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Showing posts with label POLITICO NIGHTLY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label POLITICO NIGHTLY. Show all posts

Friday, February 11, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Warning signs mount on Russia-Ukraine

 



 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY RENUKA RAYASAM AND TYLER WEYANT

With help from Myah Ward

National security adviser Jake Sullivan speaks during the daily White House press briefing.

National security adviser Jake Sullivan speaks during the daily White House press briefing. | Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

‘THREAT IS IMMEDIATE’ — That was national security adviser Jake Sullivan’s assessment of the possibility of a Russian invasion of Ukraine. The appearance by Sullivan at today’s White House briefing, along with a flurry of evacuation moves and continued intelligence reports on Russian troops, painted a gloomy picture for the days ahead. Here’s is the latest from POLITICO reporters around the world:

— Americans, Britons urged to leave: Sullivan urged Americans still in Ukraine to depart the country within the next 24 to 48 hours, saying President Joe Biden would not send troops into harm’s way to evacuate U.S. citizens who could have left the Eastern European country when they had the chance. In a statement late today, the U.K. urged British nationals to “leave now via commercial means while they remain available.”

— More troops headed to Poland: Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin ordered 3,000 troops from the 82nd Airborne Infantry Brigade Combat Team to Poland, a senior DoD official told POLITICO. The contingent will add to forces ordered to deploy there last week and will bring the total number of U.S. troops sent to Poland and Germany to 5,000.

— Invasion could come before Olympics end: Three official sources in Washington and Europe told Nahal Toosi and Paul McLeary that intelligence shared with them by the United States pinpointed Feb. 16 as a possible start date for the invasion. Publicly, however, aides to Biden would not confirm a specific date other than to say that — counter to much public speculation and some previous assessments from Washington — an invasion could begin before the Feb. 20 end of the Beijing Winter Olympics.

— Biden and Putin plan to talk Saturday: Biden and the Russian leader will hold a call on Saturday morning, a senior administration official told POLITICO. Russia proposed a Monday call, the official said, but the U.S. counterproposed Saturday, and Moscow accepted.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s authors at rrayasam@politico.com and tweyant@politico.com, or on Twitter at @renurayasam and @tweyant .

 

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AROUND THE NATION

THE LULL THE LULL MIGHT END — Renu emails Nightly:

When the pandemic first settled into our daily life — when we started to realize that two weeks to flatten the curve was woefully inadequate — many predicted that so much forced home life would also spark a divorce surge.

Nearly two years later, it’s clear that marriages didn’t buckle under the virus. But now, on the cusp of our second pandemic Valentine’s Day, with mask and other mandates lifting, there’s a sense among divorce lawyers that some long-delayed splits are on the way. The Covid lull may end the divorce lull. 

“Some speculate there may be, quote unquote, pent up demand,” said Cary Mogerman, a St. Louis-based attorney who is the president of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers. “I will say this: Last month, I’ve seen a lot of new traffic and it’s different than last year at this time.”

The divorce rate has been on the decline for decades , and so far, the pandemic hasn’t disrupted that long-term trend, said Wendy Manning, founder of the Center for Family and Demographic Research at Bowling Green State University. Manning and her team looked at administrative data in 35 states and found that the number of divorces continued going down in 2020. In some states, divorce declined more than it had in previous years.

The pandemic absolutely increased relationship conflict , Manning said. Couples continued to fight over many of the same issues, child care, money, housework, rather than social distancing or masking.

But couples are generally less likely to get divorced during times of economic uncertainty, Mogerman said. In the aftermath of the 2008 recession, he said that his phone didn’t ring for six months.

So the reason that divorces didn’t spike before — the economy and life uncertainty — may also be the reason that they could start to take off this year. Divorce is expensive, moving out can be tricky and court proceedings were delayed by the pandemic.

Even so, Manning isn’t ready to predict a 2022 divorce surge. She believes there are also pandemic-related reasons why fewer couples are splitting up — it’s been harder to have an affair and some families benefited from extra bonding time at home. Marriage rates, as well as divorce rates, are on the decline. Those who are getting married tend to be more educated and wealthier, giving them a better chance of weathering the pandemic with minimal economic disruption.

