It also projects the wrong image to America’s enemies and allies, as a cascading series of leadership changes calls into question the stability of America’s sea service.

“There is never a good time for a crisis in leadership, but having it in the middle of a pandemic is a particularly awful time,” said Ray Mabus, who served as Navy secretary under former President Barack Obama.

Lawmakers, national security experts and Navy veterans alike disavowed Modly’s extraordinary remarks to the crew of the aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt on Sunday. Modly had just fired Capt. Brett Crozier for blasting an email to Navy personnel asking for aid as the carrier was forced to dock in Guam, coronavirus running rampant through the ship’s decks.

In a speech to the crew that was later leaked to the media, Modly called Crozier’s actions “naïve” and “stupid.” The decision to give the address, as well as the abrupt move to fire Crozier before uniformed Navy officials had completed an investigation into the incident, crossed a critical line, upsetting the delicate balance between civilian and military control of the service, former officials said.

“The final adjudication is with the chief of naval personnel,” said retired Vice Adm. John Miller, former commander of 5th Fleet, which oversees the Middle East. “Having Modly, who is senior to everyone in uniform in the Navy, be the relieving officer makes that whole review process more difficult.”

Others called for the speedy confirmation of a permanent replacement for the last Senate-confirmed Navy secretary, Richard Spencer. After Spencer was ousted in late November over his handling of Navy SEAL Chief Eddie Gallagher — President Donald Trump wanted the chief’s SEAL insignia restored after granting the sailor clemency — Trump nominated Kenneth Braithwaite, the former ambassador to Norway, for the job. Yet his nomination has languished in the Senate for several weeks.

After a break-neck chain of events that began when Crozier’s letter asking for help surfaced on March 31, followed by Modly’s firing, his speech to the crew and Tuesday’s departure, the Navy Department now finds itself under the temporary leadership of James McPherson, retired rear admiral who was confirmed to be the Army’s No. 2 a mere 15 days ago.

“The Department of the Navy needs to have a Senate-confirmed Secretary of the Navy — now,” said Michael Mulroy, who served as deputy assistant secretary of defense for Middle East policy until December and now works for ABC News.

After meeting with Defense Secretary Mark Esper on Tuesday morning, Modly sent a letter to his boss saying it was time to go.

“He resigned on his own accord, putting the Navy and Sailors above self so that the USS Theodore Roosevelt, and the Navy as an institution, can move forward,” Esper said in a statement.

In his resignation letter, a copy of which was obtained by POLITICO, Modly thanked Esper and Trump for their “confidence” in him.

“More than anything, I owe every member of the Navy and Marine Corps team a lifetime of gratitude for the opportunity to serve for them, and with them, once again,” Modly wrote. “The men and women of the Department of the Navy deserve a continuity of civilian leadership befitting our great Republic, and the decisive naval force that secures our way of life.”

Modly was more loquacious in a memo to the force, in which he acknowledged that he “lost situational awareness” during his address to the Roosevelt’s crew.

“You are justified in being angry with me about that,” Modly wrote in the memo. “There is no excuse, but perhaps a glimpse of understanding, and hopefully empathy.”

“I am deeply sorry for some of the words and for how they spread across the media landscape like a wildfire,” Modly continued.

Later in the four-page memo, Modly urged sailors not to “ be afraid” to bring up issues of concern to their immediate superiors, but noted that “there is a proper, courteous and respectful way to do this.”

Just hours earlier, on Monday night, Modly apologized to the crew and its former captain,

“I want to apologize to the Navy for my recent comments to the crew of the TR,” Modly said in a statement. “Let me be clear, I do not think Captain Brett Crozier is naïve nor stupid. I think, and always believed him to be the opposite.”

Yet the mea culpa wasn’t enough. On Monday and continuing throughout the day Tuesday, Democratic lawmakers called on Modly to resign or be fired.

Mabus criticized Crozier’s remarks, noting in an interview that “the notion that a civilian leader would go on a warship and say these things about a captain who was obviously beloved and who had done this for his crew just defies imagination.”

Mabus blamed Trump for cultivating an environment in which “the only people who seem to thrive are people who either emulate or suck up to him.” He accused the president of politicizing the military and interfering with the military’s regular justice system.

“The tone comes from the top,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/04/07/thomas-modly-coronavirus-speech-resign-navy-172625

President Donald Trump’s aggressive support for the unproven idea of using the lupus and malaria drug hydroxychloroquine to treat coronavirus has puzzled public health experts, journalists, and others for weeks.

A Monday New York Times report appeared to offer one possible new explanation: financial interest — his own, and that of those close to him.

Per the Times:

If hydroxychloroquine becomes an accepted treatment, several pharmaceutical companies stand to profit, including shareholders and senior executives with connections to the president. Mr. Trump himself has a small personal financial interest in Sanofi, the French drugmaker that makes Plaquenil, the brand-name version of hydroxychloroquine.

However, Trump’s Sanofi stake is indirect and rather small — he owns shares through a fund that includes a diverse array of stocks. As Vox’s Emily Stewart noted, a government official repeatedly promoting a product made by a company they have a minute stake in would be a very inefficient way to be corrupt:

The immediate interest in Trump’s financial connections to the pharmaceutical companies is another indicator of how the president’s decision not sell off his assets or put them into a blind trust opens him up to allegations of impropriety. But it was also a sign of how puzzled some experts are by the president continuing to tout the drug in nearly every public appearance, particularly given that it can have some dangerous side effects.

Overall, Trump’s top medical experts have taken a more measured tone, as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and White House coronavirus task force member Dr. Anthony Fauci did in speaking with CBS’s Face the Nation Sunday.

“The data are really, just, at best, suggestive,” Fauci said on the program. “There have been cases that show there may be an effect and there are others to show there’s no effect. So, I think in terms of science, I don’t think we could definitively say it works.”

Trump appears to have been convinced of the drug’s effectiveness by its advocates in his inner circle, including trade adviser Peter Navarro and his personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani, as well as by a French study that indicated the drug is effective against the virus — but that, as Vox’s Umair Irfan has explained, came with a number of caveats the president may have missed, and that has been retracted.

And this — combined with the fact that the president, unlike Fauci, has no scientific training — had led a number of observers to believe Trump genuinely thinks hydroxychloroquine is promising and should be further investigated. This view was encapsulated in the Times’s reporting Monday by a medical director at Brooklyn Hospital Center, Dr. Joshua Rosenberg.

