But Trump was not totally free from scrutiny, being asked to answer for the administration’s initial halting response to a coronavirus epidemic that is spreading throughout the world and the U.S. Instead of responding with concrete plans that might allay fears, the president pointed to polls showing approval for some of the administration’s actions, such as closing the border to foreign nationals coming from China, where the outbreak originated.

“We were really given tremendous marks for having made the decision — it was a decision I made — to close down the border so that people from China, where we take in thousands and thousands of people a day, they stopped coming in, very early, weeks ahead of where they normally would’ve been stopped,” Trump said.

Trump also cited the relatively low number of infections in the U.S. as another reason not to panic in the face of the growing outbreak.

He pivoted the discussion of the epidemic to highlight economic growth under his administration, touting the rising Dow Jones index in the face of the virus — even though financial markets have been volatile the past two weeks and the Dow dropped nearly 1,000 points on Thursday. He went so far as to say the outbreak is encouraging Americans to stay and invest in the U.S.

When asked specifically for a long-term plan to tackle the outbreak, Trump demurred, saying, “We have plans for every single possibility.”

The president also contrasted his response to the coronavirus with the Obama administration’s public health policies, invoking a comparison he made on Wednesday between the coronavirus crisis and the H1N1 outbreak in 2009 in the early days of the Obama presidency.

Speaking with Fox News’ Sean Hannity on Wednesday, Trump claimed that the Obama administration “didn’t do anything about it” amid more than 13,000 deaths. (The Obama administration actually launched a major campaign to end the pandemic and develop a vaccine.)

“I don’t blame anybody,” Trump said at the town hall on Thursday. “I want to get everybody to understand [the Obama administration] made some decisions, which were not good decisions. We inherited decisions that they made and that’s fine. We undid some of the regulations that were made that made it very difficult, but I’m not blaming anybody.”

Trump also used the town hall to tout his appointment of about 200 federal judges, asserting that his predecessor left him a slew of vacancies to fill.

“President Obama gave me 142 openings when I first got there,” Trump said. “There’s never been anything like that.”

In reality, Republicans in the Senate led by Majority Leader Mitch McConnell filibustered dozens of Obama-appointed judges, stalling them in the Senate.

Trump also used the Obama legacy as a salve for the rising national debt, which he had promised to pay off within eight years while running as a candidate in 2016. The debt is now up $3.5 trillion or 18 percent, Baier pointed out.

Trump responded that he had no choice but to let it go up as he went about rebuilding the military, which he contended Obama had left underfunded and in disarray.

“I had to fix the military. The military was depleted,” the president said. “It’s one thing to say, ‘Gee, we did a good job on the debt, or gee, we did a good job on the budget,’ and you have people from other countries running up the White House lawn. … Maybe they took over our country, but I did one hell of a job on the budget? No.”

Trump signed into law the National Defense Authorization Act in December, granting $738 billion for 2020 and raising pay for members of the military while also creating the Space Force. The defense expansions have been frequent talking points in his rallies.

The rapidly dwindling Democratic field also came up in the town hall, with Trump saying Bernie Sanders would be a formidable challenger because of his loyal base. (“It’s smaller than my base,” the president said). He needled Elizabeth Warren for dropping out after Super Tuesday, saying she split the progressive vote to the detriment of Sanders.

“She did him no favors, that was not a good friendship,“ Trump said.

The president closed the town hall with an unusual message of respect for his fellow Washington insiders. When asked who his closest friend was in D.C., Trump diverged from his “drain the swamp” message and said, “I have a lot of close friends, I really do.”

“I speak to all of the senators a lot. I speak to all of the congressmen a lot,” Trump said. “We have great people in Washington, and you have great Democrats, too. I speak to Democrats also, believe it or not. But we have great, great people in Washington. Very smart people in Washington. And it’s going to come together.”

When asked how he could bring a fractured America together again, he bragged that his administration had tremendous accomplishments, despite the constant pushback from his adversaries. He added that many Democrats were on board to collaborate with him in the coming years, despite a faction he called the “radical left Democrats.“

“There‘s so many things we could do,“ Trump said. “I really believe we are going to win back the next election and when we do, the other side is going to say OK, that is it, let‘s get along. I really believe that.“

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/03/05/trump-fox-news-town-hall-122555

Julie Tate, Abigail Hauslohner, Max Bearak, Ben Guarino, Steve Hendrix, Niha Masih, Hazem Balousha, Chico Harlan, Miriam Berger, Hannah Knowles, Taylor Telford, Thomas Heath, Erica Werner, Lena H. Sun and Amy Goldstein contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/cruise-ship-with-thousands-aboard-awaits-test-results-while-coronavirus-continues-spreading-around-the-country/2020/03/05/e32b8786-5f1a-11ea-b29b-9db42f7803a7_story.html

Ms. Warren’s political demise was a death by a thousand cuts, not a dramatic implosion but a steady decline. In the fall, most national polls showed that Ms. Warren was the national pacesetter in the Democratic field. By December, she had fallen to the edge of the top tier, wounded by an October debate during which her opponents relentlessly attacked her, particularly on her embrace of “Medicare for all.”

She invested heavily in the early states, with a ground game that was the envy of her rivals. But it did not pay off: In Iowa, where she had bet much of her candidacy — she had to take out a $3 million line of credit before the caucuses to ensure she could pay her bills in late January — she wound up in a disappointing third place.

