Week 187: August 16-22

2020 Election

On Tuesday DeJoy walked back changes to the postal service: To avoid even the appearance of any impact on election mail, I am suspending these initiatives until after the election is concluded.”

DeJoy testified before the Senate on Friday: He assured that the USPS would process every ballot and changes were only made for budgetary reasons: “if DeJoy managed to assuage concerns about the intent of the changes he has brought to the Postal Service, he was less effective in salving worries about their implementation or consequences. And that’s why Democrats emerged from today’s two-hour hearing with scarcely more confidence in DeJoy’s leadership than when the hearing started.”

Also on Tuesday Biden was officially nominated as the Democratic presidential candidate at the 2020 Democratic Convention.

In Russia News

The Senate Intelligence committee released its final report on the 2016 election interference. It confirmed and in some cases went farther than the Mueller Report on how the Trump campaign colluded with Russian GRU.

Trump’s Job Approval: 41.8%

COVID-19 Cases / Deaths: 5,598,547 / 174,645

Week 186: August 9-15

2020 Election

Biden picked Kamala Harris as his running mate this week. By Thursday Trump was questioning her citizenship and her right to stand as vice president.

On Thursday Trump said about voting by mail: “They need that money in order to have the post office work so it can take all of these millions and millions of ballots,” Mr. Trump said Thursday morning in an interview on Fox Business, referring to Democratic demands. “If they don’t get those two items, that means you can’t have universal mail-in voting because they’re not equipped to have it.”

On Wednesday Trump continued to push a campaign theme of protecting “suburban housewives” from Democrat policies: “They’re going to destroy suburbia. And just so you understand, 30+% of people living in suburbia are minorities — African American, Asian American, Hispanic American,” Trump said during the press conference. “The number’s even higher; they say 35, but I like to cut it a little lower.”

On Thursday this was the reporting: Officials have repeatedly said that the agency is equipped to handle a surge in mail-in voting, with Mr. DeJoy telling a board meeting last Friday that the Postal Service “has ample capacity to deliver all election mail securely and on time in accordance with our delivery standards.”

Yet by Friday the New York Times reported: In letters sent in July to all 50 states and the District of Columbia, Thomas J. Marshall, the general counsel for the Postal Service, told most of them that “certain deadlines for requesting and casting mail-in ballots are incongruous with the Postal Service’s delivery standards.”… Mr. Marshall urged those with tight schedules to require that residents request ballots at least 15 days before an election — rather than the shorter periods currently allowed under the laws of many states.

“This mismatch creates a risk that ballots requested near the deadline under state law will not be returned by mail in time to be counted,” Mr. Marshall wrote.
…Mail operations in several battleground states were hit hard by the cuts. On the list for removal were 24 delivery bar code sorters in Ohio, 11 in Detroit, 11 in Florida, nine in Wisconsin, eight in Philadelphia and five in Arizona.

In Russia News

On Wednesday Pompeo revealed: “If the Russians are offering money to kill Americans or, for that matter, other Westerners as well, there will be an enormous price to pay. That’s what I shared with Foreign Minister Lavrov,”

Trump’s Job Approval: 41.7%

COVID-19 Cases / Deaths: 5,285,546 / 167,546

Week 185: August 2-8

After congressional talks broke down, Trump issued executive orders designed to provide some financial relief.

It’s reported this week that Pompeo spoke with Lavrov about Russia bounties to the Taliban.

This is the same week that Trump said in the Axios interview that he was never told about the bounties and never talked to Putin about it. Among other highlights from the Trump interview: “They are dying. That’s true. It is what it is. … It’s under control as much as you can control it.”

More on Trump-appointed USPS leader, Louis DeJoy: On Friday, he shifted top personnel, including some decades-long veterans of the Postal Service, and made changes to its organizational structure.

According to the New York Times:  Russia is using a range of techniques to denigrate Joseph R. Biden Jr., American intelligence officials said Friday in their first public assessment that Moscow continues to try to interfere in the 2020 campaign to help President Trump.

The Washington Post reported on Trump’s early summer response: Under mounting pressure to improve the president’s reelection chances as his poll numbers declined, the White House had what was described as a stand-down order on engaging publicly on the virus through the month of June, part of a deliberate strategy to spotlight other issues even as the contagion spread wildly across the country. A senior administration official said there was a desire to focus on the economy in June.