“I certainly understand why the president is pushing it,” Rosenberg told the Times. “He has to project hope. And when you are in a situation without hope, things go very badly. So I’m not faulting him for pushing it even if there isn’t a lot of science behind it, because it is, at this point, the best, most available option for use.”

But the report of Trumpworld’s connections to the pharmaceutical industry caused many to believe something more sinister was afoot — namely, that Trump hoped to use the coronavirus pandemic to enrich himself and his allies.

Trump has been accused of many crimes — but doesn’t seem to be doing anything wrong this time

Trump has on numerous occasions been accused of, put under investigation for, and refused to rule out using his position to financially benefit himself. And he was, of course, impeached about four months ago on charges of using his office for his political benefit.

It’s this history that has online observers, political strategists, and journalists highlighting the president’s financial ties to Sanofi, which makes hydroxychloroquine.

But while there are a number of outstanding questions about Trump’s financial stakes and how his current role influences them, it isn’t clear there is great cause for concern with respect to his pharmaceutical holdings.

For one, the president doesn’t directly own Sanofi stock. His 2019 financial disclosures suggest he holds it in three family trusts through an investment in the mutual fund company Dodge & Cox’s international stock fund. According to Dodge & Cox, that fund includes shares of a number of drug companies — including AstraZeneca, Novartis, Bayer, GlaxoSmithKline, and Sanofi. But it also includes shares of companies in other industries, from online retail to banking to electronics. And of the drug companies it does include, only some, like Novartis and Sanofi, are major manufacturers of hydroxychloroquine.

This would suggest that the president — and anyone else who bought this particular Dodge & Cox product — may not profit very much from increased hydroxychloroquine sales, and that any benefits drug companies in the portfolio see may not be enough to offset the loses of other included companies.

Trump’s financial disclosures don’t show exactly how much each trust has invested in the fund, but they do say it is $15,000 or less. Financial Times reporter Kadhim Shubber wrote this means the president’s stake in Sanofi is likely worth about $450.

It also is not clear how much the stakes in those other pharmaceutical companies will benefit the president. In late March, Novartis donated 30 million doses of hydroxychloroquine to the US federal government, and Bayer donated an additional 1 million doses of its hydroxychloroquine drug. Other pharmaceutical companies, including Mylan and Teva, have pledged to donate millions of doses as well.

This does not mean these companies will make zero sales — particularly given continuing demand among lupus and malaria patients, as well as at hospitals and other medical facilities for Covid-19 care — but that they may not be making money hand over fist thanks to the coronavirus. And as Ami Fadia of SVB Leerink, a health care investment company, told Barron’s, any additional hydroxychloroquine sales aren’t likely to greatly impact drug companies’ bottom lines because, even if they are able to quickly ramp up production, it is a relatively cheap drug in its generic form. Fadia said it can cost as little as 32 cents per pill.

Assuming increased demand over the short term, Fadia said, Mylan could expect to make $15 million in hydroxychloroquine sales. This sounds like a lot, but not when you bear in mind Mylan’s 2019 revenues were $3.19 billion.

Given demand, Mylan Sanofi and other companies could raise prices in order to increase profits. This would likely cause public uproar and be met with pushback from lawmakers. It is true that a number of drug companies have shown themselves able to disregard that sort of criticism in the past, as with drugs to treat diabetes, for instance — but thus far, there has been little sign there will be hydroxychloroquine-related opportunistic pricing.

And the Trump allies with investments in the drug companies that would seem to be helped by Trump’s advocacy for the drug — which include Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, investor Ken Fisher, and Amneal Pharmaceuticals co-founder Chirag Patel — also do not seem to be the beneficiaries of any underhanded behavior.

Ross, like Trump, is connected indirectly, through a fund he used to run; Fisher has long been a Sanofi investor through his asset management company; and while Patel’s company does plan to produce hydroxychloroquine, Amneal has said it plans to donate pills as well — and, should the treatment actually prove effective, it may seem wise to empower those able to make it.

Again, there are many reasons some are suspicious of Trump policies and how they affect his pocketbook. He tried to steer millions of dollars of business to his Florida resort by planning to hold a G7 meeting there. He has faced questions over Air Force and White House spending at his resorts worldwide. He was ordered to pay a $2 million fine by New York for “improperly using charitable assets to intervene in the 2016 presidential primaries and further his own political interests.”

This has made many of his critics sensitive to what could appear to be improprieties on his part. It is important those sensitivities do not lead to false alarms, but past behavior means there is an important line for interested parties to walk when assessing Trump’s behavior.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2020/4/7/21211872/trump-coronavirus-hydroxychloroquine-covid19-drugs-sanofi-owns

President Trump slammed the World Health Organization (WHO) for its “China-centric” views Tuesday, adding that the global health agency’s projections and pronouncements about the coronavirus pandemic has been routinely wrong.

In an interview with Fox News’ “Hannity,” Trump said that the WHO had “strongly recommended” against America restricting travel from China, one of their earliest flawed pronouncements.

“The World Health [Organization] — very China-centric as I say —  basically everything was very positive for China,” Trump told host Sean Hannity. “Don’t close your borders, they strongly recommended … That would’ve been a disaster, that would’ve been a total disaster.

“And literally, they called every shot wrong,” the president added. “They didn’t want to say where [coronavirus] came from. For many years, we’ve been funding the World Health Organization.”

RICK SCOTT BLASTS WHO OVER ITS ‘WORK FOR COMMUNIST CHINA’, CALLS FOR CONGRESSIONAL PROBE

The president noted that while the U.S. financial contribution to the WHO dwarfs that of China, the United Nations entity seems to be very concerned about its relationship with Beijing..

“We’re going to look at it now because I think every step that they made, everything that they said was wrong and always in favor of China,” he said. “And ‘keep it open, don’t close the borders’. I didn’t listen to them, and I did what I wanted to do, and it was a good move.

“So it’s one of those things where we are the one that is the primary funder so we are going to take a very strong look at that.”

THE CORONAVIRUS OUTBREAK STATE-BY-STATE

U.S. taxpayers contributed $513 million to the WHO in 2017, up from $341 million the prior year, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Ghebreyesus had claimed Trump’s move to restrict travel from China at the end of January would create “fear and stigma with little health benefit.”

