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21 Republicans voted against giving medals to officers who responded to Jan. 6 riot
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1 hour ago - Politics & PolicyU.S. seeks $25M from Air Canada for "extreme delays" in giving refunds
2 hours ago - Economy & BusinessThe pandemic’s mental health toll
4 hours ago - HealthLina Khan will chair Federal Trade Commission
4 hours ago - TechnologyAmazon's relentless worker churn
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Jared Kushner signs deal for book to be published in 2022
Jared Kushner, then senior White House adviser, during a news conference last August. Photo: Oliver Contreras/Sipa/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Jared Kushner has signed a book deal with Broadside Books on his time as a senior adviser in the administration of his father-in-law, former President Trump, the conservative imprint of HarperCollins announced Tuesday.
The big picture: The book will be published in early 2022, Broadside Books said in an emailed statement that did not disclose the financial terms. "His book will be the definitive, thorough recounting of the administration — and the truth about what happened behind closed doors."
Go deeper: Books become free speech battleground
Coronavirus dashboard
Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios
- Health: Some Americans were infected with COVID in December 2019 — Study: Nearly a quarter of COVID-19 patients developed new or long-term conditions — U.S. COVID-19 death toll surpasses 600,000.
- Vaccines: Vermont becomes first state to reach 80% vaccine threshold — Novavax says COVID-19 vaccine was 90% effective in Phase 3 trial.
- Politics: Republicans push to sanction Chinese officials over Wuhan lab probe — Congress members hold moment of silence for Americans who died of COVID.
- States: California lifts most COVID restrictions — New York lifts most COVID restrictions as state hits 70% vaccination threshold.
- World: The G7's billion-dose pledge, heralded by Biden, doesn't add up — Boris Johnson extends England's COVID restrictions to curb variant spread.
- Sports: How all 24 Euro 2020 countries have fared with COVID-19 and vaccines.
- 🎧 Podcast: Back to normal without herd immunity.
- Variant tracker: Where different strains are spreading.
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Senate passes bill making Juneteenth a federal holiday
Photo: Brittany Murray/MediaNews Group/Long Beach Press-Telegram via Getty Images
The Senate voted via unanimous consent on Tuesday to pass a bill making Juneteenth a federal holiday.
The big picture: Juneteenth is already commemorated in 49 states and the District of Columbia. The day memorializes when the last enslaved African Americans in Texas learned about their freedom on June 19, 1865, more than 2.5 years after Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation and months after the Civil War ended.
Summer's expected IPO stampede likely to fuel record year
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
A tidal wave of household names — like Robinhood and Krispy Kreme — is about to hit the public market.
Why it matters: Jitters that spooked some would-be public companies last month didn't last. Investors are now bracing for a summer "scorcher" that will reignite the IPO boom and likely fuel a record year.
Schumer to begin budget reconciliation process on Wednesday
Bloomberg / Getty Images
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) plans to formally trigger the budget reconciliation process on Wednesday, setting Democrats up to ram the White House's American Jobs and Family Plans through the Senate via a simple majority vote in July.
Why it matters: Announcing this strategy now could be dangerous to the group of 20 bipartisan lawmakers trying to hash out a deal on the "hard" infrastructure portion of President Biden's package.
Pelosi: House to move forward with investigating Jan. 6 insurrection
Photo: Kevin Dietsch via Getty Images
Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Tuesday the House will move forward with investigating the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection, AP reports.
Why it matters: The Senate last month failed to advance a bill that would create a 9/11-style commission to investigate the Capitol riot. Pelosi's comments come after military officials and FBI Director Christopher Wray testified earlier Tuesday on the Jan. 6 events.
Heat wave enveloping West will shatter records, spark wildfires
The sun sets behind power lines in Rosemead, California on June 14, 2021, amid an early season heatwave across much of California this week. Photo by Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images
A dangerous and widespread mid-June heat wave is bringing blowtorch-like heat, skyrocketing power demand, and “critical” wildfire danger to much of the West Tuesday through this weekend.
