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Harris skipping Netanyahu address shows daylight with Biden on Israeli leader

July 24, 2024

Vice President Kamala Harris will be notably absent from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s address to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday, July 24—a move some Republicans called “petty,” according to a report by The Hill.

The move could have the potential to show some daylight between her and President Joe Biden when it comes to the Israeli leader.

Harris—now rapidly consolidating support as the likely Democratic nominee after Biden dropped out of the race—has been seen as more sympathetic to the Palestinian cause compared to the commander-in-chief, who has been followed around the country by protesters demanding an end to the war.

As vice president, Harris would traditionally preside over a joint session involving a foreign leader’s address. But instead, she will be on the road in Indiana—opting not to change her preexisting plans.

The move could further solidify support from young, minority, and more progressive voters who polls shows have been more sympathetic to the cause.

For starters, Representative Pramila Jayapal (D-Washington), chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said recently that Harris “has a deep empathy for the situation of Palestinian Americans,” adding, “It’s more natural to her.”

Yet the decision also comes with some risks, as Republicans are likely to point to Harris’s absence as an unnecessary snub of a key U.S. ally, something former President Trump’s campaign is certain to echo.

“VPOTUS Harris’s snub of Netanyahu is petty and disrespectful,” Senator John Cornyn (R-Texas), said on Monday, July 22, on the social platform X.

Harris, 59, is of a different generation than Biden, the 81-year-old president whose fiercely pro-Israel stance was increasingly out of step with young Democrats.

Allies say that as a woman of Black and South Asian descent, Harris is naturally more sympathetic to Palestinians, even if she has backed Biden’s support of Israel in the war with Hamas, which is designated as a terrorist group by the United States.

“The vice president’s language from the beginning has been inclusive of both Israeli security and the plight of the Palestinians. That has been well-regarded by people on both sides of the Israel debate,” a Harris ally said.

Harris most notably had a breakout moment on the issue during a March speech in Selma, Alabama, to mark the 59th anniversary of Bloody Sunday in which she began her remarks addressing the war, where she called the situation in Gaza “devastating” and a “humanitarian catastrophe.”

Those were some of the most pointed words coming out of the Administration since the start of the war at the time. Harris received several rounds of applause during her remarks, while Biden was often met with silence or protesters when he addressed the issue.

Biden lost more than half a million voters to the “uncommitted” movement in this year’s Democratic primaries—numbers that underscored frustration within his own party over his handling of the Israel-Hamas war.

An aide to the vice president said she has had an “unwavering commitment to the security of Israel” and has been engaged with Israeli officials since the October 7 attacks, speaking “regularly” with President Isaac Herzog.

The aide noted she “repeatedly condemned Hamas’s brutal attack on October 7 and expressed support for Israel’s right to defend itself,” which echoes Biden’s stance on the conflict. She is also expected to “reiterate her deep concerns about the humanitarian situation in Gaza and the loss of innocent life,” the aide said.

Harris’s meeting with Netanyahu this week could ease concerns among voters angered by Biden’s handling of the war and give her yet another boost, if progressives can see her candidacy as a fresh start on Middle East policy.

“Not being responsible for the situation in Gaza will help the vice president bring Democrats back to the fold who have been upset for the last few months about the issue,” said Democratic strategist Jamal Simmons, who worked for Harris until last year.

Research contact: @thehill

Tom Brady takes his fitness, apparel brands to Nobull

February 5, 2024

On Tuesday, January 30, retired football phenom Tom Brady announced via social media that his supplement brand, TB12 (a nod to his initials and jersey number as a New England Patriots quarterback), and apparel brand Brady were merging under the Nobull umbrella—“forming one complete wellness company,” reports Retail Dive.

Cross-training equipment company Nobull was founded in 2015 by ex-Reebok executives Marcus Wilson and Michael Schaeffer.