Trump also spoke Tuesday about his relationships with state governors during the pandemic, reserving particular praise for Democrats Andrew Cuomo of New York and Phil Murphy of New Jersey

CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

“I’m a diplomat, too,” Trump remarked. “Since I’ve become president, I have to view things a little bit differently. Andrew, I’ve known him a long time. He has a hard time getting the words out ‘Thank you, you did a great job,’ but he’s been pretty good over the last week or so.”

Trump also praised the work of Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards in Louisiana and Gavin Newsom in California, while declining to name which governors he thought may have done a poor job handling the contagion.

“We’ll back the people where they have bad governors.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/trump-slams-world-health-organization-china-coronavirus

Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin said Tuesday that President Donald Trump is looking at areas in the country where the economy can be reopened.

“I think everything I hear from the medical professionals in many places is we’re close to the worst point and beginning to peak. I think then things are going to get better. I know the president is very much looking at how we can reopen parts of the economy. There are parts of the country, like New York, where obviously this is very, very concerning. There are other parts of the country where it’s not,” Mnuchin said in an appearance on FOX Business Network.

Mnuchin said he hopes the shutdown will not go on longer than eight weeks, which is the length of time small businesses can pay their employees when they take out a loan from the federal government loan program provided under the CARES Act.

“All these small businesses need to do is pay their employees. If they’re closed and there’s no work to do, they don’t have to come in. They just pay them so as soon as they’re ready to open, they have their employees.… They didn’t have to get unemployment,” Mnuchin said, adding that the amount of people who could benefit for this program account for “50 percent of the private economy.

“I can assure you the president has instructed us to get this money into the economy fast.”

Americans have filed 10 million unemployment claims in the past two weeks, according to Forbes. The numbers are due to businesses closing down as a result of stay-at-home orders put in place in response to the new coronavirus pandemic. Businesses Insider compiled a list of major companies that have either furloughed or laid off thousands of employees. including Marriott International, General Electric and Macy’s.

Trump has said that he does not want the cure to be worse than the disease, meaning that the measures put in place to protect Americans from contracting the new coronavirus should not be worse than the impact of the virus itself.

“We built the greatest economy in the world. I’ll do it a second time. We got artificially stopped by a virus that nobody ever thought possible,” the president said Monday during his daily coronavirus press briefing.

There are over 370,000 confirmed cases of the new coronavirus in the United States and over 11,000 deaths attributed to the virus, according to the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/treasury-secretary-steve-mnuchin-says-donald-trump-looking-areas-us-where-economy-can-reopened-1496650

As COVID-19 surges in places throughout the country, Americans are left to wonder, “When will my state hit its worst point?”

A widely cited model offers some predictions. The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation’s COVID-19 projections were cited in recent White House briefings and take into account how the pandemic is playing out in several countries around the world. They incorporate the current trend line of deaths in U.S. states and the estimated impact of social distancing measures to predict when each state may reach peak daily deaths and hospital usage.

While projections like these are imprecise, they’re useful to policy makers and hospital leaders trying to prepare for surges. The model was designed to give hospitals an idea of how quickly and how much they need to expand capacity.

Researchers at IHME make frequent updates to the model based on newly available data, and some of those changes have resulted in drastic shifts. The latest major update, made Sunday, shows fewer people dying over a shorter period of time, the model’s lead researcher Chris Murray says.

However, he cautioned that when social distancing measures lift, outbreaks could spark up again.

“If you ease up prematurely the epidemic can rebound right back to the level we are at now in a matter of weeks,” Murray says. “So the potential for rebound is enormous if we let up on social distancing.”

To compare states with vast differences in populations, NPR analyzed the projections by looking at deaths per 100,000 residents.

Want to see the projection for your state? Jump to our state lookup tool.

Understanding the projected range

It’s important to note that much uncertainty comes with modeling into the future. The national model has a massive gap between its low and high estimates for peak daily deaths: 1,300 and 7,700. But individual states have large gaps too. The model, for example, estimates New York’s daily deaths could range between 200 to 2,800 at its peak.

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Murray acknowledged the challenge this wide range poses to decision-makers at a press conference Monday announcing updates. He advised hospitals to hope for the best-case scenarios — but to prepare for the worst.

“In places where there’s a rapidly rising epidemic — New York, New Jersey, now other places — the ability to predict that exact peak is not as accurate as we previously said,” Murray said. “Resource planners should pay attention to the upper bound so we’re not caught off guard.”

New York was nearing 5,500 COVID-19 deaths as of Tuesday. It is expected to be the hardest hit state, in terms of raw numbers. The model projects between 12,000 and 22,000 deaths in the state, with daily deaths peaking on Thursday. That amounts to between 60 and 110 deaths for every 100,000 New Yorkers, putting New York among the worst hit states per capita as well.

The model also looks at hospital bed shortages. It projects a dramatic shortfall in New York, culminating this week. On Wednesday, the state is projected to need between 14,000 and 45,000 beds. Under normal circumstances there are only 13,000 beds available in the state, according to the modelers. (This does not take into account ongoing efforts to expand bed capacity.)

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The effect of social distancing

The model projects California will see fewer deaths than New York, despite having twice as many people living in the state. That gives California a much lower death rate relative to its number of residents.

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The difference reflects social distancing measures California took, says Ali Mokdad, a professor of health metrics sciences at IHME who helped create the model.

“California started social distancing before New York. [Californians] had one week ahead of them in order to deal with the problem, and took the right measures,” Mokdad says. “And we’re seeing the benefit.”

The model makes some key assumptions about how state leaders will act — and depending on what they do, the picture could change. First, it assumes that all states will continue social distancing through the end of May — which is longer than the White House has asked Americans to practice social distancing. Second, it assumes states that have not already implemented three key social distancing measures — closing schools, closing nonessential businesses and issuing stay-at-home orders — will do so in one week.

This second assumption is particularly important for a state like Massachusetts, which has closed nonessential businesses and schools, but has not ordered residents to stay at home. Republican Gov. Charlie Baker has resisted calls to mandate a stay-at-home order, though he has enacted a voluntary stay-at-home advisory. “I do not believe I can or should order U.S. citizens to keep confined to their homes for days on end,” Baker said last month.

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The model’s highest projections could spell tragedy for Massachusetts, estimating worse daily death tolls at the upper bounds than what even New York has experienced so far. But the figure it forecasts would still be devastating for a state of its size: 373 daily deaths near the middle of April.

