Donald Trump was condemned for putting countless lives at risk on Tuesday when he announced the US is freezing payments to the World Health Organization (WHO) over its handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

The US president said funding would be on hold for 60 to 90 days pending a review of the WHO’s warnings about the coronavirus and China. He accused the global body of “severely mismanaging and covering up” the threat, even though it declared a public health emergency on 30 January – after which he continued to hold rallies, play golf and compare the coronavirus to the common flu.

Critics were stunned at the move to cut money from a critical UN agency during a global pandemic. António Guterres, the UN secretary general, declared now was “not the time to reduce the resources for the operations of the World Health Organization or any other humanitarian organization in the fight against the virus.

“As I have said before, now is the time for unity and for the international community to work together in solidarity to stop this virus and its shattering consequences,” he said in a statement.

Lawrence Gostin, a professor of global health at Georgetown University, told the MSNBC network: “Without a WHO that’s empowered there will be many, many more deaths, and not just as it marches through sub-Saharan Africa, which is next, but also here in the United States.”

America contributed more than $400m to the WHO last year, making it by far the biggest donor. The organization’s budget for 2018-2019 was around $6bn.

Speaking in the White House rose garden, Trump said: “With the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic, we have deep concerns whether America’s generosity has been put to the best use possible. The reality is that the WHO failed to adequately obtain, vet and share information in a timely and transparent fashion.”

He added: “If we cannot trust them, if this is what we will receive from the WHO, our country will be forced to find other ways to work with other nations to achieve public health goals.”

The WHO failed in its “basic duty and must be held accountable”, the president went on.

But critics said the move fit two distinct Trump patterns. One is his long antipathy towards multilateral organisations; for example, he also used a rose garden event to announce the US departure from the Paris climate accords. The other is an attempt to blame others for his own inaction in combatting the coronavirus; on Monday, he accused the media of downplaying the dangers.

Trump’s main criticism of the WHO was its “China-centric” failure to investigate credible reports from sources in Wuhan about the outbreak of the virus. “Through the middle of January, it parroted and publicly endorsed the idea that there was not human to human transmission happening, despite reports and clear evidence to the contrary,” he told reporters.

“The delays the WHO experienced in declaring a public health emergency cost valuable time – tremendous amounts of time.”

But this critique is at odds with the actual timeline. It emerged last week that in technical guidance notes, the WHO warned the US and other countries about the risk of human-to-human transmission as early as 10 January.

On Tuesday Jeremy Konyndyk, the former head of the Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance at USAid, noted that although on 14 January the WHO tweeted that “preliminary investigations conducted by the Chinese authorities have found no clear evidence of human-to-human transmission”, by 23 January it had published an official report warning of human-to-human transmission and transmissibility higher than seasonal flu.

Konyndyk, now a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development, wrote on Twitter: “So to pin the blame on WHO for this, you have to believe that somehow those 9 days between 14 and 23 January were critical to the lack of US preparedness. It’s lunacy. The administration spent the whole month of February doing nothing to meaningfully prepare the homeland.”



Donald Trump departs after speaking in the Rose Garden. Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP

On Tuesday, Trump complained that the WHO “defended the actions of the Chinese government, even praising its so-called transparency”. Yet on 24 January, Trump tweeted: “China has been working very hard to contain the Coronavirus. The United States greatly appreciates their efforts and transparency. It will all work out well. In particular, on behalf of the American People, I want to thank President Xi!”

And on 7 February, by which time the WHO had declared a public health emergency, Trump was asked if China was engaged in a cover up. “No, China’s working very hard … and I think they’re doing a very professional job. They’re in touch with World Health.”

And even by 27 February, despite multiple warnings from the intelligence agencies and his own advisers, he was still minimising the virus, stating: “It’s going to disappear. One day – it’s like a miracle – it will disappear.” By the end of the month, the US had only conducted around 4,000 tests for coronavirus while other countries tested tens of thousands of people.

Leslie Dach, the chair of the pressure group Protect Our Care, said of the WHO defunding: “This is nothing more than a transparent attempt by President Trump to distract from his history downplaying the severity of the coronavirus crisis and his administration’s failure to prepare our nation.

Dach, who served as the global Ebola coordinator for the health department, added: “To be sure, the World Health Organization is not without fault but it is beyond irresponsible to cut its funding at the height of a global pandemic. This move will undoubtedly make Americans less safe.”

At Tuesday’s briefing, Trump backed away from his Monday claim of “total” authority over states, a remark that prompted Andrew Cuomo, the New York governor, to note that Trump is not a king. “I will be speaking to all 50 governors very shortly,” the president said. “And I will then be authorising each individual governor of each individual state to implement a reopening, very powerful reopening plan of their estate in a time in a manner which is most appropriate.”

He added: “The governors will be very, very respectful of the presidency… You can talk about constitution. You can talk about federalism. You can talk about whatever you want. But the best way, I am talking now from a managerial standpoint, to let individual governors run individual states and come to us if they have difficulty and we will help them.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/14/coronavirus-trump-halts-funding-to-world-health-organization

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Donald Trump Jr. slammed CNN chief White House correspondent Jim Acosta after the reporter knocked his father for naming the president’s “scapegoates” for the coronavirus outbreak.

At Tuesday’s coronavirus press briefing, President Trump announced that he was halting U.S. funding of the World Health Organization (WHO) after several errors that were made critics say shielded China from scrutiny

During the briefing, Acosta shared a running list of “scapegoats” he accused the president of blaming.

“Scapegoats blamed by Trump for Coronavirus pandemic: World Health Organization, Members of News Media, Democrats in Congress, Governors, (Not himself),” Acosta tweeted, later adding, “Other scapegoats blamed by Trump: China, Obama administration.”

CNN MISSING IN ACTION ON BIDEN ASSAULT ACCUSER TARA READE’S STORY

Trump Jr.’s spokesperson, Andrew Surabian, knocked the reporter.

