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Showing posts with label SEAN PARNELL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SEAN PARNELL. Show all posts

Monday, November 29, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Sarah Jones | Josh Hawley and the New Anti-Feminism

 

 

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Josh Hawley. (photo: Tom Brenner/Getty Images)
FOCUS: Sarah Jones | Josh Hawley and the New Anti-Feminism
Sarah Jones, New York Magazine
Jones writes: "The conservative movement believes men are in trouble, and they know who to blame."

The conservative movement believes men are in trouble, and they know who to blame. “The left want to define traditional masculinity as toxic. They want to define the traditional masculine virtues — things like courage and independence and assertiveness — as a danger to society,” the Republican senator Josh Hawley said during a recent speech. Thus besieged, men are retreating into pornography and video games, abandoning their traditional responsibilities, he added. And who can blame them? “In America, you ought to be able to raise a family on one single income,” asserted Senate candidate Blake Masters in an ad. That feat was once possible, he claimed, but globalization made it all too rare. This is a “huge problem,” he said, but “the left, they want to attack me, and say, ‘Blake, that’s sexist.’” The breadwinner, as always, is male.

Elsewhere, Republican men show masculinity at its worst. Sean Parnell was Donald Trump’s pick to represent Pennsylvania in the Senate until he lost a custody battle following his ex-wife’s accusations of violent domestic abuse, claims that he denies. Trump, who once bragged of grabbing women by the pussy, might find much to admire in Parnell. “I feel like the whole ‘happy wife, happy life’ nonsense has done nothing but raise one generation of women tyrants after the next,” Parnell said on Fox Nation. “The idea that a woman doesn’t need a man to be successful, the idea that a woman doesn’t need a man to have a baby, the idea that a woman can live a happy and fulfilling life without a man, I think it’s all nonsense.” In Missouri, Eric Greitens is running for the Senate on a MAGA platform despite sexual-assault allegations that ended his tenure as governor.

They are putting a brash new spin on an old culture war. Hawley’s anti-feminism isn’t novel, but he is responding to a new moment in modern American politics. Conservatives have always argued that by muddying gender roles, feminism harms men and women alike. Yet in recent years, this rhetoric has acquired an even sharper edge, pitting men and women against each other as if greater freedom for women comes directly at the expense of men. For Republican politicians and their supporters, Trump’s unapologetic misogyny further expanded the borders of the possible.

The GOP has been an anti-feminist institution for decades, with conservative women making use of a loose language of empowerment in its stead. See only Sarah Palin speaking of a “mom awakening” to the anti-abortion group Susan B. Anthony List in 2010. “The left has controlled this conversation,” Carly Fiorina said during her 2016 run for president. “They have defined the term ‘feminism’ and ‘feminist’ in a certain way. And I think it’s important that we reclaim that term.” Republican voters disagreed and nominated Trump, as thorough a repudiation of feminism as one could find anywhere.

“I think you can’t really even understand the conservative movement without understanding conservative women, both as leaders, but also their organizations,” said Dr. Ronnee Schreiber, the author of Righting Feminism: Conservative Women and American Politics. Conservative women, like the Eagle Forum’s Phyllis Schlafly, she added, helped legitimize the broader movement to which they belonged. “This is better for the conservative movement to say that women were out there making the argument that abortion was bad for women, that traditional gender roles are good for women.”

Society is changing in ways that directly challenge the norms that are so precious to Hawley and his ilk. Americans are more likely than ever to identify as LGBT, a trend at odds with the traditional rigidity around men’s and women’s roles. Forty-two percent of American adults say they personally know a trans person, according to a recent Pew poll. Though the Pew poll also found that 56 percent believe that a person’s sex as assigned at birth determines their gender, it also found “that younger people tended to be more likely to know a trans person and comfortable with gender-neutral pronouns,” the 19th reported. That prospect will disturb conservatives like Hawley, who opposes basic equality for trans people, most notably in the guise of protecting cis women. The consequences of Me Too linger, inducing the feeling among some that men will be disproportionately punished for minor transgressions. The rising cost of living further threatens the male breadwinner and renders him impotent before forces he cannot control. Hawley believes men will turn to pornography — another old conservative foe — and neglect his responsibilities to his family, if indeed he marries at all.