Why it matters: The heat is building in a region that is experiencing a record drought, leading to dangerous fire weather conditions, straining electrical grids, and causing water supplies to dwindle further. The heat itself may prove deadly.
Biden names first political ambassadors, including for Israel and Mexico
FABRICE COFFRINI / Getty Images
President Biden announced his first slate of political ambassadors Tuesday, naming five political allies and donors, as well as four career foreign service officers.
Why it matters: Biden’s announcement is the first step in a nomination process that will see several more waves. But it gives an indication he is more comfortable with former and current politicians and Washington insiders than big-dollar donors who typically populate a president’s ambassador list.
U.S. COVID-19 death toll surpasses 600,000
More than 600,000 people have died from the coronavirus in the U.S., according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
The big picture: It's a higher death toll than the number of American soldiers killed in combat during the Vietnam War, World War I and World War II combined.
Senate confirms antitrust expert Lina Khan as FTC commissioner
Lina Khan speaks at a Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee confirmation hearing. Photographer: Saul Loeb/AFP/Bloomberg via Getty Images.
The Senate voted 69-28 on Tuesday to confirm antitrust expert Lina Khan as a commissioner on the Federal Trade Commission.
Why it matters: Known for her work on how to apply antitrust laws to the tech industry, Khan's confirmation marks a changing tide in federal government efforts to rein in Big Tech companies, Axios' Ashley Gold and Margaret Harding McGill report.
MacKenzie Scott donates another $2.7 billion to 286 organizations
MacKenzie Scott with her former husband, Jeff Bezos, the CEO of Amazon. Photo by Greg Doherty/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)
MacKenzie Scott announced Tuesday that she and her husband, Dan Jewett, had donated $2.74 billion to 286 different organizations, including community-based nonprofits and organizations focused on racial justice.
Why it matters: It's the next phase of what the New York Times describes as a "highly unconventional approach" to philanthropy from one of the richest women in the world.
Politico's top editor leaving for NBC
Screenshot: Youtube
Politico’s top editor Carrie Budoff Brown is joining NBC in a high-level executive position at the network that includes overseeing the "Meet the Press" franchise, sources familiar with the discussions tell Axios.
Why it matters: Budoff Brown has been with Politico since its earliest days in 2007 and is admired among newsroom staff. Her departure will be a major loss to the organization.
Bored of binging: Weekly streaming releases on the rise
Consumers and streamers are gravitating towards shows that are released weekly, as opposed to binge-watching shows that are released all-at-once, according to data provided exclusively to Axios from Parrot Analytics.
Why it matters: Streamers are no longer competing against traditional TV for consumers attention — they're competing against each other. Weekly releases help reduce subscriber churn.
Some Americans were infected with COVID in December 2019
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
The National Institutes of Health said Tuesday morning that testing of samples from an ongoing study of Americans show a very limited number of cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection in five U.S. states as early as Jan. 7, 2020.
Why it matters: Calling it another "piece of the puzzle" of when and how the coronavirus pandemic began, the NIH researchers say this offers more evidence that the virus was in the U.S. at the end of December.
Emails reveal Trump pressured top DOJ officials to overturn election results
Photo: Anna Moneymaker-Pool/Getty Images
Between December 2020 and early January, former President Trump and his allies repeatedly pressed senior Justice Department officials to investigate baseless conspiracy theories and challenge the results of the 2020 election, according to documents released by the House Oversight Committee.
Why it matters: The documents reveal new details about the extent to which Trump and his aides — including White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows — were willing to go to maintain power and advance the lie that the election was stolen.
U.S. and EU suspend 16-year Airbus-Boeing feud
President Biden at the EU summit in Brussels. Photo: Dursun Aydemir/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
The United States and the European Union reached a deal to end a 16-year-old dispute over subsidies to Airbus and Boeing, the White House announced on Tuesday.
