A fierce behind-the-scenes dispute between House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office and Facebook erupted into public view Friday, as the speaker’s office demanded that Facebook remove a video posted online by President Donald Trump.

The video in question showed Pelosi’s viral State of the Union moment ripping up the text of Trump’s speech Tuesday night, but was edited to make it appear that she ripped the speech even as Trump saluted a Tuskegee airman in the audience. In fact, Pelosi’s speech-ripping gesture came at the end of the president’s speech, and her office said it was in response to the totality of the speech and what Pelosi saw as misinformation in it.

The video, labeled “Powerful American stories ripped to shreds by Nancy Pelosi,” was posted on both Facebook and Twitter. Trump tweeted the video from his Twitter account just before 6 p.m. Thursday to his more than 72 million followers.

Within hours, the speaker’s office was demanding both social media companies remove the video, arguing it was unfair to Pelosi, who actually stood and applauded the airman during the speech.

Both Facebook and Twitter decided against removing the Trump video, although the companies cited different reasons for their decisions.

The dispute became public Friday when Pelosi’s deputy chief of staff, Drew Hammill, posted a link to a criticism of the video Friday afternoon, writing “The latest fake video of Speaker Pelosi is deliberately designed to mislead and lie to the American people, and every day that these platforms refuse to take it down is another reminder that they care more about their shareholders’ interests than the public’s interests.”

Andy Stone, a Facebook spokesman, replied to Hammill on Twitter: “Sorry, are you suggesting the President didn’t make those remarks and the Speaker didn’t rip the speech?”

Hammill fired back: “What planet are you living on? This is deceptively altered. Take it down.”

In the end, both Facebook and Twitter declined to remove the Trump campaign post, citing corporate policies.

Facebook’s Stone told CNBC, “I can confirm for you that the video doesn’t violate our policies.”

Stone said the company’s policies against altered video specifically refer to video that has been edited to make it appear a person said something they didn’t say or did something they didn’t do.

Facebook’s response left Pelosi’s Hammill frustrated.

“I think they have a history here of promoting and making money off of content that is intentionally false,” Hammill said.

Twitter, for its part, has a new set of policies around manipulated media that the company announced Tuesday. The company imposed a new rule on its users: “You may not deceptively share synthetic or manipulated media that are likely to cause harm. In addition, we may label Tweets containing synthetic and manipulated media to help people understand the media’s authenticity and to provide additional context.”

To determine that, Twitter said it would examine videos to ascertain “whether the content has been substantially edited in a manner that fundamentally alters its composition, sequence, timing or framing” as well as looking at “any visual or auditory information (such as new video frames, overdubbed audio or modified subtitles) that has been added or removed.”

But that policy doesn’t go into effect until March 5, and Twitter told Pelosi’s office that it will not remove the Trump video under its current rules. Asked if the Trump video would violate Twitter’s policies if it is posted again after March 5, Twitter spokeswoman Katie Rosborough wrote in an email: “I can’t get into hypotheticals.”

A Trump campaign spokesman said the president’s reelection effort is unconcerned about Pelosi’s reaction to the video.

“If Nancy Pelosi fears images of her ripping up the speech, perhaps she shouldn’t have ripped up the speech,” said Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh. In less than 24 hours, Murtaugh said, the video has received 2.1 million views, has reached almost 5 million people and has been shared more than 23,000 times.

It wasn’t immediately clear who actually produced the video in question. The Trump campaign referred that question to the White House, and spokespeople there did not respond to a request for comment.

As all of that was happening, Pelosi’s office was fighting to get Facebook to remove a second video of Nancy Pelosi that the speaker’s office also complained about: This one a deceptively edited video of Pelosi appearing on The Colbert Report in a comedy segment. The altered video made it appear that Pelosi was eating Tide Pods, and Facebook has a policy against that.

Facebook took the Tide Pod video down.

“When the Tide Pod challenge began we said we would take down any such videos brought to our attention out of concern for people’s safety, which is why we’ve removed this video from our platform,” a Facebook spokesman said.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/02/07/facebook-and-twitter-decline-pelosi-request-to-delete-trump-video.html

Follow our updates: Chinese health officials say they confirmed more than 31,000 cases of the novel coronavirus, more than 4,800 of them considered severe. The death toll surpassed 630.