None of this amounts to a war on men. Me Too was an attempt to correct a long-standing social problem: that of violence against women. Overcorrection, while much prophesied, never took place; millions of voters still revere a former president who faces dozens of credible accusations of sexual harassment and assault. The gender pay gap persists. The absence of guaranteed paid leave and affordable child care created heavy burdens for women workers and pushed them out of the workforce in droves throughout the pandemic. The growing acceptance of trans people may threaten traditional gender binaries, but it is not a substantive assault on the male sex; trans people remain a vulnerable minority facing pervasive discrimination.

Hawley “may have couched things slightly differently,” said Dr. Schreiber, but “without a doubt” the senator was thinking of traditional gender roles. “It’s not new, right?” she said. “There’s all sorts of literature, all sorts of activism, particularly from the Christian right, that men’s and women’s roles are being devalued and men are being emasculated by policies that promote feminism.”

Hawley is brandishing an aggressive anti-feminism that bears all the hallmarks of a trollish new age. There are notes of Gamergate and Barstool Sports in Hawley’s rhetoric, all mixed with familiar points of right-wing ire. Hawley’s war on porn is unfashionable, but there’s plenty else for Dave Portnoy and Jordan Peterson acolytes to embrace. Hawley isn’t just owning the libs. He’s owning women: more specifically, the wrong kind of woman, trans women and women who get abortions and women who reject traditional constraints. She is the real threat to Hawley’s masculinity. The desire to punish her explains why candidates like Greitens and Parnell haven’t yet been shamed out of public life.

Faced with such enemies, women need comrades, true friends in the struggle. By default, they’re left with the Democratic Party, the inconsistent counterbalance to the GOP’s increasingly authoritarian turn. Conservative anti-feminism is key to the movement’s illiberalism. Yet if the outcome of Virginia’s gubernatorial race is any indication of bigger trouble, liberals are struggling to win the culture war. It’s not enough to link a Republican candidate to Trump, as Glenn Youngkin’s victory in Virginia shows. Sexist motivations may underlie Blake Masters’s single-income dreams, but liberals won’t win anything by calling him a misogynist on the campaign trail. And yet liberals can’t concede their central point, which is that traditional gender norms are worth preserving. Masculinity, additionally, is not as threatened as Hawley claims. As long as Brett Kavanaugh can ascend to the Supreme Court despite a credible allegation of sexual assault, as long as Donald Trump remains a popular figure with conservative voters, as long as domestic violence doesn’t automatically end political careers, masculinity is hardly under attack. Rights for women, however, look fragile, with abortion at the precipice. American women need a party that won’t sacrifice them for fear of sounding too woke.

It’s not enough to run women candidates or to speak euphemistically of reproductive “choice” on the campaign trail. The right to abortion is popular. The average voter does not want to end Roe. Social conservatives often claim they speak for some silent majority of the American electorate when the subject is outlawing abortion; that claim is a pernicious lie, and Democrats should stare it down. The fight for abortion is part of a fight for liberation, and it’s possible for the liberal left to make that case without sounding like grad students on the campaign trail. Include the unapologetic right to abortion in a platform premised on economic justice for all — living wages, Medicare for All, paid leave — and Democrats have a message that directly undercuts the divisive language of the right. The conservative vision, as expressed by Hawley and lived out by candidates like Parnell and Greitens, pits men against women. Yet freedom for the latter does not have to come at the expense of the former. It’s on Democrats to say so. Without the sort of robust economic vision that leftist feminists have been developing and demanding for decades, Democrats have nothing to offer either men or women but liberal feminism: a movement that has failed, utterly, to stem the right’s illiberal tide.

No one can prevent Josh Hawley from misinterpreting concepts like toxic masculinity. And in the wake of Trump, domestic-violence allegations, like those that plague Parnell and Greitens, might not be as disqualifying as they should be. There’s no reason, however, that Democrats can’t render their appeal hollow by offering more attractive ideas. Republicans are playing an old game — and they’re good at it. Their opponents should try a novel strategy. Let Hawley posture about the decline of masculinity if he chooses. The answer lies in a more dignified future for all.


