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Good Thursday morning from Salt Lake City. Today is the 313th day of the year. There are 52 days remaining in 2017.

Thursday, November 9, 2017 - 1:15pm
Utah Policy

Daily Briefing

 

Good Thursday morning from Salt Lake City. Today is the 313th day of the year. There are 52 days remaining in 2017.

The clock:

  • 74 days until the opening day of the 2018 Utah Legislature (1/22/2018)
  • 119 days until the final day of the 2018 Utah Legislature (3/8/2018)
  • 362 days until the 2018 midterm elections (11/6/2018)
  • 1,090 days until the 2020 presidential election (11/3/2020)

 

Today's political TL; DR -

 

  • SCOOP #1: The organizers of Count My Vote have changed their ballot initiative to include the current dual-track system for candidates to get on the ballot. That means they're no longer trying to eliminate the caucus/convention system in Utah [Utah Policy].
     
  • SCOOP #2: Legislative leaders say they've reached an agreement with Gov. Gary Herbert to release a legal opinion from Attorney General Sean Reyes about the process Herbert set up for the 3rd Congressional District special election. Previously, Herbert had blocked the release of that opinion [Utah Policy].
     
  • John Curtis says he will be sworn in as Utah's newest member of Congress on Monday [Deseret News, Tribune].
     
  • Sore loser? Democrat Kathie Allen has apologized for a tweet she posted on election night ripping Utah County voters for only caring about Mormons and Republicans. She has since deleted the tweet and apologized [Utah Policy].
     
  • Gov. Gary Herbert taps Ron Gordon as his new special counsel [Utah Policy].
     
  • Newly elected Representative John Curtis names Corey Norman as his chief of staff. Curtis is also seeking applicants to fill other positions in his office [Utah Policy].
     
  • Sen. Lincoln Fillmore is proposing legislation that will equalize school funding levels across the state [Deseret News].
     
  • Utah lawmakers propose extra pay for special ed teachers in Utah public schools [Deseret News].
     
  • Federal law enforcement officials pick Utah to take part in a program designed to fight painkiller addiction and abuse [Deseret News, Tribune].
     
  • Some parts of Utah got no precipitation last month [Tribune].

 

National headlines:

 

  • The GOP is worried that Tuesday's election losses may portend bigger problems for them in 2018 [Washington Post].
     
  • Republicans in Congress say the drubbing they took at the polls on Tuesday night puts extra pressure on them to pass tax reform [Politico].
     
  • Senate Republicans will unveil their tax reform proposal on Thursday. Their plan would eliminate the ability to deduct state and local taxes, but will not completely get rid of the estate tax [New York Times].
     
  • Former national security adviser Michael Flynn is reportedly worried his son, Michael Flynn Jr., could be legally vulnerable in the investigation into how Russia interfered in the 2016 election [CNN].
     
  • President Trump said Thursday he's confident China can help defuse the growing crisis with North Korea [New York Times].
     
  • Lawmakers are alarmed that President Donald Trump's Justice Department is allegedly intervening in the proposed merger between AT&T and Time Warner. Sources say the DOJ is demanding that the two companies sell off Turner Broadcasting, including CNN, or the deal will not go through [Politico].
     
  • What the heck is going on with the Rand Paul assault story? His neighbors are saying the attack on Paul by a neighbor was not motivated by a landscaping dispute, but rather it was political [Washington Examiner, Breitbart].
     
  • An employee of an anti-hunger nonprofit founded by members of the House embezzled more than $1 million, then disappeared [Politico].
     
  • Video captured the attack on a Texas church where a gunman methodically slaughtered 26 people on Sunday [New York Times].
     
  • Experts say this year's flu vaccine may not protect everyone from the bug, but you should get one anyway [CNN].

On this day in history:

  • 1620 - Pilgrims aboard the Mayflower sight land at Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
     
  • 1872 - A fire which began in the basement of a warehouse in downtown Boston raged for 12 hours, consuming 65 acres and destroying 776 buildings. At least 30 people were killed.
     
  • 1906 - President Theodore Roosevelt is the first sitting president to make an official trip outside the United States to inspect progress on the Panama Canal.
     
  • 1938 - Mobs of Germans attacked Jewish businesses and homes throughout Germany in what became known as Kristallnacht, or Crystal Night.
     
  • 1979 - NORAD computers detected a purported massive Soviet nuclear strike. After reviewing the raw data from satellites and early-warning radars, the alert was canceled.
     
  • 1989 - East Germany opens checkpoints in the Berlin Wall, allowing its citizens to travel to West Berlin.

 

 

Today At Utah Policy

Lawmakers reach compromise with Gov. Herbert and A.G. Reyes to release secret legal opinion on CD3 special election
By Bob Bernick, Contributing Editor
An agreement has been reached between GOP Gov. Gary Herbert, Attorney General Sean Reyes, and GOP legislative leaders: The Legislature will get Reyes' legal opinion on the 3rd Congressional District election process, and lawmakers will make it public....

