AS THE IMPEACHMENT PROCESS strikes to the Senate, a whole lot of discuss has centered on course of — what is going to the trial truly appear like and who will and received’t testify. A number of of PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP’S high White Home officers refused to testify earlier than the Home. And, to this point, nothing appears to have modified on that entrance relating to the Senate.
JOE BIDEN has additionally now doubled down on feedback that he received’t adjust to a possible subpoena from his previous colleagues to testify, leaving broad open the query of what, precisely, a Senate trial would appear like and the way significant it could truly be.
— DES MOINES REGISTER: “Biden says he wouldn’t adjust to a Senate subpoena within the impeachment trial of President Trump,” by Nick Coltrain: “Former Vice President Joe Biden confirmed Friday he wouldn’t adjust to a subpoena to testify in a Senate trial of President Donald Trump. … Biden mentioned in early December he wouldn’t adjust to a subpoena by the Senate, and confirmed that assertion Friday in an interview with the Des Moines Register’s editorial board. He has not been subpoenaed, however Trump’s allies have floated the thought.
“Testifying earlier than the Senate on the matter would take consideration away from Trump and the allegations in opposition to him, Biden mentioned. Not even ‘that thug’ Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s private legal professional and former New York Metropolis mayor, has accused Biden of doing something however his job, the previous vp mentioned. Biden additionally mentioned any try and subpoena him could be on ‘specious’ grounds, and he predicted it would not come to that.” Des Moines Register
THE STAKES by way of JAMES ARKIN: “Impeachment trial will supercharge battle for Senate”: “The battle for the Senate majority in 2020 was at all times going to be heated. And now right here comes impeachment. The Senate’s impeachment trial of President Donald Trump continues to be caught in limbo, however the looming verdict represents essentially the most consequential vote senators will take earlier than subsequent yr’s elections — and a weighty place for challengers looking for to hitch the chamber.
“Impeachment additionally threatens to yoke the 35 separate races for Senate seats even nearer to the presidential contest. The politics round impeachment have calcified for each events, with public opinion rigidly constant and senators and candidates principally falling alongside get together traces forward of a potential vote to acquit Trump or take away him from workplace.
“Democrats — who have to web three seats in subsequent yr’s elections to win again management of the chamber if in addition they win the presidency — have tried to squeeze susceptible GOP senators, calling for a good trial to incorporate administration witnesses who refused to testify earlier than the Home and criticizing Majority Chief Mitch McConnell for saying he didn’t think about himself an neutral juror.
“However Republican senators have proven few indicators of breaking with Trump — as an alternative criticizing the Home Democrats’ impeachment course of as sloppy, partisan and incomplete — following the same sample after not a single Republican defected from Trump within the Home.” POLITICO
— KFILE: “Schumer mentioned in 1999 Senate wasn’t like a jury field and was ‘vulnerable to the whims of politics’” by CNN’s Andrew Kaczynski and Em Steck: “Senate Democratic Chief Chuck Schumer has blasted his Republican counterpart Mitch McConnell in latest days after he described himself as “not an neutral juror” forward of President Donald Trump’s Senate impeachment trial, however Schumer himself repeatedly expressed comparable sentiments within the late 1990s when senators weighed the removing of President Invoice Clinton.
“Schumer’s previous feedback are the newest instance of how lawmakers on either side of the aisle are having to confront their prior positions on impeachment that seem to battle with their present-day statements. … [I]n a number of appearances on tv in 1998 and 1999 reviewed by CNN’s KFile, Schumer famous that senators had beforehand fashioned opinions heading into the trial and that the Senate was ‘not like a jury field.’
“Schumer was elected to the Senate in 1998 after saying throughout his marketing campaign {that a} vote for him could be a vote to not impeach Clinton. A spokesman for Schumer advised CNN in an e-mail on Friday that his statements got here after the conclusion of the Starr investigation.” CNN
Good Saturday morning.
WHAT’S ON PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP’S MIND THIS A.M. — @realDonaldTrump tweeted at 8:33 a.m.: “California and New York should do one thing about their TREMENDOUS Homeless issues. They’re setting data! If their Governors can’t deal with the scenario, which they need to be capable to do very simply, they have to name and “politely” ask for assist. Can be really easy with competence!”