Meanwhile, quarantined on military bases, U.S. evacuees resort to Zumba, stairwell races and accounting classes.

Chinese doctor Li Wenliang, who became a symbol of the Chinese government’s failings after sounding warnings about the disease in December, died Thursday after contracting the virus in Wuhan. Within hours of his death, millions of Chinese tried to bypass censors to post the hashtag “We demand freedom of speech.”

Are you in isolation or quarantine because of the coronavirus? We want to hear about it. Have you seen or experienced any discrimination, racism or xenophobia connected to the ongoing coronavirus epidemic? Share your story.

Mapping the spread of the new coronavirus: The United States, Germany, Sri Lanka, France, Cambodia, the Philippines, India, Thailand, Japan, Nepal, Hong Kong, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates, Canada, Vietnam, Macao and South Korea have all confirmed cases of the infection.

What is coronavirus and how does it spread? Coronaviruses are a large family of viruses whose effects range from causing the common cold to triggering much more serious diseases, such as severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS. Here’s what we know so far.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/coronavirus-came-from-bats-or-possibly-pangolins-amid-acceleration-of-new-zoonotic-infections/2020/02/07/11eb7f3a-4379-11ea-b503-2b077c436617_story.html

President Trump is speaking at an Opportunity Now Summit in Charlotte, North Carolina, Friday, capping off the week the Senate acquitted him. Watch Live: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-no…


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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E2Dzzx6_8OQ

WASHINGTON – Departing the White House Friday afternoon, President Donald Trump asserted that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi “broke the law” in tearing up her copy of his State of Union address after he concluded his remarks Tuesday. 

“Well I thought it was a terrible thing when she ripped up the speech. First of all, it’s an official document. You’re not allowed. It’s illegal what she did. She broke the law,” he told reporters. 

Experts, however, disagree with Trump.

Although Trump did not cite a specific law, several of his allies, as well as his son Donald Trump Jr., have asserted that she violated the Presidential Records Act or other statutes governing the maintenance of federal records.

Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., a staunch ally of the president, went so far as to say he would lodge an ethics complaint with the House Ethics Committee alleging Pelosi broke the law. 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/02/07/trump-illegal-pelosi-tear-up-speech-but-experts-disagree/4691243002/

Now, as the focus turns to New Hampshire and its primary next Tuesday, Mr. Buttigieg has emerged as a formidable top-tier contender, harnessing the momentum from Iowa and campaigning with confidence and a large dose of swagger.

New polls this week have affirmed his strength as a moderate rivaling or even surpassing Mr. Biden: A Monmouth survey put him second in New Hampshire, 4 percentage points behind Mr. Sanders, and a Boston Globe/Suffolk University poll published on Friday showed him gaining momentum there and in a virtual tie with Mr. Sanders.

For a long time in this primary, Democrats seemed to be deciding between the progressive sizzle in Mr. Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, or the statesmanlike security blanket in Mr. Biden. In the end, Iowans liked Mr. Sanders but also embraced Mr. Buttigieg, a Midwestern neighbor with a compelling biography: Rhodes scholar, military veteran, potential history-maker as an openly gay candidate.

That he had run a city of 100,000 people did not seem to bother his supporters, who gravitated toward his soothing paeans to consensus-driven solutions and “the American experiment.”

Much of his success can be traced to geography and timing. While Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren focused their campaigns on Iowa’s cities and college towns and Mr. Biden never developed a strong organization, Mr. Buttigieg went everywhere. He held more events over more days in Iowa than his top three rivals, two of whom were sidelined by the Senate impeachment trial, and watched the investment pay off by running strong in the Des Moines suburbs and across rural Iowa.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/07/us/politics/pete-buttigieg-iowa-caucus.html

The Chinese doctor in Wuhan who tried to sound the alarm in the early stages of what would soon become the coronavirus outbreak died Friday from the virus. Thirty-four-year-old ophthalmologist Li Wenliang tried to raise concerns around the new year about what was then an unidentified virus. On Dec. 30, Li described to medical school classmates in an online chat room that what he was seeing in the capital of Hubei province resembled severe acute respiratory syndrome (or SARS). The Chinese state apparatus quickly intervened. Li was interrogated by both medical authorities and police before being forced to sign a statement disavowing his early warning of the deadly disease as an “illegal rumor.” Soon, however, thousands of residents in Wuhan had contracted the virus that has now spread around the world, claiming hundreds of lives so far, including Li’s, who contracted the disease from a glaucoma patient he was treating.