Ms. Warren slid to fourth in New Hampshire and Nevada, and to fifth in South Carolina. By Super Tuesday, her campaign was effectively over — with the final blow losing her home state, Massachusetts.

The California results strikingly laid bare the demographic cul-de-sac her candidacy had become as Ms. Warren struggled to win over voters beyond college-educated white people, in particular white women. She was poised to win delegates in only a handful of highly educated enclaves: places like San Francisco, Santa Monica and West Hollywood.

Though the campaign failed to generate the widespread backing necessary to win the nomination, Ms. Warren retained a core of fierce loyalists dedicated to her promise of wholesale change.

Her selfie lines were filled with well-wishers — young girls seeking her trademark pinkie promise (“I’m running for president because that’s what girls do”), cutouts of Ms. Warren’s likeness, and tattoos of her adopted slogan: “Nevertheless, she persisted.” When her staff gathered Thursday, many were clad in liberty green, the color her campaign adopted to symbolize its togetherness.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/05/us/politics/elizabeth-warren-drops-out.html

The fast-spreading virus causes panic in the U.S., school and office closures, even the holding of a giant cruise ship offshore

California Reports First Coronavirus Death as Symptoms Swirl on Cruise Ship
THE NEW YORK TIMES

Washington death toll now at 10; closures increase in Seattle area
KIRO SEATTLE

South Korea declares new ‘special care zone’ as coronavirus spreads
THE STRAITS TIMES

Coronavirus is mutating: Chinese scientists find second strain
FORTUNE

China may have ‘no new coronavirus cases’ outside Hubei epicentre by mid-March
SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

How the Coronavirus Spread From One Patient to 1,000 Now Quarantined in New York
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

San Francisco reports first coronavirus cases
SFGATE

From ferrets to mice and marmosets, labs scramble to find right animals for coronavirus studies
STAT

Coronavirus Response

Senate poised to send Trump $8.3 billion plan to fight virus
THE BOSTON GLOBE

White House sidelines Azar from coronavirus response
POLITICO

Trump: Botched Coronavirus Response Is Obama’s Fault
NEW YORK MAGAZINE

Late night comedians mock US coronavirus response
CNN

Worldwide Worries

Australia adds restrictions on travelers from South Korea
NBC NEWS

Mona Lisa’s smile restored: Louvre reopens after virus fears
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Italy closes all schools and universities for two weeks as coronavirus death toll rises
CNBC

Evangelical service in eastern France is center of new virus outbreak
REUTERS

Panic Hits NY

New York officials order 1,000 quarantined fearing possible contact with coronavirus patients
THEBLAZE

How coronavirus spread in New York: From a man to his family. Then a neighbor. Then friends.
THE WASHINGTON POST

NY Gov. Cuomo confirms 5 new cases of coronavirus: ‘This is literally like trying to stop air’
CNBC

Coronavirus in New York: 13 Confirmed Cases
THE NEW YORK TIMES

Can You Do Anything To Protect Yourself?

The World Health Organization has ideas that will help on the subway, or anywhere:

  • Wash your hands frequently.
  • Cough or sneeze into your elbow or a tissue, not into your hands.
  • If possible, stay as far away as possible from anyone with a fever or cough.
  • See a doctor right away if you have fever, cough or difficulty breathing, and share your travel history.
  • Don’t eat raw or undercooked animal products.
  • Get a flu shot!

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/03/05/coronavirus-rapid-spread-the-latest-news-from-around-the-world/

WASHINGTON — The Senate on Thursday approved an $8.3 billion House-passed emergency spending package to combat the coronavirus that has been spreading throughout the United States.

The Senate passed the legislation in a 96-1 vote a day after the House quickly and overwhelmingly passed it in a 415-2 vote and it now goes to President Donald Trump’s desk. Appropriators had released details of the bipartisan, bicameral agreement only hours earlier on Wednesday.

Passage of the agreement through both chambers came after several weeks of negotiations between Democrats and Republicans and as the virus’s outbreak worsened Thursday with new confirmed cases in New York and Tennessee. California also declared an emergency over its spread and a Princess cruise ship was delayed off the shore in California because it had been linked to two cases of the illness in the state.

At least 12 people in the U.S. have died from COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.

Ahead of the Senate vote Thursday, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, held a closed-door briefing with House lawmakers in the morning to discuss lab testing of the virus as many have expressed concern that the U.S. is lagging behind in testing patients.

Azar admitted that “it is a challenge if you are a doctor wanting to get someone tested,” but said, “that experience will get better over the next week and a half two weeks.”

The spending measure would provide $7.8 billion to fight the new coronavirus and include a mandatory funding authorization for $500 million over 10 years to be used toward a remote health care program.

Negotiators said it also includes a provision that would require that funds are used only to combat the coronavirus and other infectious diseases, as some Democrats feared that the Trump administration could raid the funding and use it for other unrelated purposes.

The legislation would provide more than $2 billion to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for public health funding for prevention, preparedness and response.

It also would allocate more than $3 billion to a public health emergency fund and the National Institutes of Health to research and develop vaccines, treatment, and testing of the coronavirus. The bill would also provide nearly $1.3 billion to help protect the health of Americans living abroad from the virus.

Trump had asked Congress for $2.5 billion to combat the virus, but Democrats quickly said that amount would be insufficient and noted that it called for taking money from programs for the poor. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., responded with an $8.5 billion proposal.

