Good morning. The Senate seems to have a deal on virus relief — despite Mitch McConnell’s “red line.” |
| Mitch McConnell speaking at the Capitol on Tuesday.Pool photo by Rod Lamkey |
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Over the spring and summer, Mitch McConnell repeatedly declared that he had a litmus test for any new coronavirus stimulus bill: It had to protect businesses from lawsuits from workers or customers who contracted the virus. |
“We have a red line on liability,” he said at one point. “I won’t put a bill on the floor that doesn’t have liability protection in it,” he said at another. “No bill will pass the Senate without liability protection for everyone related to the coronavirus,” he added. |
But McConnell, the Republican leader in the Senate, has since erased that red line. Congressional leaders and Steven Mnuchin, the Treasury secretary, are nearing agreement on a $900 billion bill that doesn’t include liability protection. |
So why did McConnell, arguably the savviest politician in Washington, fold? |
The answer offers an important reminder of how the Senate really works and how it could become less dysfunctional in the near future than it has been lately. |
When people talk about the Senate, they often imagine that McConnell, as the majority leader, is all-powerful and can prevent any bill he doesn’t like from coming up for a vote. That’s not the case. Any senator can propose that a bill receive a vote. If at least 50 other senators want it to receive one, it will. |
In recent decades, though, senators have voluntarily surrendered this power to their party’s leader, giving him (and, no, the Senate has never had a female majority or minority leader) a veto over what comes to the floor. The practice helps keep parties unified. |
But it comes with a major downside. It makes bipartisan compromise harder to achieve. Coalitions that could pass a bill — but that don’t include the majority leader — don’t get the chance to form. “By stopping the legislative process before it starts,” James Wallner, a former Republican Senate staff member, has told me, “it makes compromise harder.” |
On the latest round of stimulus, a bipartisan group of senators changed the dynamic by making clear that they strongly favored additional aid. They did not publicly threaten to go around McConnell, but they didn’t have to. He can count to 51, and he was also worried that the two Republican candidates in next month’s Georgia Senate runoffs were “getting hammered” over the lack of a deal. |
(McConnell did win a big concession as part of abandoning his red line: The proposed deal does not contain aid to state and local governments, even though the bipartisan group had included it in their earlier proposal and despite many economists favoring such aid.) |
It’s possible this bipartisan deal will end up being a one-time event. But it doesn’t have to be. Senators have it within their power to find other areas of compromise next year, during Joe Biden’s presidency — even if McConnell does not favor those deals. |
“In politics victory begets victory,” Rahm Emanuel, the Democratic former House member and Chicago mayor, told me yesterday. “The center-out governing coalition has a win under their belt.” It is a “big opportunity for Biden,” Emanuel said. |
Perhaps most intriguing, senators have the power to craft compromises regardless of which party wins the Georgia runoffs and controls the Senate. |
- The proposed stimulus deal is expected to include roughly $300 per week in enhanced unemployment benefits, about half the size of the enhanced benefits that the federal government paid during the spring.
- The bill will also most likely include an additional round of direct payments to individuals; a new emergency rental assistance program; and additional funding for food assistance, small businesses, schools, broadband and vaccine distribution.
- Jerome Powell, chairman of the Federal Reserve, emphasized the need for more stimulus. “The case for fiscal policy right now is very, very strong,” he said.
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- President-elect Joe Biden picked Brenda Mallory, an environmental lawyer, to lead the Council on Environmental Quality, which coordinates environment policy. Mallory is expected to focus the office on issues of environmental justice.
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| Hermina Levin, an 85-year-old Florida resident, receiving the vaccine yesterday.Joe Raedle/Getty Images |
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- The vaccine has started making its way into nursing homes, whose residents and staff members account for at least a third of Covid-related deaths in the U.S. “It was such a quick shot that no one should be afraid,” Patricia John, a 93-year-old in West Virginia, said.
- To find out how many doses your state can expect, The Times has a vaccine distribution tracker.