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Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Armed Trumper confesses to trying to kill Pelosi

 


Biden to nominate Jerome Powell for 2nd term as Federal Reserve chairman

Today's Top Stories:

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Indiana man arrested for bringing shotgun revolver to Capitol MAGA riot, told investigators it was for Pelosi

An Indiana man charged with carrying a loaded firearm to the Capitol on Jan. 6 told investigators that if he had found Speaker Nancy Pelosi, "you’d be here for another reason."



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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Fox News personality Pete Hegseth melts down when pressed on Fox’s OWN vaccine policy

Rather than acknowledge the blatant hypocrisy of his own attacks on vaccine mandates, Hegseth took potshots at his interviewer and bragged about clicks and ratings.


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Kevin McCarthy HUMILIATES himself with ultimate fail

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: What an embarrassment.


Michael Cohen calls Steve Bannon a "racist" and "maniac" who thinks Trump is an "idiot"
Trump's former fixer, who completed his prison sentence this week, vowed continued cooperation with authorities and predicted charges for the ex-president's three oldest children.



Jan. 6th committee issues subpoenas to Alex Jones and Roger Stone
The conspiracy theorist and dirty trickster were two of five Trump figures hit with the latest batch of legal writs.



Judge orders pro-Trump attorneys who brought frivolous election fraud case to pay more than $180,000 to defendants they sued
Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.


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Trump-endorsed Senate candidate suspends campaign after losing custody of kids due to abuse allegations
  [SEAN PARNELL]

He sure knows how to pick them.



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Marjorie Taylor Greene, Madison Cawthorn, and Lauren Boebert's extremism costing them support from their voters

United Rural Democrats: New extremists in Congress are taking their districts for granted while delivering nothing for them. United Rural Democrats are organizing on the ground to shock Republicans by winning back Middle America. But they need your help!


Suspect with history of domestic and vehicular violence identified in deadly Waukesha SUV attack
Darrell Brooks Jr. was reportedly fleeing a crime scene when he plowed his vehicle into a Christmas parade, killing at least 5 people and injuring nearly 50.


Donald Trump Jr. shares obnoxious Rittenhouse meme, floats 2024 congressional Medal of Freedom
There is no bottom with this crew.


Seven from anti-vax doctors’ COVID conference fall sick within days
Fringe doctors gathered at an equine facility for the Florida COVID Summit earlier this month, touting ivermectin and regurgitating incendiary MAGA nonsense about vaccines. Days later, at least seven participants in the conference were sickened with COVID-19.


White House reveals 95% of federal workforce is in compliance with vaccine mandate
Say it aloud once more: Vaccine. Mandates. Work.


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Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...







POLITICO NIGHTLY: 7 ways to name Biden’s agenda badly

 



 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY ELANA SCHOR

With help from Myah Ward and Renuka Rayasam

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi talks to reporters during her weekly news conference in the U.S. Capitol Visitors Center.

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi talks to reporters during her weekly news conference in the U.S. Capitol Visitors Center. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

WHAT’S IN A NAME? To crudely paraphrase Shakespeare, that which we call a bill can smell more or less sweet depending on its name.

President Joe Biden started his party’s journey to christening his 2021 legislative agenda in late March, when he outlined an infrastructure pitch that we initially pegged at more than $2 trillion. He followed that a month later with a social policy package originally estimated at $1.8 trillion . As those twin pillars went through the tortured fits and starts of what became a “two-track approach” (name one, for the process) to unite moderates and progressives behind both proposals, the infrastructure bill became known as “BIF,” an acronym for “Bipartisan Infrastructure Framework” (name two). That Beltway-centric acronym persisted among reporters, not to mention some lawmakers and aides, long after the F became a B (bill) and even an L (law), despite not exactly rolling off the tongue. The White House itself went with Bipartisan Infrastructure Deal.

The social policy portion of Biden’s huge swing has also acquired many names. Perhaps the least helpful to the party has been the “reconciliation” bill (name three), since it — like “two-track” — refers to the process Democrats are using to get the legislation passed rather than anything in the bill itself. The names “jobs” and “families” have also been used as shorthand for the infrastructure and social policy bills, respectively (names four and five), before the formal label of “Build Back Better Act” (name six) caught on enough to inspire a “Schoolhouse Rock”-style costumed bill who posed for pictures with House Democrats last week.

