Wednesday, December 13, 2023

"R" voters are consistently uninformed and fail to do their research before supporting an "R" candidate. PROVE ME WRONG!

 

MASS GOP EXTREMISTS are pounding their chests & endorsing DeSantis?
DeSantis failed to regulate the environment, killing MANATEES and destroyed the EVERGLADES with agricultural runoff from SUGAR!
POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook:
DESANTISLAND — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis picked up another two backers in the Bay State after this week's debate: Republicans state Sen. Ryan Fattman and state Rep. Kelly Pease .
Previously posted:
The Massachusetts Senate Republican caucus has grown to four with the addition of Peter Durant (left). | Kelly Garrity/POLITICO
MASS GOP are revelling in the recent election of PETER DURANT....
ADDED:
"R" voters are consistently uninformed and fail to do their research before supporting an "R" candidate.
PETER DURANT ENDORSED DESANTIS!
MASS GOP statement:
And the MassGOP’s ability to help Durant may be limited by its still-dire financial straits — even though a win in this race is exactly what the party needs to start turning its fortunes around.
“If we didn’t have the debt, certainly we would be able to do more in this race,” Carnevale said. “But we certainly are confident in our chances.”
PETER DURANT IS A CLOWN FOR ENDORSING DESANTIS, THE BOOK BANNER, RE-WRITES HISTORY, DON'T SAY GAY DIM WIT!
That's before defining the ENVIRONMENTAL DESTRUCTION in FLORIDA or the numerous other issues...homeowners insurance? radioactive roads? DEAD MANATEES?
POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook:
DESANTISLAND — One of GOP state Rep. Peter Durant ’s first big actions as state senator-elect: endorsing Ron DeSantis for president, per the Florida governor's campaign.
THIS IS THE CLOWN THAT PETER DURANT ENDORSED:
NOTE: GREAT BARRINGTON DECLARATION is a DIRTY ENERGY KOCH funded think tank - it's a SCAM!
Ron DeSantis' New Surgeon General Appeared in 'Demon Sperm' Doctor's COVID Conspiracy Video
excerpt:
One of the video's main speakers, Dr. Stella Immanuel, is a physician who operates a medical clinic in a Texas strip mall next to her church, Firepower Ministries. In the video, she called hydroxychloroquine a "cure" and said, "You don't need a mask" to prevent the virus' spread.
Immanuel has claimed that ovarian cysts and endometriosis are caused by "demonic seed." Demons insert sperm into sleeping individuals when they have sex in their dreams, Immanuel claimed in articles on her church's website.
Ladapo has also promoted the anti-parasite medication ivermectin as a treatment for COVID-19 symptoms. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has advised against using ivermectin as a COVID-19 treatment.
In October 2020, Ladapo signed the Great Barrington Declaration, a statement that called for developing societal herd immunity to COVID-19 through natural infection.



POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: 5 takeaways from Sununu's Haley endorsement

 


Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY AND KELLY GARRITY

With help from Mia McCarthy

SUNUNU HOPS ON THE HALEY BANDWAGON — New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu has bestowed his coveted presidential endorsement on Nikki Haley.

Political endorsements don’t matter the way they once did. But the support of the scion of one of the first-in-the-nation primary state’s powerful political families is a shot of adrenaline for the former South Carolina governor. And the effects could ripple beyond state lines. Here are five takeaways from Haley and Sununu’s big night :

— THE ANTI-TRUMP VOTE: Sununu gave a lot of likely New Hampshire GOP primary voters who don’t want Donald Trump back in the White House a sign as to which Republican he believes has the best chance against the former president. But he’s also helping further splinter the anti-Trump movement by backing Haley while another early state governor, Kim Reynolds in Iowa, is supporting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. Trump remains far and away the frontrunner in early state and national polls, despite his mounting legal troubles.

— SUNUNU’S TRACK RECORD: The candidates Sununu picks in GOP primaries don’t tend to win — a fact the governor and his new endorsee were reminded of last night. Sununu’s selections against Democratic Rep. Annie Kuster and Sen. Maggie Hassan last year both lost their primaries to Trump-aligned contenders. But Haley shrugged that off: “What I care [about] is that he’s won four terms here, and he knows New Hampshire like the back of his hand.”

