Friday, December 22, 2023

Informed Comment daily updates (12/22/2023)

 

Just Say No: Biden Must Create Peace out of the Gaza Crisis and Rein in the Israeli Right

Just Say No: Biden Must Create Peace out of the Gaza Crisis and Rein in the Israeli Right

Take a Leaf from the Book of George H. W. Bush

Gaza Crisis: US-Led Taskforce deploys in Red Sea and Considers Strikes on Yemen

Gaza Crisis: US-Led Taskforce deploys in Red Sea and Considers Strikes on Yemen

By Basil Germond, Lancaster University | – The US is reportedly considering strikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen that have been menacing commercial ships in the Red Sea since the conflict began in Gaza. The Pentagon has a range of options for missile attacks on Houthi positions and has moved the Dwight D. Eisenhower carrier […]

The US and China at Year’s End: Still Treading on the Precipice

The US and China at Year’s End: Still Treading on the Precipice

( Tomdispatch.com) – This hasn’t exactly been a year of good news when it comes to our war-torn, beleaguered planet, but on November 15th, U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping took one small step back from the precipice. Until they talked in a mansion near San Francisco, it seemed as if their […]

Old posts you may have missed

If you Prick us, do We not Bleed? – Shakespeare in Gaza

Hamtramck, Michigan, City Council Votes to rename Street in Support of Palestine

2023’s extreme Storms, Heat and Wildfires broke Records, and Burning Fossil Fuels Played a big Part

How Big Oil is Taking us for a Fossil-Fuelized Ride: With the World the Hottest in 125,00 Years, we’re being Gaslighted

Why the 14th Amendment Really does Bar Trump from Office

Who Killed the Two-State Solution? Israel!

Bloodbath: Israel’s War on Gaza’s Hospitals and their Patients



POLITICO Nightly: Why Democrats can’t take the win on U.S. Steel

 

POLITICO Nightly logo

BY GAVIN BADE

A sign at the entrance of U.S. Steel's Great Lakes Steel Plant seen on Sept. 12, 2023 in River Rouge, Mich.

A sign at the entrance of U.S. Steel's Great Lakes Steel Plant seen on Sept. 12, 2023 in River Rouge, Mich. | Aaron J. Thornton/Getty Images for Industrious Labs

STEEL DEAL POLITICS — This week could have been a huge victory lap for Democrats and the Biden administration’s industrial policy. Instead, fear of Trump’s megaphone has them stumbling for a coherent message.

On Monday, U.S. Steel announced it would be acquired by Japan’s Nippon Steel for over $14 billion. The deal puts an end to months of negotiations over the fate of the moribund U.S. industrial giant, but it has ignited a firestorm in Washington.

On its face, the steel deal could show the strength of the U.S. industrial economy under Biden. The president’s infrastructure package and Inflation Reduction Act both contained huge incentives for construction firms to buy American-made steel for new bridges, factories and clean energy products. And Biden has kept Trump-era tariffs on steel and aluminum in place for most of the world, protecting U.S. Steel and other domestic producers.

Those policies helped turn U.S. Steel — considered a hollow husk of the American industrial economy only a few years ago — into a highly investable asset. Nippon is paying a 40 percent premium on U.S. Steel’s stock price in the purchase, and the deal is the Japanese smelter’s first major foray into the American market. Global firms don’t do that without expectations of hefty returns.

That could be cause for celebration: a venerated industrial firm from one of our most reliable allies is paying a huge premium to access the fruits of America’s new economic policies. Encouraging foreign investment in the U.S. has always been one of the stated goals of Biden’s new industrial policy — a reversal of decades of outsourcing — and here’s a chief example of the policies paying off for workers and investors alike.

Instead, Rust Belt Democrats are running in the other direction — seemingly scared by the simple fact that Nippon is a Japanese company, and not American.

Pennsylvania Sens. John Fetterman and Bob Casey have urged Biden to block the deal on national security grounds. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) — facing a tough reelection next year — has lamented that the company wasn’t sold to U.S.-based Cleveland Cliffs instead. Moderate and progressive Democratic House members across the Midwest have piled on, as has Biden’s former economic adviser Brian Deese.