“Well that didn’t take long. … CNN’s Jim Acosta quite literally defending/running interference for the Chinese Communist Party. I’m sure Xi sincerely appreciates his tweets. You can’t make this stuff up,” Surabian said of the Chinese president.

The president’s son quipped, “Maybe time for a name change from CNN to Xi NN. It’s much more fitting.”

CNN FACT-CHECKER IGNORES BIDEN INACCURACIES DESPITE VOW TO REPORT ON ‘BOTH SIDES’

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, offered similar condemnation of the journalist.

“Why is CNN apologizing for the Communist Party of China?” Cruz asked. “You’re supposed to be journalists, not CCP propagandists.”

CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

Acosta has been the subject of ridicule in recent weeks with his outspoken hostility towards President Trump. Last week, he was accused of downplaying the WHO’s errors in order to attack the president.

The reporter was also accused of “mansplaining” when interrupting Dr. Deborah Birx as she was laying out the errors WHO had made leading up the pandemic.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/don-jr-blasts-jim-acosta-for-saying-trump-is-scapegoating-china-for-virus-cnn-more-like-xi-nn

GENEVA/ZURICH (Reuters) – The head of the World Health Organization (WHO) voiced confidence on Monday that the United States would continue funding his U.N. agency, despite President Donald Trump’s criticism of WHO’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said last week that the Trump administration was re-evaluating U.S. funding to the body, saying international organisations utilising U.S. taxpayer money needed to deliver on their goals.

The United States is the biggest overall donor to the Geneva-based WHO, contributing more than $400 million in 2019, roughly 15% of its budget.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director-general, asked by a U.S.-based journalist about reports that Trump might “cut off” funding this week, said he had spoken with him two weeks ago.

“What I know is that he is supportive and I hope that the funding to WHO will continue. The relationship we have is very good and we hope that this will continue,” Tedros said.

Days after China informed it about cases of pneumonia of unknown origin on Dec. 31, the WHO sent an alert to all member states on Jan. 5, its top emergencies expert Dr. Mike Ryan said.

“From that perspective the information was shared and very appropriate actions were taken in the United States in response to that alert,” he said.

“TIME FOR VIGILANCE”

Tedros said that countries in Europe that are considering lifting restrictions as the number of new cases stabilises or drops must be guided by the need to protect human health.

“While COVID accelerates very fast, it decelerates much more slowly. In other words the way down is much slower than the way up. Control measures must be lifted slowly…,” he said.

Asked whether Europe was approaching a “turning point”, Ryan said: “We look at the number of confirmed cases and at the number of hospitalisations as the first indicator that things may be stabilising and we’re certainly seeing that.”

“Now is time for vigilance, now is time to double down, now is the time to be very, very careful. That doesn’t mean the countries cannot begin to create an exit strategy,” Ryan said.

Yemen reported its first case of the novel coronavirus last Friday as aid groups braced for an outbreak in a country where war has shattered health systems and spread hunger and disease.

Ryan said the United Nations was working with all sides in Yemen to help ensure that “the surveillance systems that we have in place for polio, cholera and further diseases are now being fully activated to detect any suspect cases of COVID-19”.

The lack of ventilators and technicians will be a “huge challenge”, he said, adding: “We will all struggle to provide adequate levels of supportive care to people should the disease take off.”

Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay and Silke Koltrowitz; Editing by Gareth Jones

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-who/who-chief-says-confident-us-funding-will-continue-in-covid-fight-idUSKCN21V1O0

MSNBC host Joy Reid blasted ardent supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., for refusing to back former Vice President Joe Biden ahead of the 2020 election.

Following his campaign suspension last week, Sanders joined Biden on his podcast on Monday and offered his full endorsement of the presumptive Democratic nominee.

However, many loyal followers of Sanders, including progressive media figures and campaign surrogates, have resisted coalescing behind the former vice president, pointing to various policies as well as the newly surfaced sexual assault allegation made by former Biden staffer Tara Reade.

One of those supporters, progressive commentator Kyle Kulinski, told critics who are pressuring the left to unify that they could “blame” him if President Trump defeats Biden in November.

CNN MISSING IN ACTION ON BIDEN ASSAULT ACCUSER TARA READE’S STORY

“As a left-winger who will not vote for Biden I want you to know I’m 100% okay with you blaming me if Trump wins a second term. I mean it. Blame me. Then get to thinking real hard how you’re gonna get me to support your candidate the next time! Maybe even ask me, I’ll tell you!” Kulinski exclaimed. “We shouldn’t be defensive about this. If they’re blaming us for Trump that’s an admission that they need us to win. If they need us to win then they need to make concessions. Own it!”

That sparked a reaction from Intercept columnist Mehdi Hasan, who told Kulinski, “If you’re ok with a white nationalist winning a second term, I question your ‘left-wing’ credentials.”

CNN FACT-CHECKER IGNORES BIDEN INACCURACIES DESPITE VOW TO REPORT ON ‘BOTH SIDES’

Reid appeared to agree with Hasan and went even further with her criticism.

“What this kind of thing says to me is that these are not ‘left-wing’ voters. They are privileged white voters who demand to be bowed down to, no different than Trump’s voters want those who are not white and Christian to take the knee for them like in the ‘good old days,'” Reid tweeted Monday evening. “These are voters whose primary concern is that everyone else kneel. That’s it. Kneel. Or they threaten the rest of us with the endless torment of Trumpism. Caged children. Viral death. Poverty. Want. Voter Suppression. Muslim bans. Of course none of this harms or impacts them.”

She continued, “Well here is [reality]. No one is going to kneel. Those who get the danger of Trumpism are going to vote & find enough fellow voters committed to doing the right thing. The danger to living, breathing people is real. Most don’t have the luxury to pout over their preferred candidate.”

