THE DAILY NEWSLETTER - TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 2021

Media Winners & Losers

MEDIA WINNER:
Kristin Fisher

Fox News White House correspondent Kristin Fisher got into a tense back-and-forth with press secretary Jen Psaki over the Biden administration’s statements Friday about the nation’s refugee cap.

The White House, in a directive issued Friday, said it would leave a Trump-era cap on refugees. Then, following swift blowback from Democrats in Congress and beyond, the administration issued another statement — said the final refugee cap won’t be determined until May.

During Monday’s White House press briefing, Fisher questioned Psaki about the two statements — delivered in the same afternoon 

They sparred, with Psaki denying the change was a change before saying the change was anticipated in a caveat, and Fisher pressuring for a direct answer about whether the shift was due to Democrat unrest.

Eventually Psaki said Fisher hadn't "articulated" the change, and Fisher responded that it's "not my job to do that!"

It was a classic example of dogged pursuit of a straight answer by the press corps reporter.

MEDIA LOSER:
Naomi Wolf

Naomi Wolf appeared as a guest on Fox News Monday night to talk with Ben Domenech about the pandemic a day after tweeting out a bizarre, conspiratorial claim about side effects of the Covid-19 vaccine.

Wolf has been criticized recently for outlandish comments about the pandemic and vaccines. Last month she shared a fake quote from a doctor (actually a picture of an adult film star) without checking it first.

And she created similar controversy over the weekend and into Monday for citing a Facebook page as she said, “Well hundreds of women on this page say they are having bleeding/ clotting after vaccination or that they bleed oddly being AROUND vaccinated women.”

A day later she appeared as a guest on Fox News Primetime — guest-hosted this week by the husband of Meghan McCain — talking about Dr. Anthony Fauci and lockdowns.

Amazingly, during the segment Wolf criticized Fauci for “not giving us fact-based, science-based guidance.”

Wolf was absolutely shredded on social media over the truly out there conspiracy theory.

The A-Block

'I encourage people to take it'

“I had [Covid] and I took [the vaccine].” That's what former President Donald Trump said when he sat down with Fox News’ Sean Hannity for the full hour Monday night, when the issue of vaccine hesitancy among his supporters came up.

Trump talked up how the U.S. is “saving tens of millions of people with the vaccine” and took a shot at Pfizer, saying they’re “in with the FDA,” before knocking the Johnson & Johnson vaccine pause.

The former president then mentioned in passing, “You know, they all want me to do a commercial because a lot of our people don’t want to take the vaccine. I don’t know what that is exactly, Republican, I don’t know what it is.”

“You encourage people to take it,” Hannity said.

“I encourage people to take it. I do,” Trump responded. “I had it and I took it.”

“They want me to do a commercial saying take the vaccine,” he continued. “And they think that’s very important and I’d certainly do it.”

The former president said he then “called them” to ask about the J&J vaccine pause, citing a reported six cases of serious blood clots in the millions of people who have gotten the ond-dose vaccine.

He called it “the worst thing they could have done from a public relations standpoint.”

They want me to do a commercial, some commercial, and then they do this pause," he said, making the point that by pausing they send a bad message to the public and especially the vaccine "hesitant" about the safety of being innoculated.

CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta has raised the same point, as have many other members of the press.



In Other News...

What is 4/20? Weed is Legal in New York, and the Weed Holiday is Here

James O’Keefe Files Lawsuit Against Twitter for 'False and Defamatory' Statements About His Account Ban

Daily Show's Klepper Shares Shocking New Capitol Insurrection Footage: 'A Mix of the Scary and the Absurd'

Tucker Carlson Plays Translator for Maxine Waters, Says She Has 'No Use for Anglo-Saxon' Traditions

Must See Clip

'Isolationist, Protectionist, and to a Certain Extent Nativist'

America’s most recent two-term Republican President doesn’t think highly of the party for which he served as the standard-bearer at the start of the 21st Century.

Appearing on the Today show Tuesday, former President George W. Bush was asked by host Hoda Kotb to describe the current state of the Republican party. His response was none too charitable.

“I would describe it as isolationist, protectionist, and to a certain extent nativist,” Bush said.

And then some.

Links We Like

Ever Given Crew Fear Joining Ranks Of Seafarers Stranded On Ships For Years
- Ruth Michaelson, The Guardian
The Unbroken Chain of White Violence That Links Black Lives
- Kali Holloway, Daily Beast
Will Maxine Waters Cause a Mistrial?
- Jim Geraghty, National Review
GOP Wrong to Say American Jobs Plan Is a 'Radical Agenda'
- Mark Wolfe & Christine Harada, RealClearPolitics
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