In China, Li is being referred to as a whistleblower. In most places, he would just be referred to as a doctor. It’s a maddening story of censorship and propaganda, one that shows the global impact that China’s stifling approach to hard truths can and will have on us all. For years, economic opening and technological advance have been seen as potential drivers of systemic political change in China, but in many ways it’s worked the other way around. The expansion of Chinese economic influence buoyed by technology has effectively exported its values of secrecy in the name of stability. You need not look further than the hushed responses across the West to the pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong and China’s chilling treatment of the Uighurs. That silence you heard from the NBA, from Donald Trump, from the once-vocal corners of the globe, was the sound of punches getting pulled, values getting quietly shelved, reality rearranged. But what the past month has shown is the silver bullet to propaganda everywhere is going to be something far less hopeful—disease. The threat of pandemic requires experts and truth, honest and principled leadership. Without it, alternative sources of power well up. Technological authoritarianism and craven populism might be effective in placating the masses, wherever they reside, dividing by confusion and convenience, obfuscation and fear, but when you tell people it’s safe for their kids to go outside and you know it’s not, something changes in people, and the stakes change.

The Chinese government has largely held its line, taking down unharmonious feelings of anger and anguish, and pushing out numbing statements. “[Li] had the misfortune to be infected during the fight against the novel coronavirus pneumonia epidemic, and all-out efforts to save him failed,” the Wuhan City Central Hospital announced on Weibo. “We express our deep regret and condolences.” But there have been rare outbursts of public anger about Li’s death and China’s treatment of the truth. “Dr. Li’s death appeared unlikely to inspire protests in Wuhan, which has been under lockdown for just over two weeks in an unprecedented effort to extinguish the epidemic,” the New York Times reports. “In Wuhan and other heavily restricted areas of Hubei, residents mostly stay inside their homes and avoid socializing for fear of catching the virus.”

The result? “The Chinese public have staged what amounts to an online revolt after the death of [Li Wenliang] who tried to warn of a mysterious virus that has since killed hundreds of people in China, infected tens of thousands and forced the government to corral many of the country’s 1.4 billion people,” the Times reports. “Since late Thursday, people from different backgrounds, including government officials, prominent business figures and ordinary online users, have posted numerous messages expressing their grief at the doctor’s death and their anger over his silencing by the police after sharing his knowledge about the new coronavirus. It has prompted a nationwide soul-searching under an authoritarian government that allows for little dissent.”

Here are some examples from the Times of the extraordinary dissent being voiced largely online:

• “Refusing to listen to your ‘whistling,’ your country has stopped ticking, and your heart has stopped beating,” Hong Bing, the Shanghai bureau chief of the Communist Party’s official newspaper, People’s Daily, wrote on her timeline on WeChat, an instant-messaging platform. “How big a price do we have to pay to make you and your whistling sound louder, to reach every corner of the East?”

• Both the Chinese- and English-language Twitter accounts of People’s Daily tweeted that Mr. Li’s death had prompted “national grief.” Both accounts deleted those messages before replacing them with more neutral, official-sounding posts.

• The Weibo account of Shandong Province’s law enforcement body posted a portrait of Mr. Li with two sentences that have been circulating online: “Heroes don’t fall from the sky. They’re just ordinary people who stepped forward.”

• “It’s time to reflect on the deeply-rooted, stability-trumps-everything thinking that’s hurt everyone,” Wang Ran, chairman of the investment bank CEC Capital, wrote on Weibo. “We all want stability,” he asked. “Will you be more stable if you cover the others’ mouths while walking on a tightrope?

A pandemic, it turns out, may be a great leveler, the alarm clock awakening us from our slide into an authoritarian doze—and not just in China.

Source Article from https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/02/china-doctor-li-dies-coronavirus-whistleblower-public-anger-dissent.amp

And less than an hour later, Trump was retweeting several posts calling for Vindman to be fired “ASAP.”

Trump’s comments followed several media reports that Vindman, a Ukraine specialist at the National Security Council, could be reassigned from his NSC detail to the Pentagon as soon as Friday. Trump punted the announcement of any move to the NSC, teasing that “you’ll be hearing soon” about their decision.

