POLITICO Playbook PM: Israel and the United Arab Emirates line up and over Covid negotiations

A GREAT AGREEMENT … AP: “President Trump says the United Arab Emirates will open diplomacy with Israel,” through Jon Gambrell in Dubai, Matthew Lee in Bled, Slovenia, and Josef Federman in Jerusalem: “President Donald Trump said Thursday that the United Arab Emirates and Israel have agreed to identify full diplomacy as a component of an agreement to finalize the annexation of land sought through the Palestinians.

“The announcement makes the United Arab Emirates the first Arab Gulf state to do so and the third Arab country to have active diplomacy with Israel.

“This popularity gives Trump a rare diplomatic victory before the November election, as his efforts to end the war in Afghanistan have yet to succeed, while efforts to achieve peace between Israel and the Palestinians have progressed.”

– NBC’s @MattMcBradley: “If it works, it will be a major diplomatic breakthrough. The #UAE will be the first Arab gulf country to normalize relations with Sherael and the first Arab country since #Jordanie identified ‘Isra’l’ in 1994.”

@MohamedBinZayed: “During an appeal with President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu, an agreement was reached to finalize the continuation of The Israeli annexation of the Palestinian territories. The United Arab Emirates and Israel also agreed to cooperate and identify a roadmap for identifying a bilateral relationship. Statement through THE Ambassador of the United Arab Emirates Yousef al-Otaiba that talks on the status quo of embassies will begin

BUT, BUT, BUT … CNN’S LIVING ROOM (@vmsalama): “A big problem, yes. But as a long-time resident of the United Arab Emirates, I guarantee you that this was a long-standing coming and that the United Arab Emirates has been largely tolerant of Israel.In 2008, I attended meetings in Dubai with Israeli citizens who were granted exceptions to make a stopover for an explanation of why or another.

A LITTLE HISTORY … THIS has been IN TRAVAUX for more than a year and a half, but international relations, which concerned the United States, have accelerated over the past six weeks due to the risk of Israeli annexation of Western spaces. Bank. Arab nations have opposed annexation, saying it would be a setback for Israel’s efforts to forge alliances in the Arab world.

IT IS A HOPE IN MANAGEMENT that this is the beginning of the Arab nations’ alignment with Israel on the Palestinians, which, in trump ADMINISTRATION’s view, have refused long after an agreement.

YOU in a rite with Israeli and Emirati leaders in the coming weeks in Washington.

JARED KUSHNER IN PLAYBOOK this morning: “This has happened due to a lot of non-traditional diplomatic efforts that have been made through this administration over the more than 3 and a half years. We have noticed primary effects in the Middle East and are waiting to see many more as we continue to put into force the president’s vision of making the Middle East a more solid and disgustingly rich place.”

THE LATEST ABOUT THE COVIDArray RESCUE.. TRUMP gave the impression of recommending this morning on MARIA BARTIROMO’s Fox Business Network “MORNINGS WITH MARIA” that it would not settle for a Covid relief bill with USPS cash, putting it in a direct confrontation with Democrats, who say they won’t settle for a COvid relief bill without USPS cash.

TRUMP to BARTIROMO: “They want $3.5 billion for postal votes – universal ballots. They want $25 billion – billions – for the postArray Now they want that cash to run the post so that they can get all the millions and millions of votes. .. But if they don’t get it, it means you can’t have a universal postal vote.

SIREN – It’s A TRUMP THAT MAKES EXPLICITER that you don’t need to raise your investment for the postal service in an attempt to catch up with the postal vote, which says you’ll be a strong Democrat. A Monmouth ballot published Tuesday found that 72 percent of Democrats are most likely to vote by mail, compared to 22 percent of Republicans. Learn more about Zach Montellaro

CECI IS IN DIRECT CONFILITO with the position of the president’s negotiators – W.H. COS MARK MEADOWS and Treasury Secretary STEVEN MNUCHIN took it with Democrats behind closed doors, where they agreed to give the postal service another $10 billion in investment this year to cover the deficits. Democrats had asked $25 billion in the CARES Act, which is the only law that has been passed on the issue.

