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DNC Talkers’ Toplines — June 9, 2022

DNC Talkers’ Toplines — June 9, 2022

Thursday, June 9, 2022

TOP TIDBITS
FROM THE DNC WAR ROOM
MESSAGE TO MOBILIZE
ARTICLES TO AMPLIFY
TOP TWEETS
TALKING POINTS
BIDEN-HARRIS ADMINISTRATION WEEK AHEAD

TOP TIDBITS

  1. Tonight, the House select committee investigating January 6 will hold its first hearing.

    On January 6, MAGA Republicans stormed the U.S. Capitol and attacked our democracy after Donald Trump spent his last weeks in office pushing dangerous and unhinged conspiracy theories about the 2020 election in a desperate attempt to cling to power. But MAGA Republicans didn’t stop there. They have not only downplayed the attacks that took place that day but continue to undermine our democracy and make it harder to vote in hopes of taking power. 

    Read more from the DNC War Room HERE.
     

  2. COVID-19 vaccines remain the single-most important tool that we have to protect people against COVID-19 and its most serious outcomes. Next week, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) will consider whether to authorize and recommend the first COVID-19 vaccines for kids under the age of 5. If the FDA authorizes and CDC recommends one or both of the COVID-19 vaccines for this age group, it would be a historic milestone in the nation’s fight against the virus—and would mean nearly every American is eligible for the protection that vaccination provides.

    Today, the Biden-Harris administration is announcing an operational plan that will ensure that vaccines—if authorized by FDA and recommended by CDC—are readily available for our youngest kids and that we continue the critical work of ensuring that all families know the benefits of getting their children vaccinated against COVID-19.

    Read the full White House fact sheet HERE.
     

  3. This week, the Democratic National Committee, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and the Arizona Democratic Party released statements after successfully intervening against the Arizona Republican Party’s legal action seeking to end early and absentee voting in Arizona –  a dominant form of voting in the state. 

    A Superior Court in Mohave County ruled against the GOP’s lawsuit yesterday afternoon. Earlier this year Arizona’s state Supreme Court also dismissed the Republicans’ lawsuit.

    From Sam Cornale, DNC Executive Director:

    “Wins like this are possible because Democrats are standing up against Republican attacks on Americans' fundamental right to vote. Today's decision is a victory for Arizonans and for our democracy, and we will continue to work so that every eligible voter can make their voice heard."

    Read more HERE.

 

FROM THE DNC WAR ROOM

DNC War Room: As January 6 Hearings Begin, A Reminder MAGA Republicans Tried To Overturn The Election To Cling To Power

@DNCWarRoom: Republican lawmakers sold their souls to Donald Trump long before January 6, but they made clear they’re loyal MAGA Republicans who would do anything to gain power as they continued to defend Trump even after he incited a violent attack.

@DNCWarRoom: Republican leaders and candidates keep reminding us what’s at stake in November. The American people cannot afford Republican leadership. [LINK] 

MESSAGE TO MOBILIZE

Please amplify some of our top content from DNC channels below:

Under President Biden, Social Security and Medicare are stronger and projections show the deficit will be cut by the largest amount ever in a single year. Republicans, led by NRSC Chair Rick Scott, have a plan that could put these programs on the chopping block every five years. @TheDemocrats (Twitter), (Facebook)

Under the Biden-Harris administration, last month: The economy added 390,000 jobs. The unemployment rate stayed near historic lows. Their leadership is guiding us through a robust economic recovery. @TheDemocrats (Twitter)

Republicans talked about it, but we oversaw a deficit reduction of $350 billion last year—and we're on target to reduce the deficit by the end of the fiscal year by $1.7 trillion. @JoeBiden (Twitter), (Facebook)

We are proud to stand with our unions and our workers. @KamalaHarris (Twitter), (Facebook)

Want to help amplify the DNC’s message online? Join the DNC’s Greenfly to start receiving daily content updates and access to social media resources. Click here to download the app and use code: DEMSTALKERS at sign up.

Please note that individuals working for independent expenditures or Democratic primary campaign candidates are ineligible to join the DNC’s Greenfly.
 