The president suggested at an event in Washington earlier in the week that he would sign whatever funding deal Congress sends him.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/senate-passes-8-3-billion-emergency-bill-combat-coronavirus-n1150521

President Trump, speaking at a Fox News Town Hall in Joe Biden’s hometown of Scranton, Pa., on Thursday evening, openly suggested that the new Democratic front-runner’s repeated gaffes could be a sign of a competency issue — honing a line of attack that Republicans are expected to repeatedly deploy if Biden becomes his party’s nominee.

Trump also wasted little time in criticizing ex-rival Elizabeth Warren’s decision to drop out of the race only after Super Tuesday, saying she may have sabotaged Bernie Sanders’ struggling presidential bid by siphoning the progressive vote.

The setting was more casual and conversational than Trump’s boisterous rallies, and afforded the commander-in-chief an opportunity to connect directly with voters on camera.

“Bernie Sanders would have won five, six, seven states,” Trump remarked. “When you look at it, she did him no favors. That was not a good friendship. We started to see that during the debates, by the way. It became unhinged.”

Trump went on to argue that Biden was “damaged” by the impeachment process that implicated his son Hunter in apparent overseas corruption while Biden was vice president. “They aimed at Trump and they took Biden down,” the president said.

“Here’s a guy, who didn’t have a job, unfortunately sadly the military was a very sad experience for him — he goes out and gets $3 million plus $183,000 a month to be a board member of a company that a lot of people said was corrupt,” he continued. “Just as bad, China — I just made a great China deal … His son walks out a China for a billion-and-a-half dollars for a fund.”

The Super Tuesday results, Trump said, had come as a surprise — especially given what he suggested were Biden’s possible cognitive impairments.

“I’m all set for Bernie, communist,” Trump began. “And then we have this crazy thing that happened on Tuesday, which he thought was Thursday. But he also said 150 million people were killed with guns, and that he was running for the U.S. Senate — there’s something going on there.”

HUNTER BIDEN SCANDALS EXPLAINED: UKRAINE, COCAINE AND MORE

The president noted that he hadn’t spoken to former President Obama since the 2018 funeral for President George H.W. Bush, in part because of lingering animosity about that administration.

“I sat next to him, I said, ‘Hello,'” Trump said, describing the funeral. “Then I said, ‘Goodbye’ That’s about it. I didn’t like the job he did. I didn’t like the job he and Biden did. I didn’t like the position he put us in. I didn’t like what he did to our military. … Right now we have more ammunition than ever before.”

Concerning health care, Trump said he was “most disappointed” that he hasn’t been able to “sell what a great job we’ve done.” The president touted his administration’s termination of the Obamacare “individual mandate,” and said plans were now less expensive — but that the “carcass of Obamacare” remains a problem.

“Without the whole thing with the individual mandate, it’s a whole different ball game,” Trump said. He promised that the GOP would come up with an alternative, but didn’t offer specifics other than that pre-existing conditions would be covered.

Anchor Bret Baier noted that Trump, when campaigning, had promised to erase the national debt within eight years — but nevertheless had approved $4.6 trillion in new debt already.

“I’ll always talk about it, because to me it’s very important,” Trump said. “The good thing about the debt is we’re paying almost no interest.” He added that more cuts would be coming but that it was crucially important to fund the military in the meantime.

“They aimed at Trump and they took Biden down.”

— President Trump, referring to the impeachment process

The town hall covered an array of other topics, including stock market turbulence and deregulation. Out of the gate, Trump defended his administration’s response to the coronavirus outbreak, saying his decision to limit travel from China had averted a broader domestic crisis.

“I think people are viewing us as doing a very good job,” Trump told a questioner. “This started in China. How it started, is a question. … It’s gonna all work out. Everyone has to be calm.”

The president pointed to something of a silver lining in the episode: “People are now staying in the United States, spending their money in the United States, and I like that. You know, I’ve been after that for a long time. I’ve been saying, let’s stay in the U.S., spend your money here. It’s sort of enforced doing that.”

Trump later noted that he has always disliked the concept of shaking hands: “If there was ever a time you could convince people not to shake hands, this could be it,” he mused, before lamenting that politicians unfortunately are required to shake some hands.

Responding to the threatening statements directed at Associate Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch on Wednesday by Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Trump said the comments amounted to a call for physical violence.

“If a Republican did what Schumer did, they’d be in jail right now,” Trump said to applause.

The media, Trump argued, was “a part of the Democrat Party” to a “large extent” — and “we have to fight back.”

He gave a similar answer when asked by a voter how he would “bring us together.” The voter noted that a relative had banished Trump supporters from the family.

“Success” as a country is the solution, Trump said, suggesting that Democrats would come to the bargaining table, if not the dinner table, if he won reelection.

At the same time, Trump said, “when they hit us, we have to hit back.”

Hours before the town hall, Trump took his trademarked parting shots at Warren and Mike Bloomberg, whom Trump likened to an incompetent, undersized Darth Vader-style character from the 1987 parody “Spaceballs.”

Bloomberg had compared Trump to Vader with a video from the movie “Star Wars.”

“Elizabeth ‘Pocahontas’ Warren, who was going nowhere except into Mini Mike’s head, just dropped out of the Democrat Primary…THREE DAYS TOO LATE,” Trump wrote, referring to Warren’s previous claims of Native American ancestry. “She cost Crazy Bernie, at least, Massachusetts, Minnesota and Texas. Probably cost him the nomination! Came in third in Mass.”

