ANITA DUNN LEAVES THE WHITE HOUSE — Our Myah Ward: “Top Biden adviser Anita Dunn will depart the White House … as her temporary position concludes, though she will still play a key role as an outside counselor to … Biden — similar to how she served in the Obama years. “Dunn told POLITICO that her time at the White House was wrapping up Thursday .. She had stayed in the senior adviser post longer than expected, but had always envisioned being in a place to help see Biden’s economic agenda gain steam in Congress.” ASIA DIPS AFTER WALL STREET HITS RECORDS — Via Bloomberg: “Most Asian shares slipped Friday as the spread of the delta Covid-19 variant and China’s regulatory curbs restrained sentiment despite another record high close on Wall Street. The technology sector led losses on a slide in Chinese Internet giants and a retreat in chipmakers that hurt South Korean equities. “U.S. equity futures were steady after the S&P 500 hit a fresh peak and the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 rose. Airbnb Inc. slid in extended trading on a tough outlook due to the virus, while a surge in streaming demand boosted Walt Disney Co. U.S. Treasury 10-year yields were near a one-month high following a tepid 30-year auction and data highlighting price pressures and a recovery in the labor market. A gauge of the dollar held an advance.” LEFT WARNS DEMS NOT TO LESSEN $3.5T BILL — Our Laura Barrón-López: “One of the most powerful Democratic-allied groups in D.C. is warning party members that they risk leaving women voters behind if they don’t back … Biden’s social spending package. ... The Center for American Progress is pressing Democratic lawmakers to keep the $3.5 trillion reconciliation package as close to its original blueprint as possible, arguing that it’s vital for helping women workers hit hard by the pandemic. “Simply passing an infrastructure bill, the group warns, would create a massive divergence in the economic recovery along gender lines. … The push from CAP comes as Biden is ramping up promotion of his so-called Build Back Better agenda, which is expected to include funding for workers in elder and child care — fields that are dominated by women.” HOME PRICES SURGE — WSJ’s Nicole Friedman: “Home prices surged in almost every corner of the U.S. in the second quarter as robust demand continued to overwhelm the supply of homes for sale. While the homebuying frenzy has shown signs of a slowdown in recent months, home-price growth has yet to cool. “The median sales price for single-family existing homes was higher in the second quarter compared with a year ago for 182 of the 183 metro areas tracked by the National Association of Realtors, the association said Thursday. In 94% of those metro areas, median prices rose by more than 10% from a year earlier. Nationwide, the median single-family existing-home sales price rose 22.9% in the second quarter to $357,900 from a year ago, a record in data going back to 1968, NAR said.” WARREN ON THE TAX SYSTEM — Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) in a Wash. Post op-ed: “Now that the Senate has passed a budget resolution, we’re one step closer to realizing … Biden’s transformational agenda … The other half of the package — how to pay for these investments — is equally important. “The already huge gap between the 0.1 percent and everyone else is just getting wider. … I’ve proposed measures that would raise more than $5 trillion in revenue — far more than we need to enact the Biden plan. Though not every Democrat agrees with every one of my ideas, Biden campaigned aggressively on a suite of progressive tax policies, and voters embraced these changes at the ballot box. No matter how loudly Washington lobbyists bleat otherwise, progressive tax policies are wildly popular. “ |