There’s also the formal name of the legislation that settled for “BIF” for too long! It’s called the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (name seven in total for the agenda).

If you’re exhausted by the terminology crush, your feelings are shared by quite a few folks who work full-time on tracking the bill. And the lack of a consistent, digestible shorthand to describe Biden’s ambitious set of domestic pillars really matters — especially when it comes to selling the legislation to voters, as Renuka Rayasm covered for Nightly last month.

More than simply marketing the two bills, at this point Democrats are selling themselves: The more down-to-earth they sound talking about their goals, the more likely their incumbents and candidates are to connect with the people who have to hire them every two or six years. And the awkward labels for the infrastructure and social policy bills only distance both the public and Congress from their core provisions, which tend to poll well. (Although a recent Morning Consult poll found a plurality of voters predicting the families/BBB/reconciliation bill will worsen inflation.)

When Shakespeare’s Juliet raised the question of what’s in a name, she was musing on the man-made power of an appellation to keep her from her true love in another family, at odds with hers. (“’Tis but thy name that is my enemy.”) Yet her creator also knew the power of a well-titled story to rivet centuries of readers. We’re not in the business of helping either party do their jobs, but just sayin’: “Roads-and-Rails” and “Health-and-Kids” are two names with exactly as many syllables as “Romeo” and “Juliet” that would have given Democrats a far catchier line.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. A programming note: We’ll be off for Thanksgiving this Thursday and Friday, but we’ll be back and better than ever on Monday, Nov. 29. Reach out with news, tips and Thanksgiving football predictions at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at eschor@politico.com, or on Twitter at @eschor.

 

BECOME A GLOBAL INSIDER: The world is more connected than ever. It has never been more essential to identify, unpack and analyze important news, trends and decisions shaping our future — and we’ve got you covered! Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, Global Insider author Ryan Heath navigates the global news maze and connects you to power players and events changing our world. Don’t miss out on this influential global community. Subscribe now.

 
 
ON THE ECONOMY

Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome Powell speaks as President Joe Biden listens during an announcement at the South Court Auditorium of Eisenhower Executive Office Building.

Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome Powell speaks as President Joe Biden listens during an announcement at the South Court Auditorium of Eisenhower Executive Office Building. | Alex Wong/Getty Images

FED UP Biden said today he will reappoint Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, a move that keeps Powell in the government’s most powerful economic post as rising inflation spooks the country. Powell will likely face pressure from fellow Fed officials, some of whom believe the central bank should take aggressive action to stamp out rising prices, economics reporter Victoria Guida wrote today.

How should not just Powell and the Fed, but the whole of the federal government, respond to rising inflation? Nightly’s Myah Ward asked economists for their ideas. These responses have been edited.

“President Biden should continue his efforts to improve supply chains by, for example, increasing port capacity. He should take additional steps; the most important would be to reduce tariffs that are raising prices for Americans.

“But none of this will do that much — to really make a big difference the Federal Reserve will need to do more. The Fed is the primary agency responsible for controlling inflation, and it needs to shift its communications, be clearer about caring about both unemployment and inflation, taper asset purchases more quickly, and set a default path of three rate hikes for next year.” — Jason Furman, economic policy professor at Harvard and chair of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Barack Obama from 2013 to 2017

“Biden needs to look like he’s trying to combat surging prices. That’s politics. But if his economists are correct, inflation will simply fade away. Already the impact of $3 trillion in stimulus is starting to wane. And there are hints global bottlenecks are beginning to clear. The mismatch between supply and demand might slowly be returning to balance.

“But Biden shouldn’t assume all will be well in 2022. Rising inflation expectations suggest a non-zero risk that higher prices may prove sticky.

“So first, no more stimulus, no new deficit spending bills. And be careful with calls to investigate Corporate America for raising prices. Political uncertainty could chill business investment, which the economy needs to boost productive capacity. Higher productivity is anti-inflationary.

“Second, don’t let even a transitory crisis go to waste. Argue for anti-inflationary deregulation in pricey sectors such as housing, healthcare, and education. Examples: loosen restrictive zoning, let nurses do more, make colleges responsible when loan-burdened students don’t graduate.