The Fox News Town Hall was Trump’s first town hall of the campaign season. It was also Trump’s first discussion with Baier and Martha MacCallum since interviews in June 2018 and April 2017.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Fox News Channel will present an encore presentation of the Trump Town Hall at 11 p.m. ET.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-fox-news-town-hall

Ms. Warren’s decline had begun in earnest at the October debate, when she was pressed on how she would pay for Medicare for all and had no answer. It took weeks to detail her plan, but by then her perceived trustworthiness seemed to have taken a hit: The candidate with a plan for everything did not have one to finance the biggest issue of the campaign. (Mr. Sanders, despite releasing fewer details on how he plans to enact Medicare for all, has faced fewer questions.)

When she did roll out details, she was criticized by those on the left for compromising too much and by centrists for the sheer size of the plan. The episode captured a fundamental pain point for her candidacy: She was too much of an insider for those demanding revolution, and too much of an outsider for those who wanted to tinker with the system and focus on beating Mr. Trump.

As the race intensified in the fall, Ms. Warren was reluctant to strike back at her opponents, even as they undermined her image. Pete Buttigieg made deep incursions into her support among educated white voters but she did not call him out in earnest until December, even as he flooded the Iowa airwaves with a moderate message undercutting her progressive platform.

While most campaigns used the megaphone of mass television ads to cut through the media filter, Ms. Warren’s braintrust was cool to the power of commercials from the start, preferring on-the-ground and digital organizing.

At times, Ms. Warren’s campaign did not reflect the urgency of a candidacy trying to make history and promote a program of systemic upheaval that included government-run health care, free public college, student debt cancellation, breaking up Big Tech, universal child care, and tax increases on the wealthy.

After weak finishes in Iowa and New Hampshire, Ms. Warren charged into the February debate planning to confront Mr. Bloomberg in his first appearance onstage. In Mr. Bloomberg, she found a rare rival she seemed truly comfortable attacking, a walking embodiment of the influence of money she rails against.

She slashed. He stumbled. Mr. Bloomberg would never recover. Ms. Warren’s donations surged, but her vote count did not.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/05/us/politics/elizabeth-warren-drops-out.html

Princess Cruises said it will test some of the passengers and crew aboard the Grand Princess cruise ship, which California health officials said is the site of another COVID-19 outbreak. The company said fewer than 100 people would be tested.

The ship, which was on a two-week voyage to Hawaii, was ordered to return early to San Francisco, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said, adding that passengers and crew have developed symptoms. A spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that three passengers who were previously on the ship have since tested positive, including one who has died.

Shares of parent company Carnival Corp. fell more than 14% Thursday.

The ship was due to arrive in San Francisco on Wednesday, Newsom said, but is currently off the coast of California, according to Seascanner, which tracks the location of ships. Executive director of San Francisco’s Department of Emergency Management Mary Ellen Carroll said Thursday there are about 3,500 people aboard the ship. Of that, 35 people have exhibited symptoms, Carroll said, though some have recovered.

“That ship is now being delayed to provide ample opportunity for the CDC in partnership with Coast Guard and state health officials to conduct tests,” Newsom told reporters late Wednesday, “because we have a number of passengers and crew members who have developed symptoms on this cruise ship.”

Newsom added that the U.S. Coast Guard will deliver test kits to the ship by helicopter on Thursday. The kits will be analyzed at a lab in Richmond, California, Newsom said, “where we’ll be able to very quickly, within just a few hours” test the samples. However, San Francisco’s Mary Ellen Carroll said Thursday that test results are expected Friday.

San Francisco officials did not say what would happen if people on board the ship test positive for COVID-19. 

“Once we have results from the tests, the CDC and the state will determine the most appropriate location for the ship to berth,” Carroll said.

Representatives from the U.S. Coast Guard were not immediately available for comment.

Only passengers and crew who have symptoms and people who were guests on the ship’s previous voyage will be tested, the company said in a statement, adding that it’s fewer than 100. 

Princess Cruises and Carnival Cruises did not respond to CNBC’s requests for comment.

Health officials in northern California’s Placer County announced Wednesday that they traced the first COVID-19 death in the state, and the 11th in the country, to the Grand Princess cruise ship. The patient who died was aboard the ship from Feb. 11 to Feb. 21 on a trip from San Francisco to Mexico.

An unknown number of passengers remained on the ship for the voyage to Hawaii and are currently quarantined in their cabins, according to a letter sent to passengers by the company on Wednesday.

More than 2,500 passengers were on the ship for the Feb. 11 voyage, Newsom said, over half of whom are Californians. That does not include the ship’s crew, Newsom said, adding that U.S. health officials are contacting everyone who was on board the ship for testing. He said California is now monitoring 9,400 people for COVID-19.

Princess Cruises is also the operator of the Diamond Princess ship, which was the site of what might have been the first major COVID-19 epidemic outside of China. The Diamond Princess was quarantined at a Japanese port on Feb. 4 after a previous guest, who didn’t have any symptoms while aboard the ship, tested positive for the virus.  

There were 3,700 passengers and crew aboard the ship, and more than 700 became infected. The Japanese government and other nations eventually evacuated their citizens from the ship. 

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/03/05/princess-cruise-ship-is-again-the-source-of-a-coronavirus-outbreak.html

A House Democratic aide told CNBC that the supplemental funding bill includes:

  • More than $3 billion dedicated to the research and development of vaccines, as well as therapeutics and diagnostics;
  • $2.2 billion in public health funding to aid in prevention, preparedness and response efforts — including $950 million to support state and local agencies;
  • Nearly $1 billion to go toward medical supplies, health-care preparedness, Community Health Centers and medical surge capacity, and
  • $1.25 billion to address the coronavirus overseas.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and other lawmakers hope to push the legislation through to Trump before the week’s end, stressing the urgency of securing funds to fight the virus.