Herbert taps Ron Gordon as general counsel
By Bob Bernick, Contributing Editor
Gov. Gary Herbert has a new legal counsel, Ron Gordon, who has just missed stepping into one of the messiest legal issues the governor has seen in eight years in office....

Retooled Count My Vote ballot initiative keeps current dual-track system for candidates
By Bryan Schott, Managing Editor
Organizers of the Count My Vote ballot initiative are retooling their proposal to keep Utah's current dual track system for candidates to get on the ballot....

 

Curtis names Norman as chief of staff, begins search to fill other staff positions
By Press Release
Congressman-Elect John Curtis announced that Corey Norman will be joining his congressional office in Washington, DC as the Chief of Staff....

Kathie Allen blasts Mormons, Republicans on Twitter following loss
By Bryan Schott, Managing Editor
Shortly after she lost the CD3 election to Republican John Curtis, Democratic nominee Kathie Allen sent out (then deleted) a tweet that slammed Utah County voters for blindly voting for Mormons and Republicans....

Weekly survey: 'Fake news' on social media
By Bryan Schott, Managing Editor
We're learning more about how Russian "troll farms" used social media to spread misinformation during the 2016 election. Would you support or oppose a law requiring social media companies to remove "fake news" posts or political content paid for by a foreign government?...

Policy News

 

Hatch, Donnelly suicide prevention bill passes in the Senate
The National Suicide Hotline Improvement Act, sponsored by Senators Orrin Hatch (R-UT) and Joe Donnelly (D-IN), passed in the Senate....

 

Stewart's bipartisan bill passes House
The House passes H.R. 3922 which included the text of Rep. Chris Stewart's (R-Utah) bipartisan bill, the National Health Service Corps Strengthening Act of 2017....

 

Sens. Lee, Leahy support USA Liberty Act
Wednesday, the House Judiciary Committee reported the USA Liberty Act to the House floor with 27-8 support....

 

Local Headlines

Salt Lake Tribune

Holly Richardson: Campaign season is dead. Long live campaign season.

Michelle Quist Mumford: Will 2018 be the year of the Utah Democrat?

Editorial: There is reason to hope that Curtis will be part of the solution

Gov. Gary Herbert appoints new general counsel

Republican John Curtis, Utah's new congressman-elect, set to be sworn in, cast first vote Monday

Count My Vote ballot drive shifts course, will try to preserve current election law - mostly

Homeless hotline won't take reports, Liberty Wells residents tell Salt Lake City Mayor Jackie Biskupski

Deseret News

A. Scott Anderson: Envision Utah - 20 years of empowering vibrant communities

Op-ed: The Second Amendment is meant to ensure that the people always have the means to defend themselves

Op-ed: Work is foundational to restoring dignity

Jay Evensen: By now we should understand that homelessness can't be solved quickly

Editorial: Trump administration's memo on religious liberty upholds sound principles

Utah lawmakers propose $4,000 salary stipends for special ed teachers

Congressman-elect John Curtis says he'll be sworn in Monday

New Count My Vote initiative would keep Utah's convention system

Lawmaker pitches statewide funding equalization program for Utah schools

Energy symposium highlights natural resource wonders in Utah

Utah launches new DEA strategy to combat painkiller, heroin addiction

Feds to help Utah put spotlight on dangers of opiates

'We're scared': Liberty Wells residents plead for help from Operation Rio Grande spillover

Other

Weber County officials ask groups eyeing change in government to unite (Standard-Examiner)

National Headlines

U.S. stocks close at record on anniversary of Trump's election (MarketWatch)

Iran-North Korea's 'axis of evil' may be Trump's biggest threat (CNBC)

Maui budget crisis has begun (Maui News)

Biden feared Clinton mud-slinging 'would stop at nothing' (Daily Mail)

How Brazile's book exposes liberal media's Hillary health coverup (New York Post)

NASA is working with Uber on its flying taxi project (CNBC)

Group Calling National Anthem Lyrics Racist, Anti-Black (CBS Sacramento)

A black student wrote those racist messages that shook the Air Force Academy, school says (Washington Post)

CBO: Repealing Health Coverage Mandate Would Save $338 Billion (NPR)

Rand Paul has 6 broken ribs following alleged assault (CNN)

White House implements new Cuba policy restricting travel and trade (Washington Post)

Wise Words

Excuses

"It is better to offer no excuse than a bad one." George Washington
 

 

Lighter Side

Medical Marijuana

"In an interview, "Jeopardy" host Alex Trebek revealed that he once tripped hard on hash brownies. Apparently, Trebek spent hours saying "What is, 'my hand' for 800?" Conan O'Brien