“There is a lot of media right now about how marriage is the pathway to success in life,” Manning said. But as much as Democrats and Republicans want to support stable families and marriage, there isn’t a readymade policy that can just promote marriage and prevent potential divorce surgeshe said. “You can’t just slap marriage on people,” she said.

Still, romantics have at least one reason to take heart this year. Nearly 2.5 million weddings are expected to take place in 2022, according to the Wedding Report, an industry trade group. That’s the most weddings since 1984, which is also around the time that divorce rates started dropping.

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— FDA delays meeting on kid vaccines as Pfizer promises more data: The Food and Drug Administration is delaying its planned Tuesday meeting of outside advisers to consider recommending Covid-19 vaccines for children under 5 years old after new data from Pfizer and BioNTech convinced regulators to wait for more information about the effectiveness of a third dose. Peter Marks, director of the agency’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, declined to explain what new information prompted the decision.

— Trucker convoy forces Canada’s largest province into state of emergency: Ontario Premier Doug Ford declared a state of emergency today in a province struggling to break up trucker protests besieging Ottawa and jamming an economically crucial bridge to the United States. The leader of Canada’s most-populous province said his Cabinet will enact orders making it illegal to block and impede the movement of goods, people and services along critical infrastructure. The punishments include fines as high as C$100,000 and up to a year in prison.

Hundreds of truck drivers and their supporters gather to block the streets of downtown Ottawa, Ontario.

Hundreds of truck drivers and their supporters gather to block the streets of downtown Ottawa, Ontario. | Spencer Platt/Getty Images

— American truckers distance from Canada protests: The vehicle blockades that have snarled North American supply chains, paralyzed Canada’s capital and inspired threats of a copycat convoy to Washington, D.C., may have started with truck drivers irate about mask and vaccine mandates. But the grievances of the protests’ biggest champions bear little similarity to the demands that U.S. truck drivers’ union reps and trade groups typically bring to Washington.

— Dem duo’s warning of CIA ‘warrantless backdoor searches’ revives domestic spying debate: A newly declassified letter from two Democratic senators warning that the CIA has been conducting “warrantless backdoor searches” of Americans’ data is roiling Washington’s long-running debate over balancing national security with civil liberties. In an April letter declassified on Thursday, Sens. Ron Wyden of Oregon and Martin Heinrich of New Mexico allege that the CIA “has secretly conducted its own bulk program … outside the statutory framework that Congress and the public believe govern this collection.”

— Sarah Palin’s lawyers: New York Times libeled her amidst pattern of sliming conservatives: Sarah Palin’s lawyers offered jurors a simple explanation for why The New York Times used a 2017 editorial to link Palin to a deadly shooting in Arizona six years earlier: a long-standing political vendetta against conservatives . On several occasions during his summation of the evidence in a Manhattan courtroom, Turkel argued that the Times’ decision to reference Palin’s political action committee in the editorial spurred by a shooting at a GOP congressional baseball practice in Virginia was part of a pattern at the newspaper of slurring Republicans.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

8

The number of accounts a POLITICO analysis found associated with deceased politicians that still have money in the bank , some with hundreds of thousands of dollars, or debts that, according to Federal Election Commission records, remain unpaid. These zombie PACs and campaign committees have been paying for such things as communications consulting, campaign contributions, car rentals, or fees for former associates. 

PUNCHLINES

Weekend Wrap of political cartoons and satire

COLD SOUP TURNS HOT TOPIC — Political cartoonists and satirists had a field day with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s gestapo-gazpacho mixup, and Matt Wuerker and Brooke Minters found the best bits on the incident for the latest Weekend Wrap.

PARTING WORDS

A view of SoFi Stadium as workers prepare for Super Bowl LVI in Inglewood, Calif.