Vindman’s removal from his post would come amid three months of relentless attacks by Trumps allies in Congress, the White House and on Fox News, questioning the Iraq War veteran’s patriotism and honesty. Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) launched a multi-day string of Twitter attacks on Vindman during the impeachment trial.

Vindman is one of the few firsthand witnesses House investigators were able to secure testimony from before charging that Trump abused his office by withholding vital aid from Ukraine until it announced investigations into his political opponents. He testified to lawmakers that he flagged Trump’s July 25 call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenksy to a top White House lawyer, and he testified publicly in November that he considered Trump’s call improper. His testimony elicited a mid-hearing attack from the official White House Twitter account and drew the ire of the president’s allies.

A transfer would almost certainly be interpreted by some as an act of retribution for Vindman’s testimony against the president, and the Washington Post reported that the White House is mulling reassignments for other administration officials who defied the White House’s orders and testified in the inquiry.

A source close to Vindman suggested as much Friday, saying that it appears the White House “is getting ready to retaliate.”

Trump called out Vindman directly, as well as his twin brother, who also serves on the National Security Council, during a lengthy celebration of his impeachment trial acquittal Thursday.

The discussion of Vindman’s future comes as several of the other 17 witnesses in the House’s impeachment inquiry have returned to the news.

For example, Jennifer Williams, a former aide to Vice President Mike Pence who testified alongside Vindman and similarly raised concerns about Trump’s July 25 call, is moving to a new role at CENTCOM this spring, sources revealed last week. Bill Taylor, the former top U.S. envoy to Ukraine, left his post last month and took to the pages of the Washington Post to chide Secretary of State Pompeo for wondering whether Americans cared about Ukraine.

And Marie Yovanovitch, the former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine ousted by Trump amid a smear campaign by his allies, detailed her impeachment experience in an op-ed earlier in the week, applauding those who would call out “wrongdoing” by powerful officials.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/02/07/donald-trump-pressure-impeachment-witness-alexander-vindman-111997

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/02/07/politics/emoluments-lawsuit-trump/index.html

“If he stays at one of his places, the government actually . . . saves a fortune because, if they were to go to a hotel across the street, they’d be charging them $500 a night, whereas, you know we charge them, like 50 bucks,” Eric Trump said.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/secret-service-has-paid-rates-as-high-as-650-a-night-for-rooms-at-trumps-properties/2020/02/06/7f27a7c6-3ec5-11ea-8872-5df698785a4e_story.html

The number of diagnosed cases of coronavirus on a Princess Cruises ship quarantined off the coast of Yokohoma, Japan, has tripled to 61, according to a  report from the cruise line late Thursday.

The Japanese Ministry of Health notified Princess Cruises that an additional 41 people screened aboard the Diamond Princess have tested positive for coronavirus. Eight of those patients that have tested positive are Americans, according to the cruise line. On Wednesday, Princess Cruises confirmed 20 diagnosed cases of coronavirus on the ship, which was already under a 14-day quarantine.

Guests testing positive are expected to be transported to local hospitals immediately.

Japanese health officials confirmed the completion of onboard testing late Thursday night, according to a statement from the cruise line. The quarantine will end on Feb. 19, pending any unforeseen circumstances. 

As of Friday morning, a total of 31,523 cases of coronavirus have been confirmed across the world, and the virus has caused 638 deaths. Common signs of infection include fever, cough, shortness of breath and breathing difficulties. The virus, which originated in Wuhan, China, can be spread by coughing, sneezing and through close contact with an infected person or an object carrying the virus.

Diamond Princess:  Cruise ship to stay under quarantine after 10 more passengers test positive

“The health and safety of our guests and crew remains our top priority. We continue to work closely with the Japan Ministry of Health on all protocols and procedures while ensuring the comfort and well-being of our guests,” Princess Cruises’ Public Relations Director Negin Kamali said in the statement. 

The Japanese government is providing assistance to the crew, according to Princess Cruises.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/travel/news/2020/02/07/coronavirus-cruise-ship-denied-by-guam-japan-philippines-holland-america/4688716002/

WASHINGTON — Yes, Bernie Sanders could very well end up being the odds-on favorite to win the Democratic nomination — if he wins New Hampshire and Nevada.