Through social distancing, Mokdad says, communities and individuals can still make a difference in how bad things will get.

“We’re modeling [based on] your deck of cards right now,” he says. “If you change the deck of cards, it’s going to be totally different. If people do a better job, it’s going to go down. If they don’t — if they ignore recommendations and start partying and going out — then they will have more mortality.”

A final important note about this model: The data shows the day each state may reach its worst day for deaths between now and the beginning of August. It does not reflect surges that could happen after that.

You can view your own state’s peak and projected totals below, or see how all states compare.

Note: This projection is current as of April 7, at 5 p.m. ET, and will be updated periodically as the modelers input new data. The visualization shows the day each state may reach its worst day for deaths between now and Aug. 4.

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Stephanie Adeline, Nurith Aizenman, Daniel Wood contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/04/07/825479416/new-yorks-coronavirus-deaths-may-level-off-soon-when-might-your-state-s-peak

President Donald Trump on Tuesday said he never read or considered reading a memorandum in which his top trade adviser warned of the need to implement an “aggressive containment” strategy to prevent a massive loss of life and economic damage from the COVID-19 pandemic.

The document in question was authored in January by the White House Director of Trade and Manufacturing Policy, Dr. Peter Navarro, and submitted to the president via National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien.

In it, he warned of “an increasing probability of a full-blown COVID-19 pandemic that could infect as many as 100 million Americans, with a loss of life as many as 1-2 million souls.”

Navarro, a maverick Harvard-educated economist who has long advocated a tougher stance against Chinese trade practices, pressed for “an immediate travel ban on China” as part of an “aggressive containment” strategy to mitigate what a Council of Economic Advisers study predicted could be a $3.8 trillion loss in terms of economic act as a result of a pandemic.

But when asked about the memorandum during a White House press briefing on Tuesday, Trump said he did not see it at the time.

“I heard he wrote some memos talking about a pandemic,” Trump said. “I didn’t see them, I didn’t look for them either.”

Pressed further on when he became aware of the memorandum’s existence, Trump said he asked Navarro about the documents “just a little while ago” after reading about them.

“I said: ‘Did you do a memo?'” Trump recalled, adding that he still neither looked for the document, saw the document, or asked Navarro to show him the document.

When it was pointed out to Trump that he’d been downplaying the seriousness of the threat from COVID-19 at the time Navarro penned his memos warning of the consequences ignoring it could bring, Trump defended his nonchalant attitude as part of being a “cheerleader” for the US.

“Well, the cases really didn’t build up for a while, but you have to understand, I’m a cheerleader for this country,” he said.

“I don’t want to create havoc and shock and everything else but ultimately, when I was saying that I’m also closing it down I obviously was concerned about it because I closed down our country to China, which was heavily infected,” he continued, adding later that at the time he was “not going to go out and start screaming: This could happen! This could happen!”

While Trump has frequently bragged of having “closed down” travel from China on February 2, the measures he implemented ended up being far from what Navarro pushed for.

Instead, the restrictions Trump has touted as evidence that he took the threat of COVID-19 seriously when confronted with statements he made downplaying it applied only to foreign nationals, and did not cover residents of Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan. U.S. citizens and permanent residents were also exempt from the restrictions, and incoming flights did not stop landing at U.S. airports until several weeks later. Nearly 40,000 people arrived on inbound flights from China in the 60 days after Trump imposed the partial restrictions he now touts as a ban, according to The New York Times.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/trump-says-he-never-read-looked-memo-warning-possible-coronavirus-pandemic-1496707

Justice Ginsburg said that approach trivialized “a matter of utmost importance.”

The contrasting visions of the two sides, one viewing the case as minor and technical and the other as an effort to vindicate a fundamental constitutional value, amounted to a deep disagreement about the judicial role in voting rights cases.

In public comments, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. often insists that the justices “don’t work as Democrats or Republicans.” But he and his fellow Republican appointees have frequently voted to restrict voting rights in ways that have primarily helped Republicans.

Chief Justice Roberts wrote the majority opinion, for instance, in Shelby County v. Holder, the 2013 voting rights decision that effectively gutted the Voting Rights Act by a 5-to-4 vote. Freed from the act’s constraints, states controlled by Republicans almost immediately started imposing an array of restrictions on voting, including voter ID laws, cutbacks on early voting and purges of voter registration rolls.

Some scholars said the public should not assume that the justices were driven by partisanship rather than their judicial philosophies.

“It’s unfortunate that both the Wisconsin and U.S. Supreme Court rulings broke down the way they did, because it lends credence to the perception that law is increasingly no different than politics,” said Ilya Shapiro, a lawyer with the Cato Institute, the libertarian group. “But the decisions weren’t partisan.”

“Republican-appointed judges tend to want to apply the law as written, while Democrat-appointed ones want to see ‘justice’ done, even if it means bending the rules,” he said. “In the Wisconsin context, Republican-affiliated judges would leave any decision to delay the election or change its operation to the Legislature, while Democrat-affiliated ones want to fix the problem themselves.”

“I agree with the former approach,” Mr. Shapiro said, “because, even in a pandemic, we shouldn’t cast aside the rule of law or the separation of powers.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/07/us/politics/wisconsin-elections-supreme-court.html

It also projects the wrong image to America’s enemies and allies, as a cascading series of leadership changes calls into question the stability of America’s sea service.

“There is never a good time for a crisis in leadership, but having it in the middle of a pandemic is a particularly awful time,” said Ray Mabus, who served as Navy secretary under former President Barack Obama.

Lawmakers, national security experts and Navy veterans alike disavowed Modly’s extraordinary remarks to the crew of the aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt on Sunday. Modly had just fired Capt. Brett Crozier for blasting an email to Navy personnel asking for aid as the carrier was forced to dock in Guam, coronavirus running rampant through the ship’s decks.

In a speech to the crew that was later leaked to the media, Modly called Crozier’s actions “naïve” and “stupid.” The decision to give the address, as well as the abrupt move to fire Crozier before uniformed Navy officials had completed an investigation into the incident, crossed a critical line, upsetting the delicate balance between civilian and military control of the service, former officials said.

“The final adjudication is with the chief of naval personnel,” said retired Vice Adm. John Miller, former commander of 5th Fleet, which oversees the Middle East. “Having Modly, who is senior to everyone in uniform in the Navy, be the relieving officer makes that whole review process more difficult.”