A view of SoFi Stadium as workers prepare for Super Bowl LVI in Inglewood, Calif. | Ronald Martinez/Getty Images

BIG GAME, BIGGER SPORT — Before you get your snacks and drinks ready for the Super Bowl, read Derek Robertson ’s essay, coming Sunday in POLITICO Magazine, on the NFL’s unlikely journey to becoming America’s most resilient institution. Here’s an excerpt:

A recent Los Angeles Times/SurveyMonkey poll found that one-third of its respondents declared themselves less of a football fan than they were five years ago, and that those in that cohort were far more likely to express discomfort with the league’s recent gestures toward solidarity with the movement for racial justice. Keep in mind, however, that people say plenty of surprising things to pollsters, and then consider the disconnect between said responses and the league’s reality: NFL ratings are the highest they’ve been since 2015, and football is consistently and overwhelmingly the most-watched thing on television. Franchise values continue to climb to dizzying heights. Even in-person attendance is slightly up from before the pandemic. Disgruntled fans can claim all they want that they’ve kicked the habit over some cultural grievance, but all evidence indicates they’re still crawling back each autumn and winter Sunday.

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POLITICO NIGHTLY: Here come the Covid midterms

 


 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY DAVID SIDERS

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi joins a bicameral and bipartisan group of lawmakers on the East Front of the U.S. Capitol for a moment of silence for the more than 900,000 people who have died from Covid-19.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi joins a bicameral and bipartisan group of lawmakers on the East Front of the U.S. Capitol for a moment of silence for the more than 900,000 people who have died from Covid-19. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

THE VIRUS VOTERS — Joe Biden always said he’d “follow the science” on Covid, and with few exceptions — such as the White House’s premature declaration of victory over the pandemic — he’s spent the past year doing just that, largely with the support of Democrats in Congress and in the states.

But from the beginning, politicians have weighed the politics of the pandemic along with the science. And in a Monmouth University poll last week, 7 in 10 Americans — including 47 percent of Democrats — agreed with the idea that “it’s time we accept that Covid is here to stay and we just need to get on with our lives.” The poll was in line with other surveys suggesting people are tired of their restriction-altered realities. Almost on cue, Democratic-led states throughout the country started paring back mandates.

Biden was elected president in part — perhaps largely — because he promised to defeat the virus, to take more aggressive measures instead of punting the problem to the nation’s governors, as President Donald Trump had done. But since he took office, the pandemic has been a persistent drag on Biden’s presidency. Public approval of his handling of the virus has fallen underwater.

Republican strategists have described the pandemic to Nightly as a godsend, with its effects on both inflation and education, two of voters’ top concerns, as well as on Biden’s dismal public approval ratings.

GOP strategists are vowing to run on unpopular Covid restrictions even if they’ve been taken away. They gleefully predict that Biden’s party will pay a price in the midterm elections for, in their view, waiting too long.

“They are waving the white freaking flag, after they’ve completely lost the war and have nothing else to do besides retreat,” said Jeff Roe, the Republican strategist who managed Texas Sen. Ted Cruz’s presidential campaign in 2016 and helped elect Glenn Youngkin governor of Virginia last year. “The female suburban independent, college educated voter? Good luck. Add people who are married with kids, and put them in the Republican camp. [Democrats] did more damage to that coalition in the last 14 months than any Republican has done in the last 14 years.”

Fred Davis, a Republican ad maker, said that in the November elections, “People will remember that the supply chain was broken down, that kids didn’t go to school … that the world closed up.”

The prospect that people will remember school shutdowns and mask mandates  and punish Democrats for them — is one possible outcome of pandemic politics, assuming the lull continues. But let’s stipulate that, in November, children aren’t wearing masks in schools, that families have spent the summer posing for pictures at Disney World and hugging Mickey Mouse.

In that Clorox-free scenario, it’s not clear that Republicans are the party that will gain an advantage.

Take Covid away, and it’s not unreasonable to think the mood of the electorate may improve, and that Biden’s approval ratings might tick up — and perhaps help to limit Democrats’ losses in the House.

“If Covid is in the rearview mirror and there’s a return to, quote, normal, whatever normal is, the occupant of the White House will benefit,” said Lee Miringoff, director of the Marist College Institute for Public Opinion.