“Third, if inflation persists, the Powell Fed (assuming the Senate approves a second term for the current chair) will need to act. Biden needs to give the central bank his full support, both privately and publicly.” — James Pethokoukis, economic policy analyst at the American Enterprise Institute and author of the Faster, Please! Substack newsletter

“We need federal policies that will help tackle the root causes of inflation: shortages that are the direct result of decades of disinvestment in our supply chains and the corporate extraction that has weakened our economy’s responsiveness to crises.

“Policymakers must take on the extractive corporate actors that are getting rich off of people’s pain. This means cracking down on pandemic profiteers and price gouging, and taxing corporations and the wealthy.

“The privatization of supply chains has resulted in a reliance on precarious labor that is a significant liability to supply chain resiliency. Shoring up the quality of jobs and addressing misclassification issues will not only help workers who move goods we all depend on, but also strengthen supply chains as a whole — creating a system that is able to withstand shocks.” — Rakeen Mabud, chief economist and managing director of policy and research, Groundwork Collaborative

“First, the Federal Reserve should increase the pace of its taper of asset purchases and end the ambiguity about how long it will let inflation run above target to make up for past shortfalls. This would likely require a clear timeline for rate liftoff beginning in 2022.

“Second, the federal government should address the stalled recovery in the labor force. This would include reintroducing work requirements into the expanded Child Tax Credit and other transfers, as was done in the 2017 expansion of the CTC. To incentivize continued labor force participation among older workers who left the workforce in 2020-21, the government could make the 2017 marginal personal income tax rate reductions permanent. I would avoid further large increases in fiscal transfers that merely fuel demand without raising supply.

“Finally, the government should make permanent the full expensing of new business investment in equipment, and rule out corporate income tax hikes. This would help close the $1.8 trillion shortfall in business investment since the pandemic began, which constitutes a 1 percent hit to potential output.

“Despite the focus on ports and supply chains, prudent monetary policy and fiscal policy that encourages labor force participation and business investment are ultimately much bigger issues.” — Tyler Goodspeed, Kleinheinz Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and acting chair and vice chair of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Donald Trump from 2020 to 2021

“The whipsaw of shutdowns and restarts across economic sectors precipitated by Covid-19 remains the main driver of inflation. The virus led spending to rush away from services towards goods, and the Delta variant gummed up supply chains around the world. Virus containment remains the most important economic priority.

“In the meantime, the Covid-19 inflation shock is being muffled, not amplified, by the labor market as average wage growth lags inflation. This has been tough on working families but means harsh medicine meant to stop wage-price spirals is not needed. The Federal Reserve’s decision to slowly reduce monthly asset purchases was prudent, providing a strong signal that inflation stability remains a crucial part of its mandate. But that’s enough for now.” — Josh Bivens, director of research at the Economic Policy Institute

“The blunt way we conduct monetary policy — near-zero interest rates and large-scale asset purchases — artificially drives up asset prices, including real estate. This has the dual effect of increasing rents and compounding pre-existing wealth gaps in our society. The Federal Reserve would do well to embrace the spirit of its targeted pandemic-era innovations such as the Municipal Liquidity Facility and the Main Street Lending Program. On the fiscal side, extending targeted policies such as the enhanced child tax credit and the expanded earned income tax credit — as called for in the Build Back Better Act — would help families weather the continuing economic fallout of the pandemic.” — Demond Drummer, managing director, equitable economy at PolicyLink

ASK THE AUDIENCE

Nightly asks you: Is there something you really want or need to buy, whether for the holiday season or just an everyday item, that you’ve noticed is far more expensive or seemingly impossible to get? Send us your responses using our form, and we’ll share some answers Wednesday.

WHAT'D I MISS?

— Jan. 6 committee subpoenas Roger Stone and Alex Jones: The House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol is charging ahead with subpoenas on some longtime denizens of Trump World : InfoWars head Alex Jones, self-described dirty trickster Roger Stone, and rally promoters Dustin Stockton and Jennifer Lawrence. The committee is also subpoenaing former President Donald Trump’s current spokesperson, Taylor Budowich. Jones and Stone gave speeches to Trump supporters on Jan. 5, urging them to push back against the election results.