Others called for the speedy confirmation of a permanent replacement for the last Senate-confirmed Navy secretary, Richard Spencer. After Spencer was ousted in late November over his handling of Navy SEAL Chief Eddie Gallagher — President Donald Trump wanted the chief’s SEAL insignia restored after granting the sailor clemency — Trump nominated Kenneth Braithwaite, the former ambassador to Norway, for the job. Yet his nomination has languished in the Senate for several weeks.

After a break-neck chain of events that began when Crozier’s letter asking for help surfaced on March 31, followed by Modly’s firing, his speech to the crew and Tuesday’s departure, the Navy Department now finds itself under the temporary leadership of James McPherson, retired rear admiral who was confirmed to be the Army’s No. 2 a mere 15 days ago.

“The Department of the Navy needs to have a Senate-confirmed Secretary of the Navy — now,” said Michael Mulroy, who served as deputy assistant secretary of defense for Middle East policy until December and now works for ABC News.

After meeting with Defense Secretary Mark Esper on Tuesday morning, Modly sent a letter to his boss saying it was time to go.

“He resigned on his own accord, putting the Navy and Sailors above self so that the USS Theodore Roosevelt, and the Navy as an institution, can move forward,” Esper said in a statement.

In his resignation letter, a copy of which was obtained by POLITICO, Modly thanked Esper and Trump for their “confidence” in him.

“More than anything, I owe every member of the Navy and Marine Corps team a lifetime of gratitude for the opportunity to serve for them, and with them, once again,” Modly wrote. “The men and women of the Department of the Navy deserve a continuity of civilian leadership befitting our great Republic, and the decisive naval force that secures our way of life.”

Modly was more loquacious in a memo to the force, in which he acknowledged that he “lost situational awareness” during his address to the Roosevelt’s crew.

“You are justified in being angry with me about that,” Modly wrote in the memo. “There is no excuse, but perhaps a glimpse of understanding, and hopefully empathy.”

“I am deeply sorry for some of the words and for how they spread across the media landscape like a wildfire,” Modly continued.

Later in the four-page memo, Modly urged sailors not to “ be afraid” to bring up issues of concern to their immediate superiors, but noted that “there is a proper, courteous and respectful way to do this.”

Just hours earlier, on Monday night, Modly apologized to the crew and its former captain,

“I want to apologize to the Navy for my recent comments to the crew of the TR,” Modly said in a statement. “Let me be clear, I do not think Captain Brett Crozier is naïve nor stupid. I think, and always believed him to be the opposite.”

Yet the mea culpa wasn’t enough. On Monday and continuing throughout the day Tuesday, Democratic lawmakers called on Modly to resign or be fired.

Mabus criticized Crozier’s remarks, noting in an interview that “the notion that a civilian leader would go on a warship and say these things about a captain who was obviously beloved and who had done this for his crew just defies imagination.”

Mabus blamed Trump for cultivating an environment in which “the only people who seem to thrive are people who either emulate or suck up to him.” He accused the president of politicizing the military and interfering with the military’s regular justice system.

“The tone comes from the top,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/04/07/thomas-modly-coronavirus-speech-resign-navy-172625

As the novel coronavirus sweeps across the United States, it appears to be infecting and killing black Americans at a disproportionately high rate, according to a Washington Post analysis of early data from jurisdictions across the country.

The emerging stark racial disparity led the surgeon general Tuesday to acknowledge in personal terms the increased risk for African Americans amid growing demands that public-health officials release more data on the race of those who are sick, hospitalized and dying of a contagion that has killed more than 12,000 people in the United States.

A Post analysis of what data is available and census demographics shows that counties that are majority-black have three times the rate of infections and almost six times the rate of deaths as counties where white residents are in the majority.

African Americans by percentage of population and share of coronavirus deaths

Only a few jurisdictions publicly report coronavirus cases and deaths by race.

In Milwaukee County, home to Wisconsin’s largest city, African Americans account for 73 percent of the dead but just 26 percent of the population. The disparity is similar in Louisiana, where 70 percent of the people who have died were black, although African Americans make up just 32 percent of the state’s population.

In Michigan, where the state’s 845 reported deaths outrank all but New York’s and New Jersey’s, African Americans account for 33 percent of cases and 40 percent of deaths, despite comprising only 14 percent of the population. The state does not offer a breakdown of race by county or city, but more than a quarter of deaths occurred in Detroit, where African Americans make up 79 percent of the population.

And in Illinois, a disparity nearly identical to Michigan’s exists at the state level, but the picture becomes far starker when looking at data just from Chicago, where black residents have died at a rate six times that of white residents. Of the city’s 118 reported deaths, nearly 70 percent were black — a share 40 points greater than the percentage of African Americans living in Chicago.

Note: Data per 100k based on averages.
Source: John Hopkins University and American Community Survey.

President Trump acknowledged for the first time the racial disparity at the White House task force briefing Tuesday.

“We are doing everything in our power to address this challenge, and it’s a tremendous challenge,” Trump said. “It’s terrible.” He added that Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, “is looking at it very strongly.”

“Why is it three or four times more so for the black community as opposed to other people?” Trump said. “It doesn’t make sense, and I don’t like it, and we are going to have statistics over the next probably two to three days.”

Detailed data on the race of coronavirus patients has been reported publicly in fewer than a dozen states and several more counties.

African Americans’ higher rates of diabetes, heart disease and lung disease are well-documented, and Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards (D) noted those that health problems make people more vulnerable to the new respiratory disease. But there never has been a pandemic that brought the disparities so vividly into focus.

“I’ve shared myself personally that I have high blood pressure,” said Surgeon General Jerome Adams, who is 45, “that I have heart disease and spent a week in the [intensive care unit] due to a heart condition, that I actually have asthma and I’m prediabetic, and so I represent that legacy of growing up poor and black in America.”

Adams added, “It breaks my heart” to hear about higher covid-19 death rates in the black community, emphasizing that recommendations to stay at home to slow the spread are for everyone to follow.

On Monday, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law and hundreds of doctors joined a group of Democratic lawmakers, including Sens. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.), Cory Booker (N.J.) and Kamala D. Harris (Calif.), in demanding that the federal government release daily race and ethnicity data on coronavirus testing, patients and their health outcomes.

To date, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has only released figures by age and gender.

Legislators, civic advocates and medical professionals say the information is needed to ensure that African Americans and other people of color have equal access to testing and treatment, and also to help to develop a public-health strategy to protect those who are more vulnerable.

