🥞 Hello, Sunday. Today's Smart Brevity™ count: 1,166 words ... 4½ minutes.
🥞 Hello, Sunday. Today's Smart Brevity™ count: 1,166 words ... 4½ minutes.
President-elect Biden has ordered up a shock-and-awe campaign for his first days in office to signal, as dramatically as possible, the radical shift coming to America and global affairs, his advisers tell us.Â
The plan, Part 1 ... Biden, as detailed in a "First Ten Days" memo from incoming chief of staff Ron Klain, plans to unleash executive orders, federal powers and speeches to shift to a stark, national plan for "100 million shots" in three months:Â
The plan, Part 2 ... Biden plans a $2 trillion stimulus/coronavirus plan + the following executive orders to symbolize and solidify a substantial shift here and abroad:Â
The big picture: Watch for Biden to wrap everything, even tangential ideological priorities, under the banner of the coronavirus, in hopes of speeding up legislative action and picking up some Republican votes.
Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photo: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images
In Episode 2 of "Off the rails," our fly-on-the-wall series on President Trump's final days by Jonathan Swan and Zachary Basu, an increasingly isolated Trump stops buying what aides tell him — and turns to radical voices peddling what he wants to hear.
President Trump plunked down in an armchair in the White House residence, still dressed from his golf game — navy fleece, black pants, white MAGA cap. It was Saturday, Nov. 7. The networks had just called the election for Joe Biden.
Plan B, driven by Rudy Giuliani and a parallel track of conspiracists, was already coming together, unfolding before the original advisers' own eyes.
A bizarre routine set in at Trump campaign headquarters in Arlington, Va.:
Bewildered campaign aides would look around the table at one another, silently asking what the hell was going on. One would invariably shuffle out of the room, followed by another a few minutes later.
Eventually, Giuliani would realize that he and his crew were alone in the conference room. He'd walk down the hall and knock on the glass outside Stepien's office, where about eight aides had squeezed onto a pair of couches.
"Off the rails," Episode 2, continues...
Some of the senior staff argued that Trump should spend this post-election period claiming credit for the GOP's strong congressional performances in the elections and to burnish his legacy, by talking about his achievements in office and the pace of the Operation Warp Speed vaccine development.
Biden was declared the winner of Arizona on Nov. 12, by more than 11,000 votes — a margin that was uncatchable. At that point, the core campaign team told Trump his pathway was dead. In retaliation, Trump stopped listening to them.
📱Go deeper: Read the whole deeply reported episode in the Axios stream.
🎧 Axios premieres a new podcast series on Monday, "How it happened," featuring Jonathan Swan and "Off the rails." Subscribe to "Axios Today" to catch the first episode as soon as it drops.
Road closures map: Google Maps via WTOP
Screenshots of digital fliers for fringe-right rallies. Source: GroupSense
Domestic extremists are using obscure and private corners of the internet to plot new attacks ahead of Inauguration Day. Their plans are hidden in plain sight — buried in podcasts and online video platforms, Sara Fischer and Kyle Daly write.
Extremism researchers worry the threat is more diffuse than the openly plotted Jan. 6 attack in Washington, with far-right groups taking to non-mainstream channels to plan nationwide disruption, and whip up anger and calls to arms.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
When the lockdowns started in March, kidstech firm SuperAwesome found that screen time was up 50%. Nearly a year later, that percentage hasn't budged, Sara Fischer and Margaret Harding McGill report.
Axios spoke with more than a dozen parents of kids from different ages, states and socioeconomic backgrounds about screen time during the pandemic.
Timothy Snyder — author of "On Tyranny," on America’s turn toward authoritarianism — writes in the New York Times Magazine cover story:
Informed observers inside and outside government agree that right-wing white supremacism is the greatest terrorist threat to the United States. Gun sales in 2020 hit an astonishing high. History shows that political violence follows when prominent leaders of major political parties openly embrace paranoia.
Keep reading (subscription).
Bling Easter eggs ... "The ring that each Lakers player received for winning the 2020 NBA championship is mostly gold and diamonds, ... but there is something subtle lurking beneath the gleam," the L.A. Times' David Wharton writes.
📬 Thanks for starting your holiday weekend with us. Please invite your friends to sign up for Axios AM/PM.