Phew! The government is funded - until September. Lots of earmarks this time, too. Russia is expanding their attacks, now headed westward
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The Utah Policy newsletter is your one-stop source for political and policy-minded news. We scour the news so you don't have to! Send news tips or feedback to Holly Richardson at editor@utahpolicy.com.

 

Situational Analysis | March 11, 2022

It's Friday and while the weather doesn't feel much like spring, it's time to "Spring Ahead" this Sunday as we switch back to Daylight Saving Time. ☀️

Also, don't miss the open letter from Ukraine's First Lady, Olena Zelenskyy. It's a little long, but a must-read.

Be in the Know

  1. “We’re not going to let Russia gaslight the world," said Olivia Dalton, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Mission to the United Nations. The U.N. Security Council scheduled a meeting Friday at Russia’s request to discuss what Moscow claims are US-backed biolabs hiding in Ukraine. The United States has warned about Russian “false flag” operations to create a pretext for the invasion for months - and that's just what they did. “We can say with a high probability that one of the goals of the United States and its allies is the creation of bioagents capable to selectively infect various ethnic groups,” said the head of the Russian military’s radiation, chemical and biological protection troops. The UN Security Council will meet this morning at 11 am EST.   
  2. The US Senate voted 68-31 on Thursday night to pass a $1.5 trillion, 2,700-page spending package that—once signed into law by President Joe Biden—will fund the federal government through September. The omnibus legislation—which includes (about $10 billion worth of) earmarks for the first time since 2011—allocates $13.6 billion in emergency military and humanitarian aid for Ukraine, and boosts defense and nondefense spending over FY 2021 levels by $42 billion and $46 billion, respectively.
 

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Utah Headlines

General

  • The new inflation numbers have nothing to do with Russia’s war with Ukraine (Deseret News)
  • ‘Help Wanted’ signs are everywhere. Where did all the workers go? (Deseret News)
  • How state and tribal leaders hope to bring water to Westwater (Salt Lake Tribune)
  • Galina Perova left the Soviet Union for Utah. Now she wants to save family fleeing Ukraine (KUER)

Politics

  • Romney 2024 — The Third Time’s A Charm? With Democrats on the ropes and Republicans divided, Mitt Romney should consider running for president (Deseret News)
  • Mitt Romney says it’s time for Putin to be ‘fearful of what we might do’ (Deseret News)
  • San Juan County attorney resigning to take job with state of Utah (KUTV)
  • Lawmakers side with police, pass bill targeting Utah County Attorney’s progressive policies (Fox13)
  • An internet privacy bill awaits Gov. Cox’s signature. Some consumer advocates say he should veto it (KUER)
  • Utah set to get a new holiday, if Cox signs on (Salt Lake Tribune)

Energy

  • Benji Backer: Fossil fuels or clean energy? We can, and should, have both (Deseret News)
  • Gabe Ure: Administration needs to allow more oil production in U.S. (Salt Lake Tribune)
  • Madeleine Para and Jim Wightman: Clean energy transition would break Russia’s geopolitical hold (Salt Lake Tribune)

COVID Corner

  • Why Utah leaders are optimistic on the second anniversary of the COVID-19 pandemic (Deseret News)
  • Here’s a preventive treatment for COVID-19 that experts want Utahns to know about. Unlike some places, the state has plenty of doses (Deseret News)
  • Research provides hope to those experiencing long-term loss of smell due to COVID-19 (Deseret News)
  • More than 4,500 Utahns have died of COVID-19 since pandemic began, state reports (Salt Lake Tribune)
  • Timeline of first historic COVID-19 moments in Utah (KUTV)
  • U.S. to extend airplane, transit mask mandate through April 18 (Reuters)

National Headlines

Politics

  • Senate averts shutdown, passes $13.6B in Ukraine aid (The Hill)
  • Judge tosses Jan. 6 claims against Mo Brooks (The Hill)
  • The U.S. is fighting against an incendiary disinformation campaign about bioweapons being pushed by Russia and China. (New York Times)

Ukraine

  • Heartbreaking. A Ukrainian learned his family had died after seeing viral photos: ‘I lost everyone and lost the meaning of life’ (Washington Post)
  • Russian strikes hit western Ukraine as offensive widens (AP)
  • U.S., G7 allies may strip Russia of 'most favored nation' status (Reuters)
  • Russian forces regroup near Kyiv after setbacks (Reuters)
  • Video analysis reveals Russian attack on Ukrainian nuclear plant veered near disaster (NPR)
  • GOP senators urge Biden to send Polish warplanes to Ukraine (AP)
  • Day 15: A fighter mourned; a young girl shot (AP)
  • UN rights office says it has credible reports of Russian cluster bomb use in Ukraine (Reuters)
  • Russian Forces Intensify Strikes on Cities in Western Ukraine (Wall Street Journal)
  • ‘I’m astounded that Zelensky’s still alive,’ says top Republican on House Foreign Affairs Committee (Washington Post)
  • Kremlin press secretary: Those criticizing war are not 'real' Russians (The Hill)
 