In its letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, the Lawyers’ Committee said the Trump administration’s “alarming lack of transparency and data is preventing public health officials from understanding the full impact of this pandemic on Black communities and other communities of color.”

As pressure mounted, a CDC spokesman said Tuesday that the agency plans to include covid-19 hospitalizations by race and ethnicity in its next Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, more than six weeks after the first American died of the disease.

Health departments nationwide report coronavirus cases to the CDC using a standardized form that asks for a range of demographic information, including race and ethnicity. However, fields are often left blank and those local agencies are “under a tremendous amount of strain to collect and report case information,” said Scott Pauley, a CDC spokesman.

As the disease has spread in the United States, information on age, gender and county of residence also has been reported inconsistently and sporadically.

In some regions, lawmakers are pushing to fill the data gap on their own. Virginia reports the racial breakdown of its cases but not of its deaths. In neighboring Maryland, Gov. Larry Hogan (R) said Tuesday the state would begin to release data about race, a day after more than 80 members of the House of Delegates sent him a letter asking for the information.

Del. Nick Mosby, a Democrat who represents Baltimore, has pushed for the data for weeks after he started hearing from friends, colleagues and his Omega Psi Phi fraternity brothers about black men who were infected or were dying of covid-19.

“It was kind of frightening,” Mosby said. “I started receiving calls about people I knew personally.”

In Washington, D.C., this week, district officials released race data for the first time, showing that the disease has killed African Americans in disproportionately high numbers. Nearly 60 percent of the District’s 22 fatalities were black, but African Americans make up about 46 percent of the city’s population.

Like many other jurisdictions, the District’s health officials don’t know the race of many people who have tested positive. In an interview with MSNBC on Tuesday, Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) said that the city lacked race data on half of all positive cases but that the existing data was enough for her to be “very fearful of the impact that this virus is going to have disproportionately on African Americans in our country.”

“We know that underlying conditions, like hypertension and diabetes and heart disease, this virus is particularly hard on,” Bowser said. “And we know that African Americans are living with those underlying conditions every day, probably in larger proportions than most of our fellow Americans.”

Although the disparities have garnered national attention in recent days, some predominantly black communities have been rocked by the outbreak for the past several weeks.

Dougherty County and the city of Albany, in rural southwest Georgia, have recorded the highest number of deaths in Georgia. Dougherty, with a population of 90,000, had 939 positive cases and 52 deaths as of Tuesday.

By contrast, Fulton County, which includes Atlanta and has a population of more than 1 million, had 1,124 cases and 36 deaths. Black residents make up 70 percent of Dougherty’s population and more than 90 percent of coronavirus deaths, said county coroner Michel Fowler.

“Historically, when America catches a cold, black America catches pneumonia,” Albany City Commissioner Demetrius Young said last week.

Elected officials and public-health experts have pointed to generations of discrimination and distrust between black communities and the health-care system. African Americans are also more likely to be uninsured and live in communities with inadequate health-care facilities.

As a result, African Americans have historically been disproportionately diagnosed with chronic diseases such as asthma, hypertension and diabetes — underlying conditions that experts say make covid-19 more lethal.

Critics of the public-health response have cited confusing messaging about how the virus is transmitted and have noted that some public officials were slow to take action to push people out of public spaces and into their homes to encourage social distancing.

Even then, some activists argued, black people might have been more exposed because many held low-wage or essential jobs, such as food service, public transit and health care, that required them to continue to interact with the public.

“This outbreak is exposing the deep structural inequities that make communities pushed to the margins more vulnerable to health crises in good times and in bad,” Dorianne Mason, the director of health equity at the National Women’s Law Center, said in a statement. “These structural inequities in our health care system do not ignore racial and gender disparities — and neither should our response to this pandemic.”

David Montgomery, Ovetta Wiggins, Samantha Pell and Darran Simon contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2020/04/07/coronavirus-is-infecting-killing-black-americans-an-alarmingly-high-rate-post-analysis-shows/

LONDON – British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is in “good spirits” after spending the night in an intensive care unit in London where he is being treated for coronavirus, the leader’s office said Tuesday. 

Johnson, 55, is being treated with oxygen but is not on a ventilator.

He was admitted to St. Thomas’ Hospital in central London on Sunday because he had persistent symptoms of COVID-19, including a temperature and cough, almost two weeks after testing positive for the respiratory illness. 

Coronavirus live updates:Boris Johnson remains in ICU; Anthony Fauci sees ‘positive signs’ in hot spots; Wisconsin polls open

A Downing Street spokesman said Johnson is in a stable condition. “He has not required mechanical ventilation or noninvasive respiratory support,” he said.  

Johnson is the first major world leader to fall ill with the virus. He designated Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab to run the country in his absence. 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2020/04/07/coronavirus-covid-19-boris-johnson/2960288001/

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has removed the lead watchdog overseeing the $2 trillion coronavirus package, just days after the official, Glenn Fine, was appointed to the role.

The move came as Trump pursued similar action in recent weeks against independent inspectors general across the federal government.

Fine had been the acting Pentagon inspector general until Monday afternoon, when Trump abruptly removed him from his post. 

“Yesterday, the President nominated Mr. Jason Abend for the position of DoD Inspector General,” said Dwrena Allen, a spokesperson for the Defense Department’s Inspector General, in a statement to CNBC.

“The same day, the President also designated Mr. Sean W. O’Donnell, who is the Environmental Protection Agency Inspector General (EPA IG), to serve as the Acting DoD IG in addition to his current duties at the EPA,” Allen said.

“Mr. Fine is no longer on the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee,” Allen said, and he now “reverts to his position as the Principal Deputy Inspector General.”

Fine had been chosen March 30 to lead the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee by his fellow inspectors general, who were tasked by the new law to select a chairman for their committee.

By removing Fine from his Pentagon job, Trump effectively eliminated Fine from the oversight committee, since only sitting inspectors general can serve on the committee.

Speaking at a press conference Tuesday evening, Trump said he had never met Fine, but suggested he was a Democratic appointee. “We have a lot of IGs from the Obama era, and I left them, largely. But when we have reports of bias, and we have different things coming in.” 