One reason for Trump’s long-standing reluctance to wear a mask — although he sported one Thursday during a factory visit in Ohio — is the concern that his prized political base, which has held steady in its approval of him, is not enthusiastic about wearing them.

Trump’s Job Approval: 41.4%

COVID-19 Cases / Deaths: 4,920,369 / 160,220

Week 184: July 26-August 1

Border Patrol and US Marshals are sending more reinforcements to Portland.

The New York Times got its hands on a memo prepared by the FBI Counterterrorism Mission Center shows that officials were overreacting to the protests early on: A memo from the deputy director of the F.B.I., dated June 2, demanded an immediate mobilization as protests gathered after George Floyd’s death while in police custody a week earlier. David L. Bowdich, the F.B.I.’s No. 2, declared the situation “a national crisis,” and wrote that in addition to investigating “violent protesters, instigators” and “inciters,” bureau leaders should collect information with “robust social media exploitation teams” and examine what appeared to be “highly organized behavior.”

As for expansion of this effort the Times piece has this detail: The department also sent a tactical team to stand by in Seattle last week, hours after department officials told the mayor there no such deployment would occur. After pushback from those local officials, the administration told the Seattle government on Tuesday the team had left the city.

The Washington Post reports on this questions: “Trump’s shortcomings have perplexed even some of his most loyal allies, who increasingly have wondered why the president has not at least pantomimed a sense of command over the crisis or conveyed compassion for the millions of Americans hurt by it.”
The answer: “People close to Trump, many speaking on the condition of anonymity to share candid discussions and impressions, say the president’s inability to wholly address the crisis is due to his almost pathological unwillingness to admit error; a positive feedback loop of overly rosy assessments and data from advisers and Fox News; and a penchant for magical thinking that prevented him from fully engaging with the pandemic.”

One strategy advisors are deploying against Trump’s inaction: senior advisers began presenting Trump with maps and data showing spikes in coronavirus cases among “our people” in Republican states, a senior administration official said. They also shared projections predicting that virus surges could soon hit politically important states in the Midwest — including Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin, the official said.

Barr testified before the House this week.

DHS and Oregon reached a deal to remove the unmarked federal troops by Thursday: While Mr. Trump has used images of tactical agents cracking down on protesters in his campaign videos, there was an increasing sense in the administration that the violent scenes of unrest linked to federal agents in Portland could risk becoming a liability, an administration official said.

Trump has been targeting suburban voters in recent days. He tweeted this week to stoke fears about low income people moving in due to Democratic housing policy: Mr. Trump said on Twitter that “people living their Suburban Lifestyle Dream” would “no longer be bothered or financially hurt by having low income housing built in your neighborhood.” The president was referring to the administration’s decision last week to roll back an Obama-era program intended to combat racial segregation in suburban housing. The program expanded provisions in the Fair Housing Act to encourage diversification and “foster inclusive communities.”

On Thursday Trump tweeted: With Universal Mail-In Voting (not Absentee Voting, which is good), 2020 will be the most INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history. It will be a great embarrassment to the USA. Delay the Election until people can properly, securely and safely vote???

On Trump’s contribution to the stimulus bill: Rather than push for a comprehensive plan that could win support from both Democrats and Republicans, Mr. Trump first embraced big-ticket items that Senate Republicans did not want and that would do little to help millions of struggling workers and businesses. That included a payroll tax cut and an expanded tax break for business lunches, along with $1.75 billion to rebuild the F.B.I.’s headquarters in Washington.

There is growing concern about the postal service and the election: President Trump’s years long assault on the Postal Service and his increasingly dire warnings about the dangers of voting by mail are colliding as the presidential campaign enters its final months.

Trump’s Job Approval: 41.2%

COVID-19 Cases / Deaths: 4,542,579 / 152,870

Week 183: July 19-25

This week Trump make moves to have undocumented immigrants go uncounted in the Census.

Protestors in Portland have come on in larger numbers than recent weeks to stand against the militarized DHS, including a contingent of moms.

Trump said on Monday that more cities will be targeted: “New York and Chicago and Philadelphia, Detroit, and Baltimore and all of these—Oakland is a mess—we are not going to let this happen in the country, all run by liberal Democrats,” the president told reporters in the Oval Office. “We’re going to have more federal law enforcement, that I can tell you.”

