Wednesday
October 6, 2021
Good morning,

Again, just to remind: TNR has moved the daily newsletter, which you used to get in the late afternoon, to mid-morning, with a short introduction written by me or staff writer Tim Noah or someone else. So—let’s proceed with installment three.

The big political news of the day is the debt limit, and we’ll circle back to that, but I want to note a different development expected to happen today. Jonathan Kanter, Joe Biden’s nominee to head the Justice Department’s antitrust division, has his Senate confirmation hearing, and he’s expected to be confirmed. The New York Times has a decent summary of the situation.

Why is this so important? Because if the Democrats lose the House, as the odds would favor, the ability of the Biden administration to make dramatic change moves to the executive branch. Under Barack Obama, that hinged on executive orders and regulatory change, but now it means, or should mean, aggressive trust-busting. And Biden has signaled through appointees Kanter and Tim Wu and Lina Khan that he’s ready to rumble.

Insanely quick history of U.S. government posture toward monopoly power: 
One, monopolies grew unchecked; two, the government cracked down, under Teddy Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson (and Louis Brandeis—today’s anti-monopolists call themselves the “New Brandeisians”) and Franklin Roosevelt; three, Robert Bork (yep, that guy) screwed it all up in 1978; four, it’s high time to de-Bork antitrust policy.

(Interruption: As I type these words, I just heard Mika Brzezinski say on TV that Lindsey Graham was shouted down by his Republican constituents over the weekend. For a foolish split second, my heart rose. Was it because he’s against funding childcare? Because they want him to expand Medicare to include dental? No. Because he meekly suggested that maybe they should consider vaccination.)

Back to Kanter: If the Democrats manage to pass these two bills this month, that may be about it in terms of legislation. Voting rights and minimum wage, I hope. There will be no more big spending bills, in all likelihood. But they don’t need legislation to take on monopoly power. So keep an eye on Kanter (and Khan and Wu).

Piece worth reading today: As I know (!) you read a while back, I wrote a column explaining how the media’s incessant use of the $3.5 trillion reconciliation number frames the debate on terms favorable to the right. I wrote that the truer way to put it is $60 billion a year—less than 1 percent of the federal budget. Now David Cay Johnston goes me one better and does a little more ciphering* to show that the price tag for this bill to your average American is $2.88 a day. But even that is misleading because the rich will pay more. It’s a numbers-heavy (in a good way), important read.

At NewRepublic.com, Grace Segers has a solid rundown on the debt-limit situation. The Democrats are of course going to have to do this through reconciliation. Mitch McConnell thinks they’ll pay a political price for this. I don’t think anyone gives a crap about the debt limit, which I’ll probably argue in a future column. Esther Wang explains why police unions are up in arms about vaccine mandates for cops (basically, because they have the power to be). Timothy Noah lays out why South Dakota is a horrible state and should not exist. And treat yourself to Alex Shephard’s rollickingly funny take on who might win the Nobel Prize for literature.


Happy Wednesday, 
Michael Tomasky, editor

*You may not know this usage of “ciphering.” But if you’re from a place like West Virginia, or ever watched The Beverly Hillbillies, you do.

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Morning Quiz:
Yesterday’s question: There is today a sitting senator who was the first Democrat ever elected to the Senate from his/her state. Who’s the senator, and what’s the state?

Answer: The currently sitting senator who is the first Democrat ever elected to the Senate from his state is … Patrick Leahy of Vermont. That’s right—until 1974, Vermont, the hippiest, leftiest state in the country, had never elected a Democratic senator! It was staunchly, if moderately, Republican.

The nonpolitics question: The Yankees and Red Sox played last night. I remember watching the last time they played a one-game playoff, in 1978. Everybody knows that Bucky Dent hit the home run that lifted the Yankees to victory (at Fenway, incidentally, as tonight’s game is). But who was the winning pitcher?

Answer: Yes, Bucky Dent hit that Yankees home run in 1978, but it was Ron Guidry who got the win. He won the Cy Young that year, incidentally.

Today’s political history questions: Which countries attacked which other country on this day in 1973, launching which war? And what world leader was assassinated on this day in 1981 (perhaps overly generous hint: He led one of the countries that commenced hostilities in 1973)?

Today’s must reads:
We’ll give you the short version (because your time is valuable) and the long version (because you might have nothing better to do).
by Grace Segers
Not Haruki Murakami, that’s for sure.
by Alex Shephard
What does it mean to be a moderate in the era of the climate crisis?
by Kate Aronoff
The Roberts court may have no choice but to resolve a sprawling case that threatens the Indian Child Welfare Act and the legal regime that has supported Native people.
by Matt Ford
We’ve heard this story before, when police said criminal justice reform would lead to mass resignations.
by Esther Wang
Governor Kristi Noem isn’t the problem. The other Dakota is a make-believe state devoted to the preservation of wealth dynasties, and it should just go away.
by Timothy Noah
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