Sunday, August 7, 2022

👀 Axios AM: Celebrity candidate threat

Plus: New job titles | Sunday, August 07, 2022
 
Axios Open in app View in browser
 
Presented By Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids
 
Axios AM
By Mike Allen · Aug 07, 2022

Happy Sunday. Smart Brevity™ count: 1,120 words ... 4 mins. Edited by Jennifer Koons.

 
 
🗳️ 1 big thing: Celebrity candidates threaten GOP hopes
Mehmet Oz and Shaquille O'Neal at Fanatics Super Bowl Party in Culver City, Calif., in February. Photo: Mike Coppola/Getty Images

Inexperienced Republican candidates are threatening to cost Mitch McConnell a long-expected Senate majority in this year's midterms.

  • The GOP roster is filled with Trump-endorsed celebrities who've never run political campaigns — former NFL star Herschel Walker in Georgia, Dr. Oz in Pennsylvania and best-selling author J.D. Vance in Ohio.
  • The winner in Tuesday's GOP primary in Arizona, Blake Masters — a venture capitalist who ran an unconventional primary comparing his candidacy to a tech startup — has resisted hiring political strategists to help tailor his message for November, according to Republican sources familiar with his campaign.

Why it matters: Despite a favorable political environment for Republicans, these nominees are trailing in recent public polls, Axios' Josh Kraushaar writes.

  • McConnell acknowledged the lowered expectations in an interview with Fox News' Bret Baier: "I think when this Senate race smoke clears, we're likely to have a very, very close Senate still, with us up slightly or the Democrats up slightly."

Reality check: Political outsiders are sometimes the right candidates.

  • Democrats won control of the House in 2018 by recruiting military veterans, businesswomen and physicians to win over swing voters.
  • Those candidates also campaigned as moderates, unlike the current crop of Trump-backed Republicans.

The bottom line: McConnell prefers experienced candidates who stay on message. Trump likes zany outsiders who stand outside the political mainstream. But Trump won key fights in the GOP primaries.

Share on Facebook Tweet this Story Post to LinkedIn Email this Story
 
 
2. 😷 Biden's COVID escape
President Biden on the South Lawn this morning. Photo: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

President Biden landed this morning in Rehoboth Beach, Del., after testing negative for COVID for the second day in a row. It's his first trip out of Washington in more than two weeks.

  • "I'm feeling good," Biden told reporters before boarding Marine One at the White House.
The Capitol last night. Photo: Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

After working all night, the Senate continues voting today on Democrats' climate, health and tax package.

  • Vice President Harris' tie-breaker yesterday put the party on track for a morale-boosting victory three months from midterms.

"I think it's gonna pass," Biden said.

Share on Facebook Tweet this Story Post to LinkedIn Email this Story
 
 
3. 🇹🇼 Taiwanese shrug off China drills
Tourists on Friday on the beach near Kaohsiung Harbor, as cargo ships anchor outside the Taiwanese port. Photo: Sebastian Kjeldtoft

LIUQIU ISLAND, Taiwan — Families collected shells on the beach and tourists took sunset selfies on the tiny resort island of Liuqiu.

While international attention focuses on the emerging cross-strait crisis, Taiwanese have been living with Chinese government threats for decades.

  • Few people appeared seriously concerned about a possible military conflict — even on this islet, closer to the drills than any other part of Taiwan.

What's happening: China launched a series of military exercises in six zones encircling Taiwan after Speaker Pelosi's visit last week. Ballistic missiles launched from China landed in waters east of Taiwan.

  • The drills, which are due to end today, are the largest China has ever held in the Taiwan Strait.
  • Taiwan's Ministry of Defense said the exercises amount to an "air and sea blockade," as some commercial flights and cargo ships in the region have had to adjust or cancel their routes.

Being there: Tourists were still flocking to the island about eight miles off the southwest coast of Taiwan, even as the drills were underway.

  • Divers swam with turtles close to the shore, and fishing boats traversed the nearby waters as usual. In the evenings, seaside restaurants and bars were filled to capacity.

In interviews with more than 20 tourists and local residents, nonchalance was the most common attitude toward the live-fire drills happening just a few miles away.

  • When asked if they were nervous about the close proximity of Chinese warships and planes, numerous people laughed and shook their heads.

Others said the drills were only intended as a show of intimidation rather than a serious military threat.

Share on Facebook Tweet this Story Post to LinkedIn Email this Story
 
 

A message from Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids

FDA leaves kids at risk with synthetic nicotine e-cigs
 
 

Congress set a July 13 deadline for the FDA to protect kids from synthetic nicotine e-cigs. But the FDA missed another deadline.

