Monthly Archives: May 2020

GOP and NC trade demands as Charlotte 2020 convention is at risk

The GOP and North Carolina are playing a bit of chicken over the 2020 convention. Simply, the GOP wants to be able to hold their convention as they see fit, with whatever health guidelines they want and don’t want. Given the COVID situation, North Carolina is unable to give those assurances at this time. But time is running out on the GOP’s ability to move the convention:

Republicans planning their party’s convention traded demands with North Carolina’s Democratic governor this week over holding the event in Charlotte in August, as President Trump pressures Democratic leaders in the state to allow him to host the kind of convention he wants despite concerns about the coronavirus pandemic.

The Republican National Committee chairwoman, Ronna McDaniel, and the president of the convention committee, Marcia Lee Kelly, wrote to Gov. Roy Cooper on Thursday, giving him a deadline of June 3 to approve safety measures to prevent the spread of the virus during the event. Continue Reading...

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Florida mayors chime in on hosting 2020 GOP Convention

While talks between North Carolina and the GOP continue, Florida mayors had their say:

St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Kriseman:

“Putting on an event of this size and scale takes months and months of preparation, so I don’t see how realistically that could even happen, so I think it’s a non-issue.” Continue Reading...

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NC to GOP: Your move

North Carolina secretary of Health and Human Services Mandy Cohen sent a letter to the head of the 2020 GOP Convention, basically saying, you want to be in Charlotte? What’s the plan?:

As we work together, it is important to have a written plan from you and your team as soon as possible for how you plan to approach the COVID-19 safety aspects of the convention. A written plan provides a necessary and valuable starting point to planning discussions with our public health teams at the county and state levels. …

We also discussed on Friday the need to plan for different levels of impact of COVID-19 so the RNC convention logistics could be tailored to the COVID-19 situation we find ourselves in at the end of August. As you know, North Carolina is now in Phase 2 of easing restrictions but this Saturday we saw our highest day of new lab confirmed COVID-19 cases in North Carolina. The status of COVID-19 infections in our state and in the Charlotte area continues to rapidly evolve, thus, it will be important to have several scenarios planned that can be deployed depending on the public health situation. Continue Reading...

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GOP Site Selection back on?

Yes, we’re having fun with this, but both the Governors of both Florida and Georgia tweeted today offering their states to hold the 2020 GOP convention:

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Trump suggests moving GOP convention out of Charlotte

First the Times reported on Thursday

Mr. Trump, who was heavily involved in the staging of his last nominating convention, has even shown a new openness to participating in a scaled-down event. He has mused aloud to several aides about why the convention can’t simply be held in a hotel ballroom in Florida, given all of the health concerns and the fact that Florida is further along in reopening portions of the state.

But with expensive contracts signed and money raised, the event is unlikely to move from Charlotte — unless the Democratic mayor and governor there say it can’t be held. Continue Reading...

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Convention update

A month ago I, and pretty much everyone outside of Trump and his circle, were pretty sure there was no way either party could hold on in-person convention. Now, I’m not so sure. I mean they could put 100 people in a walled off TV studio on the floor of the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, and Trump could give his speech, and the networks would have to cover it as the official convention speech – even if all the other convention activities were virtual.  And if it’s clear the GOP will hold some sort of in-person convention, will Biden feel he has to do the same?

Here’s a summary of how we got here over the last few weeks:

  • On May 12, the DNC Rules and Bylaws Committee passed the changes necessary to support a virtual convention. Nothing from the GOP, yet, but they could make similar changes anytime they wanted to.
  • Yahoo News floated the following options:

The roll-call vote could potentially take place with one representative from each state entering the hall to announce their vote, one DNC member told Yahoo News. Another DNC member floated the idea of having each state’s representative join the broadcast by teleconference from a symbolic location in their state, such as a capitol building. Continue Reading...

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VP Sweepstakes

It appears from news reports that we are moving into stage 2 of the Biden campaign’s search for a vice-presidential nominee — the vetting process.  Broadly speaking, there are three things that influence the pick of a vice-presidential nominee:  1) vetting (anything that disqualifies a candidate); 2) political consideration; and 3) personal compatibility.