‘I testify’: An open letter from Ukraine’s First Lady, Olena Zelenskyy

Recently, an overwhelming number of media outlets from around the world have reached out with requests for interviews. This letter serves as my answer to these requests and is my testimony from Ukraine.

What happened just over a week ago was impossible to believe. Our country was peaceful; our cities, towns, and villages were full of life.

On February 24th, we all woke up to the announcement of a Russian invasion. Tanks crossed the Ukrainian border, planes entered our airspace, missile launchers surrounded our cities.

Despite assurances from Kremlin-backed propaganda outlets, who call this a “special operation” – it is, in fact, the mass murder of Ukrainian civilians.

Perhaps the most terrifying and devastating of this invasion are the child casualties. Eight-year-old Alice who died on the streets of Okhtyrka while her grandfather tried to protect her. Or Polina from Kyiv, who died in the shelling with her parents. 14-year-old Arseniy was hit in the head by wreckage, and could not be saved because an ambulance could not get to him on time because of intense fires.

When Russia says that it is ‘not waging war against civilians,’ I call out the names of these murdered children first.

Our women and children now live in bomb shelters and basements. You have most likely all seen these images from Kyiv and Kharkiv metro stations, where people lie on the floors with their children and pets – trapped beneath. These are just consequences of war for some, for Ukrainians it now a horrific reality. In some cities families cannot get out of the bomb shelters for several days in a row because of the indiscriminate and deliberate bombing and shelling of civilian infrastructure.

The first newborn of the war, saw the concrete ceiling of the basement, their first breath was the acrid air of the underground, and they were greeted by a community trapped and terrorized. At this point, there are several dozen children who have never known peace in their lives.

This war is being waged against the civilian population, and not just through shelling.

Some people require intensive care and continuous treatment, which they cannot receive now. How easy is it to inject insulin in the basement? Or to get asthma medication under heavy fire? Not to mention the thousands of cancer patients whose essential access to chemotherapy and radiation treatment have now been indefinitely delayed.

Local communities on social media are full of despair. Many people, including the elderly, severely ill and those with disabilities, have been debilitatingly cut off, ending up far from their families and without any support. War against these innocent people is a double crime.

Our roads are flooded with refugees. Look into the eyes of these tired women and children who carry with them the pain and heartache of leaving loved ones and life as they knew it behind. The men bringing them to the borders shedding tears to break apart their families, but bravely returning to fight for our freedom. After all, despite all this horror, Ukrainians do not give up.

The aggressor, Putin, thought that he would unleash blitzkrieg on Ukraine. But he underestimated our country, our people, and their patriotism. Ukrainians, regardless of political views, native language, beliefs, and nationalities, stand in unparalleled unity.

While Kremlin propagandists bragged that Ukrainians would welcome them with flowers as saviors, they have been shunned with Molotov cocktails.

I thank the citizens of the attacked cities, who have coordinated to help those in need. Those that keep working – in pharmacies, stores, public transportation, and social services – showing that in Ukraine, life wins.

I acknowledge those that have provided humanitarian aid to our citizens and thank you for your continued support. And to our neighbors who have generously opened their borders to provide shelter for our women and children, thank you for keeping them safe, when the aggressor has rendered us unable to do so.

To all the people around the world who are rallying to support Ukraine. We see you! We’re here watching and appreciate your support.

Ukraine wants peace. But Ukraine will defend its borders. Defend its identity. These it will never yield.

In cities where shelling persists, where people find themselves under debris, unable to get out of basements for days, we need safe corridors for humanitarian aid and evacuation of civilians to safety. We need those in power to close our sky!

Close the sky, and we will manage the war on the ground ourselves.

I appeal to you, dear media: keep showing what is happening here and keep showing the truth. In the information war waged by the Russian Federation, every piece of evidence is crucial.

And with this letter, I testify and tell the world: the war in Ukraine is not a war “somewhere out there.” This is a war in Europe, close to the EU borders. Ukraine is stopping the force that may aggressively enter your cities tomorrow under the pretext of saving civilians.

Last week to me and my people, this would have seemed like an exaggeration, but it is the reality we’re living in today. And we do not know how long it will last. If we don’t stop Putin, who threatens to start a nuclear war, there will be no safe place in the world for any of us.