Health officials have warned that the coronavirus is on the verge of becoming a pandemic, and a slew of new cases have been confirmed in the U.S. in recent days.

The disease, which is believed to have originated in Wuhan in China’s Hubei province, has killed more than 3,200 people around the world and infected tens of thousands more, prompting wild market fluctuations and drastic government actions.

Senate Majority Whip John Thune, R-S.D., had suggested that the Senate might opt to pass the bill by unanimous consent in order to speed up the process. But McConnell’s office confirmed to CNBC on Thursday morning that the Senate would hold a roll-call vote, requiring a 60-vote threshold for passage. 

Paul, the only senator to vote against the bill, had put forward the only amendment to the legislation. Paul’s amendment sought to offset the costs of the coronavirus spending by cutting funding for certain international programs.

“I support our government’s efforts to fight the coronavirus,” Paul said in a statement earlier Thursday. “We also owe it to the American people to do it in a way that avoids piling billions more in debt on their backs.”

The Senate voted 80-16 to table — essentially, to kill — Paul’s amendment prior to voting on the spending bill itself. 

Paul’s office did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment on the senator’s decision to vote against the emergency coronavirus funds. 

The spending plan also allows an estimated $7 billion in low-interest Small Business Administration loans to affected small businesses, the aide told CNBC.

The House aide added that the emergency bill provides more than $300 million to “help ensure that, when a vaccine is developed, Americans can receive it regardless of their ability to pay.”

The question of affordability has reportedly been a sticking point in negotiations. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar came under fire last week after declining to guarantee to lawmakers that a vaccine would be affordable for all.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/03/05/senate-passes-8point3-billion-coronavirus-bill-sending-it-to-trumps-desk.html

The latest: A cruise ship carrying about 2,500 passengers, en route from Hawaii to San Francisco, was held in waters off California for coronavirus screening.

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Mapping the spread of the new coronavirus: More than 60 countries have reported at least one case of the novel coronavirus since it originated in Wuhan, China.

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Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/social-issues/new-york-coronavirus-westchester/2020/03/04/a9e0c5e0-5e48-11ea-b014-4fafa866bb81_story.html

I want to start with the news. I want all of you to hear it first, and I want you to hear it straight from me: today, I’m suspending our campaign for president.

I know how hard all of you have worked. I know how you disrupted your lives to be part of this. I know you have families and loved ones you could have spent more time with. You missed them and they missed you. And I know you have sacrificed to be here.

So from the bottom of my heart, thank you, for everything you have poured into this campaign.

I know that when we set out, this was not the call you ever wanted to hear. It is not the call I ever wanted to make. But I refuse to let disappointment blind me – or you – to what we’ve accomplished. We didn’t reach our goal, but what we have done together – what you have done – has made a lasting difference. It’s not the scale of the difference we wanted to make, but it matters – and the changes will have ripples for years to come.

What we have done – and the ideas we have launched into the world, the way we have fought this fight, the relationships we have built – will carry through, carry through for the rest of this election, and the one after that, and the one after that.
So think about it:

  • We have shown that it is possible to build a grassroots movement that is accountable to supporters and activists and not to wealthy donors – and to do it fast enough for a first-time candidate to build a viable campaign. Never again can anyone say that the only way that a newcomer can get a chance to be a plausible candidate is to take money from corporate executives and billionaires. That’s done.

  • We have also shown that it is possible to inspire people with big ideas, possible to call out what’s wrong and to lay out a path to make this country live up to its promise.

  • We have also shown that race and justice – economic justice, social justice, environmental justice, criminal justice – are not an afterthought, but are at the heart everything that we do.

  • We have shown that a woman can stand up, hold her ground, and stay true to herself – no matter what.

  • We have shown that we can build plans in collaboration with the people who are most affected. You know just one example: our disability plan is a model for our country, and, even more importantly, the way we relied on the disability communities to help us get it right will be a more important model.

And one thing more: campaigns take on a life and soul of their own and they are a reflection of the people who work on them.

This campaign became something special, and it wasn’t because of me. It was because of you. I am so proud of how you all fought this fight alongside me: you fought it with empathy and kindness and generosity – and of course, with enormous passion and grit.

Some of you may remember that long before I got into electoral politics, I was asked if I would accept a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau that was weak and toothless. And I replied that my first choice was a consumer agency that could get real stuff done, and my second choice was no agency and lots of blood and teeth left on the floor. And in this campaign, we have been willing to fight, and, when necessary, we left plenty of blood and teeth on the floor. And I can think of one billionaire who has been denied the chance to buy this election.

Now, campaigns change people. And I know that you will carry the experiences you have had here, the skills you’ve learned, the friendships you have made, will be with you for the rest of your lives. I also want you to know that you have changed me, and I will carry you in my heart for the rest of my life.

So if you leave with only one thing you leave with, it must be this: choose to fight only righteous fights, because then when things get tough – and they will – you will know that there is only option ahead of you: nevertheless, you must persist.

You should all be so proud of what we’ve done together – what you have done over this past year.

  • We built a grassroots campaign that had some of the most ambitious organizing targets ever – and then we turned around and surpassed them.

  • Our staff and volunteers on the ground knocked on over 22m doors across the country.