Biden, who must run the industrial swing state gauntlet of Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin to win reelection, has been listening. Late Thursday afternoon, the White House weighed in with a statement saying that the president believes the planned purchase deserves “serious scrutiny” because of potential national security and supply chain concerns.

Most of these arguments are wrong-headed. A deal with Cleveland Cliffs, for instance, was on the table months ago. But the U.S. company was handily outbid by its Japanese opposition — offering $35 per share to Nippon’s $55. Any deal with Cleveland Cliffs likely would have raised antitrust concerns — the combined company would have owned 80 percent of U.S. blast furnace capacity — and could have resulted in redundancies and layoffs due to the firms’ overlapping footprints.

The national security concerns are even thinner. When Trump invoked national security arguments to impose tariffs on imported steel in 2018, the goal was to protect domestic production, not shut out any foreign ownership. The Japanese government is also among the most steadfast U.S. allies in the world and a crucial regional bulwark against China.

Union concerns do give some pause. The United Steelworkers had previously supported an acquisition by Cleveland Cliffs and has spoken out against the Nippon deal. But their current contract with U.S. Steel stipulates that any new buyer must agree to a new labor agreement before completing the acquisition. If Nippon is so hungry for a deal that it will pay a 40 percent premium, some concessions to the union don’t seem out of reach.

So, why the outcry from Democrats? Trump’s specter lurks behind all of these policy discussions, even though he and his allies have yet to weigh in on the deal.

Still chastened by Trump’s 2016 victory in the industrial Midwest, Democrats have bent over backwards for years to appear more “America-first” than the 45th president. That’s the main motivation behind Biden’s aggressive manufacturing policies in the IRA, his preservation of Trump’s tariffs on China, and his decision — with hefty pressure from Midwestern Democrats — to pull back on Indo-Pacific trade talks last month in San Francisco. The November elections chastened Democrats even further, after voters in a rural Michigan town threw out their local government due to its support for a Chinese-owned battery factory — despite the thousands of jobs it promised an impoverished region.

The subtext is the same when it comes to the U.S. Steel deal. Even when the economics could be on their side, Democrats are so afraid of appearing like Clinton-era globalists that they will disavow any investments that come with a foreign flag — even one of our closest allies.

Those protestations won’t protect Democrats from GOP attacks. In Pennsylvania, Casey has already been fending off accusations that he’s soft on China from his Republican challenger David McCormick – despite the fact that Casey is one of the most hawkish Democrats on China and has worked for years to increase oversight of American banks’ activities in the Chinese economy. If Democrats are to recapture the economic narrative, they might do well to take a page from Dan Kildee, the labor-friendly, veteran Democratic congressman from Flint, Michigan, who is retiring next year.

“What we’ve learned is you make the right decisions about the right policies, no matter what [Republicans] are going to turn it into a political question,” Kildee said when asked last week about trade policies in Congress. “So, just do the right thing and we’ll handle the politics later.”

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at gbade@politico.com or on X (formerly known as Twitter) at @GavinBade. PROGRAMMING NOTE: We’ll be off next week for the holidays but back to our normal schedule on Tuesday, Jan. 2.

 

GLOBAL PLAYBOOK IS TAKING YOU TO DAVOS! Unlock the insider's guide to one of the world's most influential gatherings as POLITICO's Global Playbook takes you behind the scenes of the 2024 World Economic Forum. Author Suzanne Lynch will be on the ground in the Swiss Alps, bringing you the exclusive conversations, shifting power dynamics and groundbreaking ideas shaping the agenda in Davos. Stay in the know with POLITICO's Global Playbook, your VIP pass to the world’s most influential gatherings. SUBSCRIBE NOW .