OH MY … “VOTING RIGHTS” IS A LIBERAL DESIRE? Democratic demands are wish lists of the liberal left … right to vote and assistance to foreigners and others. That’s not our game and the president can’t settle for that kind of agreement. We’ll wait and see the negotiations. Treasury Secretary Mnuchin is executing it, but so far it’s a dead end. There’s no doubt about it.” Learn more about Max Cohen

COVIDS PERSPECTIVES are already grim. They look a lot darker after that.

IT’S A MASSIVE POINT FOR TWO: Government investment runs out on September 30. But will it be necessary to threaten the government’s closure? Will Democrats ask the USPS for cash?

NANCY PELOSI on Capitol Hill this morning, her call with MNUCHIN: “They called yesterday, the secretary said, ‘Would you like to sit down?’ I said what we said, ‘You’re going to go up a billion, we’re going to go down a billion.”

Good Thursday afternoon. TRUMP will hold a press conference at 5:30 p.m.

From selling 5G in the United States to reaching the long term, Nokia is creating and making a long-term investment in our country. Developed through our U.S. innovation centers, by adding the iconic Nokia Bell Labs, Nokia provides answers for and for the U.S. Learn even more.

THE IMAGE OF THE CHAMAGE – “New unemployment programs fall below 1 million for the first time in five months,” through Rebecca Rainey: “New task programs dropped last week to 963,000,” the Department of Labor reported Thursday, the first time in months. less than 1 million.

“488,622 more laid-off employees deployed for unemployment assistance under the new pandemic unemployment assistance program, created for those who are historically not eligible for unemployment benefits, such as self-employed staff and structure staff. Arrangement.. In total, more than 25 million other people are receiving unemployment benefits lately, according to DOL. Political

THE LAST IN BEIRUT – “U.S. Official: THE FBI will sign for the investigation of the Beirut explosion, through AP’s Sarah El Deeb:” [Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs] Hale said that participation in the investigation was one of the tactics with which the United States was helping Lebanon cope with the consequences of the crisis. drastic explosion. Hale arrived in Lebanon on Thursday and plans to meet with Lebanese officials over the next two days. Ap

NOTICE – “The mask with valves or vents does not prevent the spread of coronavirus, according to the CDC,” through Reis Thebault and Angela Fritz of WaPo

AP/LUMPKIN, GA.: “The moment an ICE detainee in Georgia dies of COVID-19 headaches”: “A Costa Rican diabetic in federal immigration custody at the time an inmate in Georgia dies of COVID-19 headaches after being held in a detention center that reported more than 150 cases of coronavirus.” Ap

Winter is coming: “In the clutches of coronavirus, the fitness government is preparing for flu season,” through Jared Hopkins of the WSJ: “To lower pressure, drug brands like AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline and Sanofi are manufacturing around two hundred million flu vaccines. year to send to doctors, hospitals, and pharmacies, 13% more than last year and a record by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“The federal government is also launching a crusade to encourage others to get vaccinated, while drug brands and pharmacies are exploring new measures to get more people vaccinated, such as providing flu shots on the streets. Wsj

A STRANGE STORY OF SUCCESS COVIDE – “In Native American lands, touch tracking saves lives,” through NYT’s Gina Kolata: “The coronavirus is sweeping the White Mountain Apache tribe. Spread out in a giant reserve in eastern Arizona, Apaches have swelled by more than 10 times the rate of others in the state as a whole. However, its Covid-19 mortality rate is much lower, only 1.3%, to 2.1% in Arizona.

“Epidemiologists have a positive theory about what led to this unexpected outcome: the extensive search for contacts in the reserve probably allowed groups adding doctors to locate and treat other seriously ill people before it was too late to save them. An essential tool was an undeniable and affordable medical device: an oximeter that, attached to a finger, detected dangerously low blood oxygen levels in others who did not even realize they were seriously ill.” Nyt

CAMPAGNE COVID – “Will the Michigan Democrats run after a virtual crusade?” through Tim Alberta in Lansing, Michigan: “[Rep. Elissa] Slotkin follows all the rules, takes every and every precaution, does everything he can to succeed in the electorate without endangering them. It’s a source of pride: after reinventing in the fly, Slotkin’s team heads to the 2020 final stretch with an unproven artistic theory of how to conduct a winning crusade amid a pandemic. But it is also a source of abundant uncertainty.