The other possibility — the more likely one, judging by recent history — is that if the pandemic really does subside, it may quickly fade from our politics altogether. In the run-up to last year’s gubernatorial race in Virginia, politicians and strategists of both parties were bracing for the pandemic to feature heavily. But several weeks before the election, as Covid conditions improved, polling showed Covid receding as a priority for voters. Campaign advertising related to the pandemic nearly vanished.

And by the time Youngkin defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe, exit polls showed Covid lagging behind education and the economy and jobs as a top issue of concern. The pandemic still mattered to the extent that it infected those facets of life. But as a stand-alone issue, it was not all that salient.

This year, a pandemic-stayed November may look a lot like that — with Republicans likely to win back the House, but not because of Covid.

Republicans probably don’t need it. They will have Biden’s legislative difficulties to talk about — and gas prices and crime and critical race theory. And then there’s whatever else happens — or whatever else the right can dream up — in the nine months before the election. By November, voters may have other things to worry about.

“I think what will be top on their minds is what they’re seeing — inflation, gas prices,” said Bob Heckman, a Republican consultant who has worked on nine presidential campaigns. “I don’t even think they’ll be thinking about Covid, to be honest.”

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at dsiders@politico.com, or on Twitter at @davidsiders.

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— Biden says he’s thoroughly reviewed ‘about 4’ SCOTUS candidates so far: Biden said today that he had thoroughly reviewed about four “well qualified and documented” candidates to fill Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer’s seat on the bench. Biden, who has vowed to nominate the first Black woman to the Supreme Court, told NBC’s Lester Holt that he’d done the “deep dive” on those contenders, making sure there was nothing in their background checks that might disqualify them.

Protestors and supporters set up at a blockade at the foot of the Ambassador Bridge, sealing off the flow of commercial traffic over the bridge into Canada from Detroit in Windsor, Canada.

Protestors and supporters set up at a blockade at the foot of the Ambassador Bridge, sealing off the flow of commercial traffic over the bridge into Canada from Detroit in Windsor, Canada. | Cole Burston/Getty Images

— Canadian bridge blockade could worsen Biden’s economic headaches: The anti-vaccine protest blocking a critical trade route between the U.S. and Canada threatens to exacerbate two persistent economic challenges confronting the Biden administration: congested supply chains and rising consumer prices. A convoy of truckers opposing cross-border vaccine requirements has stopped traffic from crossing the Ambassador Bridge between Windsor, Ont. and Detroit, the busiest international crossing in North America that facilitates the exchange of more than $300 million worth of goods per day.

— Schumer moves to limit debate on FDA nomination: Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer filed cloture today on Robert Califf’s nomination to lead the Food and Drug Administration , signaling Democrats expect to have the votes to confirm him. The motion to limit debate on the cardiologist’s nomination sets up a vote next week, meeting Senate HELP Chair Patty Murray‘s goal of shepherding him through the chamber ahead of the Presidents Day recess.

— Top D.C. lobbying firm reps company alleged by former employees to have paid off Taliban: A top Washington lobbying shop has agreed to represent the U.S. parent company of a major Afghan telecom alleged by three former employees and four former senior Afghan government officials to have paid money and extended other favors to the Taliban as they fought a bloody insurgency over the last 20 years. S-3 Group filed a lobbying disclosure Nov. 1 that it now represents Telephone Systems International, the holding company for Afghan Wireless, one of the largest mobile telephone operators in the country. The document, required by U.S. law, states three of its lobbyists — John Scofield, Jose Ceballos and Michael Long — will lobby on “access to wireless communication in Afghanistan.”

— Senate clears #MeToo bill banning mandatory arbitration: The Senate cleared a bill today that would forbid clauses in employment contracts requiring workers to litigate sexual harassment and abuse cases in private , rather than a court, several years after the #MeToo movement drew attention to the issue. The legislation, which was passed by voice vote, has bipartisan support. Lawmakers drafted it in response to the #MeToo movement, which exposed how the clauses — known collectively as mandatory arbitration — prevent repeat offenders from being held accountable.

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) surrounded by reporters.

Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) surrounded by reporters. | Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

HILL HUNG UP OVER SANCTIONS — Bipartisan negotiations over how to deter a Russian invasion of Ukraine are at an impasse, top senators said today, amid fears that a Moscow invasion is imminent, Andrew Desiderio writes.

