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Thursday, October 1, 2020

Biden flip-flops on door-knocking with just 33 days left


Campaign door-knocking in a pandemic puts lives at risk and turns off voters. It’s also sort of useless. And anyone who said otherwise is needlessly panicking.

That was the Joe Biden campaign’s position until Thursday, when it abruptly reversed course and announced hundreds of volunteers would soon be hitting the doors in swing states with just 33 days to go in the campaign.

The campaign said volunteers would start door-knocking in Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania this weekend with the rest of the battleground states following early next week.

It’s an abrupt turnaround from the Biden campaign’s previous posture. Over the past two months, the campaign and the Democratic National Committee have insisted that their voter turnout operation focused on digital organizing, phone banking and texting was superior to President Donald Trump’s even without canvassing. Meanwhile, Democrats used door-knocking as a public health cudgel to bash Republicans as irresponsible.

The senior spokesperson for the DNC’s “War Room,” Lily Adams, said in August, “The Trump campaign is risking the lives of their staff, the lives of voters, and risking becoming a super spreader organization during the middle of a pandemic.”

The Biden campaign emphasized that it was starting its canvassing operations with a host of safety measures such as free personal protective equipment, temperature checks, and training sessions. It’s not clear, however, why those precautions couldn’t have been taken months ago.

“We're now expanding on our strategy in a targeted way that puts the safety of communities first and foremost and helps us mobilize voters who are harder to reach by phone now that we're in the final stretch and now that Americans are fully dialed-in and ready to make their voices heard," Biden campaign manager Jen O’Malley Dillon said in a statement.

The Biden campaign told POLITICO that, despite its public statements to the contrary, the campaign has been piloting and building out a strategy to engage voters in-person since the August convention.

Last month, O’Malley Dillon said that the campaign didn’t need to knock on doors to reach voters. “I know the Republicans want to say ‘We have a million door knocks a week.’ Well, that doesn’t really matter,” she said.

But that calculus has apparently changed closer to Election Day.

Internal polls from progressive groups show the race tightening in Pennsylvania, contrary to what public polls have indicated, according to two Democrats with knowledge of the numbers. The Trump campaign says it has knocked on 1.5 million doors in the key swing state since June, while the Biden campaign has knocked on zero.

And in multiple battleground states across the country, other Democratic candidates broke with Biden weeks ago and resumed in-person canvassing.


The Biden campaign’s shift comes as a relief to many Democrats who have spent months pressuring the campaign to start door-to-door campaigning, because they feared the party was unilaterally disarming against the Trump campaign.

“I think it’s the absolutely right call,” said John Fetterman, the Democratic lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania, who said he had told the Biden campaign he believed that they should resume door knocking. “There are many counties with a small handful of cases where it can be done safely.”

Jim Wertz, chair of the Erie County Democratic Party in Pennsylvania, also applauded the news. Eager to avoid a repeat of 2016, when the county flipped to support Trump after twice backing former President Barack Obama, the local Democrats hired their own field director and, in June, began dropping off literature and having “soft” conversations with voters in person.

“The more people we have walking, the better,” Wertz said.

The late efforts could be especially helpful for reminding voters to return absentee ballots, with a record number of Democratic voters are expected to vote by mail.

The Republican National Committee ripped the Biden campaign for their reversal and mocked its effort to start canvassing so late.

“We have been safely knocking doors for months, and Democrats sanctimoniously called us ‘super spreaders’ for it,” said RNC spokesperson Michael Ahrens. “They are getting trounced on the ground and they know it, but you cannot build an effective ground game in a matter of weeks.”

The RNC claimed that it and the Trump campaign are knocking on 2 million doors a week and have hit 19 million doors since they resumed canvassing in mid-June.

Those efforts appear to have paid off in at least one key way: Republicans have been outmatching Democrats in voter registration amidst the pandemic. Since June, the GOP has made a net gain of 135,619 voters in Pennsylvania, while Democrats added just 57,985, election analyst David Wasserman reported Thursday.

Even if Republicans are inflating their door-knocking count, as some Democrats insist, it is effectively impossible for Biden’s campaign to match Trump’s door-knocking numbers before Election Day. Some Democrats fear that it will be impossible to stand up even an effective ground game with just a month to go. In 2012, Obama’s reelection campaign began placing field organizers in swing states in April 2011 — 18 months before the election.