— Parnell suspends Pennsylvania Senate campaign: Sean Parnell, who was endorsed in the race by former President Donald Trump and has been the frontrunner in the Republican primary, lost a fight for custody of his children earlier today to his estranged wife, who had accused him of abuse in court testimony. Parnell called Trump to inform him of the decision to suspend his campaign.

Some pumpjacks operate while others stand idle in the Belridge oil field near McKittrick, Calif.

Some pumpjacks operate while others stand idle in the Belridge oil field near McKittrick, Calif. | Mario Tama/Getty Images

— Biden eyes SPR crude oil release: The Biden administration is expected to release oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserves in coordination with other nations in the coming days in a bid to tamp down the recent increase in gasoline prices, people familiar with the effort said today. The U.S. release is expected to be between 30 million and 35 million barrels and would be carried out over time, one of the people said. The administration is currently trying to coordinate concurrent releases with foreign governments, including those in China and Japan, a process that has complicated the timing for an announcement, two of the people added.

— Hochul dominates gubernatorial field in early poll: Gov. Kathy Hochul is maintaining a healthy lead over her toughest challenger , state Attorney General Tish James, in her bid to win a term in her own right next year, according to a new Data for Progress poll shared with POLITICO. Hochul leads James 36-22 when the poll includes former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who resigned in August and has made no moves to reclaim his old seat. When he is omitted from the poll, the 15 percent support he received is fairly evenly divided among Hochul, James and others trailing the frontrunners.

— Rep. Peter Welch launches Senate bid for Leahy’s seat: Vermont Rep. Peter Welch announced today he will run for Senate next year to fill the seat held by retiring Sen. Patrick Leahy. It was widely anticipated that Welch would launch a bid for Leahy's seat. As the representative for Vermont’s at-large House district since 2007, Welch is the only other member of the state’s congressional delegation besides independent Sen. Bernie Sanders.

 

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.

 
 
AROUND THE WORLD

‘VACCINATED, CURED OR DEAD’ — Germans will be “vaccinated, cured or dead” by the end of this winter, Health Minister Jens Spahn said today, as he rushed out extra doses of the coronavirus jab from BioNTech and Pfizer to inject into the arms of the one-third of people in the country who are still not vaccinated, Laurenz Gehrke writes.

Germany is experiencing record Covid-19 caseloads in the current fourth wave of the pandemic, putting hospital intensive care units under increasing strain — with unvaccinated patients far more likely to become critically ill.

“Probably by the end of this winter pretty much everyone in Germany — as has sometimes been cynically put — will be vaccinated, cured or dead," Spahn told a hastily arranged press conference, in his starkest warning to date of the risks of holding out against vaccination.

Spahn angered doctors last week by rationing scarce supplies of the vaccine devised by Mainz-based startup BioNTech, which is in favor thanks to its “Made in Germany” status, while saying no limits would apply to the distribution of doses from U.S. biotech company Moderna.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

95 percent

The proportion of the 3.5 million federal employees covered by Biden’s vaccine mandate for government workers who have complied with the requirement ahead of its deadline today, according to the White House.

PARTING WORDS

GAETZGATE FALLOUT — A Florida businessman pleaded guilty today to involvement in an effort to extort $25 million from the wealthy father of Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) as part of a bizarre scheme that involved a pledge to secure a presidential pardon for Gaetz in the high-profile federal sex trafficking investigation the lawmaker faces, Josh Gerstein writes.

Stephen Alford, 62, appeared in federal court in Pensacola to plead guilty to one count of wire fraud in connection with the convoluted shakedown, which also included securing the release of Robert Levinson, a former FBI agent who disappeared in Iran in 2007.

During the hearing, U.S. Magistrate Judge Elizabeth Timothy recommended that Alford’s guilty plea be accepted. Alford, of Fort Walton Beach, faces a maximum of 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000 at his sentencing, set for Feb. 16 before U.S. District Court Judge M. Casey Rodgers. Defendants typically get a sentence far below the maximum, but Alford could face a stiff prison term because he has prior federal convictions for fraud.

After being approached about the alleged pardon deal earlier this year, Matt Gaetz’s father Don went to the FBI. Agents helped the elder Gaetz, a wealthy former Florida state Senate leader, record meetings with Alford and others involved in the caper.


 

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