ARTICLES TO AMPLIFY

CNN: Biden administration lays out its plan for Covid-19 vaccinations for children under 5

Ebony: Vice President Kamala Harris Engages Faith Leaders on Gun Violence Issues

KABC: VP Kamala Harris visits small business in Monrovia, highlights efforts to boost economic recovery
 

TOP TWEETS

@TheDemocrats: Veterans are the backbone of our country, and we have a sacred obligation to care for them and their families when they come home. 
Thank you, President Biden, for signing into law nine bills that extend and improve care for our veterans.

@DavidABergstein: Rick Scott has helpfully put Republicans' plan to raise taxes on paper, and told the world 24 hours ago he would apologize to no one for it. We will continue to take him at his word.
 

TALKING POINTS

  1. Five Key Points on our Economic Transition and How We Got Here

 
Last week, President Biden noted that our economy is in a moment of transition: from what has been an historic economic recovery to what can be a period of stable, steady growth that works for working families. The president understands that Americans are dealing with the challenge of elevated inflation. And addressing inflation is his top economic priority.
 
This is a moment when we can build on the unique strengths of our recovery to bring down inflation and ensure that we don’t give up the historic economic gains of the last year. It also means building on the recovery to deliver growth that actually works for working families – unlike the growth that we saw too often in the years before the pandemic, when we were promised that gains for those at the top would trickle down to working families. President Biden’s approach is to build the economy from the bottom up and the middle out.
 
As we look ahead and aim to achieve stable, steady growth, here are five key points about how we arrived at our current economic moment. In short, the administration passed the American Rescue Plan in a moment of significant economic uncertainty and, because of the Administration’s decisive action, we now face a range of global economic challenges – with inflation chief among them – from a position of strength. 
 

  1. The American Rescue Plan helped deliver one of the strongest job markets in American history.

    When President Biden took office, the unemployment rate was 6.4% and millions of Americans were on unemployment insurance. Since then, the unemployment rate has come down to 3.6 % -- with only three times in the last 50 years when the rate has been lower – and fewer than 1.5 million Americans are receiving unemployment insurance. Before the Rescue Plan passed, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected the unemployment rate would be 5% right now, and would not drop below 4% until 2026. In addition, the number of Americans between the ages of 25 and 54 who are working or looking for work is higher today than it was before the pandemic began. In the wake of the Great Recession, that recovery took 12 years. 
     

  2. The American Rescue Plan has meant the U.S. recovery has been the envy of the world.

    According to the latest World Economic Outlook from the International Monetary Fund, the U.S. economy will be larger at the end of this year—relative to its pre-pandemic size—than any other Group of 7 economy. The U.S. economy may grow faster this year than China’s economy for the first time since 1976, according to a projection by Bloomberg Economics.
     

  3. The American Rescue Plan has meant economic security for millions of families.

    Self-reported financial well-being at the end of 2021 reached its highest level on record, with 78% of adults reporting that they are financially comfortable. In the same survey, 68% of Americans said they could cover a $400 emergency cash expenses – the highest level in the history of the survey and up 18 percentage points since 2013. Bankruptcy filings also remained below pre-pandemic levels, eviction filings have remained 30% below pre-pandemic levels across the eight months since the eviction moratorium ended, and foreclosures hit their lowest level in 2021 in data going back 15 years.
     

  4. The American Rescue Plan didn’t just improve our economic position; it improved our fiscal position too.

    The CBO projected that the deficit will fall by $1.7 trillion this fiscal year. This is the largest nominal reduction in the federal deficit in history. According to their projections, the deficit as a share of the economy this year will be at a lower level than in 2019, before the pandemic. It is also a lower level than CBO projected for this year before the American Rescue Plan passed, showing that the strong economic recovery resulting from President Biden’s economic and vaccination plans were not just good for our economy but also for our fiscal position. Public debt as a percent of the economy is also projected to be lower this year than was projected before the Rescue Plan passed – further reflecting the degree to which our strong economic recovery has improved our fiscal position. This progress on deficits and debt was not pre-ordained. In addition to responsibly winding down emergency programs, around half of the reduction in the deficit this year is projected to be driven by an increase in revenues, as household and business earnings have increased given the strong economic recovery.
     

  5. Inflation is a global challenge, with many causes, but the Rescue Plan is not its predominant cause.

    Inflation is elevated around the world, particularly in light of Putin’s invasion into Ukraine, which has driven global food and energy prices higher. Inflation is at its highest level on record in the Euro Area and in Germany, the highest level in 40 years in the U.K., and the highest level in more than 30 years in Canada. Consumer prices have risen by 8.2% in the United States in the last year, 8.1% in the Euro Area, and 9% in the United Kingdom.

    Putin’s actions in Ukraine have driven inflation higher in recent months, with gas prices up $1.50 since Putin began amassing troops on the border of Ukraine. It is of course not plausible that disruptions in global energy and food markets are the result of the American Rescue Plan.

    And even before disruptions to global energy and food markets have driven inflation higher, many other factors boosted demand, shifted its composition, and constrained supply, which led to higher prices. The pandemic meant that American consumers shifted their consumption from services to durable goods. Businesses were unprepared for demand returning quickly, and we saw an inward shift in supply capacity – from auto production to domestic energy production to rental cars. And supply chain pressures meant bottlenecks and thinner inventories that also drove up prices.

    That’s why we know that even without the Rescue Plan – or with a smaller Rescue Plan – inflation would have still been elevated. In fact, according to one independent analysis, keeping inflation close to 2% would have required an unemployment rate in the double digits – instead of today’s 3.6% unemployment rate. Moreover, without the Rescue Plan, another independent analysis shows that we would have had less growth, less job creation, and more human suffering.

  1. President Biden Urges Congress to Pass Commonsense Laws

  • In Uvalde and Buffalo and so many other communities across America, there are too many schools and everyday places that have become battlefields.
     

  • In each place, there are families that are broken and that will never be the same. The President saw firsthand the havoc that was wrecked on them and their communities by gun violence. They have one message to us all: Do something.
     

  • Last week, President Biden forcefully called on Congress to finally take action. The president has done more through executive action in his first year than any of his predecessors, but he can’t do it alone. Congress needs to act.
     

  • According to new CDC data, guns are the number one killer of children in the United States of America—more than car accidents or cancer. Over the last two decades, more school-age children have died from guns than on-duty police officers and active duty military combined.
     

  • We can’t prevent every tragedy. But here’s what President Biden—and the overwhelming majority of the American people—believe we must do:

    • Ban assault weapons — or at least raise the age to purchase them from 18 to 21.

    • Ban high-capacity magazines.

    • Strengthen background checks.

    • Enact safe storage laws and red flag laws.

    • Repeal the immunity that protects gun manufacturers from liability.

    • Address the mental health crisis deepened by the trauma of gun violence.
       

  • The president supports the bipartisan efforts that include a small group of Republican senators trying to find a deal. But the fact that the majority of Senate Republicans don’t want any of these proposals to even be debated or come up for a vote is unconscionable.
     

  • President Biden has been in this fight a long time. He knows how hard it is. But he will never give up. And if Congress fails, he believes the majority of the American people will not give up either.

BIDEN-HARRIS ADMINISTRATION WEEK AHEAD

Thursday, June 9
 
The president will attend and deliver remarks at the opening plenary of the Ninth Summit of the Americas.
 
The president and the first lady will welcome heads of state and government and their spouses for a dinner as part of the Ninth Summit of the Americas.
 
Friday, June 10
 
President Biden will deliver remarks at the Port of Los Angeles.
 
The president will host a leaders retreat and working luncheon with heads of state and government as part of the Ninth Summit of the Americas.
 
Saturday, June 11
 
The president will travel to Santa Fe, New Mexico and meet with New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham, state and local officials, first responders, and response and recovery personnel from FEMA and other agencies to receive a briefing on the New Mexico wildfires at the New Mexico State Emergency Operations Center.

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