NEW: USA TODAY POLL — “Will or not it’s a cheerful new yr? Positive, in our personal lives. For the nation? Ballot says that is harder,” by Susan Web page, William Cummings and Nicholas Wu: “A USA TODAY/Suffolk College Ballot this month requested People in the event that they thought issues would get higher or worse in their very own lives in 2020. By an amazing 80% to 11%, they predicted their lives could be higher. That optimism stretched throughout demographic traces, though males had a extra optimistic outlook than ladies (83% versus 76%) and Southerners a extra optimistic outlook than Midwesterners (84% versus 74%).” USA At this time
FOR YOUR RADAR — “New Russian weapon can journey 27 instances the pace of sound,” by AP’s Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow: “A brand new intercontinental weapon that may fly 27 instances the pace of sound turned operational Friday, Russia’s protection minister reported to President Vladimir Putin, bolstering the nation’s nuclear strike functionality.
“Putin has described the Avangard hypersonic glide car as a technological breakthrough akin to the 1957 Soviet launch of the primary satellite tv for pc. The brand new Russian weapon and the same system being developed by China have troubled the US, which has contemplated protection methods.
“The Avangard is launched atop an intercontinental ballistic missile, however in contrast to an everyday missile warhead that follows a predictable path after separation it could make sharp maneuvers within the environment en route to focus on, making it a lot tougher to intercept.” AP
— “Russia Deploys Hypersonic Weapon, Doubtlessly Renewing Arms Race,” by NYT’s Julian E. Barnes and David Sanger: “Moscow has been engaged on the know-how for years and has invested closely in it, decided to reverse the sample within the Chilly Warfare, when it was typically struggling to meet up with American nuclear weapons programs. If the brand new system, known as “Avangard,” works as President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia boasted when he described the weapon a yr in the past, it could considerably improve Moscow’s already highly effective nuclear forces, American officers mentioned. …
“But the Russian announcement could also be as a lot about spurring a brand new spherical of diplomatic talks as it’s about reviving an arms race, present and former diplomats mentioned. Moscow is anxious for President Trump to resume the final remaining arms management treaty between the US and Russia, known as New START, which limits strategic nuclear missile launchers and deployed warheads for each nations. The treaty expires quickly after the following presidential inauguration in 2021.” NYT
CNN: “Federal decide denies bid to undo Georgia voter purge,” by Paul LeBlanc: “A federal decide on Friday blocked an effort to revive 98,000 Georgia voters to the rolls who had been eliminated earlier this month after being categorized as ‘inactive.’ Decide Steve C. Jones denied a movement filed by the voting rights group Honest Combat Motion, who had claimed that Georgia’s voter-list upkeep course of violated voters’ rights to procedural due course of underneath the US Structure, court docket paperwork present.” CNN
2020 WATCH …
— “Biden reveals deep bench of marketing campaign bundlers,” by Maggie Severns: “Joe Biden launched the names of greater than 200 folks and {couples} who’re elevating cash for his presidential marketing campaign, a listing that features quite a few massive names in Democratic cash like Hollywood producer Jeffrey Katzenberg and LGBT rights activist Tim Gill and his husband, Scott Miller. Biden’s listing of fundraisers, every of which has introduced in at the very least $25,000 for his presidential bid, consists of most of the greatest names in Democratic fundraising. The listing spans Wall Road, Silicon Valley and quite a few politicians themselves.
“The previous vp voluntarily disclosed the listing because the Democratic area — and particularly Pete Buttigieg and Elizabeth Warren — sparred with one another all through November and December over find out how to have enough transparency about cash and funds on the marketing campaign path.