David Grahm writes in the Atlantic that Trump Administration is trying to create a national police force akin to what some countries have in their Interior Ministry: “The agents out on the streets of Portland are detailed from Customs and Border Protection, the Transportation Security Administration, the Coast Guard, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Among the forces deployed in Washington last month, when Trump briefly barricaded himself within the White House, were officers from the Federal Bureau of Prisons…. The reason these agents are the ones being deployed is simply that they’re the ones who are available. In the absence of a federal police force, the administration is simply pulling in any federal law-enforcement officer that it has the power to reassign…. Whatever his motives, the precedents he’s creating are likely to endure: His successors will have a blueprint for the creation of a national police force that answers to the president.”

Wittes and Jurecic write: The tactical divisions of the Homeland Security Department from which the officers in Portland appear to hail—Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE)—are not typically deployed at protests, but charged with enforcing immigration law and guarding the U.S. border. And as an internal department memo obtained by The New York Times shows, the officers sent into Portland’s streets were not trained to handle crowds.
So why is the Trump administration sending into American cities officers who aren’t appropriately trained for the mission, are acting on legal authority that will require litigation to defend, and are being deployed to address a problem that the federal government could address by means far less provocative and in a fashion far less likely to escalate disorder?

Here is one more theory for Trump’s actions: In deploying federal forces, Trump appears to be trying to provoke clashes with protesters, which he can use to convince white suburban voters that he’s the last line of defense between them and the chaos allegedly incubating in cities, Rahm Emanuel, the former Chicago mayor, told me. Referring to the street battle between construction workers and anti-war protesters in Manhattan in 1970, Emanuel said, “Trump is trying to create his own hard-hat riot, and they are wearing [law-enforcement] helmets.”

Wednesday night the mayor of Portland joined the protests and was tear gassed by unidentified DHS officers.

The Washington Post reports that the Trump Administration was looking to escalate conflict with protestors in June but when the protests and statue vandalism died down, they chose to focus on Portland where the federal courthouse is being attacked nightly: One of the officials said the White House had long wanted to amplify strife in cities, encouraging DHS officials to talk about arrests of violent criminals in sanctuary cities and repeatedly urging ICE to disclose more details of raids than some in the agency were comfortable doing. “It was about getting viral online content,” one of the officials said.

Congressional talks between Republicans and the White House broke down this week over new stimulus money.

And there was more bad jobs news: New state unemployment claims increased last week for the first time in nearly four months, disturbing evidence that the struggling economy is backsliding at a time when coronavirus cases are on the rise.

The New York Times wrote a long piece about how Trump turned against stopping the virus in April and May: But their ultimate goal was to shift responsibility for leading the fight against the pandemic from the White House to the states. They referred to this as “state authority handoff,” and it was at the heart of what would become at once a catastrophic policy blunder and an attempt to escape blame for a crisis that had engulfed the country — perhaps one of the greatest failures of presidential leadership in generations.

Some key findings: “Mr. Trump’s rush to urge a return to normal would help undercut the social distancing and other measures that were holding down the numbers.
The president quickly came to feel trapped by his own reopening guidelines. States needed declining cases to reopen, or at least a declining rate of positive tests. But more testing meant overall cases were destined to go up, undercutting the president’s push to crank up the economy. The result was to intensify Mr. Trump’s remarkable public campaign against testing…”

After being re-arrested this week, a judge turned Michale Cohen free: “I make the finding that the purpose of transferring Mr. Cohen from furlough and home confinement to jail is retaliatory,” the judge, Alvin K. Hellerstein of Federal District Court in Manhattan, said in court. “And it’s retaliatory because of his desire to exercise his First Amendment rights to publish a book and to discuss anything about the book or anything else he wants on social media and with others.”

Trump’s Job Approval: 40.20%

COVID-19 Cases/Deaths: 4,099,310 / 160,220

COVID-19 Political Fallout — June-July 2020

Below is a monthly update, marking key metrics and commentary in from mid-June to mid-July, the fourth month since lockdowns began.