 
 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— Senate returns dozens of nominations to Biden to restart process in 2024, including Julie Su: The Senate sent back more than 50 nominations to President Joe Biden as it wrapped its work for 2023 on Wednesday, most notably that of acting Labor Secretary Julie Su. Those nominees will have to be resubmitted by the president and begin the Senate confirmation process anew, since the chamber didn’t approve them within the calendar year. The positions range from Cabinet-level posts like Su’s to appeals court judicial nominees to ambassadors, but also less visible roles like ones on the Merit Systems Protection Board and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. “It is clear Ms. Su lacks the necessary votes for confirmation,” said Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), ranking member of the Senate HELP Committee. “I urge President Biden to put forward a nominee who is committed to fair enforcement of our nation’s labor laws and is capable of being confirmed in the Senate.”

— Giuliani files for bankruptcy: Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani filed for bankruptcy in New York today, as legal bills from his failed efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election for former President Donald Trump pile up. The filing comes days after Giuliani, 79, was ordered to pay $148 million in damages to two former Georgia election workers who said their lives were upended after the former Trump lawyer falsely accused them of manipulating ballots during the 2020 election.

— Harvard president Claudine Gay facing new plagiarism accusations: Harvard University President Claudine Gay is facing new plagiarism accusations as the news media and conservative activists scrutinize the academic record of the leader of America’s oldest university. An internal review from Harvard Wednesday night announced that while her actions did not rise to the level of serious wrongdoing under the university’s rules, Gay still used “duplicative language without proper attribution” in the writing of her 1997 dissertation, according to the student newspaper, the Harvard Crimson. The university told the paper that Gay, who earned her doctorate from Harvard in political science, would submit three additional corrections to her dissertation in response.

NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

COLORADO CALL — Top officials with Donald Trump’s presidential campaign and the Colorado Republican Party spoke today to discuss plans of action after the Colorado Supreme Court’s decision to throw the former president off of the Republican primary ballot, reports POLITICO. The call, which involved Clayton Henson, a former White House aide who has been a liaison between the Trump campaign and state parties, was confirmed by Dave Williams, the chair of the Colorado GOP.

Williams said that the Colorado GOP will appeal the Colorado court’s decision — holding that Trump was invalidated from appearing on the ballot because he’d incited an insurrection on Jan. 6 — to the Supreme Court. Depending on how the U.S. Supreme Court ruled, he said, the party would ask the Republican National Committee for a waiver to hold a caucus instead of a primary election.

VEEP TOUR — Vice President Kamala Harris is visiting Nevada and South Carolina next month, two of the earliest states on the Democratic presidential calendar, where she’ll court voters she and President Joe Biden hope to win over, reports the Associated Press.

Harris will meet with members of the powerful casino workers’ Culinary Union in Las Vegas on Jan. 3, which offers one of the most powerful endorsements in Nevada Democratic politics, the White House said today. Three days later, she plans to head to Myrtle Beach in South Carolina, home of the Democrats’ leadoff primary, to address an annual women’s retreat of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the oldest historically Black denomination in the U.S.

Harris has been touring the country to tout the administration’s accomplishments, most recently angling to energize younger voters during a multi-stop college tour. Next month she plans to embark on a nationwide series of events to rally voters to give Biden a second term and regain full control of Congress.

AROUND THE WORLD

Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Air Force Gen. C.Q. Brown, participates in a virtual Ukraine Defense Contact Group (UDCG) meeting, on  Nov. 22, 2023, at the Pentagon in Washington.

Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Air Force Gen. C.Q. Brown, participates in a virtual Ukraine Defense Contact Group (UDCG) meeting, on Nov. 22, 2023, at the Pentagon in Washington. | Cliff Owen/AP

THAWING RELATIONS — Gen. C.Q. Brown, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke to his Chinese counterpart Gen. Liu Zhenli this morning, ending a nearly year-and-a-half impasse between the two militaries, the Pentagon announced, reports POLITICO.

Brown is the first senior U.S. military official to speak with his Chinese counterpart since the two countries’ leaders agreed in November to resume military communications after China froze all talks in retaliation for then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan in August 2022. The two spoke during a video teleconference this morning, according to the Pentagon.