Reid also acknowledged that “yes of course there are nonwhite voters who fall into this category as well,” noting that she met a black mother and daughter who voted for the Green Party in 2016 because of their dislike for Hillary Clinton.

CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

On Monday, Sanders’ campaign national press secretary Briahna Joy Gray announced that she would not endorse the former vice president following the senator’s own declaration.

“With the utmost respect for Bernie Sanders, who is an incredible human being & a genuine inspiration, I don’t endorse Joe Biden,” Gray wrote. “I supported Bernie Sanders because he backed ideas like #MedicareForAll, canceling ALL student debt, & a wealth tax. Biden supports none of those.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/msnbc-joy-reid-sanders-biden-privileged-white-voters

In the Queens borough of New York City on Tuesday, people wearing face masks wait in line to enter a store that offers check-cashing services.

Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty Images


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In the Queens borough of New York City on Tuesday, people wearing face masks wait in line to enter a store that offers check-cashing services.

Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty Images

New York City has drastically increased its estimate of the number of people killed by COVID-19 to include probable victims who were not tested. The new number is 10,367.

For weeks, firefighters and paramedics have been recording a massive spike in deaths at home around New York City. The deceased were presumed to be victims of the coronavirus but were never tested. Now city officials have recalculated the toll that the virus has taken and reached a staggering number — adding nearly 4,000 to the total.

“Behind every death is a friend, a family member, a loved one. We are focused on ensuring that every New Yorker who died because of COVID-19 gets counted,” said the city’s health commissioner, Dr. Oxiris Barbot. “As a city, it is part of the healing process to be able to grieve and mourn for all those that have passed because of COVID-19. While these data reflect the tragic impact that the virus has had on our city, they will also help us to determine the scale and scope of the epidemic and guide us in our decisions.”

The increase shows that New York’s outbreak is among the worst in the world, and it is sure to renew questions about whether the city should have shut its businesses and public schools sooner.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has recently formed a working group with six other states that is focused on an eventual reopening of the economy. But all have agreed that the health care crisis must be under control first, which is likely to take months.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/04/14/834647854/new-york-citys-covid-19-death-toll-soars-past-10-000

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-CortezAlexandria Ocasio-CortezOcasio-Cortez says it’s ‘legitimate to talk about’ allegation against Biden The Hill’s Campaign Report: Obama gives Biden boost with endorsement Schumer, Ocasio-Cortez demand federal funds for funeral, burial costs in New York MORE (D-N.Y.) on Tuesday addressed a sexual assault allegation against presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe BidenJoe BidenOcasio-Cortez says it’s ‘legitimate to talk about’ allegation against Biden Biden needs a history-making women’s agenda in response to COVID Sanders: Progressives who ‘sit on their hands’ and don’t support Biden would enable Trump reelection MORE by a former Senate staffer, saying it was “legitimate to talk about.”

Ocasio-Cortez was asked about the allegation against the former vice president during an online forum hosted by The Wing, a women’s network and community space, by a questioner who said she was strongly opposed to President TrumpDonald John TrumpPompeo says WHO needs ‘to do its job’ as Trump moves to halt funding Trump campaign fundraising pitch seeks donations to ‘hold China accountable’ Schumer: Trump thinks coronavirus crisis ‘revolves around him’ MORE’s reelection but that she also “really resent[s] the fact that the other choice is someone who has a really long history of being creepy to women,” citing the allegation by former staffer Tara Reade.

“I think it’s legitimate to talk about these things,” Ocasio-Cortez responded, according to CBS News. “And if we want, if we again want to have integrity, you can’t say, you know — both believe women, support all of this, until it inconveniences you, until it inconveniences us.”

“I think a lot of us are just in this moment where it’s like, how did we get here? You know, it almost felt like we started this cycle where we had kind of moved on from, you know, from all of this. And now it feels like we’re kind of back in it,” she added. “You know, the most diverse field that we’ve ever seen — that we’re kind of back kind of replaying old movies in a way.”

Reade has said Biden sexually assaulted her when she worked in the then-Delaware senator’s office in 1993. Biden has yet to address the allegation, but his campaign has denied it.

“Such claims should also be diligently reviewed by an independent press. What is clear about this claim: It is untrue. This absolutely did not happen,” Biden’s deputy campaign manager, Kate Bedingfield, told CBS.

Reade first alleged Biden had touched her inappropriately in April 2019 as one of several women who made similar allegations at the time against Biden, prompting an apology from the former vice president. But Reade did not specify at the time that she was alleging sexual assault.

Ocasio-Cortez was a prominent surrogate for Sen. Bernie SandersBernie SandersOcasio-Cortez says it’s ‘legitimate to talk about’ allegation against Biden Hillicon Valley: Amazon workers fired after criticizing company | Apple sharing mobility data to track virus | Tax pros targeted by hackers Sanders: Progressives who ‘sit on their hands’ and don’t support Biden would enable Trump reelection MORE (I-Vt.) during his presidential campaign before his withdrawal earlier this month. Ocasio-Cortez has yet to formally endorse Biden but said in March she would support Biden if he became the Democratic nominee.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/house/492856-ocasio-cortez-says-its-legitimate-to-talk-about-allegation-against-Biden

Chat with us in Facebook Messenger. Find out what’s happening in the world as it unfolds.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/04/14/politics/trump-name-checks-coronavirus/index.html

Newsom declined to offer a timeline on when the order might be lifted, but he told reporters that if the six requirements are met by the first week of May, “ask me the question then.” However, he cautioned that lifting the order too early could have dire consequences if the virus begins to spread rapidly.

Ultimately, he said, society will have to remain vigilant at least until there is a vaccine for Covid-19, which is unlikely to be discovered and produced before 2021.

California’s relatively early and strict response to the outbreak appears to have paid off. While hundreds have died, it’s managed to avoid the situation of New York state, which has more confirmed Covid-19 cases than any country outside of the U.S. 