“In fact, Slotkin won his seat by persuading many independent voters, not to mention a smart number of Republicans, to accept as true with a Democrat to form the district for the first time in this century. The inability to remain in the most sensible of those “persuadable” is the cause of relentless anxiety. But today, in Lansing, Slotkin faces the other political dilemma he will have to solve in the midst of Covid-19: how to reshape the party’s base.” Political

JACK HITT at WIRED: “A race driven through a spreadsheet to repair voting rights”: “Many think tanks and teams of voters have studied this challenge of underserved voters after the election. But in a small Ohio town, there’s at least one guy who’s very profitable in fight stations, obsessed with solving the challenge before it happens. Steve Tingley-Hock is a computer scientist who has long worked in database control trenches, running for years in American Express’s vast credit card database.

“During his off-peak hours, he developed an exclusive pastime: examining the state’s electoral records. Last fall, he had the opportunity to test those skills. At the beginning of a purging procedure in Ohio, he and other knowledge analysts won the purge list. By implementing several fundamental knowledge-questioning techniques, he has learned that thousands of electorates were mistakenly heading for deportation. Now, armed with their work, voter rights teams in a handful of states are looking to fill the gaps in the voter registration formula: before thousands of voters empty the charts before the presidential election.

VALLEY TALK – “Facebook strengthens efforts against misinformation before the U.S. election,” via AP’s Barbara Ortutay in Oakland, California: “As of Thursday, U.S. Facebook users. That they publish articles about the vote will likely begin to see an appendix to their publications. Label readers direct readers to reliable data about the upcoming presidential election.

“Facebook began adding similar links to in-person and mail-in-mail posts about voting through federal politicians, adding President Donald Trump in July. These tags will be connected to a new COVID-19-like voter data center that, according to Facebook, has been noticed through billions of users worldwide.

FOR YOUR RADAR – “Kamala Harris and the most productive Democrats at a school athlete pay while the virus is in full swing,” through Juan Pérez Jr. and Nolan McCaskill: “Announced as a ‘College Athlete Rights Statement,’ the Democratic bill proposes to pay a student-athlete through income-sharing agreements with sports associations, meetings and schools that make money.

“The proposal would also allow athletes to provide products or for their own benefit, provide them with ‘lifetime proportional scholarships’ and create applicable aptitude and protection criteria that would come with new monetary assistance for sports-related injuries and illnesses.”

SOUTH VECINOS – “As the U.S.-China hole grows, Mexico is going to bring U.S. corporations home,” through Kevin Sieff of WaPo in Mexico City: “As tensions between the United States and China rise, and as the coronavirus pandemic forces some U.S. corporations to reconsider their chains of remote sources. Array Mexico has a message for the world’s CEOs: move here.

“The Mexican government calls it a ‘offshoring strategy’: a crusade to convince corporations that they would be safer by bringing production closer to the U.S. market, to a country with a newly signed American industrial agreement, and warmer relations with the U.S. government. . ArrayArray .. By trying to convince corporations to move from China, the Mexican government is emphasizing the price of its proximity to the United States. Officials are suing some of the world’s largest corporations, such as Apple, Google and Microsoft.” Wapo

CLIMATE FILES – “New EPA regulations may raise the bar for climate replacement regulations,” through WSJ’s Timothy Puko: “The Environmental Protection Agency plans to use new methane regulations to help set a higher bar for regulating other emissions that make a contribution to climate change, according to others familiar with the scenario and an excerpt from the new rule.

“Regulations followed Thursday will repeal regulations on methane fuel emissions followed in 2016, adding the finishing needs that oil and fuel manufacturers have procedures in a position to trip and repair methane leaks in their systems. Array.. The company will take the same position in relation to the regulation of other commercial pollutants, according to extracts from the final draft regulation of revised methane through the Wall Street Journal. Wsj

SCOTUS WATCH – “Abortion, transgender rights will likely return to the Supreme Court, through Robert Barnes of WaPo:” Over the next week, the courts have resurrected questionable restrictions on abortion in Arkansas, stopped a Vermont program that deprived top school academics, and ordered a Florida school district to replace their policy that prohibits transgender students from going to the restrooms of their choice.

“Everyone was in the Supreme Court decisions just a few weeks ago. And especially in transgender rights and abortion, they pose problems that seem to justify the continued attention of judges.”

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