Senate Foreign Relations Chair Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) and the panel’s top Republican, Sen. Jim Risch of Idaho, indicated that their weekslong negotiations have hit several snags in recent days, including over the scope of sanctions to impose after a possible Russian incursion.

“We’re running out of runway,” Risch said bluntly. “It’s important that the Senate of the United States express … where the United States is on this issue.”

While both lawmakers have insisted that the effort isn’t dead, the remaining disputes continue to threaten the time-sensitive package. Republicans and Democrats have long disagreed over the best way to deter a Russian invasion, with GOP lawmakers insisting that some sanctions should be imposed on the front end while Democrats argue that the sanctions should come only after an incursion.

“We’re thinking of a different process to move forward,” Menendez said, citing the impasse.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

7.5 percent

The annual inflation rate in the U.S., the highest since 1982 , according to a Labor Department report. This is the second report in a row where the number has broken 7 percent.

PARTING WORDS

THE DJT TP OMG — Breaking news reporter Samuel Benson emails Nightly:

When it comes to Trump’s bathroom records-keeping practices, the fits are hitting the newsstands.

new book by New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman, scheduled for publication in October, flushes out new material on Trump’s obsession with toilets. Staff in the White House residence told Haberman they periodically found a toilet clogged with wads of printed paper, leading them to believe Trump attempted to flush ripped documents.

Trump was quick to refute the reporting. He released a statement today, calling the story “categorically untrue and simply made up by a reporter in order to get publicity for a mostly fictitious book.”

But today’s powder room dust-up is only the latest saga in Trump’s yearslong crusade against low-flow toilets and sinks. Krystal Campos put together this video of the greatest hits from Trump’s WC CV.

Donald Trump talking about toilets

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Thursday, February 10, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Covid restrictions the experts would end right now

 


 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY MYAH WARD

A bar in the French Quarter in New Orleans.

A bar in the French Quarter in New Orleans. | Mario Tama/Getty Images

BREAKING THE PLEXIGLASS — The Blue Pause, which began Monday when New Jersey set a date for lifting its school mask mandate, continued today, with announcements that mask mandates in public schools in Denver, as well as the entire states of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, would end in the coming weeks. Connecticut, New Jersey and Delaware were already there. New York is keeping masks in schools for now, but announced today that the mandate for businesses ends this week. California is enacting a similar policy.

Some public health experts think it’s too soon to celebrate, but most agree that a whole bunch of Covid mitigation measures, many of them introduced in March 2020, seem to have become unnecessarily permanent — from plexiglass barriers in restaurants to the elimination of housekeeping and buffets at hotels to ostentatious “deep cleaning” protocols on airlines. Nightly asked our roster of go-to public health experts what mitigation measures they would end right now, as the U.S. enters a Covid lull. These answers have been edited.

“A mitigation measure I would end immediately is restricting visitors to patients who are near end-of-life with Covid-19. We know that many of these patients are actually in the inflammatory state of the disease and are likely at very low risk of transmitting to others around them. It is important that family members get to visit and be near their loved ones. And, if there is any concern the patient could still be contagious (such as may be the case with some who are immunocompromised), family members can be equipped with N95 masks. By keeping family members away from patients who may not be contagious, we are causing unnecessary harm and grief.” — Abraar Karan, infectious disease fellow at Stanford University

“I would immediately end the risk averseness of universities. Many universities and colleges have vaccine — and booster — requirements, yet still cling to aggressive masking, social distancing, and testing policies with no off-ramps. College students are low-risk for severe disease and having them fully vaccinated should be sufficient to ensure the resiliency of universities to what will be an ever present virus.” — Amesh Adalja, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Institute for Health Security

Plexiglass barriers and digital menus should have been dropped a long time ago — we’ve known for more than a year that they’re useless. Outdoor masking is similarly pointless (unless you’re in a very small, crowded area). Although I wouldn’t relax any mitigation measures today, I am looking forward to most of us being able to spend time together without masks, indoors, and to enjoy restaurants without fear of catching Covid, in the weeks to come. I am also looking forward to rapid-testing-before-a-get-together being less necessary (especially for those of us who are vaccinated) in the very near future.