The state of play: Both sides agreed to suspend tariffs for five years while they work together to counter China's investment in the aircraft sector in ways "that reflect our standards for fair competition," U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai told reporters.
White House releases first national strategy for countering domestic terrorism
Jan. 6 Capitol riot. Photo: Samuel Corum/Getty Images
The Biden administration on Tuesday released the first-ever "National Strategy for Countering Domestic Terrorism," following a 100-day comprehensive review ordered by President Biden on his first day in office.
Why it matters: It's the first national plan for countering what the White House is calling "the most urgent terrorism threat the United States faces today," echoing previous assessments by Attorney General Merrick Garland, FBI Director Christopher Wray and the intelligence community.
Bitcoin’s code upgrade is about privacy
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Bitcoin’s most significant code improvement in years won a key stamp of approval this weekend, reports CoinDesk’s Christie Harkin.
Why it matters: Over three years in the making, Taproot represents the ability for bitcoin to one day do more than be a store of value: think more nimble smart contracts (similar to those on Ethereum) and better usability.
Melinda French Gates meets with Biden administration, Hill officials
Melinda French Gates speaks during SXSW Online in March. Photo: SXSW via Getty Images
Melinda French Gates is staying visible with a Washington swing this week to visit White House and Hill officials to discuss issues important to her, especially paid leave, advisers tell me.
Driving the news: French Gates met at the White House yesterday with Chief of Staff Ron Klain and Domestic Policy Adviser Susan Rice, among other senior administration officials.
Republicans push to sanction Chinese officials over Wuhan lab probe
Rep. Elise Stefanik. Photo: Samuel Corum/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Two House Republicans — including Conference Chair Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) — are introducing a bill Tuesday to sanction top Chinese health officials until they allow an investigation into whether the coronavirus originated in a Wuhan lab, according to a copy of the bill text obtained by Axios.
Why it matters: The lab-leak theory has regained prominence in both the scientific and political worlds, after the Wall Street Journal reported that three scientists who worked at the Wuhan Institute of Virology experienced COVID-19 symptoms in November 2019.
Your hands-free car drives way more politely than you
2021 Cadillac Escalade with Super Cruise technology allows hands-free highway driving. Photo: GM
Assisted-driving features are supposed to make cars safer and relieve some of the monotony of driving, but if your robot sidekick's driving style doesn't match your own, it could lead to unexpected dangers.
The big picture: Reliable, fully driverless cars are still a long way off. Until then, motorists will share driving duties with partially automated, assisted-driving systems, and they need to know what to expect from them.
3 dirty jobs that will build the future
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
The clean, green, connected world that's right around the corner will require dirty, dangerous work to build.
Think: Hauling solar panels up to high roofs. Digging trenches for fiber-optic cables along busy highways. Climbing towering masts to rig cellular antennas.
House antitrust bills take tight aim at tech giants
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
The sweeping antitrust bills House lawmakers introduced Friday don't just propose broad new principles of digital-age competition — they put giant bullseyes on the backs of Google, Facebook, Amazon and Apple.
Why it matters: Laws crafted now to tie the hands of today's dominant companies will still be on the books for years and decades to come, and critics are already flagging possible unintended consequences.
PwC outlines new plan on racial equity, building trust in business
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios
A slew of corporations over the last year made promises to help build a more equitable future, pushed to action by sustained protests demanding racial equity. Consumers and investors alike are looking for action to back up rhetoric.
What’s new: PwC, a professional services firm, provided Axios an early look at a new global strategy announced this morning that aims to reimagine business' role in society. A cornerstone of the plan is putting $300 million toward education and racial equity programs.
Grid operator asks Texans to conserve power amid outages in searing heat
Power lines stretch along along a highway near Alpine, Texas. Photo: Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images
Texas' power grid operator has asked people to "reduce electric use as much as possible" until Friday following days of searing heat and a "significant number of forced generation outages."
Why it matters: The request by the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) comes months after a deadly winter storm blew out the state's power infrastructure and left millions of Texans without power for days.