Every day these flavored, nicotine-loaded products are sold, our kids stay at risk.

FDA: Enforce the law. Clear the market of unauthorized synthetic nicotine products.

 
 
4. 🕶️ Extreme summer
This road in Mojave National Preserve in San Bernardino County, Calif., was destroyed by heavy rain on July 31. Photo: S. Andeskie/National Park Service

A monsoon in Death Valley ... floods in Vegas casinos.

  • "Death Valley has averaged about 1.96 inches of precipitation per year since record keeping began in 1911," the L.A. Times reports. "Nearly 75% of that amount fell in the space of a few hours on Friday."
  • Friday's storm — roads turned into rushing rivers, and dumpsters rammed parked cars — marked the second time flash flooding hit Death Valley within a week.
Photo: National Park Service via AP

Above: Cars are stuck in mud and debris from flash flooding at The Inn at Death Valley in Death Valley National Park, Calif., on Friday.

🖼️ The big picture: It's not just the West. The Washington Post says climate change is producing "Extreme Summer" coast to coast, turning "a season of joy into a season of disaster."

The bottom line: Heat waves, wildfires and rainstorms are all outrunning America's infrastructure, Axios' Andrew Freedman writes.

Share on Facebook Tweet this Story Post to LinkedIn Email this Story
 
 
5. 🐘 Cheney calls GOP "very sick"
Clover is ready for Tuesday's primary. Photo: Liz Cheney's Twitter

Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), vice chair of the House Jan. 6 committee, will continue her crusade to stop former President Trump even if she loses her primary Tuesday, the N.Y. Times' Jonathan Martin writes from Cheyenne:

  • "If the cost of standing up for the Constitution is losing the House seat, then that's a price I'm willing to pay," she said in an interview.

Cheney told JMart she has no interest in changing parties: "I'm a Republican."

  • But she said the GOP "may not be" salvageable in the short term.
  • She called her party "very sick," and said it's "continuing to drive itself in a ditch and I think it's going to take several cycles if it can be healed."

It's easy to hear a White House bid in her rhetoric, The Times reports:

  • "Cheney's relentless focus on Mr. Trump has driven speculation — even among longtime family friends — that she is preparing to run for president. She has done little to dissuade such talk."

"Cheney had spent roughly half her war chest as of the start of July, spurring speculation that she was saving money for future efforts against Mr. Trump," The Times adds.

  • "Cheney long ago stopped attending meetings of House Republicans. When at the Capitol, she spends much of her time with the Democrats on the Jan. 6 panel and often heads to the Lindy Boggs Room, the reception room for female lawmakers, rather than the House floor with the male-dominated House G.O.P. conference."

Keep reading (subscription).

Share on Facebook Tweet this Story Post to LinkedIn Email this Story
 
 
6. 💻 1 fun thing: Cutting-edge job titles

Creative Artists Agency last week named its first "chief metaverse officer."

Why it matters: "Hyper-specific and unconventional roles are opening up to match a professional landscape no one has seen before," writes the N.Y. Times' Emma Goldberg (subscription).

  • Among them: chief science advocate ... chief heart officer ... V.P. for product evangelism ... V.P. for flexible work ... head of dynamic work ... and, for a remote software company, "head of team anywhere."
Share on Facebook Tweet this Story Post to LinkedIn Email this Story
 
 

A message from Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids

FDA ignoring the law? The latest on synthetic nicotine
 
 

Congress set a July 13 deadline for the FDA to protect kids from synthetic nicotine e-cigs. The FDA again failed to act. Flavored, nicotine-loaded products continue to put kids at risk.

The takeaway: The FDA must enforce the law and clear the market of these unauthorized products NOW.

Read more.

 

📬 Invite your friends to sign up here for their daily essentials — Axios AM, PM and Finish Line.

HQ
Are you a fan of this email format?
It's called Smart Brevity®. Over 300 orgs use it — in a tool called Axios HQ — to drive productivity with clearer workplace communications.
 

Axios thanks our partners for supporting our newsletters. If you're interested in advertising, learn more here.
Sponsorship has no influence on editorial content.

Axios, 3100 Clarendon B‌lvd, Arlington VA 22201
 
You received this email because you signed up for newsletters from Axios.
Change your preferences or unsubscribe here.
 
Was this email forwarded to you?
Sign up now to get Axios in your inbox.
And make sure you subscribe to Mike's afternoon wrap up, Axios PM.
 

Follow Axios on social media:

Axios on Facebook Axios on Twitter Axios on Instagram
 
 
                                             

No comments:

Post a Comment

Private investors pour $50 billion into booming sector… investment opportunity

Unstoppable megatrend driven by hundreds of billions in government spending ...