Six months ago, the private equity arm of serial entrepreneur Mike Repole’s family investment office took a majority stake in Nobull. Repole is best known for founding beverage brands BodyArmor, Energy Brands, and Glaceau’s Vitaminwater and Smartwater.

In a post on Instagram, Brady noted that the move to Nobull “wouldn’t be possible without Mike Repole, a great friend of mine. whom I have spent the past few years with talking about my own journey. We’ve pushed each other to get better every day and now it’s time to bring this attitude to the world.”

In October 2023, New England sports journalist Dale Arnold reported on X that sources told him that Brady and his business partner Alex Guerrero had split; their TB12 supplement and fitness company “seems to be closing all facilities and there may be a new business model for Brady.”

By then, several Boston publications had noted the closure of Brady’s TB12 stores in the area, and Guerrero had already announced a new company, TBRx or “total body recovery.”

Research contact: @RetailDive

Down, but not out: 11 House Republicans join with Democrats to boot Greene off committees

February 8, 2021

Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Georgia) will remain in the U.S. Congress, but will not be seated on any committees, following a vote by the full House on Thursday night, February 4, The Daily Beast reports.

On Wednesday night, 61 Republican lawmakers—30% of the conference—voted in favor of Representative Liz Cheney’s removal as the third-ranking leader in the House GOP after she said that former President Donald Trump had incited the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol on January 6. However, 145 voted for Cheney’s survival by secret ballot, in a move that she said “was [a] very resounding acknowledgement that we need to go forward together.”

Less than 24 hours later, nearly 100% of the GOP conference voted to keep Representative Greene (R-GA) on her committees after Democrats forced a vote on Thursday, prompted by a string of reports unearthing her past endorsement of outlandish conspiracy theories and threats of violence against top Democrats.

According to The Daily Beast, this “is the first time the majority party has stripped a minority member of their committee posts.”

Eleven Republicans joined Democrats in supporting the move: Reps. Adam Kinzinger (Illinois), Brian Fitzpatrick (Pennsylvania), John Katko (New York), Chris Jacobs (New York), Nicole Malliotakis (New York), Fred Upton (Michigan), Mario Diaz Balart (Florida), Carlos Gimenez (Florida), Maria Salazar (New York), Chris Smith (New Jersey), and Young Kim (California).

The resolution to remove Greene was approved 230-199, and the freshman from Georgia will no longer sit on the House Education and Labor or the House Budget Committees.

In a floor speech before the vote, Greene sought to distance herself from her past positions—clarifying she believes the 9/11 terror attacks were real and disavowing the QAnon conspiracy theory—while refusing to apologize or acknowledge a host of other comments and posts that have infuriated Democrats.

The vote effectively ends days of drama over what, if any, repercussions Greene might face for her mounting, outrageously offensive paper trail on social media. She was known to be an extreme conspiracy theorist even before her election, but scrutiny of her record grew after a CNN report last week that revealed that before taking office, she said recent school shootings like those in Parkland, Florida, and Las Vegas were staged “false flag” operations.

But Greene’s expulsion from committees—which ice her out from the main venue through which lawmakers do their work—figures to poison the well even further between the two parties, a month after the Jan. 6 attack that had already fomented distrust and resentment across the aisle.

Over the howls of Republicans who increasingly closed ranks around Greene, Democrats framed Thursday’s vote as an unfortunate but necessary step they had no choice but to take—because Republican leadership refused to address the outrageous past conduct of one of their own.

The second ranking House Democrat, Representative Steny Hoyer (D-Maryland), underscored the stakes of the vote when he appeared on the House floor during the debate on Thursday bearing a poster of a photo Greene posted to social media, in which she posed with a gun next to images of the progressive “Squad.”

 “When you take this vote, imagine your faces on this poster,” Hoyer said to his GOP colleagues seated on the floor. “Imagine it’s a Democrat with an AR-15. Imagine what your response would be.”

Research contact: @thedailybeast