— NATIONAL VS. STATE INFLUENCE: Veteran GOP operative Jim Merrill put it best: Sununu’s endorsement could matter more nationally than within New Hampshire. Haley is “earning the support of the most popular and successful Republican of his generation up here. It’s going to give her a real shot in the arm in New Hampshire,” Merrill told Playbook. “But it also gives her a national surrogate, who I’m sure you’re going to see on the Sunday shows and talking to donors.”

— THE IOWA EFFECT: Rival campaigns were quick to downplay the significance of Sununu’s endorsement. DeSantis’ campaign argued the results from Iowa, where the Florida governor is polling better than Haley, will sway Granite State voters.

Yes and no. Iowa isn’t known for picking the people who end up winning their parties’ nominations. But candidates who do well in the Iowa caucuses can ride that bump into a better finish in New Hampshire. Just look at Ted Cruz, the staunch conservative senator from Texas who leveraged an Iowa win in 2016 into a third-place finish in far more moderate New Hampshire. But it was Trump who won New Hampshire’s GOP primary that year — and kept winning. So, even that effect is limited.

— INDEPENDENTS DAY: Sununu’s endorsement could be particularly damaging to Christie , who is staking his campaign almost entirely on New Hampshire and who, like Haley, garners a lot of interest from moderate Republicans and independents who can pull ballots in the GOP primary. Sununu will now be working to draw those voters to Haley — and away from his longtime friend, Christie.

GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS . If Haley wins the GOP presidential nomination, would Sununu be her VP? "Hard pass," he told reporters last night in Manchester. "I just want to help."

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley and Gov. Chris Sununu appear at a town hall campaign event, Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2023, in Manchester, N.H. Haley received the New Hampshire governor's endorsement. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

Nikki Haley and Chris Sununu have forged a new partnership six weeks before New Hampshire's key presidential primary. | Robert F. Bukaty/AP

TODAY — Gov. Maura Healey holds a swearing-in ceremony for Maj. Gen. Gary W. Keefe at 10 a.m. in her office. Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll chairs a Governor’s Council meeting at noon. Healey, Driscoll and Senate President Karen Spilka attend the State House menorah lighting at 5 p.m.

PROGRAMMING NOTE:  We’ve reached the last week of Playbooks for the year!  Send us all those tips and scoops you’ve been holding onto: lkashinsky@politico.com and kgarrity@politico.com .

DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “Citing inequity in child care, state officials endorse new subsidy rate for providers,” by Samantha J. Gross, The Boston Globe: “State officials are proposing to revamp how they divvy up money to reimburse child care centers that provide child care to poor children in Massachusetts, resulting in more money across the board for the state’s struggling and long-overlooked child care industry. The changes will begin to address ‘some long-standing inequity’ for the roughly 56 percent of child-care providers in the state who accept children that receive state subsidies, state Early Education and Care Commissioner Amy Kershaw told the Globe.”

— “Healey plans to file economic development bill next year as revenues draw concern,” by Chris Van Buskirk, Boston Herald: “Gov. Maura Healey said her administration is prepping a wide-ranging economic development bill to file early next year as Massachusetts’s revenue picture continues to draw concern. The exact details of the proposal are still scarce outside of a 66-page statutorily required economic development plan Healey released last week and promoted to the public during a Tuesday afternoon event inside the State House."

— “Everett soccer stadium still on the table; senator vows to file standalone bill,” by Lance Reynolds, Boston Herald: “Don’t rule out a dilapidated industrial site in Everett being transformed into a soccer stadium just yet. State Sen. Sal DiDomenico has vowed to file a standalone bill at the State House that would contain language to help kickstart construction of a soccer stadium and waterfront park along the Mystic River, removing the 43-acre site as a Designated Port Area.”

2024 WATCH

FILL IN THE (BALLOT) BLANKS — Cape and Islands Assistant District Attorney Thomas Moakley is preparing to run for state Rep. Dylan Fernandes ' House seat as the Woods Hole Democrat looks to replace state Sen. Susan Moran (D-Falmouth), who has said she won’t run again in 2024 to pursue a county court job. Moakley, a Falmouth Democrat, is running “to join a new generation of leaders” who emphasize issues like climate change, reproductive freedom, housing and the opioid epidemic, he said in a statement announcing his bid.

