What a day. First, the Senate at last passed a bipartisan infrastructure bill. This is big, both policy-wise and politically. Infrastructure projects positively impact all Americans by creating jobs and improving the roads, railways, public transportation, water systems, power grids, and broadband we all use daily. That's a victory for everyone. Further, 19 Republicans, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, voted in favor of the bill. In this political climate, that's a significant victory not only for the president, but for American democracy. Just mere minutes after the Senate vote, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced his resignation. This is as it should be. The sexual harassment allegations against him are both serious and credible, and, as he acknowledged today, his continuing on as governor is untenable and ultimately unfair to the people of New York. This was the only proper response. —Melissa Amour, Managing Editor
 
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Cuomo resigns

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has announced his resignation from office, effective in two weeks. The decision follows last week's release of a report from state Attorney General Letitia James that found he sexually harassed 11 women, including some who worked in his office, and violated state and federal laws. At his press conference this morning, Cuomo apologized to the women, but continued to claim his innocence.

MORE: Kathy Hochul to become New York's first woman governor with Cuomo resignation —New York Daily News

Senate gives Biden a big win

The Senate passed a roughly $1 trillion infrastructure package with broad bipartisan support today, marking the most substantial federal investment in roads, bridges, and rail in decades. The legislation reauthorizes spending on existing federal public-works programs and pours an additional $550 billion into water projects and the electrical grid, among other projects. Presidents of both parties have said for years that they wanted to pass a major infrastructure package, but Congress could never seem to reach an agreement. President Biden has bucked that trend, though the bill still faces an uphill battle in the House, where Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said the chamber won't take it up until the Senate also passes a separate $3.5 trillion social spending plan. —The Wall Street Journal

MORE: Dems double-dare a dug-in McConnell on debt —Politico

WaPo Ed Board: The next Olympics must not celebrate dictatorship and genocide

"To be sure, a boycott would probably not change China's behavior, while athletes who have worked their whole lives for a shot at Olympic gold would pay a heavy price. But if there is to be no boycott, then countries and companies must deny China the unchallenged showcase it craves. The U.S. and its fellow democracies should devise appropriate condemnations and time for them at the [2022 Beijing] Olympics." —The Washington Post

MORE: U.S. steps up pressure on businesses over forced labor in China —The Wall Street Journal

Your money or your mask

Could Ron DeSantis be any more unlikeable right now? The governor of Florida, where cases of COVID-19 are pushing the state's hospitals to the brink, issued an executive order last month essentially banning mask mandates in the state's public schools. Several lawsuits have been filed challenging the constitutionality of that order, and a number of school districts have indicated that they may defy it and require masks for the safety of students and staff. DeSantis' office upped the ante yesterday, saying the state board of education could withhold the salaries of superintendents and school board members who disregard the order. Wow. —CNN

MORE: Gov. Greg Abbott's order banning mask mandates in Texas schools faces lawsuit, defiance by big-city districts —The Texas Tribune

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Milbank: Bigotry is bigotry, from right or left

"A vague 'they' conspiring to 'exploit the rest of us for their own profit' from 'behind the curtain': These anti-Semitic tropes have been used against the Jews for generations. If that weren't clear enough, [Rep. Rashida] Tlaib let it be known that 'they' operate both in Gaza and Detroit, and only Jews meet that description. Tlaib went on to say the exploiters 'made record profit' during the pandemic—an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory popular on the Web. ... Democrats and others on the left should call this what it is: bigotry. It's grotesque when Trump and his MAGA minions do it, as I've chronicled at length; it's no less ugly when it comes from the left." —Dana Milbank in The Washington Post

Dana Milbank is an author and columnist at
The Washington Post.

MORE: Jewish leaders condemn Tlaib's 'anti-Semitic dog whistle' in recent comments —The Times of Israel

Focus on voting and elections

Dominion Voting Systems filed suit against One America News Network and Newsmax today for defamation, after the media outlets spread false claims that Dominion rigged the 2020 election for Joe Biden. The lawsuits are the latest legal actions taken by the voting machine maker against Trump allies that amplified falsehoods about the company—and Dominion attorney Stephen Shackelford has not ruled out suing Donald Trump himself. "We are still exploring options as to how to hold other participants in the campaign of lies accountable," Shackelford said. Stay tuned. —Reuters

MORE: Forging ahead, Texas Senate committee again passes voting restrictions bill —The Texas Tribune

Weiner: The erosion of the separation of powers

"The concept of the separation of powers—which depends on members of Congress unifying to protect legislative power—has collapsed in the U.S. We have become a de facto parliamentary system in which competing parties battle for executive power. The problem is that we have acquired all the vices of such a system but none of its virtues. ... As it stands—with Congress unwilling to unite against even a physical assault incited by the president—we have maintained the empty shell of the separation of powers around the core of a partisan system. The result is a system capable of abusing citizens but not governing them. It would be difficult to conjure a worse combination." —Greg Weiner in The New York Times

Greg Weiner is a political scientist at Assumption University, a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, and the author of "The Political Constitution: The Case Against Judicial Supremacy."


MORE: Commission on Capitol attack contemplates requesting Jan. 6 Trump call logs —Truthout

I liked Alyssa Rosenberg's story last week. We are the politicians' bosses, not the other way around. It's time we made them understand that. —John C., Florida

It's one thing for a candidate to oppose mask mandates. It's another to make a video SHOOTING UP a box of harmless masks (which could have been donated to poor people who want them). 

Candidate Matt Richards, running in Georgia's 10th District, asks readers to forward his e-mail to five of their closest friends. Sorry, I'm just sending it to Topline. —Jim V., New York

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The views expressed in "What's Your Take?" are submitted by readers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the editorial staff or the Stand Up Republic Foundation.


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