“Greater than another main candidate, Biden is relying on massive fundraising occasions to energy his bid for the presidency, which makes these bundlers essential to his success. Different big-name bundlers for Biden embrace New York enterprise capital and personal fairness investor Alan Patricof, and billionaire actual property dealer George Marcus.” POLITICO … Extra from WaPo’s Michelle Ye Hee Lee on the end-of-the-year fundraising sprint
— “Pete Buttigieg as soon as boasted he helped McKinsey ‘flip round’ Fortune 500 corporations. Not anymore,” by WaPo’s Amy B. Wang
— “‘Name Me Elizabeth’: Contained in the Hours Elizabeth Warren Spends on the Telephone,” by NYT’S Shane Goldmacher
— WSJ: “Spotify to Droop Political Promoting,” by Persistence Haggin: “Spotify Expertise mentioned it could cease promoting political commercials in early 2020 as a result of it lacks the suitable instruments to evaluation them, a transfer that comes as digital platforms promoting such advertisements face rising criticism for serving to unfold misinformation.
“‘At this cut-off date, we don’t but have the required degree of robustness in our processes, programs and instruments to responsibly validate and evaluation this content material. We are going to reassess this determination as we proceed to evolve our capabilities,’ a Spotify spokeswoman mentioned.
“The spokeswoman declined to say what evaluation course of the digital music service carried out for political advertisements within the 2016 and 2018 election cycles, and declined to specify whether or not the transfer was motivated by considerations about overseas meddling in U.S. campaigns.” WSJ
TRUMP’S SATURDAY — The president has no public occasions scheduled.

PHOTO DU JOUR: Anti-government demonstrators defend themselves amid the spray of a police water cannon attempting to disperse them in Santiago, Chile on December 27, 2019. | Fernando Llano/AP Photograph
AP: “Truck bomb in Somalia’s capital kills at the very least 76 folks,” by Abdi Guled in Mogadishu, Somalia: “A truck bomb exploded at a busy safety checkpoint in Somalia’s capital Saturday morning, killing at the very least 76 folks together with many college students, authorities mentioned. It was one of many deadliest assaults in Mogadishu in latest reminiscence, and witnesses mentioned the power of the blast reminded them of the devastating 2017 bombing that killed a whole lot.
“The toll may rise as scores of individuals had been rushed to hospitals, authorities spokesman Ismail Mukhtar advised The Related Press. Dr. Mohamed Yusuf, director of Madina hospital, mentioned that they had acquired 73 our bodies. The Aamin Ambulance service reported at the very least 76 lifeless and greater than 50 wounded.” AP
CLIMATE WATCH — GAVIN BADE: “The power company that might thwart Democrats’ local weather plans”: “Democratic presidential candidates’ guarantees to combat local weather change may hinge on whether or not they can reshape an obscure federal company that has overseen a surge in oil and gasoline initiatives.
“The Federal Power Regulatory Fee, an impartial regulator of pipelines and energy markets, derives its authority from decades-old legal guidelines that largely predate worries about local weather change and had been centered totally on guaranteeing that power provides stay low cost and dependable. However that mandate could intervene with a number of the extra aggressive local weather plans Democrats are considering, and candidates are going through strain to overtake the company if elected. …
“Although little recognized to many of the public, FERC has attracted rising notoriety amongst local weather activists, who staged months of sit-ins that thwarted its makes an attempt to carry public conferences through the latter years of the Obama administration. Now, Hudson’s group is floating a far-reaching proposal to rebrand the company because the Federal Renewable Power Fee and reorient its mission towards preventing local weather change.” POLITICO
D.C. METRO SECTION: “Most Washington-area federal workers to obtain 3.52 % elevate,” by WaPo’s Eric Yoder: Most federal workers within the Washington-Baltimore space will obtain a 3.52 % elevate in January, the most important improve amongst metropolis areas within the pay system for white-collar federal staff, underneath an order President Trump signed Thursday.” WaPo
— MEANWHILE: “Rank-and-File Staff Get Larger Raises,” by WSJ’s Eric Morath and Jeffrey Sparshott: “Wages for rank-and-file staff are rising on the quickest tempo in additional than a decade, even quicker than for bosses, an indication that the labor market has tightened sufficiently to convey larger will increase to lower-paid workers.