FROM THE HUB

— “Unclear target for Boston’s housing goals,” by Jennifer Smith, CommonWealth Beacon: “In a Monday briefing with reporters on changes to the Boston Planning and Development Agency, Mayor Michelle Wu and planning chief Arthur Jemison were leery about offering long-term production goals even as they referred to policies that would drive 'a very large number' of units year over year. The reluctance to set a specific goal marks a sharp departure from her two predecessors, who regularly paraded out ambitious housing targets.”

— “Boston City Hall roiled by email party invitation for ‘electeds of color’ sent to all,” by Gayla Cawley, Boston Herald: " A Wu administration official, on behalf of the mayor, mistakenly sent all Boston city councilors an email Tuesday inviting them to a holiday party that was meant exclusively for “electeds of color,” prompting an apology and mixed reactions."

— “Ahead of possible vote, City Council drills down on details of police patrolmen’s contract,” by Danny McDonald, The Boston Globe.

STATE OF THE CITY — Boston Mayor Michelle Wu will deliver her second State of the City address on Jan. 9 at MGM Music Hall.

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

BOSTONIAN(S) OF THE YEAR — Last year it was Celtics legend Bill Russell This year, The Boston Globe is honoring the “Beleaguered, Intrepid, Absolutely Essential MBTA Commuters ,” with its Bostonians of the Year award. “These commuters are the red blood cells traveling the arteries of our city’s beating heart,” the Globe’s Janelle Nanos writes.

DAY IN COURT

— “Verdict in federal trial: Former troopers found guilty of OT fraud, all counts,” by Brad Petrishen, Telegram & Gazette: “A federal jury Tuesday convicted two former state troopers, including one from Westborough, of all the charges they faced regarding allegations they orchestrated more than $130,000 in federal overtime theft.”

FROM THE DELEGATION

— “Richie Neal wants to make a deal,” by Gintautas Dumcius, CommonWealth Beacon: “Lawmakers are considering an aid package for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, and House Speaker Mike Johnson has said he wants to include restrictive changes to border security, a notion that has drawn pushback from some Democrats. Neal insisted that there could be an opening for an agreement with congressional Democrats and the White House."

FROM THE 413

— “30 percent of profs call for Amherst College to divest from firms making money from Gaza campaign,” by Scott Merzbach, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “A call for Amherst College to divest from companies that could be making money off the Israel-Hamas war is being issued by 60 faculty members, who contend in a letter that Israel’s military response to the Oct. 7 Hamas attack violates international humanitarian law and constraints on a just war. The academics sent the two-page letter to President Michael Elliott and members of the trustees on Dec. 4.”

— “Greenfield shelter complaints aired at Human Rights Commission meeting,” by Mary Byrne, Greenfield Recorder: “A handful of guests, both past and present, of the homeless shelter on Wells Street appeared before the Human Rights Commission on Monday night to offer their support for complaints filed by two brothers against Clinical & Support Options (CSO), which manages the shelter.”

MEANWHILE IN RHODE ISLAND

“‘Unexpected and unacceptable’: RI lawmakers want answers about sudden bridge closure,” by Eli Sherman, Tim White and Ted Nesi, WPRI.

HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

SPOTTED ON CAPITOL HILL — Former New England Patriot Rob Gronkowski … and one of your Patriots-obsessed Playbook scribes running down three flights of stairs to get this selfie with him . Gronkowski met with Majority Leader Chuck Schumer Tuesday and was lobbying for a Valley fever research bill he told our Mia McCarthy (while she tried not to freak out). The former tight end was also too tall for the Capitol Hill basement tunnels, McCarthy reports.

NEW THIS MORNING — Veteran Democratic strategist Greg Maynard is launching the Boston Policy Institute, a new think tank aimed at making state and local policy more accessible to Massachusetts residents. Joe Caiazzo , another veteran Democratic operative, will be the organization’s spokesperson.

TRANSITIONS — Rebecca Herst is the new associate director for resilience at the Boston Green Ribbon Commission. She had been the director of the Sustainable Solutions Lab at UMass Boston.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Boston state Sen. Lydia Edwards and Nancy Fitzpatrick.

DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS: Monday’s edition said Josh Kraft bought property in Rep. Ayanna Pressley’s district. He did not.

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how:  jshapiro@politico.com .