In fact, Fine was first confirmed by the Senate to be an inspector general in 2000, during the George W. Bush administration. After 11 years at the inspector general of the Justice Department, Fine returned to the private sector in 2011. In 2015, he came back to government as a deputy inspector general for the Pentagon.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/07/coronavirus-relief-trump-removes-inspector-general-overseeing-2-trillion-package.html

Lawmakers were given notice Tuesday that Trump had designated Sean O’Donnell, the inspector general of the Environmental Protection Agency, to take over the Pentagon watchdog’s office in addition to his current post. That designation negated Fine’s appointment to the coronavirus oversight panel.

“Yesterday, the President nominated Mr. Jason Abend for the position of DoD Inspector General,” Allen said. “The same day, the President also designated Mr. Sean W. O’Donnell, who is the Environmental Protection Agency Inspector General (EPA IG), to serve as the Acting DoD IG in addition to his current duties at the EPA.”

Trump’s decision to have the EPA inspector general simultaneously monitor the sprawling Department of Defense is also raising alarms among environmental advocates, who worry oversight of EPA could suffer as a result.

“It is going to affect, probably adversely, the IG function of EPA,” said Stan Meiburg, a 40-year regional EPA chief and member of the Environmental Protection Network. “DOD is a monster organization and will overwhelm the demands on an EPA IG. How anyone could do both jobs escapes me.”

There are indications, though, that O’Donnell isn’t afraid to ruffle feathers among Trump appointees. Despite being on the job at EPA for just a few months, O’Donnell has already clashed with Trump officials there several times.

Last week, O’Donnell issued an unusual alert publicly warning that EPA has failed to tell communities about the risks of living near medical sterilization plants and chemical plants that emit a carcinogenic gas. EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler demanded the alert be rescinded and said he felt blindsided.

Under O’Donnell, the Office of the Inspector General granted a request from Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) to look into how EPA reviews state air quality clean-up plans, a probe stemming from last year’s battle between the Trump administration and California over environmental enforcement. And earlier this month, O’Donnell issued a report showing a long-term enforcement decline at EPA, drawing criticism from agency leadership.

The new coronavirus law includes multiple layers of oversight, the most powerful of which is the panel of inspectors general given wide latitude to probe any aspect of its implementation. Fine was named by fellow inspectors general to lead that panel just last week. Now, his colleagues will be forced to make a new selection.

Fine had been the acting Pentagon watchdog since early 2016 after joining the Defense Department inspector general’s office in 2015 during the Obama administration. He was previously the Justice Department’s inspector general from 2000 to 2011, spanning three administrations of both parties.

Abend, who has been nominated to take over as the permanent Pentagon inspector general, is a senior policy adviser with U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

But the Senate is out of session until at least April 20, and a shortened election-year calendar will give the Senate Armed Services Committee precious little time to confirm Abend, meaning O’Donnell may be in for an extended stay at the Pentagon.

Alex Guillén contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/04/07/trump-removes-independent-watchdog-for-coronavirus-funds-upending-oversight-panel-171943

Coronavirus deaths in New York surged by 731 on Monday, the biggest single-day jump in COVID-19 fatalities since the outbreak began a few months ago, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Tuesday.

The jump in fatalities comes even as the number of intensive care admissions starts to decline, giving the state some needed breathing room to ramp up supplies and staff to handle an expected wave of cases over the next few weeks, he said. Earlier in the day, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said the number of coronavirus patients being placed on ventilators in recent days has been better than expected, giving the city precious time to secure necessary supplies for a wave of patients expected to hit local hospitals in the next few weeks.

So far, 5,489 people in the state have died from the coronavirus, accounting for roughly half of all deaths in the U.S.

“Behind every one of those numbers is an individual, is a family, is a mother, is a father, is a brother, is a sister. So, a lot of pain again today,” he said at a press conference in Albany.

The number of deaths is a lagging indicator of the number of hospitalizations, Cuomo said. Those people were admitted to hospitals at the peak and weren’t successfully treated, Cuomo said, adding that they were placed on breathing machines, and “the longer you are on a ventilator the less likely” you will survive.

New York is the epicenter of the outbreak in the United States, with more than half the cases in the state in New York City, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

Cuomo said he plans to issue several executive orders later Tuesday, including one that formalizes $1,000 fines for people who aren’t following social distancing rules.

New York state health officials said they expected to have a breakdown of COVID-19 deaths by race this week. Hospitals don’t provide that information to the state, they said, so officials had to obtain it from coroners.

The virus “kills vulnerable people. That’s what it does, and it does that very well,” Cuomo said.

De Blasio also said people of color and people in lower-income communities, which historically have had more health problems, are getting hit disproportionately harder by the coronavirus. The city hasn’t released race data for the outbreak, but de Blasio said the city plans to do so later this week, although he warned that the data wasn’t preliminary.

“The extent of that disparity we’re still fully trying to understand. And the data we’ll give you will help us understand, but it will not be the final word, because … it is preliminary and imperfect in the middle of a crisis,” he said. “The ethnicity data in a crisis atmosphere where health care is being provided rapidly to everyone that can be reached, that’s been less of a focus.”

— CNBC’s Dan Mangan contributed to this article. 

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/07/new-york-coronavirus-deaths-jumped-by-731-monday-the-single-biggest-daily-increase-gov-cuomo-says.html

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg decried a decision made by the Supreme Court’s majority blocking an extension to the absentee ballot deadline in Wisconsin, where the governor unsuccessfully tried to postpone in-person voting due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The high court on Monday blocked a lower court’s extension of the ballot deadline in a 5-4 decision, just hours after the Wisconsin Supreme Court shut down Gov. Tony Evers’ last-minute executive order postponing voting in Tuesday’s contests.

In her dissent, Ginsburg, who was joined by Justices Stephen Breyer, Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor, wrote that the ruling “will result in massive disenfranchisement.”

“The question here is whether tens of thousands of Wisconsin citizens can vote safely in the midst of a pandemic. Under the District Court’s order, they would be able to do so. Even if they receive their absentee ballot in the days immediately following election day, they could return it,” RBG wrote.

“With the majority’s stay in place, that will not be possible. Either they will have to brave the polls, endangering their own and others’ safety. Or they will lose their right to vote, through no fault of their own. That is a matter of utmost importance — to the constitutional rights of Wisconsin’s citizens, the integrity of the State’s election process, and in this most extraordinary time, the health of the Nation.”

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader GinsburgGetty Images

Ginsburg went on to say she wasn’t doubting “the good faith” of her colleagues on the bench, but that the majority was not grasping just how significantly the pandemic had altered everyday life nationwide.