However, the stringent measures have come with consequences for the state of nearly 40 million people. California processed about 2.3 million unemployment insurance claims in the four weeks leading up to April 9, Newsom said last week, which is more than the total number of claims filed in 2019.

On Monday, Newsom along with Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced a regional partnership to coordinate the reopening of the West Coast. In the northeast, seven other states, including New York and New Jersey, the two hardest-hit states by the coronavirus, announced a similar plan to coordinate reopening.

With the exception of Massachusetts, all ten states actively developing plans to reopen are led by Democratic governors.

Announcements about the pacts to coordinate plans came after Republican President Donald Trump declared any decision on reopening the economy was up to him. The White House is preparing its own plans which are expected to be announced later this week.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/14/california-gov-gavin-newsom-unveils-guide-to-lifting-coronavirus-restrictions.html

Donald Trump was condemned for putting countless lives at risk on Tuesday when he announced the US is freezing payments to the World Health Organization (WHO) over its handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

The US president said funding would be on hold for 60 to 90 days pending a review of the WHO’s warnings about the coronavirus and China. He accused the global body of “severely mismanaging and covering up” the threat, even though it declared a public health emergency on 30 January – after which he continued to hold rallies, play golf and compare the coronavirus to the common flu.

Critics were stunned at the move to cut money from a critical UN agency during a global pandemic. António Guterres, the UN secretary general, declared now was “not the time to reduce the resources for the operations of the World Health Organization or any other humanitarian organization in the fight against the virus.

“As I have said before, now is the time for unity and for the international community to work together in solidarity to stop this virus and its shattering consequences,” he said in a statement.

Lawrence Gostin, a professor of global health at Georgetown University, told the MSNBC network: “Without a WHO that’s empowered there will be many, many more deaths, and not just as it marches through sub-Saharan Africa, which is next, but also here in the United States.”

America contributed more than $400m to the WHO last year, making it by far the biggest donor. The organization’s budget for 2018-2019 was around $6bn.

Speaking in the White House rose garden, Trump said: “With the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic, we have deep concerns whether America’s generosity has been put to the best use possible. The reality is that the WHO failed to adequately obtain, vet and share information in a timely and transparent fashion.”

He added: “If we cannot trust them, if this is what we will receive from the WHO, our country will be forced to find other ways to work with other nations to achieve public health goals.”

The WHO failed in its “basic duty and must be held accountable”, the president went on.

But critics said the move fit two distinct Trump patterns. One is his long antipathy towards multilateral organisations; for example, he also used a rose garden event to announce the US departure from the Paris climate accords. The other is an attempt to blame others for his own inaction in combatting the coronavirus; on Monday, he accused the media of downplaying the dangers.

Trump’s main criticism of the WHO was its “China-centric” failure to investigate credible reports from sources in Wuhan about the outbreak of the virus. “Through the middle of January, it parroted and publicly endorsed the idea that there was not human to human transmission happening, despite reports and clear evidence to the contrary,” he told reporters.

“The delays the WHO experienced in declaring a public health emergency cost valuable time – tremendous amounts of time.”

But this critique is at odds with the actual timeline. It emerged last week that in technical guidance notes, the WHO warned the US and other countries about the risk of human-to-human transmission as early as 10 January.

On Tuesday Jeremy Konyndyk, the former head of the Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance at USAid, noted that although on 14 January the WHO tweeted that “preliminary investigations conducted by the Chinese authorities have found no clear evidence of human-to-human transmission”, by 23 January it had published an official report warning of human-to-human transmission and transmissibility higher than seasonal flu.

Konyndyk, now a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development, wrote on Twitter: “So to pin the blame on WHO for this, you have to believe that somehow those 9 days between 14 and 23 January were critical to the lack of US preparedness. It’s lunacy. The administration spent the whole month of February doing nothing to meaningfully prepare the homeland.”



Donald Trump departs after speaking in the Rose Garden. Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP

On Tuesday, Trump complained that the WHO “defended the actions of the Chinese government, even praising its so-called transparency”. Yet on 24 January, Trump tweeted: “China has been working very hard to contain the Coronavirus. The United States greatly appreciates their efforts and transparency. It will all work out well. In particular, on behalf of the American People, I want to thank President Xi!”

And on 7 February, by which time the WHO had declared a public health emergency, Trump was asked if China was engaged in a cover up. “No, China’s working very hard … and I think they’re doing a very professional job. They’re in touch with World Health.”

And even by 27 February, despite multiple warnings from the intelligence agencies and his own advisers, he was still minimising the virus, stating: “It’s going to disappear. One day – it’s like a miracle – it will disappear.” By the end of the month, the US had only conducted around 4,000 tests for coronavirus while other countries tested tens of thousands of people.

Leslie Dach, the chair of the pressure group Protect Our Care, said of the WHO defunding: “This is nothing more than a transparent attempt by President Trump to distract from his history downplaying the severity of the coronavirus crisis and his administration’s failure to prepare our nation.

Dach, who served as the global Ebola coordinator for the health department, added: “To be sure, the World Health Organization is not without fault but it is beyond irresponsible to cut its funding at the height of a global pandemic. This move will undoubtedly make Americans less safe.”

At Tuesday’s briefing, Trump backed away from his Monday claim of “total” authority over states, a remark that prompted Andrew Cuomo, the New York governor, to note that Trump is not a king. “I will be speaking to all 50 governors very shortly,” the president said. “And I will then be authorising each individual governor of each individual state to implement a reopening, very powerful reopening plan of their estate in a time in a manner which is most appropriate.”

He added: “The governors will be very, very respectful of the presidency… You can talk about constitution. You can talk about federalism. You can talk about whatever you want. But the best way, I am talking now from a managerial standpoint, to let individual governors run individual states and come to us if they have difficulty and we will help them.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/14/coronavirus-trump-halts-funding-to-world-health-organization

A couple wearing masks crosses the almost-deserted Times Square in New York City on Monday.