 

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POLITICO Nightly: Nikki Haley’s big get

 


POLITICO Nightly logo

BY CHARLIE MAHTESIAN

Presented by

New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu speaks onstage at the 2023 TIME100 Summit at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York City.

New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu speaks onstage at the 2023 TIME100 Summit at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York City. | Jemal Countess/Getty Images for TIME

STAMP OF APPROVAL — Chris Sununu said he would endorse a presidential candidate before Christmas, and he just delivered on his promise.

The New Hampshire governor gave his imprimatur to Nikki Haley this evening, providing an adrenaline shot to Haley’s campaign in the first-in-the-nation primary state. It’s a big get for the former U.N. ambassador, even if the value of Sununu’s endorsement is subject to some hyper-ventilating and overheated analysis.

It’s the latest reminder of Haley’s surge in the polls, and a blow to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie in the early state most primed for a Trump ambush. Haley’s presidential fortunes are reliant on a strong finish in New Hampshire; having the support of the state’s popular governor is a crucial validation for her campaign.

Political endorsements don’t have nearly the same resonance they once had. There are probably less than a dozen across the nation that truly matter in the Republican primary this year — and Sununu’s stamp of approval is one of them. Part of the reason is his state: New Hampshire’s early role in the primary calendar amplifies the significance of the otherwise small state. Independents can vote in the primary there, which distinguishes the state from the political calculus at work in Iowa and South Carolina, where the GOP electorates have higher percentages of social conservatives and evangelicals.

Sununu’s personal popularity also changes the equation. Despite being one of the GOP’s leading Trump critics, he retains his viability within the party. He’s coming off a big reelection victory in 2022 where he won more votes than any other candidate on the New Hampshire ballot, and has been a rare statewide bright spot for his party over the past decade — since 2011, Democrats have won every presidential election and Senate contest.

The problem, of course, is that there are limits to what Sununu can deliver in a party that remains in thrall to Donald Trump. For all the hype that will attach to his endorsement of Haley, the fact remains that Trump remains the overwhelming GOP frontrunner, both nationally and in New Hampshire. His lead over Haley, who is in second place in Granite State polls, is more than 2-to-1.

In one recent poll from Suffolk University/The Boston Globe/USA Today, 86 percent of likely New Hampshire Republican primary voters said a Sununu endorsement would not impact their vote, compared to just 13 percent who said it would.

And recent election history suggests gubernatorial endorsements rarely move the dial for primary voters. Other than Charlie Crist’s last-minute 2008 endorsement of John McCain in Florida, there aren’t many standout examples over the past quarter-century. Governors, for their part, have become increasingly reluctant to put skin in the game before any primary votes are cast for fear of blowback or wasting their political capital. (Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, who endorsed DeSantis in November and incurred the wrath of Trump, is a prominent example of a governor who bucked that trend).

In Sununu’s case, it’s worth remembering that prior to 2000, one of the more memorable examples of a governor lifting a presidential candidate came from within his own family —

his father, former Gov. John Sununu, went all out for George H.W. Bush in the 1988 New Hampshire primary and played a key role in helping Bush defeat Sen. Robert Dole there.

Haley isn’t really battling for victory in New Hampshire — she’s engaged in a fight for second place, to claim the mantle as the Trump alternative. She’s playing a longer game, and in that context, Sununu’s endorsement has enhanced value. He may be viewed in some party quarters as a small-state governor and a suspected squish, but as a member of the GOP’s governing wing and a rare Republican who has thrived in the blue killing fields of New England, his voice can’t be easily dismissed.

Before endorsing Haley, Sununu spent time squiring both DeSantis and Christie around his home state. In light of DeSantis’ fading prospects in New Hampshire , Sununu’s decision couldn’t have come as much of a surprise. For Christie, who’s staked his entire campaign on a strong performance there, it will leave a bigger bruise .

“This is the best day of Nikki Haley’s campaign,” said Jim Merrill, a veteran GOP strategist who ran both of Mitt Romney’s campaigns in New Hampshire, but is not working for a candidate this year. “She’s earning the support of the most popular and successful Republican of his generation up here. It’s going to give her a real shot in the arm in New Hampshire, where she’s already shown some momentum and growth, but it also gives her a national surrogate who I’m sure you’re going to see on the Sunday shows and talking to donors.”