Brown and Liu, China’s chief of the Joint Staff, discussed “the importance of working together to responsibly manage competition, avoid miscalculations, and maintain open and direct lines of communication,” according to a readout provided by the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff. Brown “reiterated the importance of the People’s Liberation Army engaging in substantive dialogue to reduce the likelihood of misunderstandings.”

GLOOM AND DOOM — European leaders are increasingly concerned by the stalemated war in Ukraine, and with allies’ struggles in keeping ahead of new Russian arms production, reports POLITICO.

A year that began with promises of a huge Ukrainian counteroffensive to match last year’s surprise push through hundreds of miles of Russian-occupied territory devolved into a bloody, yard-by-yard fight across hundreds of miles of front, that saw little territorial gain despite a massive human cost.

“Russia has the capability and the ability to go on with this war for years,” Finnish Defense Minister Antti Häkkänen said during a visit to Washington this week where he signed a new defense agreement with the U.S. “Many are overestimating that the West is winning this, that Ukraine is winning.”

This month, Häkkänen’s government announced it is doubling its production of ammunition, committing to send much of it to Ukraine as it struggles with thinning supplies from Western allies and the slow buildup of production capabilities in the U.S. and Europe. He declined to disclose how large the new output will be, or identify the exact munitions that will be involved.

With about $25 million in seed money from the government along with multiyear contracts to guarantee that the work continues in the coming years, the project is also being funded by new investments from NAMMO, the Norwegian defense firm with a large presence in Finland. The production increases will reach their peak by 2027. Public and private investments, plus long-term purchase contracts will total $1.3 billion from 2024 to 2030.

Those kinds of long-term contracts have proven a major hurdle for American and European governments, which have been reluctant to make guaranteed commitments to defense spending in future years. But without them, even some major defense companies have been reluctant to invest their own money in weapons critical to the war in Ukraine, fearing that the resolve of governments will eventually falter.

 

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

65 percent

The percentage of Americans who say they always or often feel exhausted when talking about politics, a record dissatisfaction that comes at a time in which only 4 percent of U.S. adults say that our political system is working “extremely well” or “very well” according to Pew Research Center.

RADAR SWEEP

CHAPLAIN PD — Meet the Los Angeles Police Department Chaplain Corps, 47 volunteer chaplains across multiple faiths aimed to build camaraderie within the police department and trust within their community. In first responder jobs where trauma is a near daily experience, LAPD has recruited Catholic, Buddhist, Jewish, Muslim, Toaist, Protestant and Interfaith leaders to be a listening ear in the department. The corps is just one instance in the trend of law enforcement bringing spiritual leaders into the force — there are more than 600 chaplains in police departments across 32 states, according to the general director of the United States Chaplain Corps. In this story for CNN, Mike Valerio looks at the members of the LAPD Chaplain Corps — including a motorcycle riding monsignor — and how the group is trying to destigmatize mental health issues in their police departments.

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 1989: Demonstrators, protesting the United States military action in Panama, congregate outside the Federal building in Chicago. The protesters, made up of Central American human rights groups, were allowed to march inside the building for several minutes, then were forcibly removed when they refused to leave on their own.

On this date in 1989: Demonstrators, protesting the United States military action in Panama, congregate outside the Federal building in Chicago. The protesters, made up of Central American human rights groups, were allowed to march inside the building for several minutes, then were forcibly removed when they refused to leave on their own. | John Swart/AP

Did someone forward this email to you?  Sign up here .

 

Follow us on Twitter

Charlie Mahtesian @PoliticoCharlie

Calder McHugh @calder_mchugh

 

FOLLOW US

Follow us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterFollow us on InstagramListen on Apple Podcast
 


POLITICO, LLC 1000 Wilson Blvd. Arlington, VA, 22209, USA




Rep. Elise Stefanik files complaint against judge over her Trump comments

 
ELISE STEFANIK WAS BOOTED FROM HARVARD BECAUSE SHE'S AN ELECTION DENIER AMONG OTHER THINGS

Rep. Elise Stefanik files complaint against judge over her Trump comments

Dec. 15 (UPI) -- Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., filed an ethics complaint Friday against a federal judge who oversaw multiple Jan. 6-related cases.