“I think it’s too little too late,” a Democratic strategist who works with major donors said Thursday. “If it’s true that Trump is knocking a million [doors] a week and we are doing zero, that’s criminal negligence on the Democrats’ part.”

Claire Sandberg, Bernie Sanders’ 2020 national organizing director, said it is “definitely” possible to get a field program off the ground in 33 days. But she cautioned that the Biden campaign could face challenges.

“I think the critical question is whether they have enough staff dispersed across those states to handle all of the potential volunteers and reach all of the people on the doors who are in their target voter universes,” Sandberg said. “I’m relieved that they’re doing this. Look, phone calls and texts and relational organizing are all effective. But no tactic reaches everyone, and there are some people who you’re only going to reach if you knock on their door.”

The Biden campaign and Democratic Party have been defensive about their doors-don't-matter approach for months, even as they dismissed concerns as “bedwetting.”

Democrats appear to have scrambled to prepare the operation over the past several days. Earlier this week, a canvassing company placed ads online saying it was “urgently hiring” for “social distancing door to door canvassers” in Michigan for the Democratic Party’s coordinated field campaign. The ad said the firm was hiring in Flint, Detroit, Lansing and Grand Rapids.

A Democratic strategist working in Michigan described the door-to-door campaign as “a huge change that local volunteers have been clamoring for.” Field organizers in Pennsylvania began emailing volunteers about the change on Thursday. In one email obtained by POLITICO, the organizer highlighted that “we will be adding some socially distant in-person volunteer opportunities, including lit-drops, careful door knocking, and voter educators for the final 33 days.”

David Siders and Marc Caputo contributed reporting.



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Trump vows to overturn 'ridiculous' gender-neutral Navy SEAL ethos


President Donald Trump vowed Thursday to reverse a move by the elite Navy SEALs to make its ethos gender neutral — marking the latest incursion by the commander in chief into the service's operations.

American Military News first reported on Monday that the Navy SEALs and the Navy Special Warfare Combatant-craft Crewmen had changed their ethos and creed statements to remove words such as "man" and "brotherhood."

A Navy spokesperson told the outlet that the ethos and creed were written before all combat posts were opened to women.


"I will be overturning this ridiculous order immediately!" Trump tweeted Thursday evening.

A Navy spokesperson on Thursday night referred questions to the White House. Chief Pentagon spokesperson Jonathan Hoffman did not immediately return a request for comment.

A White House spokesperson declined to comment.

Ash Carter, who was defense secretary under former President Barack Obama, in 2015 opened all combat specialties to women. However, no women have yet qualified to become a Navy SEAL.

If Trump follows through, it would mark the president's latest foray into the operations of the Navy.

Trump has long called for the Navy to replace the electromagnetic launch systems for its new — and costly — aircraft carriers and return to steam-powered catapults for launching fighters from carriers.

Last year, Trump restored the rank of Navy SEAL Edward Gallagher, who was acquitted in July 2019 of charges related to killing a prisoner in Iraq but was convicted of posing for a photo with the ISIS militant’s corpse. Trump gave the order despite concerns that doing so would hurt the military justice system and undermine good order in the ranks.

Then-Navy Secretary Richard Spencer resigned in November over his handling of the issue.

Trump's new order also comes amid heightened tensions between the White House and the Pentagon following reports based on anonymous sources that the president referred to wounded and fallen troops as "losers" and "suckers."

Lara Seligman contributed to this report.



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California governor signs first-ever law requiring diversity on corporate boards

California takes a big first step toward corporate equality

In a move that is being lauded as the first of its kind, California Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed a law requiring all publicly traded corporations headquartered in the state to make diversity a priority by appointing directors from underrepresented communities to their boards.

READ MORE: Florida teacher forced to quit after parent complains about BLM flag

According to USA Today, this is the first law in the nation that’s mandated the racial make-up of corporate boards. It was reportedly inspired by a gender-focused piece of legislation from 2018 that required publicly-held corporations headquartered in California to diversify their all-male boards.

“When we talk about racial justice, we talk about power and needing to have seats at the table,” Newsom said Wednesday during a press conference.