“I will continue to use MyCOVIDRisk.app to help me judge the risk of infection, based on local case numbers and vaccination status!” — Megan Ranney, emergency physician and professor at Brown University

“I think right now, we have to be cautious because of the uncertainty around the BA.2 sub variant. Although Omicron is decelerating quickly, BA.2 could drag this out for another six weeks or more. So we’re at Omicron and mask ‘Groundhog Day’: If Omicron continues its downward trajectory, then mask restrictions can lift by the new target dates set by many of the governors. But if BA.2 gains a foothold, we’re looking at six or more weeks of Covid winter.” — Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine and co-director of the Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Keep reading for more ideas for Covid measures that should be scrapped from our panel of experts. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at mward@politico.com, or on Twitter at @MyahWard.

 

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“Like masks themselves, there’s no one-size-fits-all for mask mandates and the timing of tightening or loosening requirements. The best practice is to adjust mask mandates and other measures per the burden of cases and hospitalizations in each area. We’re all sick of the virus, but it’s still important to listen, look at the data, and then make decisions accordingly. Although cases are declining fast, cases and hospitalizations are still high in most of the country. If we prematurely lift lifesaving and disease-restraining measures, we will prolong the flood.

“The United States is better defended against Covid now than ever in the past two years. We can have the upper hand over the virus as long as we adapt our response and use multilayered and strong defenses, starting with vaccine-based immunity, and strengthened with measures such as masks. Even without mandates, people who are feeling sick, those who are medically vulnerable, and anyone who feels more comfortable doing so should feel free to mask up. No one can know what’s coming next.” — Tom Frieden, former CDC director and president and CEO of Resolve to Save Lives, a global public health initiative 

“I would immediately end digital menus in restaurants, members of the service industry wearing rubber gloves, and deep cleaning anywhere, as Covid is not spread by fomites and such measures spread unnecessary fear (and are non-scientific). I would also end temperature screening, as Covid can spread when asymptomatic. Because masks provide one-way protection, some states are ending mask mandates now or can go on a hospitalization metric. Non-pharmaceutical interventions were always meant to protect our hospitals. One standardized metric is to drop mask mandates when hospitals in the region are at <80 percent ICU capacity (a marker for severe Covid disease which corresponds to vaccination rates in the region) as can be determined by the HHS hospital utilization website.” — Monica Gandhi, infectious diseases expert at the University of California at San Francisco

“Just because cases begin to decline, and we think the virus is abating, does not mean we should let our guard down. That’s not to say we keep all pandemic mitigation measures in place during these periods of ‘lull.’ Instead, we should be strategic, methodical, grounded through the lens of equity and based on local data to make decisions on lifting mitigation measures. We should reevaluate lifting measures like mask mandates based on local context (i.e. hospital capacity, community transmission levels, vaccination rates, access to testing); and remove measures that never really worked in the first place — like plexiglass barriers. Now, it is easy to say we should make data-driven decisions when unfortunately, our data is lagging an upwards of 2 weeks. This also means we should take this time to develop better real-time surveillance systems, so we’re not blinded again if or when cases begin to increase.”  Syra Madad, infectious disease epidemiologist at the Harvard Belfer Center

WHAT'D I MISS?

— CDC weighs new messaging around transmission and masking: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is considering updating its guidelines on the metrics states should use when lifting public health measures such as mask mandates, according to four people familiar with the matter . Agency scientists and officials are debating whether to continue to publicly support using transmission data as a marker for whether to ease public health interventions such as masking, particularly in school settings, the people said. CDC staff are weighing whether the agency should use case rates as a metric or whether it should lean more heavily on hospitalization data, particularly information on hospital capacity. In recent days, the CDC has reached out to external doctors, scientists and public health organizations for input, one of the people with knowledge of the discussions said.

The U.S. Capitol.

