🧤 Friday came fast. Today's Smart Brevity™ count: 1,470 words ... 5½ minutes.
🧤 Friday came fast. Today's Smart Brevity™ count: 1,470 words ... 5½ minutes.
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
President Biden talks — and promises to govern — like a soothing centrist. But early moves show he's keeping his promise to advance a liberal agenda, Axios' Dion Rabouin, Courtenay Brown and Jennifer A. Kingson report.
Jaret Seiberg of Cowen Washington Research Group says that having it both ways "will work in the short-term, but eventually those progressives who are taking over key jobs will impact the regulatory environment."
Biden handed some of his most visible positions, including treasury secretary, to "old-timers" like former Fed chair Janet Yellen, says Joseph Trevisani, senior analyst at FXStreet.
On immigration, a coalition of 200 U.S. mayors challenged the new administration to adopt a highly progressive agenda — only to find their announcement upstaged by Biden's pledge to try to enact nearly all the reforms.
Between the lines: The party's center has been shifting left for years, and Biden arguably just moved with it.
Photo: Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images
President Biden will continue his executive action blitz today, issuing two more orders in an attempt to provide immediate relief to struggling families without waiting for Congress, Hans Nichols reports.
Today's first executive order primarily focuses on directing the departments of Agriculture, Treasury and Veterans Affairs to consider administrative changes to how they calculate payments under various federal programs.
The second executive order is designed to protect workers and increase wages and also revokes three Trump executive orders.
The bottom line: The operative word in these executive actions is "consider." Biden is putting his own departments on notice that he expects them to interpret regulations broadly to help families.
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
Apple's moves on self-driving cars have come in fits and starts, but it has big ambitions and is pushing both its own efforts and potential partnerships with automakers, Axios chief tech correspondent Ina Fried writes from S.F.
Hyundai, the Korean carmaker, made a rare (and probably unwise) public confirmation two weeks ago that it is in talks to work with Apple.
Between the lines: Apple wants to play a significant role in this space, but that doesn't necessarily mean proprietary iCars will be rolling down the streets.
Selling cars doesn't produce the 35%+ profit margins Apple typically likes, while a service might.
Between the lines: Apple usually likes to put a better interface on technology that's emerging but not brand new, rather than being the absolute first to market.
Apple has confirmed interest in the category, but declined to comment for this story.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, joining White House press secretary Jen Psaki during her briefing yesterday, on the contrast with Trump administration briefings: "[I]t was very clear that there were things that were said — be it regarding things like hydroxychloroquine and other things like that — that really was uncomfortable because they were not based on scientific fact."
The White House released a 198-page COVID-19 strategy, available for download here.
After booming in 2020, stocks of clean-energy companies are poised to keep going up under President Biden's policies, Axios' Amy Harder writes.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
America’s big banks capped off a winning year, led by soaring Wall Street-facing business lines, Axios' Courtenay Brown reports.
How it happened: Financial results show that banks made a killing thanks to unprecedented action by the Federal Reserve — which caused a rush of activity in financial markets, pushed a slew of companies to issue debt, and led a flood of others to go public for the first time.
Trump family at his last Andrews departure. Photo: Alex Edelman/AFP via Getty Images
Many of former President Trump's pardons, including Paul Manafort's, "are narrowly drawn," leaving recipients open to future prosecution, Andrew Weissmann, the former Mueller lead prosecutor, argues for NYU School of Law's Reiss Center on Law and Security.
Between the lines: Trump's zany process, which often cut out the Justice Department pardon machinery, could wind up backfiring on his allies.
President Biden's swearing-in and inaugural address drew nearly 40 million viewers (not counting streaming), beating Trump's 38.35 million viewers from 2017, according to preliminary Nielsen figures, Sara Fischer writes.
Why it matters: The figures, which don't include data from households that may have streamed the event, show that despite all of the drama in Washington, the country was still eager to watch its new president be sworn in.
Bret Baier's son Paul is recovering from his fourth open-heart surgery, and has "made leaps and bounds" since the 10-hour procedure last month, the Fox News anchor tells PEOPLE in the issue out today.
Baier said he and his wife, Amy, who also have a 10-year-old son, Daniel, recognize that every parent "has something" in terms of difficulties they face with their children — and Paul's condition is their "something."
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