Not surprisingly, in 2018, when the state mandated that company boards could no longer be a ‘boy’s club’ that systemically kept women at bay, the law was faced with opposition and legal challenges from conservative groups. But in the wake of nationwide protests sparked by the murder of George Floyd, the buy-in for this newest mandate along the lines of race appears to be widely understood as a sign of the times.

Granted, corporate attorney Keith Bishop testified against the bill, saying “it violates the Equal Protection Clauses of the U.S. and California Constitutions and the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution,” but this time, no major groups or organizations made a concerted effort to undermine the law’s passage.

A new study by USA Today found that less than 2% of top executives at the 50 largest companies are Black. But moving forward, at least one person from an “underrepresented community” has to have a seat on corporate boards in California by the end of 2021.

READ MORE: Meghan Markle applauds Black Lives Matter peaceful protests as ‘a beautiful thing’

“The new law represents a big step forward for racial equity,” one of the bill’s authors, Assemblyman Chris Holden, a Democrat from Pasadena, said in a statement. “While some corporations were already leading the way to combat implicit bias, now, all of California’s corporate boards will better reflect the diversity of our state.”

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Issa Rae forms Hoorae media company for TV, film and digital projects

‘Insecure’ creator Issa Rae has consolidated all her show business properties into one company

Issa Rae is stepping up her brand. The Insecure creator has consolidated her growing business entities under one umbrella, Variety reports.

Read More: Lenny Kravitz on ex Lisa Bonet’s husband Jason Momoa: ‘Love this dude’

The newly minted Hoorae media company will allow Rae to continue her multimedia domination which now includes Insecure, A Black Lady Sketch Show, Tre Cnt and Seen & Heard for HBO, along with Rap S— for HBO Max.

Rae’s other projects in various stages of production are Ghost in the Machine at Netflix, Strangers for Spyglass, and Sinkhole based on a short story by Leyna Krow, with Monkeypaw and Universal. Rae is producing along with Jordan Peele and is expected to star in the project as well.

Rae also has Raedio, a record label in collaboration with Atlantic Records.

When it comes to her success, though Rae, 35, says she still doesn’t feel that she’s accomplished enough. She recently told writer/influencer Elaine Welteroth in a conversation for Bustle that there is much more ahead of her.

“Every single time you do something, there’s a moving goal post. I still feel like I have so much more to do and so much more to prove. To the point of competing, I guess, with myself or with some invisible being just ahead of me, I don’t feel any impact yet. And a lot of that comes with time. Yes, 2007 was 13 years ago, but [it] feels like it’s been two years. I’m like, “I need more time.”

This year, though, despite the social distancing required and a virtual awards show, Rae celebrated eight Emmy nods for Insecure: Outstanding Comedy Series, Oustanding Actress in a Comedy Series for Rae, Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for co-star Yvonne Orji as well as technical nods for Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series, Outstanding Music Supervision, two nods for Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series, and Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series. Rae was also nominated this year as executive producer for A Black Lady Sketch Show.

The 77th Annual Peabody Awards Ceremony - Inside
Creator and cast member of Insecure, Issa Rae speaks on stage during The 77th Annual Peabody Awards Ceremony at Cipriani Wall Street on May 19, 2018 in New York City. (Photo by Brad Barket/Getty Images for Peabody)

Though the show only won a single award for Oustanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for the episode “Low Key Trying” Orji said the recognition meant the show has hit its stride in its fourth season.

Read More: Kerry Washington joins leaders to launch $10 million racial justice initiative

“I think [this year’s nominations are] a testament to the writers and everybody involved. It’s like wine. We get finer and finer,” Orji told E! News. “Every season just gets better and better, and I think people have seen that and we’re grateful.”

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John Legend, Chrissy Teigen gave the gift of grief, here’s what they deserve in return

OPINION: Pregnancy loss is devastating, which is why those who’ve experienced it deserve to do whatever they need to access healing.

The photos released by Chrissy Teigen and John Legend should be revered for the gift that they are. As celebrities, they had no choice but to make their loss public, but they didn’t simply share their loss, they gave us images that let us in on their grief, and for that we should be grateful. 

Read More: Chrissy Teigen, John Legend mourn the loss of baby boy after miscarriage

Losing a pregnancy is a special kind of grief. You mourn for everything that could have been. For hopes and dreams that will never be fulfilled. While some form of pregnancy loss impacts 10-25% of all pregnancies, and many women will experience more than one loss, we still struggle to talk about it, and often judge the women who do. 

