Plus: Grappling With DC Vaccine Mandate, Capitol Hill Restaurant Owner Pleads for Decency
January 27 2022
Good morning from Washington, where the Biden administration is busy figuring out how to track federal employees with religious or medical reasons for not getting a COVID-19 vaccine. Fred Lucas has an update on our exclusive reporting. With the news of another imminent Supreme Court vacancy, John Malcolm assesses what Stephen Breyer stands for. On the podcast, it’s West Virginia v. China, sort of. Plus: tailoring education to children’s needs; YouTube bounces Dan Bongino; and “Problematic Women” wades into the masks-at-school debate. Fifty-five years ago today, a launch pad fire during tests at Cape Canaveral, Florida, kills Apollo I astronauts “Gus” Grissom, Edward White II, and Roger Chaffee, all trapped inside the command module.
"This is just the latest addition to the ever-growing list of abuses from an administration hellbent on imposing medical tyranny on the American people," says Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas.
Noe Landini put up a sign promising that his restaurant would not “discriminate against any customer based on sex, gender, race, creed, age, vaccinated or unvaccinated.”
A reliable vote with the liberal wing of the court—especially on issues such as same-sex marriage, abortion, and campaign finance issues—Breyer values consensus and compromise.
Dan Bongino’s channel was initially suspended and demonetized for seven days after Bongino posted a video in which he said masks were “useless” in stopping the spread of the coronavirus,
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell responds to some of the president’s outlandish claims over his first year, saying the Biden on display wasn’t the one he’s known for decades.