Today in 1964, EMI Records rejected a group called the Hi-Numbers after its audition. Who? That’s the group’s current name:
Today in 1964, EMI Records rejected a group called the Hi-Numbers after its audition. Who? That’s the group’s current name:
The number one song today in 1957 …
… came from a just-opened movie:
The number one song today in 1967:
Joe Biden has been abusing his authority as president to aid his party in the midterm elections. We know, we know — we need to be more specific. This time, it’s the abuse of his powers as commander in chief in negotiating with Saudi Arabia and in drawing down the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
Democrats have a gas-price problem. High gas prices are the most visible sign of inflation, as well as a driver of inflation in the prices of many goods. The average price of a gallon of regular gas is $3.87, and while that is down from the historic high of $5.02 in June, it is still noticeably higher than the $3.33 price of a year ago or the $3.68 price of a month ago. Biden bet heavily on the decline after June’s high as proof that inflation was over, so the recent spike has driven the White House into a panic with only three weeks until Election Day. Moreover, the obvious solution to high gas prices — increasing domestic production — is ideologically anathema to the people around the president.
What Biden is pursuing instead is any avenue to temporarily increase supply just until Election Day. The one domestic lever he has is the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, which was designed in 1975 to ensure adequate fuel supply for the military and essential industries in case of a foreign conflict that interrupts the flow of oil — say, a conflict with Russia. Presidents have too often treated the SPR as a piggy bank to soften gas-price spikes at politically inconvenient times, but never at the scale that Biden is doing now.
Biden is set to announce this week more releases of oil from the SPR, following similar announcements in early October, and nobody has the slightest illusion as to why. Reuters, breaking the news based on administration sources, described it as “a bid to dampen fuel prices before next month’s congressional elections.” Bloomberg said the “efforts come as gasoline prices set off alarms before election.” CNN said that “officials have closely eyed Biden’s ability to trigger new releases within the bounds of the initial program as Election Day looms.”
Biden has already released more than a third of the SPR, dropping it to the lowest level in four decades, and would take it down further to around half of its capacity. This does nothing to encourage more production or less consumption; Biden is just buying time. He will have to start buying oil again at some point, quite likely at higher prices — but after the election. The cynicism of his calculation is obvious, and serves no interest but that of his party. Also, as with many of Biden’s election-year gambits, it is politically short-sighted, because there will be another election in two years, and Biden’s hat will be out of rabbits.
The SPR releases can put downward pressure on oil prices, but there is a limit to what they can accomplish, especially given that world oil-futures markets understand that these are short-term supplies only. In order to pump more gas supply without increasing domestic production, therefore, Biden needs to turn to foreign suppliers. The big one, with major influence in the OPEC+ cartel, is Saudi Arabia.
When Biden went hat in hand to beg the Saudi regime in mid-October to delay OPEC+ oil supply cuts for a month into mid-November, the Saudis saw the timing for what it was. The Wall Street Journal reported that “U.S. officials warned Saudi leaders that a cut . . . would weaken already-waning support in Washington for the kingdom” and that Saudi officials “viewed [the requests] as a political gambit by the Biden administration to avoid bad news ahead of the U.S. midterm elections.” While the administration angrily denied the motivation, National Security Council spokesman John Kirby admitted to both the request and the timeline: “We presented Saudi Arabia with analysis to show that . . . they could easily wait for the next OPEC meeting to see how things developed.”
This blew up in Biden’s face when the Saudis instead chose the moment to humiliate Biden by lobbying for the cuts. Biden’s relationship with Saudi Arabia has been fraught from the start for two reasons. One, the kingdom’s most serious enemy is Iran, so the efforts of the Biden administration to renew the Obama-era push for a reorientation of U.S. policy in the region around a rapprochement with Tehran is rightly seen by the Saudis as a grave threat to their security and to their longstanding alignment with the United States. Two, Biden pledged to make Saudi Arabia a pariah over its murder of Washington Post writer Jamal Khashoggi. While Khashoggi’s brutal slaying was indefensible, it was foolhardy to pivot the entire multifaceted U.S. relationship on it — with the result that Biden needs to curry favor with other brutal regimes such as Venezuela. In either event, Biden gave the Saudis ample incentive to leverage his naked political desperation against him.