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We are shocked and in the kind of deep pain you only hear about, the kind of pain we’ve never felt before. We were never able to stop the bleeding and give our baby the fluids he needed, despite bags and bags of blood transfusions. It just wasn’t enough. . . We never decide on our babies’ names until the last possible moment after they’re born, just before we leave the hospital. But we, for some reason, had started to call this little guy in my belly Jack. So he will always be Jack to us. Jack worked so hard to be a part of our little family, and he will be, forever. . . To our Jack – I’m so sorry that the first few moments of your life were met with so many complications, that we couldn’t give you the home you needed to survive. We will always love you. . . Thank you to everyone who has been sending us positive energy, thoughts and prayers. We feel all of your love and truly appreciate you. . . We are so grateful for the life we have, for our wonderful babies Luna and Miles, for all the amazing things we’ve been able to experience. But everyday can’t be full of sunshine. On this darkest of days, we will grieve, we will cry our eyes out. But we will hug and love each other harder and get through it.

A post shared by chrissy teigen (@chrissyteigen) on

When I decided it was time to share our struggle with infertility, my husband’s greatest concern was how I would be treated as a result. How would people respond to me? Would I be judged or mistreated? 

We are seeing with the #OhChrissy hashtag that his fears were valid, but I know as someone who lost a parent at a young age, how not sharing your grief can harm you, how it can destroy you. I know how burdensome it is to act like you’re OK while silently carrying your pain. I know that wouldn’t serve me and in fact, maybe sharing could help others feel less alone or broken with their grief.

When my body betrayed me last summer, and my one surviving embryo failed to turn into the child that I longed for, I felt a special kind of defeat. My body had failed to do that one thing we as women are expected to do, the most basic thing, sustain life. 

Read More: What I learned about grief on my first Father’s Day as an angel parent

It was a different kind of grief from what I experienced when I lost my mother. There is something about pregnancy loss that makes you feel somehow complicit in your own suffering. It is horrible, and when it happens, people deserve to do whatever they need to do to access healing and instead of silencing or mocking women, we need to encourage them to share their stories. 

Grief makes us all a little better, a little more human, a little more empathic, so we should be grateful for those who are willing to invite us to bear witness to their pain.  

(Photo: Adobe Stock)

For better or worse, miscarriage and pregnancy loss are a part of life. They are a part of the motherhood journey for so many women. We need to learn to apply the same comfort we have with celebrating women’s ability to sustain life, to the pain and grief they experience when they lose that life. 

Grief is love, and we need to learn to hold space for the pain and devastation that comes from grief. If people can find the energy and imagination to host obscene and unnecessary gender reveal parties, now that we can’t have parties, perhaps we can shift some of that attention and energy to holding space for people’s grief when a pregnancy doesn’t work out as expected.

I know the pain of pregnancy loss and the sadness that comes when hopes go unfulfilled. I know the love one is capable of holding for a child you haven’t yet met. The physical, mental, and emotional sacrifices you’re willing to make bring that child into this world, and the grief experienced when it doesn’t work. I know the vulnerability required to hit “post” on an IG image that conveys your broken-heartedness. What I needed then, and still sometimes need now, was space to physically heal and to acknowledge all of these confusing and complicated feelings. 

Read More: White supremacy takes so much already, don’t let it take your grief too

I needed people to tell me they loved me and to simply sit with me in my brokenness and not try to fix anything. I needed the ability to be honest about what had happened to me and my body and my husband. 

I needed to exist in a world that valued me for who I was absent from my ability to successfully reproduce. I needed a world void of the stigma that so often accompanies pregnancy loss and conversations around women’s bodies. I needed kindness and compassion and grace, and I hope we can all find space in our hearts to give those things to John and Chrissy. 

They gave us the gift of their grief, and I hope we can in turn give them what they deserve: love and understanding absent of any judgment or stigma. 


Marisa Renee Lee is a writer, speaker, and entrepreneur. She is the CEO of Beacon Advisors, co-founder of Supportal, and founder of the breast cancer charity, The Pink Agenda. She lives in the DC area with her husband Matthew and dog Sadie. 

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