“The Court’s suggestion that the current situation is not ‘substantially different’ from ‘an ordinary
election’ boggles the mind,” the feminist icon wrote.

United States Supreme Court: (front, from left) Associate Justice Stephen Breyer, Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice John Roberts, Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Associate Justice Samuel Alito Jr.; (rear, from left) Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch, Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Associate Justice Elena Kagan and Associate Justice Brett KavanaughGetty Images

“Now, under this Court’s order, tens of thousands of absentee voters, unlikely to receive their ballots in time to cast them, will be left quite literally without a vote.”

In an unusual move, the Supreme Court’s majority opinion was not listed with any justice as the author and included a disclaimer early in the text that the court was only upholding the longstanding opposition to last-minute orders by federal judges that threw election processes into chaos.

It added that the court was not making an endorsement of any specific electoral practices to adopt in the wake of the coronavirus, nor was it ruling out potential changes being made to those practices in the future.

“The Court’s decision on the narrow question before the Court should not be viewed as expressing an opinion on the broader question of whether to hold the election, or whether other reforms or modifications in election procedures in light of COVID–19 are appropriate. That point cannot be stressed enough,” the majority opinion read.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/04/07/ruth-bader-ginsburg-slams-supreme-court-decision-on-wisconsin-voting/

Glenn Fine, who had been the acting Pentagon inspector general, was informed Monday that he was being replaced by Sean W. O’Donnell, currently the acting inspector general at the Environmental Protection Agency.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/trump-removes-inspector-general-who-was-to-oversee-2-trillion-stimulus-spending/2020/04/07/2f0c6cb8-78ea-11ea-9bee-c5bf9d2e3288_story.html

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Two memos circulated in the White House in late January and late February show the Trump administration was well aware of the potential dangers of the coming spread of the coronavirus, despite public presidential assurances that all was well. Both memos were authored by President Donald Trump’s trade adviser Peter Navarro. Each outlined, with growing alarm, the coming impact of the virus, and each missive was reportedly circulated around the top levels of the White House. The warnings were clear: The “risk of a worst-case pandemic scenario should not be overlooked,” Navarro’s memo dated Jan. 29 cautioned.

The Jan. 29 memo signed by Navarro and addressed to the National Security Council makes plain the stakes of the pandemic. “The lack of immune protection or an existing cure or vaccine would leave Americans defenseless in the case of a full-blown coronavirus outbreak on U.S. soil,” the memo said. “This lack of protection elevates the risk of the coronavirus evolving into a full-blown pandemic, imperiling the lives of millions of Americans.” The New York Times reports that the document was sent to the NSC and reached top White House officials, including then–acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, but it is not known if it reached Trump himself. The Jan. 29 dateline on the memo was the same day that Trump named the coronavirus task force to respond to the looming pandemic. The task force is chaired by Vice President Mike Pence and includes many of the officials who are now daily fixtures at the White House briefings on the pandemic response, including Deborah Birx and Anthony Fauci.

A week before the memo, on Jan. 22, Trump told CNBC, “We have it totally under control” and “It’s going to be just fine.” Navarro’s missive is one of the first reported documents that gives some insight into what the people around the president, and potentially Trump himself, knew in the early stages, and what information the White House was responding to, despite public denials that there was anything to worry about. In the document, Navarro refuted what would become one of Trump’s preferred talking points on the coronavirus, comparing its impact to that of the flu. It is “unlikely the introduction of the coronavirus into the U.S. population in significant numbers will mimic a ‘seasonal flu’ event with relatively low contagion and mortality rates,” the memo reads. Trump would continue to use the faulty flu analogy for more than six weeks. “We’re talking about a much smaller range” of deaths than from the flu, Trump said as recently as early March.

Two days after the memo’s warning, on Jan. 31, Trump placed travel restrictions on non-American citizens who had recently visited China. Days later, Fox News host Sean Hannity asked Trump during an interview, “Coronavirus, how concerned are you?” “Well, we pretty much shut it down coming in from China,” Trump responded. A week later, on Feb. 10, Trump adopted a new line that the warm weather would prompt the virus to “go away.” “Looks like by April, you know, in theory, when it gets a little warmer, it miraculously goes away,” Trump told supporters at a campaign rally. “I think the numbers are going to get progressively better as we go along,” he said in a TV interview a little more than a week later.

The second memo, dated Feb. 23, which was unsigned but attributed to Navarro, addressed the president directly. In it, the Trump adviser warned of the “increasing probability of a full-blown COVID-19 pandemic that could infect as many as 100 million Americans, with a loss of life of as many as 1–2 million souls.” The same day, Trump told reporters on the White House lawn, “We have it very much under control in this country.” The memo shows the early seeds of what would later become the government’s multibillion-dollar rescue package to try to stabilize the economy. The New York Times reports that the memo “called for an increase [in] funding for the government to purchase personal protective equipment for health care workers, estimating they would need ‘at least a billion face masks’ over a four-to-six-month period.” “Any member of the Task Force who wants to be cautious about appropriating funds for a crisis that could inflict trillions of dollars in economic damage and take millions of lives has come to the wrong administration,” the memo said. Five days later, on Feb. 28, Trump declared in South Carolina that Democratic criticism of the government’s response was the Democrats’ “new hoax.

“It’s an unforeseen problem,” Trump said of the pandemic a week later, on March 6. “What a problem. Came out of nowhere.”

Source Article from https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/04/navarro-coronavirus-memos-trump-pandemic-warning.amp

LONDON – British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is in “good spirits” after spending the night in an intensive care unit in London where he is being treated for coronavirus, the British leader’s office said Tuesday. 

Johnson, 55, is being treated with oxygen but is not on a ventilator.

He was admitted to St Thomas’ Hospital in central London on Sunday because he had “persistent symptoms of COVID-19, including a temperature and cough, almost two weeks after testing positive for the respiratory illness. 

Coronavirus live updates:Boris Johnson remains in ICU; Anthony Fauci sees ‘positive signs’ in hot spots; Wisconsin polls open

A Downing Street spokesman said Johnson is in a stable condition. “He has not required mechanical ventilation or non-invasive respiratory support,” he said.  

Johnson is the world’s major world leader to fall ill with the virus. He has designated Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab to run the country in his absence. 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2020/04/07/coronavirus-covid-19-boris-johnson/2960288001/