Stefanik formally requested an ethics investigation into U.S. District Court Judge Beryll Howell, accusing her of judicial misconduct in a "highly inappropriate speech" the judge gave last month after accepting an award at the Women's White Collar Defense Association awards gala in Washington, D.C.

In her speech, Howell warned of the effect of "big lies" in regard to the storming of the Capitol on Jan. 6.

"My D.C. judicial colleagues and I regularly see the impact of big lies at the sentencing of hundreds, hundreds of individuals who have been convicted for offense conduct on Jan. 6, 2021, when they disrupted the certification of the 2020 presidential election at the U.S. Capitol," she said.

In her complaint to the Judicial Council of the D.C. Circuit, Stefanik accused Howell of suggesting that re-electing former President Donald Trump will lead to authoritarianism in America and that her speech "undermines public trust in judicial independence, in violation of Canon 2B."

"Partisans cannot use our judicial system to exact political revenge against those with whom they disagree," the complaint read. "The consequences for our legal system, Constitution, and country would be devastating."

Howell, who was appointed by former President Barack Obama, has issued several decisions against Jan. 6 defendants and oversaw the grand jury that indicted Trump in his federal 2020 election subversion case.

Howell is not the only judge Stefanik has targeted with an ethics inquiry. A staunch Trump supporter and member of GOP leadership, Stefanik in November filed a complaint against Judge Arthur Engoron, who ruled Trump and the Trump Organization committed systematic business fraud for years.

Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., appears at a press conference at the U.S. Capitol in November. Stefanik filed an ethics complaint Friday against a federal judge who oversaw multiple Jan. 6-related cases

Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., appears at a press conference at the U.S. Capitol in November. Stefanik filed an ethics complaint Friday against a federal judge who oversaw multiple Jan. 6-related cases


https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/rep-elise-stefanik-files-complaint-against-judge-over-her-trump-comments/ar-AA1lzdwJ?ocid=socialshare&cvid=252e92ecd32245408725be03b234efe7&ei=16&fbclid=IwAR1xEyfbEkMIWgpKNjbZyF3XrXv6okYrL6OflGK3pljfVabWy5Cg2GVkXcg

The Storyteller: CHRISTMAS SECRET SANTA

 

My friend handed me a very old metal match box car today. Then he said I found this yesterday and it reminded me of a major life lesson. I held it in my hand and looked at it while he talked.
He said, "when I was in elementary school, we did a Secret Santa in my class room at school. All the kids drew a name and then we exchanged presents the last day before Christmas break". He said, "my parents went out and bought me a nice new toy to give to the child I had drawn. My mom wrapped it up and the kid loved the present that received it."
He then said, "I went and found my present from a boy in my class that I didnt really know. It looked like it had been wrapped with news paper." He said, "I opened it and it was that little car you are holding in your hand." He said, "... but when he gave it to me it was dirty and looked well played with." He said "I was mad I had given such a nice gift and he had put so little effort into his."
“I felt cheated.” He said, “but later I learned the kid lived in a very runned down shack. His mom was sick and his daddy had left them years before. He said they barely had enough money to have heat and food.” He said, "when I realized he had given me one of his only few toys, I felt ashamed for the way I treated him when I got the gift."
He said, “I only learned how poor he was after he quit coming to school and it we were told his mom had died and he had been sent to foster care. I never saw him again.” He said, “I kept this little car all these years because I know it was the best present I have ever gotten.”
I thought about this story and looked at that little car sitting in my hand and I cried. How many times in my life have I been given something from someone and not appreciated it's TRUE value. This kid had given with his heart when he had so little and it made me realize I need to always remember to never judge anything on the surface and always look deeper.
I just wanted to put this story out there to you all in this season of giving."

~ Author unknown
May be an image of toy





The GOP just tried to kick hundreds of students off the voter rolls

    This year, MAGA GOP activists in Georgia attempted to disenfranchise hundreds of students by trying to kick them off the voter rolls. De...