ICC prosecutor seeks full probe into Duterte's drug war killings in Philippines
President Rodrigo Duterte during a speech at a Philippine Air Force base in Manila, the Philippines, in February. Photo: Xinhua/Rouelle Umali via Getty Images
The International Criminal Court's chief prosecutor has called for a full investigation into a deadly crackdown on drugs since President Rodrigo Duterte took office.
Why it matters: Official government data shows more than 6,100 people have died in police drug operations in the Philippines since 2016, but rights groups say the figure is likely to be much higher.
3,000 unruly passenger reports made to FAA this year
Photo: Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Airlines have reported some 3,000 cases of unruly behavior by passengers to the Federal Aviation Administration this year — including 2,300 for refusing to comply with face mask mandates, the FAA announced Monday.
Why it matters: Passenger numbers remain below pre-pandemic levels. But the FAA is investigating the highest number of suspected federal law violations since it began recording unruly passenger incidents in 1995, per ABC News.
Cashier killed after face mask policy dispute in Georgia grocery store
An Atlanta area grocery store cashier was killed and three other people were injured in a shooting following a dispute over a face mask policy in the supermarket Monday, police said.
Driving the news: DeKalb County Sheriff Melody Maddox said during a news conference that the female cashier was working at the Big Bear Supermarket in Decatur when she was shot following a "confrontation" over the wearing of masks.
House panel to investigate Trump-era DOJ data seizures
Photo: James Devaney via Getty Images
The House Judiciary Committee will launch a formal probe into the Trump-era Justice Department's seizure of data from devices belonging to members of Congress, their aides, journalists and then-White House counsel, panel chair Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.) announced Monday.
Why it matters: Though it's so far unclear if the cases are related, they raise "serious constitutional and separation of power concerns," Nadler said in a statement.
Scoop: Inside Biden's Putin prep
Photo illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios. Photo: Leon Neal (WPA Pool)/Getty Images
President Biden assembled a group of outside Russia experts — including former Trump officials — to brief him for his summit with President Vladimir Putin, people familiar with the matter tell Axios.
Why it matters: The previously unreported session demonstrates the extent to which Biden wants to be well prepared, drawing on the experience of officials with first-hand knowledge of the onetime KGB colonel’s tactics and tricks.
Rubio's play for anti-China vote
Sen. Marco Rubio. Photo: Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call Inc. via Getty Images
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) is making a play for China hawks in Florida as he braces for a competitive re-election fight next year, records show.
Why it matters: Hostility toward communism drove a significant number of Latino voters in Florida into the Republican column in 2020. The Rubio campaign’s focus on China can capitalize on that trend and a wider — and widening — American mistrust of Beijing.
By the numbers: The building migrant backlog
There are now more than 1.3 million cases awaiting a decision from an immigration judge — double the caseload from 2017 — to determine whether migrants can legally stay in the U.S., according to newly released data reviewed by Axios.
Why it matters: The rapidly growing backlog is another sign of a broken immigration system. Migrants have been waiting an average of nearly 950 days for a court decision — two-and-a-half years of living in limbo.
Vermont becomes first state to reach 80% vaccine threshold
A COVID-19 vaccination record card and an "I got my COVID-19 vaccine!" sticker. (Photo by: Don and Melinda Crawford/Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Vermont Gov. Phil Scott (R) announced Monday that 80% of its eligible population has received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.
Why it matters: Vermont is the first state in the country to reach that threshold. As a result, Scott said he is removing all COVID-19 restrictions.
Obama: Women "found themselves in an impossible situation" during pandemic
Photo: Scott Olson via Getty Images
Former President Obama, speaking to The 19th, called on the government, spouses and partners to play their role in addressing the decline in women's labor force.
Why it matters: Women's labor force participation in the U.S. was at a 33-year low in January. The pandemic has driven mothers out of the workforce, and there's reason to be concerned about "permanent scarring," Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in March.