  • They made 20m phone calls and they sent more than 42m texts to voters. That’s truly astonishing. It is.

  • We fundamentally changed the substance of this race.

You know a year ago, people weren’t talking about a $0.02 wealth tax, universal childcare, cancelling student loan debt for 43 million Americans while reducing the racial wealth gap, or breaking up big tech. Or expanding Social Security. And now they are. And because we did the work of building broad support for all of those ideas across this country, these changes could actually be implemented by the next president.

A year ago, people weren’t talking about corruption, and they still aren’t talking about it enough – but we’ve moved the needle, and a hunk of our anti-corruption plan is already embedded in a House bill that is ready to go when we get a Democratic Senate.

We also advocated for fixing our rigged system in a way that will make it work better for everyone – regardless of your race, or gender, or religion, regardless of whether you’re straight or LGBTQ. And that wasn’t an afterthought, it was built into everything we did.

And we did all of this without selling access for money. Together 1.25 million people gave more than $112m to support this campaign. And we did it without selling one minute of my time to the highest bidder. People said that would be impossible. But you did that.

And we also did it by having fun and by staying true to ourselves. We ran from the heart. We ran on our values. We ran on treating everyone with respect and dignity. You know liberty green everything was key here – my personal favorites included the liberty green boas, liberty green sneakers, liberty green make up, liberty green hair, and liberty green glitter liberally applied. But it was so much more. Four-hour selfie lines and pinky promises with little girls. And a wedding at one of our town halls. And we were joyful and positive through all of it. We ran a campaign not to put people down, but to lift them up – and I loved pretty much every minute of it.

So take some time to be with your friends and family, to get some sleep, maybe to get that haircut you’ve been putting off – you know who I’m talking about. Do things to take care of yourselves, gather up your energy, because I know you are coming back. I know you – and I know that you aren’t ready to leave this fight.

You know, I used to hate goodbyes. Whenever I taught my last class or when we moved to a new city, those final goodbyes used to wrench my heart. But then I realized that there is no goodbye for much of what we do. When I left one place, I took everything I’d learned before and all the good ideas that were tucked into my brain and all the good friends that were tucked in my heart, and I brought it all forward with me – and it became part of what I did next. This campaign is no different. I may not be in the race for president in 2020, but this fight – our fight – is not over. And our place in this fight has not ended.

Because for every young person who is drowning in student debt, for every family struggling to pay the bills on two incomes, for every mom worried about paying for prescriptions or putting food on the table, this fight goes on. For every immigrant and African American and Muslim and Jewish person and Latinx and transwoman who sees the rise in attacks on people who look or sound or worship like them, this fight goes on. And for every person alarmed by the speed with which climate change is bearing down upon us, this fight goes on. And for every American who desperately wants to see our nation healed and some decency and honor restored to our government, this fight goes on. And sure, the fight may take a new form, but I will be in that fight, and I want you in this fight with me. We will persist.

One last story. One last story. When I voted yesterday at the elementary school down the street, a mom came up to me. And she said she has two small children, and they have a nightly ritual. After the kids have brushed teeth and read books and gotten that last sip of water and done all the other bedtime routines, they do one last thing before the two little ones go to sleep. Mama leans over them and whispers, “Dream big.” And the children together reply, “Fight hard.”

Our work continues, the fight goes on and big dreams never die.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/mar/05/read-elizabeth-warren-full-statement-quitting-2020-race

President Trump on Thursday said the government will begin holding back funds for sanctuary cities – like New York – following a federal appeals court decision last month.

“As per recent Federal Court ruling, the Federal Government will be withholding funds from Sanctuary Cities,” Trump tweeted. “They should change their status and go non-Sanctuary. Do not protect criminals!”

The US Court of Appeals in Manhattan ruled on Feb. 26 that the government can withhold millions in dollars in law enforcement grants to cities and states that do not give US Immigration and Customs Enforcement access to jails and alert the agency when an illegal immigrant is being released.

The decision overturned a lower court ruling ordering the administration to release the funds.

The Big Apple joined seven states – New York, Connecticut, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Virginia and Washington – that sued the government in 2017 after the Justice Department said it would block the funds.

The appeals court ruling pertained to the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant, named after the NYPD officer killed in 1988 in Queens, that is handed out to local governments to assist with law enforcement.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/03/05/trump-says-government-will-withhold-federal-funding-to-sanctuary-cities/

At times, Ms. Warren’s campaign did not reflect the urgency of a candidacy trying to make history, not only as the first female president, but also through a program of systemic upheaval that would include government-run health care, free public college, student debt cancellation, breaking up big tech companies, universal child care, and significant tax increases on the wealthiest individuals and corporations.

In a series of speeches, Ms. Warren sought to elevate the stories of women, often women of color. Her final major address, in East Los Angeles on the eve of Super Tuesday, was about Latina janitors who organized for better working conditions.

Aimee Allison, the founder and president of She The People, a political advocacy organization for women of color, praised Ms. Warren for the intentional inclusivity of her campaign. “She really comes up as the first white candidate for president who had an intersectional politics,” she said.

But Ms. Allison acknowledged that pitch did not find favor in the broader minority electorate, even as it won plaudits from academics and activists.

“Black voters really were looking for a return to normalcy,” she said. “It was a rejection from what was perceived as riskier politics and a broader and more courageous political vision.”