Johannes Eisele /AFP via Getty Images


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A couple wearing masks crosses the almost-deserted Times Square in New York City on Monday.

Johannes Eisele /AFP via Getty Images

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo says he will not fight with President Trump during a pandemic, appearing conciliatory after a day of rising tension between the two men.

At a news conference Monday, Trump said his “authority is total” in terms of when to open the economy. He then tweeted Tuesday that governors such as Cuomo who were starting to make their own plans about how to reopen their states are mutinous.

Cuomo, for his part, harshly criticized the president on several morning news shows. He took issue with the president’s claim of “total authority” over the states, which Cuomo — and legal experts — said is unconstitutional.

But Cuomo said midday Tuesday that he wants, and needs, to work with the federal government.

“I put my hand out in total cooperation with the president. If he wants a fight, he’s not going to get it from me. Period,” Cuomo said.

And despite his combative tone on Monday and earlier Tuesday, Trump at a later White House event said he would be making decisions about how to reopen the economy in consultation with governors.

“I’m going to be making a decision pretty quickly. And it’s being done in conjunction with governors. We have tremendous support from governors. And what I do is going to be done in conjunction with governors,” Trump said.

Cuomo repeated some of his past praise of Trump’s efforts on behalf of New York – including help with setting up a temporary hospital in Manhattan’s Javits Center.

He said further cooperation was crucial. New York’s “curve” of coronavirus cases has flattened, even though the lagging indicator of deaths is still nearing 800 per day.

“It’s basically flat, at a devastating level of pain and grief,” he said.

The governor said that this progress is still reversible and that his state needs all the help it can get.

“This is going to take us working together. We have a real challenge ahead. Just because those numbers are flattening, it’s no time to relax. We’re not out of the woods,” said Cuomo. “In this reopening, we could lose all the progress we made in one week if we do it wrong.”

Cuomo urged, for example, that the Federal Emergency Management Agency take over purchase and distribution of testing kits to prevent chaotic bidding wars between state governments.

Trump also said Tuesday that he would announce advisers on the question of reopening the economy at his daily briefing at 5 p.m.

“We’re going to announce the groups of people that are going to be talking to us,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/04/14/834316548/new-york-governor-says-he-wont-fight-with-trump

Newsom declined to offer a timeline on when the order might be lifted, but he told reporters that if the six requirements are met by the first week of May, “ask me the question then.” However, he cautioned that lifting the order too early could have dire consequences if the virus begins to spread rapidly.

Ultimately, he said, society will have to remain vigilant at least until there is a vaccine for Covid-19, which is unlikely to be discovered and produced before 2021.

California’s relatively early and strict response to the outbreak appears to have paid off. While hundreds have died, it’s managed to avoid the situation of New York state, which has more confirmed Covid-19 cases than any country outside of the U.S. 

However, the stringent measures have come with consequences for the state of nearly 40 million people. California processed about 2.3 million unemployment insurance claims in the four weeks leading up to April 9, Newsom said last week, which is more than the total number of claims filed in 2019.

On Monday, Newsom along with Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced a regional partnership to coordinate the reopening of the West Coast. In the northeast, seven other states, including New York and New Jersey, the two hardest-hit states by the coronavirus, announced a similar plan to coordinate reopening.

With the exception of Massachusetts, all ten states actively developing plans to reopen are led by Democratic governors.

Announcements about the pacts to coordinate plans came after Republican President Donald Trump declared any decision on reopening the economy was up to him. The White House is preparing its own plans which are expected to be announced later this week.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/14/california-gov-gavin-newsom-unveils-guide-to-lifting-coronavirus-restrictions.html

It turns out there is a good reason for reporters to attend Donald Trump’s ridiculous, misinformation-spreading coronavirus news conferences.

It’s to confront him with reality — and let him flail wildly, melt down and generally show the world he has no idea what he’s done or what he’s doing.

It’s to ask him simple questions that any competent leader could easily answer, and watch him have a temper tantrum.

So here is part of Trump’s exchange with CBS White House correspondent Paula Reid during Monday’s session. (Watch the video):

Reid: What did you do with that time that you bought? The argument is that you bought yourself some time. You didn’t use it to prepare hospitals. You didn’t use it to ramp up testing. Right now, nearly 20 million people are unemployed.

Trump: You’re so disgraceful. It’s so disgraceful the way you say that….

Reid: Tens of thousands of Americans are dead. How is … this rant supposed to make people feel confident in an unprecedented crisis?… What did your administration do in February for the time that your travel ban bought you?

Trump: A lot.

Reid: What?

Trump: A lot, and in fact, we’ll give you a list…. We did a lot. Look, look, you know you’re a fake.

Here is part of an exchange with CNN White House correspondent Kaitlin Collins (watch the video):

Collins: You said when someone is president of the United States, their authority is total. That is not true. Who told you that?

Trump: You know what we’re going to do? We’re going to write up papers on this.

Collins: Has any governor agreed that you have the authority to decide when their states …

Trump: I haven’t asked anybody because. … You know why? Because I don’t have to ….

Collins: But who told you the president has the total authority?

Trump: Enough!

There were others, too. Like when Trump was asked what he would do if governors defied a presidential order to reopen their states — and it became clear that his talk about having “total authority” over everything was not a serious, considered assertion of extraconstitutional rights, it was just bluster. “Well, if some states refuse to open,” he said, “I would like to see that person run for election.”

To go or not to go

Not long after Trump started holding his almost daily news conferences, it became clear that they were not really about relating important information during a crisis, but were instead all about self-aggrandizement and the spreading of misinformation. Media critics and ethicists (including me) started arguing that television networks shouldn’t broadcast them live.

(My theoretical, hopeful exception would be if a news organization were prepared to aggressively use a split screen to turn them into a vector for information instead of disinformation.)

(CNN’s aggressive use of a chyron Monday evening was good for a laugh, but arguably only made things worse.)