And especially if Pete Buttigieg/Joe Biden/Michael Bloomberg split up the vote in the party’s moderate lane beginning on Super Tuesday.

But now that the dust — or more accurately, all the mess — has settled after Iowa, it becomes clear that Sanders only had an “ok” night in the Hawkeye State.

He might have met expectations, but he certainly didn’t exceed them. Turnout was lower than expected. And the entrance poll showed him with limited crossover appeal outside of his young, very liberal base.

Sanders got just 8 percent support from Iowa caucus-goers 45 and older. And among seniors 65-plus, it was just 4 percent.

While he overperformed among “very liberal” Iowa Dems (43 percent), he underperformed among “somewhat liberals” (19 percent) and moderates (12 percent).

He got just 12 percent support from white women college graduates — arguably the heart of the Dem resistance against Trump.

And maybe most concerning of all for Sanders, he won more than half of the Iowa caucus-goers who said they supported him in 2016. But he barely registered (7 percent) among the 54 percent of all Iowa caucus-goers who said they backed Hillary Clinton four years ago.

So his base — right now — is about half of the Democrats who supported him in 2016.

But few else.

(He did overperform with the sliver of non-white Democrats in Iowa, but it’s unclear if that translates outside of the Hawkeye State.)

So if he’s really going to be the odds-on favorite to win the Democratic nomination, he’s got to win convincingly in New Hampshire.

Remember, this is a state he carried with 61 percent of the vote in 2016.

Kneel before Trump

One day later, so much stands out from President Trump’s remarks at the White House after his acquittal in the Senate impeachment trial.

His vulgar curse word.

Calling Democrats and opponents “horrible” and “evil.”

The attack on Mitt Romney.

But maybe the biggest takeaway from the event is how Trump and Republican lawmakers made it clear that the GOP is Trump’s party — and how members of Congress are subservient to him.

One by one, he recognized Republican senators and representatives — not for being impartial jurors, but for defending him and protecting him.

“Mitch McConnell, I want to tell you: You did a fantastic job [in the impeachment trial].”

“A man [Sen. Chuck Grassley] who got James Comey to choke, and he was just talking in his regular voice… Chuck Grassley is an incredible guy.”

“You were unbelievable. You were tough. And you are something. And one of the greatest supporters on the impeachment hoax was [Sen.] Josh Hawley.”

“A young woman who I didn’t know at all, but she’s been so supportive — and I’ve had great support from other people in that state. And she’s been so supportive, and she’s been downright nasty and mean about the unfairness to the President. And [Sen.] Kelly Loeffler, I appreciate very much.”

Data Download: The number of the day is … 6

Six.

That’s the number of times before yesterday that the word “bulls****” appeared in the 132,480 records in the American Presidency Project’s White House archives. Of those six utterances, two were from musical artists (songwriter Diane Warren and rapper Kanye West.) The remaining four were said by Trump.

2020 Vision: It’s debate night in New Hampshire

At 8:00 p.m. ET, seven of the Democratic presidential candidates participate in the ABC/WMUR debate from New Hampshire — the eighth round of Dem debates this season.

Those seven candidates: Bernie Sanders, Pete Buttigieg, Elizabeth Warren, Joe Biden, Amy Klobuchar, Tom Steyer and Andrew Yang.

The debate comes as a new Boston Globe/WBZ-TV/Suffolk poll shows Bernie Sanders at 24 percent, Pete Buttigieg at 23 percent, Elizabeth Warren at 13 percent and Joe Biden at 11 percent. No other candidate is in double digits.

More from the poll: “Biden … dropped from 18 percent in Monday’s New Hampshire poll to 15 percent on Tuesday, and then 12 percent on Wednesday, before dropping Thursday to 11 percent,” the Boston Globe writes.

On the flip side, “Buttigieg … saw a remarkable jump from the 11 percent he scored in Monday’s New Hampshire poll, catapulting him past Warren and Biden, nearly into first place.”

Meanwhile, a Monmouth poll released Thursday shows these numbers: Sanders 24 percent, Buttigieg 20 percent, Biden 17 percent, Warren 13 percent, Klobuchar 9 percent.