“Features for these staff have accelerated a lot of this yr, a time when the unemployment fee fell to a half-century low. A brief provide of staff, elevated poaching and minimum-wage will increase have helped these nearer to the underside of the pay scale.” WSJ
A YEAR IN REVIEW … “US mass killings hit new excessive in 2019, most had been shootings,” by AP’s Lisa Marie Pane
— “Trump’s quest to shatter GOP economics reached its fruits in 2019,” by WaPo’s Jeff Stein: “
NYT’S DAVE PHILIPPS: “Anguish and Anger From the Navy SEALs Who Turned In Edward Gallagher”: “‘The man is freaking evil,’ Particular Operator Miller advised investigators. ‘The man was poisonous,’ Particular Operator First Class Joshua Vriens, a sniper, mentioned in a separate interview. ‘You might inform he was completely O.Ok. with killing anyone that was shifting,’ Particular Operator First Class Corey Scott, a medic within the platoon, advised the investigators.
“Such dire descriptions of Chief Gallagher, who had eight fight deployments and typically glided by the nickname Blade, are in marked distinction to Mr. Trump’s portrayal of him at a latest political rally in Florida as certainly one of ‘our nice fighters.’
“Although fight in Iraq barely fazed the SEALs, sitting down to inform Naval Felony Investigative Service brokers about what that they had seen their platoon chief do throughout a 2017 deployment in Iraq was excruciating for them.” NYT
CLICKER — “The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics,” edited by Matt Wuerker — 16 keepers
GREAT WEEKEND READS, curated by Daniel Lippman (@dlippman):
— “The Decade Tech Misplaced Its Approach: An oral historical past of the 2010s” — NYT: “When the last decade started, tech meant promise — vehicles that might drive themselves, social networks that might take down dictators. It related us in methods we may barely think about. However someplace alongside the way in which, the issues of know-how turned abundantly clear. What occurred? The individuals who introduced us this decade clarify.” NYT
— “Meet the Mad Scientist Who Wrote the E-book on Easy methods to Hunt Hackers,” by Wired’s Andy Greenberg: “Thirty years in the past, Cliff Stoll printed ‘The Cuckoo’s Egg,’ a e-book about his cat-and-mouse recreation with a KGB-sponsored hacker. At this time, the web is a far darker place—and Stoll has develop into a cybersecurity icon.” Wired … $10.39 on Amazon
— “The Most Trendy Scammer: 20 Years of ‘The Proficient Mr. Ripley,’” by Haley Mlotek in The Ringer: “Within the 20 years since launch, ‘The Proficient Mr. Ripley’ … stays certainly one of our best-looking up to date movies. … Visually, the movie stays beautiful for its lush evocation of depravity hid by good manners and higher garments; texturally, the depth of feeling is as enduring because the bloodstain that received’t wash off. … The pull of trying good is what [Anthony] Minghella understands. It’s immensely pleasing to look at wealthy individuals who know find out how to spend their cash proper.” The Ringer … Trailer (h/t Longform.org)
— “The Training of David Stockman,” by William Greider in December 1981 in The Atlantic: “‘None of us actually understands what’s happening with all these numbers.’” Atlantic
— “The Combat to Decolonize the Museum,” by Adam Hochschild in The Atlantic’s January/February concern: “Textbooks may be revised, however historic websites, monuments, and collections that memorialize ugly pasts aren’t so simply modified. Classes from the wrestle to replace the Royal Museum for Central Africa, exterior Brussels.” Atlantic
— “An Account of the Blinding of Sgt. Isaac Woodard by the Police Officer, Lynwood Shull,” by Richard Gergel in LitHub — per TheBrowser.com’s description: “Learn and weep. A adorned and newly demobbed black war-veteran boards a bus residence from Georgia to South Carolina in 1946. The white driver takes a dislike to his passenger, stops at a small city en route, and reviews him to the native police as drunk and disorderly. A sergeant beats the soldier unconscious and jails him in a single day. When he seems in court docket subsequent morning he’s completely blind from blows to each eyes. The decide sees no trigger for concern. He fines the blind man $50 and sends him away.” LitHub