The other question that came up was whether reporters from major news organizations should even continue to attend, knowing that Trump would just use them as props.

Jay Rosen, the NYU journalism professor and widely respected media critic, argued that serious news organizations should refuse to assist him in spreading misinformation — which means not sending anyone.

“I would not send reporters so he can waste our time and use them as hate objects. I would tell them to watch it on CSPAN and report any news that emerges. If he makes a factual claim it has to be verified or no go,” Rosen tweeted last week.

And in his Pressthink blog on Sunday, Rosen published a list of 13 reasons that he thinks make reporters keep coming back for more. It is not an admirable list.

There’s the simplistic view that whatever the president says is news, no matter what. There’s the prestige of feeling like you’re part of the presidency. There’s the fact that it is such an easy and reliable way to create content. There’s the overvaluing of access.

That’s four. There are nine others, some better, some worse, and I highly recommend you go read them all.

But to my mind, Rosen left out the 14th — and only really good — reason for reporters to show up at the briefings.

It’s this: They are the only people allowed in from outside the bubble.

Every president exists within a bubble, but some more intentionally than others. Trump — even more than George W. Bush, and that’s saying something — will not be caught dead in a room with people who don’t agree with him, with this one exception. He doesn’t hold events that are open to the general public, only to supporters. He doesn’t even invite Democrats to the signing of bills they collaborated on. And his bubble is exclusively occupied by loyalists and sycophants.

Reporters, once allowed inside the bubble, have enormous public-service responsibilities — particularly during a major public health crisis, and particularly with this president.

They alone can demand the answers the public needs and deserves. And they alone can confront him with the reality that he denies.

As the late, legendary White House press corps veteran Helen Thomas explained it to me in 2004: “The presidential news conference is the only forum in our society in which the president can be questioned. If he doesn’t answer questions, there’s no accountability.… We speak for the American people. We have a direct contact with the president of the United States and they don’t.”

At this moment in history, what the public needs more than anything else are answers to the forward-looking questions: What do we do now?

And with this president, confronting him with reality also means confronting him with the fact that he has no idea what he’s talking about.

That’s what Reid and Collins did so well on Monday.

But we need more.

Asking questions as a public service

The country needs a plan, and Trump doesn’t have one. Reporters need to press him on that — in part to expose his lack of leadership, and in part to push him in the right direction.

The context here is that, in the consensus view of public health officials, there’s a clear path out of this crisis — and Trump isn’t taking it. What’s required, first and foremost, is vastly more testing so public health officials can determine what communities are safe, and can identify outbreaks when they are still small and isolate the people who are infected.

So here’s a question for Trump: Once we’ve reduced the number of infected people, don’t you realize that it’s not safe just to go back to normal until we can identify the people who are infected, make sure they’re isolated and track down their contacts? Don’t you realize that requires massively more testing than we’re doing now?

There are at least three, widely-endorsed roadmaps from public health officials, complete with detailed, point-by-point plans for how to reopen the country and end the crisis safely. Ask him about those point by point: Do you agree? Disagree? What are you doing about it?

By contrast, the public service mission is no justification for stupid, incremental questions or attempted gotchas aimed at generating tiny little news scooplets. Those scooplets have no public-service value whatsoever.

What does this accomplish?

Better questioning won’t change the essential nature of the event. As Lou Cannon, who covered the Reagan White House for the Washington Post, told me back in 2004, “News conferences have always been a forum for the president to say what he wants to say, not for us to get the information that we want to get.”

No president has ever been quite this brazen about ignoring the substance of a question, or attacking the reporter who asked it. With Trump behind the podium, these news conferences will always be full of self-aggrandizement and misinformation.

(So Rosen may be right that no matter how excellent, thoughtful and tough the questions are, the net effect is still so bad that journalists should have no part of it.)

But only a tiny fraction of the news audience actually watches the briefings themselves.

So what matters more is how they are covered. And the coverage remains ridiculously variable — by publication, by reporters and sometimes even by day.

And even after Monday’s epic meltdown — complete with a propaganda video — some reporters still couldn’t shake themselves loose from old habits that just don’t serve the readers anymore.

The New York Times news analysis by Peter Baker and Maggie Haberman ran under a headline that didn’t just fail to capture the reality of the event, it actively covered it up: “Trump Leaps to Call Shots on Reopening Nation, Setting Up Standoff With Governors.”

Baker and Haberman took Trump’s comments seriously, rather than calling out what a farce the entire briefing was, and focused on how those comments raised “profound constitutional questions about the real extent of his powers.”

The Associated Press’ main story, by Jill Colvin, Zeke Miller and Geoff Mulvihill, played it straight. While in a separate story, Miller and Kevin Freking noted that Trump’s use of “a taxpayer-funded promotional video praising his own handling of the coronavirus outbreak and slamming his critics and the press” was “a highly unusual move.”

They cited a few particularly evocative Trump quotes — “Everything we did was right,” and “I think I’ve educated a lot of people as to the press” — and concluded that the briefing “amounted to a telling demonstration of the president’s growing defensiveness in the face of criticism that the administration should have acted more aggressively and sooner to combat the virus.”

The lead story in Tuesday’s Washington Post treated Trump’s comments as if they came during a normal press briefing. The article by Tim Craig and Brady Dennis blandly reported on Trump’s declarations of authority without giving readers any indication of the circumstances.

That task was left to Ashley Parker, writing under a marvelous headline — “The Me President: Trump uses pandemic briefing to focus on himself” — and a warning label that her piece included “a reporter’s insights.”

Parker wrote that Trump “made clear that the paramount concern for Trump is Trump — his self-image, his media coverage, his supplicants and his opponents, both real and imagined.” And she wrote that “Monday’s coronavirus briefing offered a particularly stark portrait of a president seeming unable to grasp the magnitude of the crisis — and saying little to address the suffering across the country he was elected to lead.”