Polling Round Up

More people became concerned about COVID infection this month. According to Gallup (July 6-12) , people who are Some-Very Worried of contracting the virus rose to 53%, a 4 point increase over last month. And the people are are worried about Financial Hardship is now 50-50, a 6 point increase from the month before.

The Five Thirty Eight Tracker, which averages all COVID polls, found a 3.7% increase in people who are worried about the virus.

On July 15, only 38% of the country approved of Trump’s handling of the crisis. The approval spread increased from 12% underwater to 19.3% underwater, with 57.5% disapproving. This month was the highest jump in that spread.

Political Weirding

Cases began to climb this month: “Nationwide, cases have risen 15 percent over the last two weeks. Cases are rising in 18 states across the South, West and Midwest. Seven states hit single-day case records Saturday, and five others hit a record earlier in the week.”

Trump urged for a slowdown in testing at the Tulsa rally (June 20), and resumed rhetorically connecting the virus with China, calling it Kung Flu.

Dr. Fauci and three other leaders of the government’s coronavirus response who testified on Tuesday (June 21) cast a cloud over the sunny accounts offered by the president as he has portrayed the United States as a nation bouncing back from the brink…. “The next couple of weeks are going to be critical in our ability to address those surges that we are seeing in Florida, in Texas, in Arizona and other states,” Dr. Fauci added.

By midweek the crisis in southern and western states was clear. Arizona testing centers were slammed and unable to process all the test requests: The United States’ coronavirus testing capacity has begun to strain as the pandemic continues to spread, with over 35,000 cases recorded Tuesday. Across the country, more than a dozen public laboratories say they are now “challenged” to meet the demand.

The Atlantic: Yesterday [June 23], the U.S. reported 38,672 new cases of the coronavirus, the highest daily total so far. Ignore any attempt to explain away what is happening: The American coronavirus pandemic is once again at risk of spinning out of control. A new and brutal stage now menaces the Sun Belt states, whose residents face a nearly unbroken chain of outbreaks stretching from South Carolina to California. Across the South and large parts of the West, cases are soaring, hospitalizations are spiking, and a greater portion of tests are coming back positive.

This Atlantic piece is a good summary of the Sunbelt spikes, listing all the key data metrics. It is also an important historical record of the politics that lead to the spikes: what unites some of the most troublesome states is the all-or-nothing approach they took to pandemic suppression. The stay-at-home order in Texas, for instance, lifted on April 30. A day later, the state allowed nearly all of its businesses and public spaces—stores, malls, churches, restaurants, and movie theaters—to open with limited capacity. …A form of wishful thinking seemed to drive these decisions: If the virus could be ignored, then it might go away altogether….Eventually, Governor Greg Abbott of Texas and Governor Doug Ducey* of Arizona went even further, blocking cities and counties from implementing any pandemic-related restriction more stringent than that required by the state….Both governors finally reversed those policies last week. (“To state the obvious, COVID-19 is now spreading at an unacceptable rate in Texas, and it must be corralled,” Abbot said at a press conference on Monday. This had not been obvious to the governor less than a week earlier, when he told Texans that the state’s record-breaking number of new infections was “no reason today to be alarmed.”)

On testing: National testing capacity has expanded significantly since the start of the pandemic, recently reaching half a million daily tests. Federal health officials testified at a congressional hearing this week that the country has the capacity to do 15 million coronavirus tests per month; they expect that number to reach 40 million to 50 million by the fall. Experts have estimated that at least 500,000 coronavirus tests daily are what the country needs to safely reopen.

New York Times: For the first time, some governors are backtracking on reopening their states, issuing new restrictions for parts of the economy that had resumed…. The decisions in Texas and Florida to revert to stronger restrictions represented the strongest acknowledgment yet that reopening had not gone as planned in two of the nation’s most populous states, where only days ago their Republican governors were adamantly resisting calls to close back down.

The New York Times has to add a “Reversing” designation to its tally of lockdown categories for the states.

Arizona: At critical junctures, blunders by top officials undermined faith in the data purportedly driving decision-making, according to experts monitoring Arizona’s response. And when forbearance was most required, as the state began to reopen despite continued community transmission, an abrupt and uniform approach — without transparent benchmarks or latitude for stricken areas to hold back — led large parts of the public to believe the pandemic was over.