On the campaign trail today

In addition to tonight’s Dem debate at 8:00 pm ET, Sanders participates in the Politics & Eggs event in Manchester… Tulsi Gabbard holds a town hall in Somersworth… Deval Patrick hits Concord and Manchester… And Republican Bill Weld is in New London… Outside of New Hampshire, Michael Bloomberg campaigns in Virginia.

Dispatches from NBC’s campaign embeds

Pete Buttigieg received an endorsement Thursday from a swing-state Democrat, N.J – Rep. Andy Kim, per NBC’s Priscilla Thompson. “’I used to work at the White House,” Kim told NBC News. “I spent a lot of time in the Situation Room, a lot of time in the oval office on tough issues.’ Kim says he has seen first-hand the challenges a President Buttigieg might face, but that the candidate has been tested in hard times,’ and has a strong moral compass that would serve him well in the White House.”

And New Hampshire officials are trying to assuage concerns that their primary will not have any reporting errors, or delayed reporting – and yes, that’s throwing some shade over at Iowa, NBC’s Julia Jester and Amanda Golden report: “NHDP Chairman Ray Buckley expressed full confidence in the NH primary, ‘We’ve had 100 years without an issue,’ Buckley said. ‘We have 100 percent confidence our local election officials along with our state officials will make sure everything runs perfectly.’ Plus, there will be an election day hotline with a team of attorneys ready to respond to issues, and every town will be visited by a polling place inspector from the DOJ.”

Tweet of the day

The Lid: How they did it

Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we took a breath and tried to figure out what we can learn about Pete Buttigieg and Bernie Sanders from their Iowa success.

Shameless Plug

New ToddCast! Don’t miss the latest Chuck Toddcast from this week. Jonathan Martin and Eugene Scott talk about everything 2020 and how the App-ocalypse hit Democratic primary season.

ICYMI: News clips you shouldn’t miss

The Iowa cataclysm: “NBC News review of Iowa caucus vote finds potential errors, inconsistencies.”

The president is preparing to reassign Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman as he plans payback for his impeachment foes.

Where was Joe Biden yesterday? Holed up with advisers trying to figure out how to save his presidential bid.

Half a dozen women of color on Elizabeth Warren’s Nevada team have left amid complaints of a toxic work environment.

Bloomberg is taking heat for referring to “some man wearing a dress” during a conversation about trans rights.

Trump’s former secretary of the Navy will endorse Michael Bloomberg.

Trump Agenda: My man, Mitch

The New York Times reports on how Mitch McConnell delivered an acquittal for Trump.

Mitt Romney is bracing for “unimaginable” consequences for his impeachment vote.

Al-Qaida leader Qassim al-Rimi has been killed in a U.S. operation, the White House announced.

2020

Bloomberg is plugging his plan to address inequality in a New York Times op-ed.

Rarely-visited parts of California are getting a lot more attention in advance of Super Tuesday.

Dozens of Yang staffers are on the chopping block.

Hmmmmmm.. Steve Bullock met privately with Barack Obama (the Senate filing deadline is March 9.)

Pete Buttigieg responded to an Iowa woman’s rescinding of her support for him when she found out he’s gay.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/meet-the-press/what-stands-out-after-iowa-bernie-sanders-limited-crossover-appeal-n1132336

The death of a Chinese whistleblower doctor who was punished for trying to warn about the coronavirus has triggered a national backlash over freedom of speech and censorship that has overwhelmed official online attempts to contain or remove the expressions of anger.

The swell of indignation that washed across Chinese social media platforms began with conflicting reports over the death of Li Wenliang, 34, an ophthalmologist in Wuhan, the epicenter of the virus outbreak.

Wuhan Central Hospital, where he had worked, finally confirmed that he had died of the virus early Friday, apparently after he contracted it from a patient.

Li had already become a national hero for alerting fellow doctors Dec. 30 in an online post about the emergence of a SARS-like illness, warning them to wear protective clothing to avoid infection. 

