NEW: Leftover COVID-19 vaccine doses that would otherwise expire can go to anyone who wants them. @leonardkl breaks down how to get one if you aren't elderly or a healthcare worker and most important w/o actually skipping the line. ($) @Politicsinsiderow.ly/Qm2a50D0N9d
Pharmacies and hospitals are finding they have leftover shots at the end of the day, and the choice is either to toss them or give them to the next person who asks for them.
"Our goal is to have minimal wastage of vaccine," said LaQuandra Nesbitt, director of DC's Health Department. "If there are people who are available at the end of the day to be vaccinated then you should vaccinate them."
Facilities aren't advertising that they have leftover vaccines, but the word is getting around, including on social media. In a Reddit thread healthcare workers are exchanging stories about being forced to throw away extra vaccines.
Arianna Miskin, a 25-year-old master's degree student at George Washington University, heard about leftover shots in NY & KY so decided to try her luck at the nation's capital. "I figured if it was happening there then it might be happening here," Miskin told @Politicsinsider
On Sunday, she called a Safeway pharmacy near her home and they told her to call back at 4PM. Instead, she went to the store at 3:30PM to wait. 2 older adults were in front of her, & others behind her were couples who looked like they were in their 20s & 30s, she said.
Miskin said she would have stepped aside if she had seen older adults or people w/ severe illnesses waiting in line behind her: "I would prefer people who are higher risk get the vaccine, but I also prefer people utilize the vaccine as opposed to them getting discarded."
Miskin receives a text every day with a link to a questionnaire from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention asking about her symptoms to track any side effects. She has a sore arm, she said, a common symptom from other vaccines, including the flu shot.
Now that she's been through the process, Miskin said that people thinking about getting leftover vaccines should call first. Pharmacies have different times of operation, & they won't always have leftovers. Some people might wait in line and get sent home w/o a shot, she said.
Five pharmacists at Safeway & Giant Food in DC confirmed to Insider that giving out the extra shots was the practice at their stores. Not every store has vials left over at the end of the day, but some pharmacists said they're already getting tons of calls about the possibility.
"It's like the PLO in the '70s," said Mark Corallo, a former spokesman for Trump's personal legal team, likening the Trump protestors to the Palestine Liberation Organization. "This is sickening." by @tomlobianco & me ($) in @Politicsinsiderow.ly/96EG50D1W96
The closing image of Trump's presidency became one of police barring doors against an angry mob, w/ guns drawn. The "American carnage" Trump promised he would end 4 years ago when he was inaugurated at the Capitol had now broken into the very same building — at his instigation.
Behind the scenes, WH aides prodded Trump to call on his supporters to end the violent protests. Ultimately, they needed about 2 hours before Trump released a brief message that appeared to be taped from just outside the White House asking his supporters to "go home."
NEW: President Trump & his team are hoping Pence will launch a last-ditch maneuver to suspend counting the electoral votes that will formalize Biden's victory, 2 Republicans close to the White House told @Politicsinsider - by @tomlobianco ($) ow.ly/itcp50D1yGR
Backing up, here's Tom's lead for those who haven't gone behind the paywall: "Vice President Mike Pence has long reveled in the pomp and circumstance of elected office, the celebratory speeches and official declarations that most journalists roll their eyes at."
But now the pomp & circumstance of standing by Trump's side for more than 4 years has put the VP in the worst jeopardy of his career. Pence today will take on the role of Senate president & read off the Electoral College vote counts & eventually declare Biden the president.
NEW: Dems' projected Senate wins are big news for Biden. Instead of haggling w/ McConnell on everything from stimulus bills to Cabinet noms, Biden will have Schumer helping to usher through his policy goals. @rbravender & @leonardkl with the breakdown ($) ow.ly/skXH50D1yfG
Whoever holds the Senate majority dictates which bills & nominations get votes on the floor. The party in charge also controls committees, where the leaders decide what hearings to hold, which issues to investigate, and which admin officials to haul to the Hill for questioning.
Democrats leapt into action on Wednesday plotting their next moves, and progressives are already pushing Biden to plow ahead with ambitious nominations and policies now that control of the Senate has been decided.
NEWS: One of President Donald Trump's top lawyers has resigned from her law firm after participating in a phone call attempting to overturn the election results in Georgia, Insider has learned. by @tomlobianco ($) in @Politicsinsider ow.ly/FFrw50D0RWU
Cleta Mitchell wrote in a letter to her clients Tuesday that she was resigning from the blue chip firm Foley & Lardner LLP, according to a copy of the resignation letter obtained by Insider.
"After discussions with my firm's management, I have decided that it is in both of our interests that I leave the firm," Mitchell wrote.
NEW: The federal government has finally released an obscure 232-page government document central to the Biden administration's efforts to get its team in place by Inauguration Day. It's called the Plum Book. by @rbravender ($) in @Politicsinsiderow.ly/kd8950CZUBy
On a more serious note, the Plum Book, as it's unofficially called, contains details about the roughly 9,000 coveted leadership jobs in the US government.
It normally arrives by early December of a presidential election year, just in time for the incoming White House team.
NEW: Shana Broussard's historic appointment comes after a grim 15 months where the FEC was without power to enforce campaign finance laws while a backlog piled up of hundreds of enforcement cases. by @davelevinthal in @Politicsinsider ($) ow.ly/AcYA50CW85G
Symbolically, Broussard told @Politicsinsider that her appointment provides "encouragement that this is not an exclusive process for only some, but that the electoral process is open for all."
"The agency that promotes transparency should be led by people that represent and make themselves available to the public that they serve," she added.