And Texas halted its reopening plan: bars closed; indoor dining reduced from 75% to 50% capacity (“If I could go back and redo anything, it probably would have been to slow down the opening of bars,” Mr. Abbott said in an interview with KVIA-TV in El Paso on Friday evening.)

Florida: no alcohol sales; restaurants must remain at 50% capacity (new rules put on place Friday June 26)

Frum has a good history of the politics of the pandemic.

Republicans began encouraging mask wearing this week (of June 28).

This reporting by the Washington Post shows how Coronavirus is becoming central to both presidential campaigns: The [Trump campaign] goal is to convince Americans that they can live with the virus — that schools should reopen, professional sports should return, a vaccine is likely to arrive by the end of the year and the economy will continue to improve.
White House officials also hope Americans will grow numb to the escalating death toll and learn to accept tens of thousands of new cases a day, according to three people familiar with the White House’s thinking, who requested anonymity to reveal internal deliberations. Americans will “live with the virus being a threat,” in the words of one of those people, a senior administration official.

As more school districts release their reopening plans for the fall: “I disagree with @CDCgov,” Mr. Trump wrote on Twitter on Wednesday, a day after hosting a series of calls and events to pressure schools to reopen fully. “While they want them open, they are asking schools to do very impractical things. I will be meeting with them!!!”

During a coronavirus task force briefing later Wednesday afternoon, Vice President Mike Pence announced that the C.D.C. would issue new recommendations next week.

An unreleased CDC report on schools: “While many jurisdictions and districts mention symptom screening, very few include information as to the response or course of action they would take if student/faculty/staff are found to have symptoms, nor have they clearly identified which symptoms they will include in their screening,” the talking points say. “In addition, few plans include information regarding school closure in the event of positive tests in the school community.”

By Friday (July 10) the death toll had begun to tick up nationally.

Some new restrictions were put back in place across the South and West:
Louisiana: no more indoor bars and restaurants, and outdoor mask requirement
South Carolina: no alcohol sales after 11pm
Las Vegas & Reno, Nevada: bars closed
New Mexico: no indoor dining

California closed all bars and indoor dining. Oregon issued an outdoor mask order.

In Georgia: On Friday, a day after suing the mayor of Atlanta for mandating virus-fighting rules that were stricter than his own, Gov. Brian Kemp said he would not stand down as the mayor’s “disastrous policies threaten the lives and livelihood of our citizens.” Mr. Kemp, a Republican, stood by his decision to sue Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and City Council members over their move to require masks and revert the city to the most restrictive reopening phase.

Sunday the New York Times released insider reporting on Trump April decision to downplay the virus and push responsibility to the states.

Economic Outlook:

Sewer interviewed people in some of the 10,000 cars who sat in a food line in Texas: Although a few had recently seen their finances improve, most had been struggling since the 2008 recession and the anemic recovery that followed. Very few of the people I spoke to saw a culprit—while some were inclined to blame the Trump administration, and others held the Chinese government responsible, the vast majority saw the pandemic as an unlikely event no one could have planned for.
He cites this statistic: Among those still employed, the pain has not been evenly distributed. More than half of those making less than $50,000 have seen their hours cut, compared with 36 percent of those making $50,000 to $100,000 and 28 percent of those making more than $100,000.

His close: Trump’s theft of the meager economic gains since the Great Recession may foil his bid for a second term. But if Biden takes office and fails to heed Roosevelt’s example, then he will be leaving the majority of Americans in the same place they were at the end of the last recession: defenseless against calamity. The vast queues of struggling Americans lining up for food will not just be the nation’s present, but its future.

Reviving the economy will be difficult. Reinvigorating American democracy will be much harder.

Annie Lowrey writing in the Atlantic forecasted the economic outlook: Retail sales rose 18 percent in May, and the economy added 2.5 million jobs. But absent dramatic policy action, a pandemic depression is possible: the Congressional Budget Office anticipates that the American economy will generate $8 trillion less in economic activity over the next decade than it projected just a few months ago, and that a full recovery might not take hold until the 2030s.
She concludes: Ending the pandemic would have been the single best thing the federal government could have done to preserve the country’s wealth, health, and economic functioning. The Trump administration, in its hubris, obstinacy, and incompetence, failed to do it.

Still, a second Great Depression is not inevitable.