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at cmahtesian@politico.com or on X (formerly known as Twitter) at @PoliticoCharlie .

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— Johnson almost certainly has votes to formalize Biden impeachment inquiry: House Republicans almost certainly have the votes needed to formally launch an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden this week . Nearly all GOP members either plan to or lean towards supporting a vote to formalize their investigation into the Democratic president and his family’s business dealings, according to a POLITICO whip count, while all House Democrats are expected to unanimously oppose. It was a tricky whip operation for Speaker Mike Johnson, who can only afford to lose three GOP votes assuming full House attendance. The Louisiana Republican, top investigators and his leadership team worked to win over Republicans in battleground districts who for months had been loath to support such a vote but, so far, only one GOP lawmaker seems likely to oppose the resolution to greenlight the inquiry on Wednesday.

— New York’s top court orders new House district lines: New York’s top court is giving Democrats another shot at drawing congressional lines in 2024 , smoothing the path for pickups for the party in a state where they underperformed in 2022 and helped hand House control to Republicans. A 4-3 decision by the Court of Appeals today ordered a bipartisan commission that deadlocked last year to reconvene and produce new draft plans by the end of February.

— Judge: Giuliani may have defamed Georgia election workers again: Rudy Giuliani’s defiant public statements outside a Washington, D.C., federal courthouse — just minutes after he departed the first day of his civil trial for defaming two Georgia election workers — may have defamed them yet again , the judge presiding over the proceedings said today. “Was Mr. Giuliani just playing for the cameras?” wondered U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell, who has already found Giuliani liable for lying about the workers, Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, by accusing them of manipulating ballots in the 2020 election. After the first day of his trial, when jurors began to hear evidence to determine just how much Giuliani must pay for defaming the two women, Giuliani approached television cameras outside the courthouse and reiterated his attacks on them.

— Claudine Gay holds on as Harvard president, rebuffing lawmakers: Harvard University’s highest governing board released a statement today standing by President Claudine Gay amid calls from Capitol Hill seeking her removal after responses she gave at a House Education committee hearing on antisemitism. “In this tumultuous and difficult time, we unanimously stand in support of President Gay,” the Harvard Corporation wrote in a statement. “At Harvard, we champion open discourse and academic freedom, and we are united in our strong belief that calls for violence against our students and disruptions of the classroom experience will not be tolerated.”

 

Enter the “room where it happens”, where global power players shape policy and politics, with Power Play. POLITICO’s brand-new podcast will host conversations with the leaders and power players shaping the biggest ideas and driving the global conversations, moderated by award-winning journalist Anne McElvoy. Sign up today to be notified of new episodes – click here .

 
 
NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

CHRISTIE COOKED? — It was a win for Nikki Haley, but a blow for Chris Christie — today, Chris Sununu, New Hampshire’s popular governor and a longtime friend of Christie, endorsed the former U.N. ambassador. Christie couldn’t even land the support of the guy who once called Trump “fucking crazy.” Not even in the state in which he’s staking his campaign, writes POLITICO.

Christie seemed to know it was coming. He sought to downplay the importance of Sununu’s endorsement as Haley’s polling surge made it increasingly unlikely he was going to get it. And his campaign did much the same today.

THE OTHER MENENDEZ — Rep. Rob Menendez (D-N.J.), son of indicted Senator Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), is getting a primary challenger for his New Jersey House seat in 2024 , POLITICO reports. Hoboken Mayor Ravi Bhalla announced his bid to unseat the junior Menendez today.

The election will test whether the son can avoid being dragged down by his father, who faces federal charges for being a foreign agent and accepting bribes in cash and gold bars. The senator already faces his own series of primary challengers, among them Rep. Andy Kim (D-N.J.) and New Jersey’s first lady Tammy Murphy.

Menendez questioned Bhalla’s jump into the race in a statement: “it seems the only reason Ravi has entered the race after endorsing me in 2022 and publicly applauding our work this year is because a week after losing control of the city council, he sees no political future for himself in Hoboken.”

FAMILY MATTERS — Democrats fear Hunter Biden’s prolonged scandals could impact his father’s chances at reelection, The Messenger reports . Democratic strategists described the Hunter Biden mess as a “distraction” with the ability to ruin President Joe Biden’s 2024 campaign.