We will win. Because of our unity. Unity towards love for Ukraine.

Glory to Ukraine!


News Releases

Romney: Enough talk, send the MiGs

Following the Defense Department’s decision to reject Poland’s plans to provide MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine, U.S. Senators Mitt Romney (R-UT) and Joni Ernst (R-IA) led 40 of their colleagues in calling on President Biden to work with Poland and our NATO allies to expedite the transfer of aircraft and air defense systems, as well as additional support capabilities, to Ukraine. (Read/Watch More)


Senator Romney: Send aircraft to the Ukrainians now

At a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing Thursday, U.S. Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT) urged the Administration to deploy MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine without delay. "I simply do not understand the logic for not getting the MiGs to the Ukrainians immediately. There is no logic which has been provided to this committee or to the nation for the lack of rapidity in making this decision. It makes no sense.

I believe there’s a sentiment that we’re fearful about what Putin might do. And what he might consider as an escalation. It’s time for him to be fearful of what we might do. The only way to get Putin to act in a way that may be able to save the lives of Ukrainians is if he fears us more than we fear him. People are dying. We need to get this aircraft immediately to the people of Ukraine. That’s what they are asking for." (Read/Watch More)


Number of the Day

Number of the Day, Mar 11, 2022
 

Tweet of the Day

Screen Shot 2022-03-11 at 7.29.20 AM
 

Upcoming

  • Fireside chat with Justice Clarence Thomas hosted by the Hatch Foundation – Mar 11, 2022, 7 pm. Register here.
  • Breakfast briefing: Is it time to rethink how we create housing in Utah by the Utah Foundation – Mar 22, 8:30 am - 10:00 am Register here
  • Dem. caucus night – Mar 22
  • Building Utah with the Utah Association of Counties – Mar 23-25 Register here
  • Inflection Point: US-Asia Relations with the Orrin G. Hatch Foundation – Mar 30, 3:00 pm ET Register here
  • Last day for a registered voter to change voter affiliation before the regular primary election – Mar 31
  • 2022 Midyear Conference, Utah League of Cities and Towns - April 20-22, St. George Register here
  • Ballots are mailed – June 7
  • Primary election day – June 28
  • General election – Nov 8
 

On This Day In History

  • 1779 - Congress establishes the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
  • 1903 - Dorothy Schiff, owner and publisher of the New York Post, is born. She sold the Post for an estimated $30 million to Rupert Murdock in 1976.
  • 1904 - Hilde Bruch is born. She escaped from Nazi Germany in 1933 to England and then America. Her pioneer work made her the leading expert in eating disorders, especially anorexia nervosa.
  • 1918 - US Army mess cook Private Albert Gitchell of Fort Riley, Kansas becomes the first documented case of a new flu. It’s the start of a worldwide pandemic that killed 50-100 million
  • 1921 - Charlotte Friend, a microbiologist in the 1950s at Sloan-Kettering Institute, was born today. She discovered a link between defective maturation and tumor growth in mice -- discoveries that were critical in establishing the role of viruses in some cancers.
  • 1941 - FDR signs the Lend-Lease Bill which lends money to Britain for their war effort.
  • 1968 - Otis Redding is the first person in the US to posthumously receive gold record for his single "Sittin' On the Dock of the Bay"
  • 1985 - Mikhail Gorbachev replaces Konstantin Chernenko as Soviet leader.
  • 1997 - The ashes of Star Trek creator, Gene Roddenberry are launched into space.
  • 2011 - 8.9 earthquake hits Japan, triggering a tsunami killing thousands of people and causing the second worst nuclear accident in history at Fukushima nuclear plant.
  • 2018 - Superhero movie "The Black Panther" becomes the fifth Marvel movie to earn $1 billion worldwide.
  • 2020 
    • COVID-19 declared a pandemic by the head of the World Health Organization Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, with 121,564 cases worldwide and 4,373 deaths.
    • NBA suspends 2019-20 season until further notice after Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert tests positive for COVID-19.
    • President Trump announces 30-day ban on travel to the US.
    • Dow Jones drops 20%
    • Harvey Weinstein is sentenced to 23 years in prison for a criminal sex act and rape in New York 

Wise Words

"The world will not accept dictatorship or domination."

–Mikhail Gorbachev


Lighter Side

“And, by the way, if Lavrov is denying that Russia is attacking Ukraine, then what’s he attending peace talks for? What, he wants Ukraine to stop blowing up Russian missiles with their maternity wards?” 

— TREVOR NOAH

 

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