Post opinion writer Greg Sargent also contributed his analysis, which included this memorable line:

When everything is all about maintaining appearances, with no concern whatsoever for underlying substance, this seeming contradiction disappears in a puff of Trumpian chaos pixie dust.

Few American news editors give their reporters the freedom that David Smith, Washington bureau chief for the Guardian, gets to call it as he sees it. He wrote:

A toddler threw a self-pitying tantrum on live television on Monday night. Unfortunately he was 73 years old, wearing a long red tie and running the world’s most powerful country.

Donald Trump, starved of campaign rallies, Mar-a-Lago weekends and golf, and goaded by a bombshell newspaper report, couldn’t take it any more. Years of accreted grievance and resentment towards the media came gushing out in a torrent. He ranted, he raved, he melted down and he blew up the internet with one of the most jaw-dropping performances of his presidency.

Reporters should keep going to these briefings. They should use their questions exclusively to demand answers on the public’s behalf and confront Trump with the reality he is incapable of accepting.

And then news organizations should recognize that the the news is not what Trump says — he’ll say anything. It’s what he fails to say, to do and to be.

Source Article from https://www.salon.com/2020/04/14/paula-reid-and-kaitlan-collins-pop-the-toddler-kings-balloon–and-he-melts-down/


Seven car in New York City | AP Photo

The city now has more than 10,000 deaths.

04/14/2020 05:08 PM EDT

Updated 04/14/2020 06:43 PM EDT


New York City’s official coronavirus death toll has soared past 10,000, after thousands of deaths that previously went uncounted were added to the city’s statistics.

In a new count released Tuesday, 3,778 more deaths were added to the rolls — driving up the previously recorded total of 6,589 by more than half. Now, the city records 10,367 deaths related to the virus.

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Previously, the city had not counted people who died at home without getting tested for the coronavirus, or who died in nursing homes or at hospitals, but did not have a confirmed positive test result. Mayor Bill de Blasio admitted last week that the true number of deaths was far higher than the official tally, and said the city would start including presumed coronavirus cases in its data.

The latest statistics include probable coronavirus deaths through Monday. And even the new statistics may understate the death toll. Probable deaths were recorded as people who did not have a positive lab test for Covid-19, but did have Covid-19 or something similar listed as the cause of death on their death certificate.

“Behind every death is a friend, a family member, a loved one. We are focused on ensuring that every New Yorker who died because of COVID-19 gets counted,” Health Commissioner Oxiris Barbot said in a statement. “As a city, it is part of the healing process to be able to grieve and mourn for all those that have passed because of COVID-19. While these data reflect the tragic impact that the virus has had on our city, they will also help us to determine the scale and scope of the epidemic and guide us in our decisions.”

The city’s death toll has soared so high that morgues have filled, funeral homes have been overwhelmed and burials of unclaimed remains on Hart Island have surged. As of Monday evening, the city tallied 107,263 cases of the coronavirus, with many more undetected because of lack of testing.

People whose death certificates don’t mention the virus still are not counted. From March 11 through April 13, 8,184 city residents died of causes not classified as confirmed or probable coronavirus.

Among probable coronavirus deaths, 60 percent happened in hospitals, 22 percent in the victim’s home and 18 percent in nursing homes or long-term care facilities. Brooklyn residents represented the most probable deaths, followed by Queens and the Bronx.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/new-york/albany/story/2020/04/14/new-york-city-coronavirus-death-toll-jumps-by-3-700-after-uncounted-fatalities-are-added-1275931

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo clashed Tuesday over who has more power to reopen the economy, a day after Trump claimed his power is “absolute” – a declaration Cuomo said he would challenge in court if necessary.

Speaking on NBC’s Today show, Cuomo said he would act if Trump really thinks “he’s going to force this state or any state, for that matter, to do something that is reckless or irresponsible, that could endanger human life, literally.”

Echoing other governors, Cuomo said that if others allow businesses to reopen too soon, “you will see those virus numbers go up again, and more people will die.”

Trump, who apparently saw Cuomo’s comments during a string of television interviews, responded on Twitter by saying the New York governor has been demanding help from the federal government all along.

“Cuomo’s been calling daily, even hourly, begging for everything, most of which should have been the state’s responsibility, such as new hospitals, beds, ventilators, etc.,” Trump said. “I got it all done for him, and everyone else, and now he seems to want Independence! That won’t happen!”

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/04/14/coronavirus-trump-andrew-cuomo-clash-over-reopening-economy/2988402001/

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer addresses the state during a speech in Lansing, Mich., on Monday. Whitmer says she’s listening to “the best medical advice” on when to ease restrictions.

Michigan Office of the Governor via AP


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Michigan Office of the Governor via AP

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer addresses the state during a speech in Lansing, Mich., on Monday. Whitmer says she’s listening to “the best medical advice” on when to ease restrictions.

Michigan Office of the Governor via AP

President Trump has claimed to have the authority to “open up the states” once the threat of the coronavirus subsides.

State governors — and constitutional experts — disagree.

Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, the state with the third-highest number of coronavirus-related deaths in the U.S., told All Things Considered on Tuesday that science and medical advice will guide her decisions on when to ease stay-at-home restrictions.

Here are selected excerpts of that interview:

Can I just get your response to the president saying he gets to decide when states open up?

I was asked this yesterday at my press conference and I explained, the government’s not going to be open via Twitter. We’re going to have to make decisions based on the best science, the best medical advice and what’s in the best public health of the people of our individual states. We’ve had to act unilaterally at the state level, and we’re probably the best ones to be able to make a decision when it’s time to safely reengage our economies. And I’m hopeful that my colleagues are listening to the best medical minds they have in their states, and we’re all thinking about doing it in the safest, smartest way.

African Americans account for almost 40% of COVID-19 deaths in your state and only make up about 13% of Michigan’s population. I know you have a task force addressing racial disparities led by your lieutenant governor, who’s African American. But right now, while people are dying, what can you specifically do to help black people who are so disproportionately affected by this disease?