Republicans have continued to villainize Hunter Biden, especially ahead of a possible impeachment inquiry into the president tomorrow. Biden allies have claimed the problems have been overblown — but still worry about the effect Hunter Biden may have in his reelection.

To many of the strategists, Hunter Biden’s legal and personal troubles resemble the emails that kept Hillary Clinton from the presidency. While the president still faces plenty of other challenges ahead of 2024 — his age, most notably — strategists worry the Hunter Biden troubles could be an effective detractor.

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

A view of a phone tower of Ukrainian mobile telephone network operator Kyivstar.

A view of a phone tower of Ukrainian mobile telephone network operator Kyivstar seen in the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine, on Nov. 30, 2022. | Andrew Kravchenko/AP

GETTING OFFLINE — Ukraine’s largest telecom operator was targeted by a cyberattack today that severely impacted internet services in portions of the country, with government agencies blaming Russia, reports POLITICO.

The attack comes as experts are warning that Russia is likely to intensify its cyberattacks on Ukraine in the winter months and marks one of the largest cyberattacks against a Ukrainian company since the beginning of Russia’s invasion early last year.

Ukrainian telecom group Kyivstar posted in a translated statement on X on this morning that the company was “the target of a powerful hacker attack” which caused “a technical failure” that led to the company’s telecom and internet access networks collapsing. The company, with about 26 million customers in Ukraine, wrote on X that “our enemies are insidious, but we are ready to face any difficulties, overcome and continue working for Ukraine.”

The Security Service of Ukraine opened a criminal investigation into the incident, according to a translated statement from the agency, and the SSU suspects that “Russian special services” are behind the attack. The SSU, which is working with Kyivstar to recover from the attack, sent a team to the company as soon as the attack was reported.

But not every agency is rushing to blame Russia. Ukraine’s State Service of Special Communications and Information Protection, the nation’s cybersecurity agency, said in a statement sent to reporters that “it is too early to draw conclusions,” and noted that specialists from Ukraine’s Computer Emergency Response team are involved in responding to the attack.

 

POLITICO AT CES® 2024 : We are going ALL On at CES 2024 with a special edition of the POLITICO Digital Future Daily newsletter. The CES-focused newsletter will take you inside the most powerful tech event in the world, featuring revolutionary products that cut across verticals, and insights from industry leaders that are shaping the future of innovation. The newsletter runs from Jan. 9-12 and will focus on the public policy-related aspects of the gathering. Sign up today to receive exclusive coverage of the show .

 
 
NIGHTLY NUMBER

0.1 percent

The amount that the consumer price index, a measure of the average change in prices over time, rose from October to November , according to a report released today from the Labor Department. That’s a miniscule number that spells good news for future inflation. At the same time, the latest data on consumer inflation showed that prices in some areas — services such as restaurants, used cars and auto insurance — continued to rise uncomfortably fast.

RADAR SWEEP

DEPT. OF RETURNS — From grabbing the gift receipts to mailing back Amazon purchases that came too late, consumers are constantly making returns. But what happens to these returned items after they’re shipped back? Amanda Mull recently looked to answer that question and figure out what happens to the unwanted stuff people return every day . She shadowed a worker at a Pennsylvania returns processing facility, where she looked at the lifespan of returned merchandise. She watched workers sort through returned clothes using everything from fabric type to smell to determine whether it can be resold — or thrown away. In a story for The Atlantic, Mull explores what happens to the items we return, whether it’s back on the shelf or (more likely) left in a landfill.

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 1987: Two Israeli soldiers run towards a group of Palestinian youth, background, who had been hurling rocks and bottles at them in Nablus — a city in the West Bank — during demonstrations throughout the city and other parts of the region. The demonstrations, termed the first Palestinian Intifada, began after an Israeli truck driver struck a car and killed four Palestinian civilians on Dec. 9, 1987, and lasted through the Madrid
 Conference of 1991.

On this date in 1987: Two Israeli soldiers run towards a group of Palestinian youth, background, who had been hurling rocks and bottles at them in Nablus — a city in the West Bank — during demonstrations throughout the city and other parts of the region. The demonstrations, termed the first Palestinian Intifada, began after an Israeli truck driver struck a car and killed four Palestinian civilians on Dec. 9, 1987, and lasted through the Madrid Conference of 1991. | Max Nash/AP

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