During debates ahead of the votes in Iowa and New Hampshire, two states where Ms. Warren had invested many of her presidential hopes, she took a back seat to other candidates like Pete Buttigieg and Ms. Klobuchar. Her campaign chose not to invest heavily in television advertising, and was outmatched on the airwaves in early voting states. Its bet on organizing staff failed to change the picture.

She had also embraced a vague message declaring her the “unity candidate,” dropping the policy-focused message that had seemed to resonate with voters early on and pitching herself as the electoral compromise between the left wing dominated by Mr. Sanders and the moderate wing led by Mr. Biden.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/05/us/politics/elizabeth-warren-drops-out.html

At least 100 people aboard the Grand Princess cruise ship will be tested for the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 after a former passenger died from the disease this week. The ship is seen here in a photo from 2001.

Luis M. Alvarez /AP


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Luis M. Alvarez /AP

At least 100 people aboard the Grand Princess cruise ship will be tested for the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 after a former passenger died from the disease this week. The ship is seen here in a photo from 2001.

Luis M. Alvarez /AP

Updated at 12:26 p.m. ET

The Grand Princess cruise ship is in limbo off the California coast after a former passenger became the state’s first known person to die from COVID-19. Health workers say they will now test some current passengers to determine whether they have the respiratory virus.

“We are going to be flying testing kits to the cruise ship, and we are going to be sending those quickly back to the state,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said at a news conference late Wednesday. “We’ll be able to test very quickly within just a few hours.”

Eleven passengers and 10 crew members were showing symptoms of COVID-19, the governor said. He added that the number “may significantly understate” the presence of the coronavirus on the cruise ship.

Newsom declared a state of emergency in California on Wednesday to help his state cope with its first COVID-19 death and more than 50 confirmed cases overall.

Officials believe the passenger, who was an elderly man, was exposed to the novel coronavirus during a trip from San Francisco to Mexico in the middle of February. Health officials are now tracking down thousands of people who were on the same trip and may have been exposed to the virus.

The man was on the ship from Feb. 11-21. He had underlying health conditions and spent nearly a week at home before being hospitalized in Placer County, health officials say. He was taken to the hospital by ambulance on Feb. 27.

In addition to that passenger, another California resident who was on the same trip has also been found to be infected, Newsom said. That person is currently hospitalized in Sonoma County, as member station KQED reports.

After completing its Mexico trip, the Grand Princess left California for a cruise to Hawaii. It’s now returning from that voyage — and operator Princess Cruises has canceled the ship’s scheduled call to Ensenada, Mexico, to bring it off the coast near San Francisco on Thursday.

“We’ve requested the arrival to be delayed,” Newsom said, to provide time for tests “because we have a number of passengers and crew members that have developed symptoms on this cruise ship.”

The Grand Princess is currently about 100 nautical miles from the coast as it heads toward San Francisco, according to the maritime tracking site Vessel Finder.

It’s the second Princess Cruises ship to be identified with a potential cluster of coronavirus cases. The Diamond Princess was held in quarantine at the port in Yokohama, Japan, for weeks last month.

The Grand Princess is carrying around 2,500 passengers and normally has some 1,150 crew members. The cruise line says only a small fraction of that number will be tested, with the remainder of the people on board told to monitor themselves for any possible symptoms of COVID-19.

“There are fewer than 100 guests and crew identified for testing,” Princess Cruises says. The number includes passengers who were on the vessel for both the Mexico and Hawaii cruises, as well as people with influenza-like symptoms and “guests currently under care for respiratory illness.”

To carry out the tests of people aboard the Grand Princess, the U.S. Coast Guard planned to use a helicopter to deliver kits and acquire samples Thursday morning. The onboard medical team will then collect samples, which will be flown back to shore to be analyzed at a lab in Richmond, Calif.

In a letter that was sent to current passengers who were also on the earlier trip, Princess Cruises informed them, “the CDC requires you to remain in your stateroom until you have been contacted and cleared by our medical staff.”

The exact date and time for the ship’s arrival is “to be determined,” the company said.

The cruise line asked passengers to report any symptoms they might have had, such as a fever or a cough, that could indicate they have COVID-19. The company emailed a similar message to people who were on the earlier voyage.

Princess Cruises is also canceling the Grand Princess’ next planned Hawaii cruise, which was to depart on Saturday.

About half of the people who were on the cruise to Mexico are California residents, Newsom said. Authorities are working to contact them and urge them to monitor themselves for potential COVID-19 symptoms.

California health agencies are currently monitoring at least 9,400 people in 49 counties who were potentially exposed to the coronavirus through air travel, Newsom said.

In addition to heightening the state’s response to the coronavirus outbreak, the governor’s emergency declaration forbids price gouging on products that are important in fighting viruses, such as hand sanitizer.

Those extra protections will remain in effect through Sept. 4, according to the declaration – suggesting state officials believe the coronavirus could affect California for months to come. The order also waives the normal 30-day and 60-day expiration times for health and public emergencies that are declared at the local level.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/03/05/812456413/coronavirus-cruise-ship-in-limbo-off-california-after-former-passenger-died

“Republicans are afraid, here in the Senate, to confront this issue directly, so they try to accomplish through the courts what they’d never accomplish in the court of public opinion. And they leave women out in the cold,” Schumer said. “So yes, I am angry. The women of America are angry. And, yes, we will continue to fight for a woman’s right to choose.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/powerpost/schumer-says-he-misspoke-in-remarks-directed-at-two-supreme-court-justices-defends-abortion-rights/2020/03/05/c0855f40-5ee3-11ea-b29b-9db42f7803a7_story.html

Topline: California Governor Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency on Wednesday after the state reported its first coronavirus death, making it the third state to declare an emergency in response to the disease.

