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2019年2月5日 星期二

The Hill's Morning Report — Trump wants State of the Union to bolster Year Three | Democrats seek to show their resistance | Five things to watch during major address | Virginia’s Gov. Northam asks Cabinet for more time | Virginia’s lieutenant governor denies sexual assault allegation | Biden said to be nearing `yes’ | Trump names former oil exec to lead Interior | Can Ebola’s spread be stopped? |

The Hill's Morning Report
 

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Welcome to The Hill's Morning Report, and it's Tuesday. Our newsletter gets you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Co-creators are Jonathan Easley and Alexis Simendinger (CLICK HERE to subscribe!). On Twitter, you can find us at @joneasley and @asimendinger.

 

From the well of the House tonight, President Trump will embrace tradition and declare the state of America's union strong.

 

In a setting freighted with 2020 aspirations, divided government and the uncertainties of criminal probes, the president will defend his policies and lay out a political challenge to his adversaries, many of whom will be in the audience.

 

As Niall Stanage reports, the State of the Union event takes place as a majority of voters say they oppose a second term for the incumbent president, disapprove of the recent 35-day partial government shutdown over a wall and worry the country is on the wrong track.

 

Trump and his top advisers argue he will deliver a "unity" message, but as Politico's Anita Kumar reports, there are disagreements about whether Americans will hear tonight from "teleprompter Trump" or "Twitter Trump." Odds are they'll recognize both in the 45th president.

 

The Hill's Jordan Fabian analyzes what audiences should listen for in tonight's speech, including how the president describes his executive authority ahead of another funding deadline on Feb. 15 tied to border security. Senate Republicans have warned Trump not to choose the national emergency route.

 

The Hill: Trump hints at new announcements in State of the Union speech.

The Hill: President will face an audience of political opponents.

Bloomberg: The president's speech will implore Congress to compromise on issues including immigration and to "bridge old divisions."

 

The televised Democratic response will be delivered by Georgia's Stacey Abrams, who says she'll decide by March if she'll seek a Senate seat in 2020. She narrowly lost her state's gubernatorial contest in November, and is considered a rising star in her party (Atlanta Journal-Constitution).

 

Also responding tonight in Spanish will be California Attorney General Xavier Becerra. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) says he'll deliver his own Trump rebuttal for a third year on Facebook Live, Twitter and YouTube.

 

The Hill: Democrats seek to demonstrate they're challenging the president.

The Hill: Senate Dems seek to block use of military funds for Trump wall.

 

Seated behind Trump will be Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), who forced the president to postpone his address until the government reopened and says Democrats will not approve new funds for a "wall" at the southern border.

 

Trump says he respects Pelosi's legislative know-how and her ability to hold her conference together. But in recent weeks, he's begun shaping a narrative that his new nemesis is so powerful, liberal and "rigid," she's a danger.

 

"I think she is very bad for our country," he said during a CBS News interview on Friday.

 

AddendumPelosi hits highest favorability rating since 2007, jumping 8 points since December in CNN poll (The Hill).Two years after inauguration, federal prosecutors subpoena Trump's inaugural committee (The Associated Press). … How have Trump's promises fared from last year's address? (The New York Times). … Reminder: State of the Union speeches rarely fuel big bounces in opinion polls (Politifact). … The president and first lady's guest list for the joint address to Congress (The White House).

 

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LEADING THE DAY

POLITICS & 2020: Virginia's Democratic governor and lieutenant governor are embroiled in separate but simultaneous political dramas rarely experienced in state capitals.

 

Gov. Ralph Northam continues to battle charges of racial tone-deafness after the emergence of a 35-year-old snapshot on Friday showed two figures, one in blackface and the other wearing Ku Klux Klan garb on his medical school yearbook page. The governor says he is not in the photograph, and has turned aside an avalanche of assessments within his party that he can no longer lead as governor (The Hill).

 

Northam on Monday pleaded with his Cabinet for more time to clear his name to avoid being known as a "racist for life" (CNN). Not one of his Cabinet members has resigned, but Northam has done nothing publicly in the last 24 hours to change the dynamic. Allies and critics questioned Monday whether he would survive the week.

 

Meanwhile, Virginia Democratic Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax denies a woman's newly surfaced but uncorroborated claims that he sexually assaulted her in 2004. He says the incident was a consensual sexual encounter (The Associated Press).

 

The Washington Post reported the woman approached the newspaper after Fairfax won election in November 2017 and before he was inaugurated in January 2018, saying she felt she had an obligation to speak out. The Post says it did not publish an article because reporters could find no evidence of a history of sexual misconduct by Fairfax and could find no one to corroborate the woman's account, in part because she told no one about an assault (The Washington Post).

 

Virginia allows one term for elected governors, so if Northam resigns, the lieutenant governor could finish out the governor's four-year term and then run for another term.

 

In 2020 presidential politics, former Vice President Joe Biden is close to making another White House bid, according to friends and colleagues, who say detailed campaign plans are in the chute to go "at a moment's notice," whenever Biden gives aides a signal (The Atlantic).

 

Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who is weighing a White House bid, faces key questions, including whether a centrist billionaire who has changed his political affiliation over the years can compete in a sprawling primary and among Democratic voters in America's midsections (The Hill).

 

Nebraska Republican Sen. Ben Sasse faces a likely primary challenge for reelection in 2020, according to GOP sources, because his frequent criticism of Trump is unpopular. Would the senator challenge Trump in the GOP presidential primary? Nebraska's law presents some complications (The Hill).

 

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IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES

CONGRESS: For the first time in years, the House this week will hold not one but two congressional hearings on fighting climate change. The new Democratic majority is nudging climate and environmental issues to the top of the national debate after eight years of GOP opposition to legislating around greenhouse gas emissions (The Hill).

