Monday Morning Read

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There’s more heat being applied to industrial development agencies. We’ve already reported on reform legislation being championed by Sen. Sean Ryan. Last week, the Albany Times Union reported that the chairman of the Senate Committee on Investigations and Government Operations is launching an investigation into how IDA’s dole out tax breaks. Sen. James Skoufis is hot and bothered by a deal in Orange County. He’s likely to blow a gasket if he looks into the deals approved of late by the Niagara County IDA, subsidies for everything from fast food restaurants to market rate housing to a warehouse for Amazon, which was brazen enough to declare it couldn’t afford to build without a handout.

Gov. Kathy Hochul is quoting an industry study in justifying her proposal that the state extend loans worth $455 million to help prop up the Belmont Park horse racing track in Long Island. New York Focus wants a copy of the study. She won’t give it to them. Sounds like the state’s response to us when we ask for a copy of the feasibility study used as a basis of negotiating a deal to build a new stadium for the Buffalo Bills. We sued, and the state relented. Go get ‘em, New York Focus.

Yet more subsidy news: There’s a move afoot to provide tax breaks to benefit the ailing newspaper industry. The problem: the industry’s business model is broken and tax breaks aren’t going to fit it.

More media news: NPR is cutting loose 10 percent of its staff. Tough financial times extend to public media, too.

And some more media news: Legal experts say Fox News has set itself up to lose the libel lawsuit brought by Dominion Voting Systems. A news outlet – and I use the term loosely when discussing Fox – has to screw up big time to lose a libel case, by publishing information it knows to be false. Texts and other internal communications show that Fox honchos and on-air personalities were privately dismissive of the claims of Donald Trump and  his minions that the 2020 presidential election was stolen and that Dominion was in on the ruse. Yet they kept parroting the lie on the air.

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Gov. Ron DeSantis, in another would-be step towards authoritarianism,  wants to make it easier for people to sue the press for libel in his state of Florida.

Ken Kruly, in his Politics and Other Stuff, catches us up on the latest shenanigans at the Western Regional Off-Track Betting Corp. (An aside to the FBI and state AG and Comptroller: When are you wrapping up your investigations? It’s been like, forever.)

The New York Times magazine details the dysfunction within the Democratic Party here in New York. An insightful read on a state party whose ineptitude helped hand the U.S. House of Representatives to the crazies.

A couple of professors are promoting the idea of appointing Mayor Byron Brown as president of Buffalo State University. Ah, no..

Words I thought I’d never read in The Buffalo News, courtesy of this story extolling the benefits of avoiding silver bullet projects:

“The Buffalo Billion brought more than $1 billion to a handful of high-profile projects, from Tesla and IBM to Athenex. All have disappointed, barely meeting or falling short of their employment goals, while largely failing to deliver on the promised broader goals of spurring a gush of good-paying spinoff development.”

The News and Investigative Post played a journalistic version of Battle of the Bands over the years involving the Buffalo Billion. It seemed every time we published an investigation exposing wrongdoing, The News responded with a “don’t worry, be happy” story. Over time, the failure of the program’s marquee projects became impossible to ignore.

The post Monday Morning Read appeared first on Investigative Post.

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‘Awkward guy’: White House insiders fear Vance may do ‘more harm than good’ with speech



Hours before he is expected to speak at a Turning Point USA gathering in Mississippi, Vice President JD Vance did not get a vote of confidence from one White House insider.

According to a report from MSNBC’s Jake Traylor, Donald Trump's MAGA heir-apparent will attempt to step into the shoes of the late TPUSA founder Charlie Kirk by giving a speech and then taking questions at the SJB Pavilion on the University of Mississippi campus.

As Traylor wrote, Vance will attempt to mimic Kirk’s appearances on college campuses that came to an abrupt end during a visit to Utah Valley University.

The report notes that Vance’s performance will be “graded” against how Kirk was received, and there is some trepidation at the White House about whether he will pull it off.

With Traylor writing, “He will try to avoid the potential pitfalls that accompany an unpredictable, live college debate format that could lead to him seeming to diminish the office he now holds. And he will try to not be too obvious in his angling for a 2028 presidential bid,” one White House official attempted to downplay expectations by admitting, “There’s tons of risks.”

Vance has claimed, “I’m going to do exactly what Charlie did. {Kirk] would answer tough questions from the left and from the right, and so I want to do that, too,” which has MSNBC reporting, “White House officials and people close to Vance caution that simply playing Kirk may do more harm than good.”

”[Charlie] had unique skills,” one person admitted. “Vance can be an awkward guy on stage. He’s not going to be what Kirk was, he’s just different from that.”

According to the report, for Vance to advance his hopes of replacing Trump, he needs to get organizations like TPUSA on his side.

To political observers, "his proximity to Turning Point in recent weeks highlights his growing alliance with the powerhouse youth group amid early speculation of his own 2028 presidential run,” MSNBC is reporting.

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