Well, we’ve done a lot to help give people some relief. We have a campaign that is absolutely focused on communicating with communities of color. We are focused on making sure that people don’t lose their home or get evicted in this time. I’ve issued a number of emergency orders so that people who are going to struggle the most are going to have the protections that they need.

We have been working incredibly hard on that outreach component because we know that education is critical and working with the leaders of our churches, especially in and around Detroit. They’ve stepped up to help administer to their flocks who need counsel and need faith now more than ever, but can’t congregate. And so we’ve undertaken a number of efforts to make sure that we’re reaching out.

And I impaneled this task force because I think this is something Michigan has been leading on. We’re one of only three states that early on started making this racial data available. And I think other states should follow suit so that we as a nation can recognize the unique challenges that people of color are confronting when we have a pandemic like this.

Listen to the full audio version of this interview later Tuesday on All Things Considered.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/04/14/834214831/michigan-gov-whitmer-states-wont-open-via-twitter

The daily number of new coronavirus hospitalizations across New York continues to decline, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Tuesday, in a further sign that the state is slowly pulling free of the disease’s grip.

A total of 1,649 new patients were admitted in the 24-hour period ending at midnight Tuesday, marking a decline of more than 300 from the day before, and the lowest single-day total since March 24.

“We have shown that we control the virus, the virus doesn’t control us,” said Cuomo in his daily Albany press briefing.

The overall number of hospitalizations, meanwhile, continued to hold effectively flat at 18,697 — actually a slight dip from the 18,825 reported one day prior.

The continued decline offered a light at the end of a tunnel darkened by 10,834 fatalities — 778 of them in the past 24 hours — and 202,208 diagnoses statewide.

Still, Cuomo urged the same caution he did when he declared that “the worst is over” on Monday.

“We are, in some ways, artificially controlling that curve,” he said Tuesday. “Whatever we do today will determine the infection rate tomorrow. It is total cause-and-effect.”

Paramedics bring a patient into the emergency room at Elmhurst Hospital Center in Queens.Justin Lane/EPA

Cuomo — who Monday joined the governors of several other Northeastern states in announcing a task force for a cautious but gradual economic revival — reiterated the need to balance the two forces.

“Everybody’s anxious to reopen, I get it,” he said. “People need to get back to work, the state needs an economy, we cannot sustain this for a prolonged period of time.

“[But] the worst scenario would be if we did all of this … and we see that number go up again.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/04/14/cuomo-says-nys-coronavirus-hospitalizations-continue-to-decline/

“When somebody’s the president of the United States, the authority is total,” President Trump said on Monday.

Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images


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Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images

“When somebody’s the president of the United States, the authority is total,” President Trump said on Monday.

Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images

President Trump at a briefing Monday night made an assertion that likely would have surprised the framers of the U.S. Constitution: that as president, his authority is “total” and that he has the power to order states — which have told businesses to close and people to remain at home to limit the spread of the coronavirus — to reopen.

“The president of the United States calls the shots,” Trump said. “They can’t do anything without the approval of the president of the United States.”

Trump said there were “numerous provisions” in the Constitution that give him that power but he didn’t name any.

“When somebody’s the president of the United States, the authority is total,” he said.

But Trump’s assertion is simply without merit or grounding in the Constitution, legal experts say.

“The President’s powers are not ‘total,’ ” Susan Low Bloch, a professor of constitutional law at Georgetown Law School, said in an email. “Our government is a government of divided powers. We call it ‘separation of powers’ with ‘checks and balances.’ ”

The president has the powers articulated in Article II of the Constitution, she says. “But the Congress, the judiciary, and the states also have powers — as articulated in the rest of the Constitution (particularly in Article I, Article III, and the 10th Amendment respectively). The President is not a king. His powers are broad, but they are definitely not ‘total.’ ”

“It’s so plain and obvious it’s not even debatable,” added Kathleen Bergin, a professor at Cornell Law School.

“Trump has no authority to ease social distancing, or to open schools or private businesses,” she said. “These are matters for states to decide under their power to promote public health and welfare, a power guaranteed by the 10th Amendment to the Constitution. Despite what he claims, no president has absolute authority over domestic policy, and he certainly has no power to override the type of measures that have been taken across the country that have proved successful in flattening the curve.”

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, a Democrat, told NPR’s Morning Edition Tuesday: “The reality is that the president does not have the authority to tell the states what to do in this regard. We put the executive orders in place. We’re the ones who are responsible for the safety and health of the people of our states.”

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, also a Democrat, said on MSNBC’s Morning Joe: “The president basically declared himself King Trump, right? And all that annoying federal-state back and forth our Founding Fathers went through, he just disregarded that.”

Cuomo vowed to challenge in court any presidential order to reopen the state against his will.

Bradley Moss, a Washington attorney who specializes in national security law, said: “Quite simply, there is no provision that gives a president ‘total’ authority, and particularly none in the context of a public health crisis.”

Moss said the Constitution delegates most public health authorities to the states, not the federal government. The president can declare national emergencies, Moss says, which Trump did on March 13, and even designate select groups for quarantine, but none of his authorities permit him to dictate how entire states open or close.

“President Trump is gaslighting us,” Moss said, “nothing more.”

Cornell’s Bergin said the president does have some additional powers, for instance to lift international travel restrictions and to issue directives to the military or federal agencies. And Congress could provide states with financial incentives to change course, though it’s doubtful lawmakers would agree to that at this stage.

“Could Trump try to flex some muscle here? Sure,” Bergin said. “But he doesn’t get constitutional authority simply by claiming it. What he tries to do and what he’s authorized by the Constitution to do are two different things.”

You can read more of our coronavirus-related fact checks here.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/04/14/834040912/fact-check-trump-doesnt-have-the-authority-to-order-states-to-reopen