 

> Meanwhile, Trump said he'll nominate ex-oil lobbyist and acting Interior Secretary David Bernhardt to succeed Ryan Zinke, who resigned last year under an ethics cloud. Environmental groups are urging the Senate to oppose the choice (The Hill). … In a letter to department staff last week, Bernhardt blamed the Obama administration for his department's ethics problems (The Hill)

 

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Lobbying jobs: Sure, there are Democratic chiefs of staff and senior congressional aides who have been snapped up by lobbying shops, law firms and government relations practices, but the K Street job market is leaner than many expected (The Hill).

 
OPINION

America is no longer in the top tier of democratic countries, by Michelle Goldberg, opinion columnist, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/2TtxB5P

 

Trump's reelection challenge: "His main trouble has come from the Trumpian exceptions on trade, immigration and polarizing temperament that motivate many of his supporters," by The Wall Street Journal editorial board. https://on.wsj.com/2t3lgda

 
WHERE AND WHEN

📺 Hill.TV's "Rising" program, starting at 8 a.m., features host Jamal Simmons with a preview of Abrams's State of the Union response; a speech teaser aimed at Republicans by Marc Lotter, former press secretary to Pence; a preview for Democrats by Cole Leiter, spokesman for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee; and an update by Ashley Tabaddor, president of the National Association of Immigration Judges. http://thehill.com/hilltv

 

The House convenes at noon.

 

The Senate meets at 10 a.m. The Judiciary Committee holds a confirmation hearing at 10 a.m. for Neomi Rao, opposed by Democrats, who is nominated to be a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to fill a vacancy created by Supreme Court Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh (The Associated Press).

 

The president delivers a State of the Union address at 9 p.m.

 

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speaks at the MOKAN (Missouri-Kansas) Forum breakfast at 8:30 a.m. in Washington.

 
ELSEWHERE

> Texas border wall: In the Rio Grande Valley, U.S. Customs and Border Protection will begin constructing a 25-mile stretch of concrete border barrier on federal land set aside for environmental and wildlife protection, tapping appropriations from Congress enacted last spring. Residents and local organizations, pointing to heavy earth-moving equipment on federal acreage on Monday, say they are turning to the courts to try to halt the wall (The Associated Press).

 

> Epidemic: A worsening Ebola outbreak in Africa alarms global health care responders after six months because they have not been able to halt the spread. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, the disease has infected 774 people and 481 have died (The Hill).

 

> Death penalty: States across the country are moving to end the death penalty, led by Republicans who no longer see it as either cost effective or a deterrent to crime (The Hill).

 

> Tech: Silicon Valley's tech giants are enjoying record profits, despite a year marked by widely publicized controversies over privacy and transparency. The heft of Google, Facebook and Amazon raise eyebrows among industry watchers and lawmakers who favor tougher federal regulation (The Hill).

 

> The Hill's In the Know: Comedian Samantha Bee on Monday teased her April 27 TBS event, "Not The White House Correspondents' Dinner," with a Twitter parody of The Washington Post's Super Bowl message defending a free press and narrated by Tom Hanks (The Hill).

 
THE CLOSER

And finally … 📺 🏈 Watching Super Bowl 53 was an endurance test for some football fans, but for the Patriots, Tom Brady and CBS, it was a good night.

 

Here's some business yardage: CBS took in $382 million from Super Bowl commercials, according to Kantar Media estimates, although ad spending fell short of levels in 2017 and 2018 (Reuters). To put the CBS bonanza in perspective, it's a one-night haul larger than what some cable companies see in a year.

 

However, analysts think CBS is flirting with a price ceiling for commercials during what still remains the preeminent live television event each year. The average cost of a 30-second ad was about $5.2 million, which tends to force newer companies to think twice about jumping in.

 

The TV-only audience for the low-scoring game delivered fewer eyeballs — down about 5 percent from 2018 and at a 10-year low — averaging 98.2 million viewers. Add the streaming audiences on CBS, NFL and Verizon digital platforms and Spanish-language broadcast and streaming from ESPN Deportes, and the audience size was 100.7 million, according to Nielsen (The Hollywood Reporter).

 

Translation: About 45 percent of all households in America tuned into the game.

 

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Comparison with State of the Union: The audience last year for Trump's big speech measured a robust 45.6 million. Recent history suggests, however, that in today's fragmented media environment, viewership shrinks for State of the Union addresses the longer contemporary presidents are in office. (Note: On social media this year, #BoycottSOTU is trending).

 

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The Morning Report is created by journalists Jonathan Easley & Alexis Simendinger. We want to hear from you! @jeasley@thehill.com and @asimendinger@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill's reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!

 
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DAILY DOSE: Working With the Body

ב"ה  

Working With the Body

By Tzvi Freeman

It used to be that the soul fought with the body, until one conquered the other by force.

Then the Baal Shem Tov came and taught a new path: The body, too, could come to appreciate those things the soul desires.

In the place of self-affliction and fasting, the Baal Shem Tov showed his students the way of meditation and joy. Every need of the body, he taught, could provide a channel to carry the soul high.

Hayom Yom, 28 Shvat. 16 Tamuz 5716. Igrot Kodesh, vol. 6 page 157. Ibid, vol. 10, pg. 240.



By Tzvi Freeman


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2019年2月4日 星期一

News Alert: After rough January, Trump seeks rebound with big speech

 
 
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After rough January, Trump seeks rebound with big speech
President Trump will deliver the State of the Union address Tuesday at one of the most vulnerable moments of his presidency — and supporters and detractors alike are skeptical he can turn things around.
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