  • The first patient who died was an elderly adult with underlying health conditions in Placer County, which is north of Sacramento. 
  • The patient was a former passenger on the Grand Princess cruise, which departed from San Francisco to Mexico last month, raising concerns that others aboard may have been exposed, Newsom said. (The cruise company, Princess Cruises, also operated the Diamond Princess ship that was quarantined in Japan last month.)
  • State health officials are working to contact people who were on the ship, and the vessel is currently being prevented from docking back in San Francisco while the CDC tests symptomatic passengers on board.
  • Washington state, which has seen the most cases, and Florida have already declared states of emergencies.
  • Practically, an emergency declaration loosens up regulations to allow state agencies to procure medical supplies and resources faster. 
  • There are 53 positive cases in the state, 24 of which involve patients who have been repatriated from abroad.

Crucial quote: “This proclamation, I want to point out, is not about money. It’s about resourcefulness. It’s about our ability to add tools to the tool kit,” Newsom said in a press conference.

News peg: Eleven people have died and more than 100 people have been infected by the coronavirus in the U.S. as officials brace for an outbreak. Public health experts say the U.S. should expect to see more cases in the coming weeks as the CDC begins to test more people after some early stumbles limiting its testing capacity.

Source Article from https://www.forbes.com/sites/rachelsandler/2020/03/04/california-declares-state-of-emergency-after-1st-coronavirus-death-in-the-state/

The latest: A cruise ship carrying some 2,500 passengers, en route from Hawaii to San Francisco, was held in waters off California for coronavirus screening.

Sign up for our Coronavirus Updates newsletter: Get the latest news straight to your inbox as we track the spread of the virus in the United States and around the world. All stories linked the newsletter are free to access.

What you need to know about coronavirus: What is it? How deadly is it? How does it spread?

Mapping the spread of the new coronavirus: More than 50 countries have reported at least one case of the novel coronavirus since it originated in Wuhan, China.

How to prepare for coronavirus in the United States. (Step 1: Don’t panic.)

Are you a health care worker fighting coronavirus on the front lines? Share your experience with The Post.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2020/03/05/coronavirus-live-updates/

VISALIA, Calif. – Tulare police are looking for a lone gunman who fired at a gathering Wednesday night, leaving one 23-year-old man dead and a 7-year-old girl clinging to life. 

The shooting started around 10:20 p.m. during a “celebration of life” memorial in an apartment complex across from a skate park. 

When police arrived at the apartment complex, 50-60 people were rushing from the area, Tulare Police Sgt. Ed Hinojosa said. 

Police found six people shot, one of whom was declared dead at the scene.

A 7-year-old girl was shot multiple times, Hinojosa said. The child was transported to a hospital in Madera in serious condition. 

Three other victims, one woman and two men, were treated at Kaweah Delta Medical Center and Tulare Adventist Health.

The fourth wounded person, a woman, was grazed by a bullet and refused to go to the hospital, police said.

Neighbors said the area has had “a lot of trouble,” but they never expected this. 

Police considered the chance that the shooting was prompted by gang violence. Typically, police are notified when gangs have memorials for fallen associates. It’s unclear whether police knew the event was scheduled for Wednesday night. 

“The motive is unknown,” Hinojosa said. “Suspect information is vague at this point, and the entire Investigations Unit has been called out to investigate.” 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/03/05/california-mass-shooting-leaves-1-dead-5-injured-tulare-police/4961589002/

NEW YORK — With a resume as long as Hillary Clinton‘s, it’s no wonder it took 35 hours just to unpack it. 

In more than 40 years of political life, Clinton, 72, has been a feminist icon and perpetual lightning rod as a two-time presidential candidate, former secretary of State, New York senator, and first lady of Arkansas and the United States alongside President Bill Clinton

Fortunately, filmmaker Nanette Burstein (“American Teen”) did her homework before she sat down for extensive interviews with Clinton for the four-part docuseries “Hillary,” which premiered at Sundance Film Festival in January and streams on Hulu on Friday. 

More:Hillary Clinton: ‘Lord knows what will happen if we don’t retire’ Trump

“She’s a very thorough preparer and comes with stacks of questions, which is probably why it took 35 hours,” Clinton affably tells USA TODAY, sitting at her Midtown office with Burstein this month. “Although it was incredibly intense, it was worthwhile because I was being interviewed by somebody who had really digested everything there was to ask me.”

The documentary is a warts-and-all look at Clinton’s life, from her childhood in a Chicago suburb to the 2016 presidential election, with her tumultuous campaign and shocking loss to Donald Trump serving as the series’ through line. USA TODAY spoke with Clinton and Burstein about the film and more. 

Question: I imagine throughout your career, many people have been interested in making a documentary about you. Why did you say yes to this one? 

Hillary Clinton: People approached me in the past, but I felt like this was the right time. I was out of politics; I wasn’t running for anything. The idea originally was to use the 2,000 hours of campaign footage we had to do a film about the campaign. The production company came with that idea and hired Nanette to be the director. But when Nanette came back to me after watching the footage and said, “There’s a bigger story here,” I thought, “Well, why not? People make up stuff about me all the time. Maybe this is an opportunity not only to talk about my life, but to place it within the flow of history.” 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/tv/2020/03/05/hillary-clinton-new-film-conspiracies-and-frustrating-email-flap/4953523002/