When it comes to vetting, everybody has something that could be used against them by the opposition.  Unless you have been living under a rock, every politician has voted for some bill or worked on some project that some people will not like (or at the very least can be twisted into something unpopular).  I have seen state and local races where ads have been run attacking candidates for using dedicated training funds to attend training programs in vacation-type locations.  (Not surprisingly, groups putting on these trainings tend to choose such locations because they are attractive to potential attendees.)  In short, a candidate does not have to have done something wrong for there to be an attack ad as long as the explanation of why there is nothing wrong takes a lot of time.  The real issue with vetting is not is there something out there, but which fights are the campaign willing to have.   We are likely never going to know which candidates are eliminated because of vetting.

Political considerations are, on the other hand, something that can easily be discussed and debated.  Every presidential candidate has strengths and weaknesses — some demographic, some experience, some political, and some geographic.  For example, the last several successful presidential candidates had minimal federal experience.  In each case, the candidate picked a running mate who had a decent amount of federal experience.  Given Vice-President Biden’s extensive federal experience, he can opt for a candidate with experience at the state level or a relatively short period of service at the federal level. Continue Reading...

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Notes from Your Doctor: Can I Touch Surfaces?

The news reported last night that it was safe to touch surfaces. Um, not exactly correct.

The CDC website says:

It may be possible that a person can get COVID-19 by touching a surface or object that has the virus on it and then touching their own mouth, nose, or possibly their eyes. This is not thought to be the main way the virus spreads, but we are still learning more about this virus. (emphasis mine.) Continue Reading...

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The Supreme Court and the Affordable Care Act

A continuing story of the past decade has been the multiple rounds of litigation involving the Affordable Care Act.  While politicians have been discussing next steps (Medicare for All, Public Option, Repeal & Replace, etc.), businesses and states and other groups have been fighting out particular provisions in the courts.  Between this term and the next, there are three significant cases (or sets of cases to be more accurate) involving particular aspects of the Affordable Care Act.  One — decided this past week — involved the attempt of Congress to cut off the payments to insurance companies by not appropriating the money for those payments.  The second — to be argued in the May teleconference center — is the latest round of the fight over how to cover contraceptives for employees of those who object to contraceptives on moral grounds.  The final — probably to be argued after the election — concerns the impact of reducing the penalty for violating the individual mandate to $0.

When the Affordable Care Act passed, it included a provision intended to make participation in the exchanges less risky for insurance companies during a transition period.  It did this by creating a mechanism for making payments to insurance companies if the premiums that those companies charged were insufficient to cover claims.  This program was funded in part by requiring the insurance companies that overcharged to pay in part of the excess.  However, before the transition period ended, Congress — in its annual appropriations bills — expressly barred any tax dollars from being used to cover these payments.  The issue in the case was whether — due to the mandate in the Affordable Care Act — the government still owed the insurance companies the money promised by the statutory formula notwithstanding the refusal of Congress to appropriate the money.  In an 8-1 decision, the Supreme Court decided that the insurance companies had a legally enforceable claim against the government.  While this decision is a small defeat to the Republican attempt to frustrate the working of the Affordable Care Act, the reasoning in the decision may be useful in the much bigger case to be heard next term.

One part of the argument in the forthcoming case is that, by repealing the penalty on the individual mandate, Congress not only repealed the individual mandate but effectively repealed the entire Affordable Care Act.  Technically, the argument is that the individual mandate is now unconstitutional (because the Supreme Court upheld it under the taxing power and there is no tax now), and that the rest of the Affordable Care Act is not “severable” from the individual mandate.   One of the arguments in the case decided this week was that the language in the appropriations bills barring payments to insurance companies implicitly repealed the mandate for those payments in the Affordable Care Act.    In its discussion of that argument, the Supreme Court noted the general rule that courts rarely find that the language in one act constitutes an implied repeal of a different statute.  Under this rule, unless the two acts are so contradictory that one must prevail over the other, courts will find ways to give effect to both laws. Continue Reading...

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