— “The Christian Withdrawal Experiment,” by The Atlantic’s Emma Inexperienced within the January concern: “Feeling out of step with the mores of up to date life, members of a conservative-Catholic group have constructed a thriving neighborhood in rural Kansas. May their flight from mainstream society be a harbinger for the nation?” Atlantic
— “Loss of life Of A Freelancer,” by Charlotte Alfred in HuffPost: “Christopher Allen reported in a number of the most harmful components of the world. Who was looking for him?” HuffPost (h/t Longform.org)
— “The Motion to Convey Loss of life Nearer,” by Maggie Jones within the NYT Journal: “House-funeral guides consider that households can profit from tending to — and spending time with — the our bodies of their deceased.” NYT Journal
— “The age of perpetual disaster: how the 2010s disrupted every little thing however resolved nothing,” by The Guardian’s Andy Beckett: “The typical life expectancy, which had been rising virtually constantly for a century, stopped rising. The typical wage rose extra slowly than in any decade because the Napoleonic wars. One million extra youngsters with working mother and father entered poverty. The variety of folks sleeping tough greater than doubled.” Guardian (h/t TheBrowser.com)
— “Scenes from the Lifetime of Roz Chast,” by The New Yorker’s Adam Gopnik: “Prior to now 4 a long time, the cartoonist has created a universe of spidery traces and nervous areas, turning anxious truth-telling into an authoritative artwork.” New Yorker
MEDIAWATCH — “Journal commerce group focuses on DC with new headquarters and CEO,” by the New York Publish’s Keith Kelly: “The MPA, or Affiliation of Journal Media (previously referred to as the Journal Publishers Affiliation) has tapped its former chief authorities affairs lobbyist as president and CEO because it prepares [to] formally open its new headquarters in Washington, DC on Jan. 1.
“The buyer journal commerce group promoted Brigitte Schmidt Gwyn, who was the manager vp of presidency affairs.” N.Y. Publish
Ship tricks to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
IN MEMORIAM — “Don Imus, Radio Host Who Pushed Boundaries, Dies at 79,” by NYT’s Robert McFadden: “Don Imus, who examined the bounds of shock radio together with his irreverent assaults on celebrities, politicians, racial and ethnic teams, ladies, homosexual folks and virtually anybody whose head caught up out of the foxhole, died on Friday in Faculty Station, Texas. …
“For almost a half-century … Mr. Imus, with occasional and typically prolonged timeouts for diseases, accidents or authorized issues, entertained and offended numerous hundreds of thousands together with his mercurial outbursts. The outpouring of sympathy after his disclosure about his prostate most cancers mirrored not solely his broad following as a radio character but in addition admiration for his personal charity work, elevating hundreds of thousands for the rehabilitation of wounded veterans of the Iraq battle and for kids with most cancers and siblings of victims of sudden toddler demise syndrome.” NYT
ENGAGED — Madeleine O’Connor, a communications affiliate in exterior affairs on the Group Preservation Company, and Christopher “CJ” Anderson, a senior affiliate in BNY Mellon’s actual property finance group, received engaged Dec. 18. They met throughout their senior yr at George Washington College, and their first date was taking his canine for a stroll. Pic
— Wealthy Chrismer, founding father of Seen Learn Heard and a Jim Expertise, Matt Blunt and Roy Blunt alum, proposed to Colleen Timson, a sommelier, personal occasion specialist and administrative coordinator at KNOWiNK, on Christmas Eve in St. Louis, Mo. Pic
BIRTHDAYS: Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) is 75 … Susanna Quinn … CFPB Director Kathy Kraninger … Sahil Kapur, nationwide political reporter for Bloomberg Information, is 33 … Seth Meyers is 46 … former Sen. Tim Johnson (D-S.D.) is 73 … former Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe is 73 (h/t Tim Griffin) … Seth Wimer, president of Brandywine Public Affairs … Shari Yost Gold … Debbie Willhite (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Michele Altemus … David Eisner (h/ts Jon Haber) … POLITICO’s Zach Montellaro and Han Ah-Sue … Kevin Boyd, DLCC nationwide political director … Melissa Block, NPR particular correspondent … AP economics author Josh Boak … Maria Olson, skilled staffer for Senate Getting older Chairwoman Susan Collins (R-Maine) (h/t Cody Sanders) … Jacqueline Godfrey Bassermann, authorities relations supervisor for the American Purple Cross, celebrating along with her two sons and husband in her hometown of Bay Shore, N.Y. (h/t husband Steve) … D.J. Jordan, VP on the Pinkston Group …