The U.S. Capitol. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images

— Congress strikes broad government funding deal: Congressional leaders reached an agreement to boost military and non-defense budgets, paving the way for a comprehensive deal to fund the government into the fall . The accord is a crucial breakthrough that’s expected to lead to enactment of a 12-bill spending bundle in the next few weeks. Democrats are seeking to finally override the funding levels carried over from the spending package signed into law in the last weeks of Donald Trump’s presidency, while Republicans are fighting for a military budget far above the less than 2 percent increase President Joe Biden requested.

— Lawmakers pessimistic about new Iran nuke deal: Top Biden administration officials warned senators today that Iran could produce enough material for a nuclear bomb in as little as two months, bolstering lawmakers’ concerns that the window for a diplomatic solution is rapidly closing. The assessment, delivered in a classified briefing and described by one senator as “sobering and shocking,” comes as Biden’s diplomats are racing to strike a deal with Tehran that would prevent it from acquiring a nuclear weapon.

— White House weighing former Obama adviser for senior Treasury job: Jay Shambaugh, who was a key economic adviser in President Barack Obama’s White House, is under consideration to be Treasury under secretary for international affairs, the agency’s top financial diplomat, according to three people familiar with the matter. Shambaugh, who served as a member of the White House Council of Economic Advisers from 2015 to 2017, is a professor of economics and international affairs at George Washington University and a nonresident senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution.

— U.N. postpones space diplomacy talks after Russia asks for more time: United Nations talks scheduled to take place next week to avoid an arms race in space are being postponed after Russia insisted it needs more time to prepare, according to two people briefed on the developments . Expectations have been high that the newly established “open-ended working group” can help fashion international norms that rein in what many see as an unrestrained military competition. The talks could even lay the groundwork for an eventual ban or moratorium on destructive anti-satellite tests, U.S. officials have said.

 

DON’T MISS CONGRESS MINUTES: Need to follow the action on Capitol Hill blow-by-blow? Check out Minutes, POLITICO’s new platform that delivers the latest exclusives, twists and much more in real time. Get it on your desktop or download the POLITICO mobile app for iOS or AndroidCHECK OUT CONGRESS MINUTES HERE.

 
 
AROUND THE WORLD

NOT JUST IN THE U.S. — U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced today that all remaining coronavirus restrictions in England, including Covid-positive self-isolation requirements, could be lifted in February, Louis Westendarp and Helen Collis write.

“Provided the current encouraging trends in the data continue, it is my expectation that we will be able to end the last domestic restrictions — including the legal requirement to self-isolate if you test positive — a full month early,” Johnson said during today’s Prime Minister’s Questions.

His comments were met with surprise among scientists and National Health Service leaders. While the data on hospitalizations and deaths is currently trending in the right direction, they warn that things can change very quickly. And above all, they’d like to see the scientific basis for his remarks.

The current expiration date for the restrictions is March 24, so on Johnson’s new timetable England could return to pre-pandemic levels of freedom in just over two weeks. Currently, anyone who tests positive for coronavirus should isolate for a minimum of five days. This rule applies to vaccinated as well as unvaccinated people.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

34 percent

The percentage of Americans who can find Ukraine on a map, according to a new Morning Consult poll . Among those who could locate Ukraine, 58 percent said they would support the most strenuous sanctions package if Moscow invades the country, compared to 41 percent support for voters who could not. 

PARTING WORDS

Police patrol in Times Square in New York City.

Police patrol in Times Square in New York City. | Spencer Platt/Getty Images

‘THEY’RE LOCKING UP MY TOOTHPASTE’ — The Rev. Al Sharpton is calling on New York City Mayor Eric Adams, a former police captain, to address the city’s spike in crime, calling the situation “out of control,”Samuel Benson writes

“In fairness to Eric, he’s only been mayor five weeks,” Sharpton said today during an appearance on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.” “But even as a fan of him: Eric, they’re locking up my toothpaste.”

Sharpton’s comment referred to reports that New York-area pharmacies and convenience stores have begun to place low-cost items, even toothpaste, in locked cases to prevent theft. Major crime increased 38.5 percent in January, Adams’ first month in office, compared to the same period last year, according to a NYPD report.

“I mean, we’re talking about basic stuff here,” Sharpton said. “I’m like, what did I miss that we now have to lock up toothpaste?”


 

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