- Vice President Mike Pence says he will receive the vaccine on camera tomorrow. Biden said he was also likely to receive it in public, to “demonstrate to the American people that it’s safe.”
- President Emmanuel Macron of France tested positive. In the U.S., David Bernhardt, the secretary of the interior, tested positive, the latest Trump administration official to do so.
- Some U.S. hospitals found a surprise in their vaccine deliveries: Some of the glass vials that are supposed to hold five doses contained enough for a sixth — or even a seventh — person.
- Americans ages 25 to 44 died at historically high rates between March and July, suggesting that the virus may be more damaging to younger adults than was previously understood, a new academic study found. (You can read a Times Op-Ed by the study’s authors.)
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| Snow in Manhattan this morning.Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times |
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- A major winter storm shut down virus testing sites and schools and created deadly road conditions along the East Coast. Follow The Times’s updates here.
- Federal prosecutors charged a man with plotting to hijack an airplane and crash it into a building in the U.S. and said he was an operative for the Shabab, a Qaeda branch in East Africa.
- A French court found 14 people guilty of aiding the 2015 attack on the magazine Charlie Hebdo, by supplying the attackers with cash, weapons and vehicles.
- Major League Baseball will add seven Negro leagues that operated from 1920 to 1948 to its official records, granting recognition to more than 3,400 players and shaking up the game’s record books.
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| Photo Illustration by The New York Times; Getty Images |
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Surprise Donations: MacKenzie Scott, the world’s 18th-richest person, is giving away billions, including large donations to colleges and universities that serve often overlooked students. She has donated nearly $4.2 billion to hundreds of organizations over the past four months. |
From Opinion: The Times’s Elizabeth Bruenig witnessed the execution of Alfred Bourgeois, a cognitively impaired man, who was convicted of murdering his daughter. |
Lives Lived: Jack Steinberger shared a Nobel Prize in Physics in 1988 for expanding understanding of the ghostly neutrino, a ubiquitous subatomic particle, opening up “entirely new opportunities for research into the innermost structure and dynamics of matter,” according to the Nobel committee. Steinberger died at 99. |
| Jessica Pons for The New York Times |
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The rise of ‘tea’ accounts |
The gossip business — which grew up with newspapers in the 20th century and then spread to celebrity magazines and websites — is expanding to Instagram. Accounts dedicated to gossip (also known as “tea” accounts, as in “spilling the tea”) are flourishing. |
The gossip on many of these accounts — which ranges from the scandalous to the mundane (like tipping habits and reactions to selfie requests) — is rarely verified. Instead, it relies on tips and often deals in blind items. “I don’t consider myself a news source,” the woman behind Deuxmoi told Vox. “I’m honestly like the moderator of a live message board.” |
Of course, the old-fashioned gossip wasn’t exactly authoritative, either. It also trafficked in blind items, grudges and puffery. Sometimes, form changes more than content. |
| Craig Lee for The New York Times |
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This tomato soup is simple yet satisfying. (Grilled cheese optional.) |
A film adaptation of “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,” August Wilson’s 1982 play, is coming to Netflix tomorrow. It features Chadwick Boseman, in his final film role, and Viola Davis. |
In recent years, Oreo has released dozens of new and often offbeat flavors, including Hot Chicken Wing Oreos and Wasabi Oreos. Why? |
Ira Glass, the founder and host of “This American Life,” chose his favorite episodes of the award-winning public radio program for its 25th anniversary. |
The late-night hosts joked about President Trump’s plan to live on his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. (His would-be neighbors are looking to enforce a decades-old agreement that the private social club cannot be used as a full-time residence.) |
The pangrams from yesterday’s Spelling Bee were deathly and heatedly. Today’s puzzle is above — or you can play online if you have a Games subscription. |
Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David |
P.S. On the Twitter account @2ShotsInTheArm, nurses and doctors are sharing photos and videos of themselves getting the Covid vaccine. |
Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com. |
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