… Harold Thune, father of Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), is 1-0-0 (h/t Ryan Wrasse) … former Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) is 83 … former Rep. Spencer Bachus (R-Ala.) is 72 … Mark Katz is 56 … David Dunn … Christa Robinson, SVP of communications for CBS Information … Ed McFadden … Ramon Looby, SVP and public coverage lead at BofA … Andy Estrada, communications officer for the Invoice and Melinda Gates Basis … Ian Wishingrad … Will Candrick … Christina Sevilla, deputy assistant USTR (h/t Tim Burger) … Clara Brillembourg of Foley Hoag (h/ts Ben Chang) … Lynn Hatcher … Cam Cullman is 3-0 … Kyle Anderson … Boeing’s Alexa Marrero … Christina Glenn … Katy Montgomery … Lou Gallo is 62 … Virginia state Sen. Jennifer McClellan … Janne Emilie Nolan … Chris Cooper is 49 … Raquel Wojnar … Douglas Wiley … Adrienne Fox Luscombe … Erica Martinson … Molly Varoga … Owen Bieber, former UAW union president, is 9-0 … Brandon DeGraff
SUNDAY SHOWS by way of Matt Mackowiak, submitting from Nashville:
— CBS’ “Face the Nation”: Ivanka Trump … Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) … Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.). Panel: Nancy Cordes, Main Garrett, Jeff Pegues, Jan Crawford and David Martin.
— “Fox Information Sunday”: Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) … Home Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.). Panel: Jason Chaffetz, Marie Harf, Chris Stirewalt and Charles Lane.
— NBC’s “Meet the Press”: Dean Baquet and Marty Baron … Clint Watts … Masha Gessen and Michael McFaul. Panel: Kara Swisher, Joshua Johnson, Susan Glasser and Matthew Continetti.
— ABC’s “This Week”: White Home nationwide safety adviser Robert O’Brien … Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) … Andrew Yang. Panel: Rick Klein, Chris Christie, Stefanie Brown James and Susan Davis.
— CNN’s “State of the Union”: Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) … Rep. Joe Kennedy (D-Mass.). Panel: Scott Jennings, Karen Finney, Sarah Isgur and Nayyera Haq.
— Fox Information’ “Sunday Morning Futures”: Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) … Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) … Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) … Gordon Chang … Gary Kaltbaum.
— Fox Information’ “MediaBuzz”: Susan Ferrechio … Mollie Hemingway …Clarence Web page … Ed Henry … Paul Steinhauser.
— CNN’s “Inside Politics”: Panel: Catherine Lucey, Karoun Demirjian, Alex Thompson and Francesca Chambers (substitute anchor: Phil Mattingly).
— CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS”: Particular episode: “Scheme and Scandal: Contained in the Faculty Admissions Disaster”: Malcolm Gladwell, Daniel Golden … Cardinal Training CEO Allen Koh … Nicholas Lemann … Daniel Markovits.
— CNN’s “Dependable Sources”: Marc Benioff … David Zurawik and Nicole Carroll … Paul Huntsman … Panel: Amy Webb, Jennifer Kavanaugh and Oliver Darcy.
— C-SPAN: “The Communicators”: Margaret O’Mara … “Newsmakers”: Nationwide Border Patrol Council President Brandon Judd, questioned by Stephen Dinan and Rebecca Morin … “Q&A”: Stephen Baker.
— MSNBC’s “Kasie DC”: Christopher Wilson … David Wasserman … Shannon Pettypiece … Jacqueline Alemany … Natasha Bertrand … Adrienne Elrod … Rick Tyler … Dylan Byers … Coral Davenport … Julia Ainsley … Enes Kanter … Caroline Fourest (substitute anchor: Ayman Mohyeldin).
— Grey TV’s “Full Court docket Press with Greta Van Susteren”: FCC Chairman Ajit Pai … Cat Zakrzewski.
— Sinclair’s “America This Week with Eric Bolling”: Phil Robertson … Katrina Pierson … Craig Shirley … Rachel Bovard. Panel: Ameshia Cross and Hannah Cox.
— Washington Instances’ “Mack on Politics” weekly politics podcast with Matt Mackowiak (obtain on iTunes, Google Play, Spotify or Stitcher or pay attention at MackOnPoliticsPodcast.com): Wealthy Galen.
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