Li, along with seven others in Wuhan, were later arrested by local security police on charges of spreading rumors and forced to sign a document disavowing his statements and agreeing to quit speaking out.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2020/02/07/coronavirus-doctor-li-wenliang-death-china-censors-anger-speech/4688827002/

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-02-07/white-house-weighs-ouster-of-aide-who-testified-against-trump

“The Members can, and likely will, continue to use their weighty voices to make their case to the American people, their colleagues in the Congress and the President himself, all of whom are free to engage that argument as they see fit. But we will not—indeed we cannot—participate in this debate,” according to the unsigned order from Judges David S. Tatel, Thomas B. Griffith and Karen LeCraft Henderson.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/legal-issues/individual-members-of-congress-barred-from-suing-president-trump-over-business-dealings/2020/02/07/b3d97b3c-3c7e-11ea-baca-eb7ace0a3455_story.html

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/02/07/politics/joe-walsh-ends-campaign/index.html

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/02/07/politics/michael-bloomberg-richard-spencer/index.html

Here’s what you need to know to understand the impeachment trial of President Trump.

What’s happening now: The Senate has voted to acquit Trump on both articles of impeachment. Follow live coverage here.

What happens next: The president will remain in office and the impeachment trial is over.

How we got here: A whistleblower complaint led House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) to announce the beginning of an official impeachment inquiry on Sept. 24. Closed-door hearings and subpoenaed documents related to the president’s July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky followed. After two weeks of public hearings in November, the House Intelligence Committee wrote a report that was sent to the House Judiciary Committee, which held its own hearings. Pelosi and House Democrats announced the articles of impeachment against Trump on Dec. 10. The Judiciary Committee approved two articles of impeachment against Trump: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. When the full House of Representatives adopted both articles of impeachment against him on Dec. 18, Trump became the third U.S. president to be impeached.

Stay informed: Read the latest reporting and analysis on impeachment here.

Listen: Follow The Washington Post’s coverage with daily updates from across our podcasts.

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Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-lashes-out-at-democrats-in-cheering-his-acquittal-as-pelosi-declares-him-impeached-forever/2020/02/06/2148e47a-48f3-11ea-b4d9-29cc419287eb_story.html

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    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/02/06/asia/wuhan-coronavirus-update-intl-hnk/index.html

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    Sanders held steady at 24 percent, while Buttigieg nipped at his heels with 23 percent. Biden slipped to 11 percent, below Warren’s 13 percent.

    “It looks like Buttigieg’s momentum is continuing, and he’s really going at the heart of Biden’s strength, which is older voters,” said David Paleologos, director of Suffolk’s Political Research Center.

    In Thursday’s poll, which has a margin of error of plus-or-minus 4.4 percentage points, Buttigieg was at 32 percent among voters over age 65, Paleologos said, while Biden had dropped to just 15 percent, and Sanders was at 14 percent.

    But the 78-year-old Vermont senator continued to outperform the 38-year-old former Indiana mayor among younger voters, with Sanders garnering 43 percent among those ages 18 to 35 compared to just 14 percent for Buttigieg.

    Sanders’s numbers remained virtually the same as he declared victory Thursday in the popular vote in the Iowa caucuses before a final tally showed him 0.1 percent behind Buttigieg in state delegate equivalents.

    Biden, who spent Thursday meeting with advisers, dropped from 18 percent in Monday’s New Hampshire poll to 15 percent on Tuesday, and then 12 percent on Wednesday, before dropping Thursday to 11 percent.

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    Buttigieg, who bested Sanders by the narrowest of margins in the chaotic and contentious Iowa caucuses, saw a remarkable jump from the 11 percent he scored in Monday’s New Hampshire poll, catapulting him past Warren and Biden, nearly into first place.

    Warren held steady at 13 percent Thursday, her same number as Monday, after dips to 10 percent Tuesday and 11 percent Wednesday. All other candidates were in the single digits, and 11 percent of voters were undecided.

    “Warren is still competitive among women,” Paleologos said. “She can’t seem to get a lot of support among men.”

    Thursday’s results came from polling conducted on Wednesday and Thursday and reflect a two-day rolling average of 500 likely voters, with 250 interviews conducted by live callers on both landlines and cellphones each night.

    If the current trends continue, Paleologos said, Buttigieg could become the candidate to beat in New Hampshire, but a lot can still happen before Tuesday — including a televised Democratic debate Friday night that could shift everyone’s numbers again.


    Jeremy C. Fox can be reached at jeremy.fox@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @jeremycfox.

    Source Article from https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/02/07/metro/pete-buttiegieg-continues-surge-nh-polling/