In all of this, Biden has played self-interested party politics with the nation’s foreign policy, and violated the sacred trust placed in him by his countrymen. Some on the right have argued that, in subordinating American foreign policy to electoral strategy, Biden has committed the same offense as Donald Trump did in 2019. At the time, we denounced Trump’s improper attempt to leverage aid to Ukraine in order to get Volodymyr Zelensky to give him information about Biden family influence-peddling in Ukraine and about Biden’s alleged interference to protect his son. Biden’s misconduct today is more conventional: He did not send campaign officials through unofficial channels to foreign governments, and he tried to influence the election not by gathering dirt but by offering some short-term benefits to American voters, albeit at a cost to the national interest that will come back to bite those voters’ pocketbooks later. That said, this is very much within the same family of abuses of power as what got Trump impeached the first time. It is yet another reminder that Biden and his party believe in principles so long as they don’t interfere with their partisan interests.
More to the point, this is bad without any reference to Donald Trump, and we should resist the temptation to excuse any presidential behavior that is not precisely identical to Trump’s. The American president’s first job is the security of the nation. That Joe Biden sees this as secondary to winning some congressional elections testifies to the smallness and shabbiness of the man in comparison to the office he occupies.
Democrats have a history of asking for aid and comfort from America’s enemies. Before the 1984 presidential election U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy (D–Massachusetts) offered to Soviet premier Yuri Andropov that “Kennedy would lend Andropov a hand in dealing with President Reagan. In return, the Soviet leader would lend the Democratic Party a hand in challenging Reagan in the 1984 presidential election.”
Four years earlier, Jimmy Carter asked Soviet ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin for reelection help, first through American businessman Armand Hammer and then through national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, “dangling the promise of several key concessions to the Soviets on Afghanistan, arms control, and Central America — concessions they would never get from Reagan — if Carter was reelected. … Dobrynin concluded, ‘his message was clear: Moscow should not do anything to diminish Carter’s chances in the election race and might even help a bit.’”
That’s the sort of thing that used to be called treason.
John McCormack and Brittany Bernstein:
Last week, this newsletter noted that Democrats across the ideological spectrum — from James Carville to Bernie Sanders — are worrying that the party is focusing too much on the issue of abortion. But not all Democrats appear to share those concerns. Take, for example, President Biden.
On Tuesday, 21 days before Election Day, Biden doubled down on the abortion campaign theme at a speech devoted to the issue at the Democratic National Committee in Washington, D.C. Biden promised the first bill he would sign in the next Congress (if Democrats have the votes) would be legislation to codify Roe as a federal statute. In reality, the Democrats’ federal abortion bill would require all 50 states to allow abortion through all nine months of pregnancy, and it would go beyond the radicalism of Roe by overriding religious-liberty and conscience protections, parental-notification laws, and 24-hour waiting limits. It would also likely require unlimited taxpayer funding of elective abortions for Medicaid recipients.
Biden’s abortion speech at the DNC came just one day after a fresh New York Times/Siena poll — showing Republicans leading Democrats 49 percent to 45 percent on the generic ballot — found that only 5 percent of Americans say abortion is the most important issue. That’s the exact same share who identified abortion as the top issue in September’s Siena poll. Tens of millions of dollars in Democratic campaign ads on that issue haven’t made that number budge.
By contrast, 44 percent of voters identified the economy or inflation as the top issue:
From the New York Times’ write-up of the poll:
“It’s all about cost,” said Gerard Lamoureux, a 51-year-old Democratic retiree in Newtown, Conn., who is planning to vote Republican this fall. “The price of gas and groceries are through the roof. And I want to eat healthy, but it’s cheaper for me to go to McDonald’s and get a little meal than it is to cook dinner.”
Mr. Biden has repeatedly tried to put a positive spin on the economy and has noted that inflation is a worldwide problem. “Our economy is strong as hell,” he said Saturday at a stop at a Baskin-Robbins ice cream shop in Portland, Ore.
Voters are telling President Biden that they are having a hard time affording groceries, and Biden is basically replying: Let them eat RU-486.
Democratic gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams almost literally delivered that message on Wednesday:
This message seems unlikely to turn things around for Democrats. The polls could be off in either direction, so the election is far from over, but Republicans have opened a three-point lead in the RealClearPolitics average of generic ballot polls. …
Anger over Dobbs likely energized Democrats in special elections over the summer; and it could — along with poor candidate quality and the prominence of Donald Trump — diminish the size of GOP gains in November. But with less than three weeks to go, the issue of abortion seems unlikely to spare House Democrats from a midterm defeat that was always the most likely outcome, given voters’ disapproval of the incumbent Democratic president and soaring inflation.
In just three weeks, we will find out if abortion really is a top-of-mind issue for voters, as Democrats have claimed. The party has pointed to Democrat Pat Ryan’s win in the special election for New York’s 19th congressional district as evidence that abortion is a top issue. And it may have been in August, when the special election was held, but abortion seems to have faded into the background since then. A Gallup poll last month found that just 4 percent of Americans believe it is the most important problem facing the country today. That’s a drop from 4 percent two months earlier and just a fraction of the 17 percent of Americans who said cost of living/inflation is the top issue in both polls.
As I reported today:
Colin Schmitt, a two-term Republican state assemblyman who is running against Ryan in the newly redrawn 18th congressional district, argues that is simply not true; voters are concerned about inflation and the economy.
“The main issues are economy, public safety, and the border crisis,” Schmitt told National Review. “That is what voters care about. We’ve done over 185,000 voter contacts and the abortion issue has been brought up about six times.”
“People cannot afford to live here,” he said. “They cannot afford the basic necessities. That’s what’s driving the day.”
• Nevada Democratic senator Catherine Cortez Masto has run as an abortion extremist, but three weeks before the election she’s released a soft-focus biographical ad that shows her sitting in front of a statue of Jesus and a painting of Our Lady of Guadalupe. John McCormack thinks the ad is a sign Cortez Masto is worried she’s alienated Latino voters with abortion extremism.
Today in 1960, Roy Orbison had his first number one single:
Today in 1962, the number one single in the U.S. was a song banned by the BBC:
The number one single today in 1973 …
… which bumped off this classic …
… which made an eight-year-old TV viewer’s eyes nearly pop out of his head.
Today in 1977, four members of Lynyrd Skynyrd and two others were killed when their plane crashed near McComb, Miss.:
We begin with one of the stranger episodes of live radio, Arthur Godfrey’s on-air firing of one of his singers today in 1953:
The number 28 song today in 1959 was customized for sales in 28 markets, including Buffalo, Chicago, Cleveland, Denver, Detroit, New Orleans, New York, Pittsburgh and San Francisco:
That was 27 positions lower than number one:
The number one British album today in 1967 was not the Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band”; it was the soundtrack to “The Sound of Music,” two years after the movie was released, on the soundtracks’ 137th week on the charts:
In an image right out of a Republican ad-maker’s dreams, this weekend President Biden went to a Baskin-Robbins in Portland, Ore., and, while eating an ice-cream cone, declared, “Our economy is strong as hell.” Biden’s rosy-eyed assessment came just days after updated figures showed the inflation rate at 8.2 percent.
As luck would have it, back in March, folks on the right created a meme of Biden licking an ice-cream cone and telling someone who can’t afford food or gas, “Best economic recovery in history, Jack!”
This weekend brought two national polls focusing on the midterms, and while the topline numbers are good for Republicans, let’s home in on how Americans currently feel about the economy, in light of Biden’s claim that it is “strong as hell.”
The number one song today in 1969:
Britain’s number one single today in 1979 probably would have gotten no American notice had it not been for the beginning of MTV a year later:
The number one album today in 1986 was Huey Lewis and the News’ “Fore”:
The City of Los Angeles declared today in 1990 “Rocky Horror Picture Show Day” in honor of the movie’s 15th anniversary, so …
The number one song today in 1960:
The number one song today in 1964:
The number one song today in 1970: