WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said the Centers for Disease Control now recommends using a cloth face covering to protect against coronavirus, but said he does not plan to do so himself. 

Speaking at a White House news conference on Friday, Trump stressed that the recommendations were merely voluntary, not required. “I don’t think I’m going to be doing it” he said as he announced the new guidance. 

Responding to a question about why he had chosen not to follow the recommendations he himself was announcing, Trump said, “I’m feeling good. I just don’t want to be doing — somehow sitting in the Oval Office behind that beautiful resolute desk, the great resolute desk, i think wearing a face mask as I greet presidents, prime ministers, dictators, kings, queens, I don’t know, somehow I don’t see it for myself. I just don’t. Maybe I’ll change my mind.”

Trump has faced criticism from both Republicans and Democrats for downplaying of the seriousness of the pandemic, although his tone has changed in the past week as U.S. cases have soared past a quarter of a million. Still, his decision to flout the CDC’s guidelines is likely to draw further criticism from public health experts.

The CDC’s website explained that the recommendations were updated following new studies that some infected people can transmit the coronavirus even without displaying symptoms of the disease.

“In light of this new evidence, CDC recommends wearing cloth face coverings in public settings where other social distancing measures are difficult to maintain,” such as in grocery stores or pharmacies, “especially in areas of significant community-based transmission,” the CDC says.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/03/trump-cdc-recommends-cloth-face-covering-to-protect-against-coronavirus.html

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/04/03/politics/joe-biden-trump-china-coronavirus/index.html

“The notion of the federal stockpile was it’s supposed to be our stockpile. It’s not supposed to be states’ stockpiles that they then use,” he said. “So we’re encouraging the states to make sure that they’re assessing the needs, they’re getting the data from their local situations, and then trying to fill it with the supplies that we’ve given them.”

Katherine McKeogh, a spokeswoman for the Department of Health and Human Services, said in a statement Friday that the edits to the stockpile’s webpage had been in the works prior to Kushner’s remarks.

“This is language we have been using in our messaging for weeks now,” McKeogh said. She added that the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response “first began working to update the text a week ago to more clearly explain to state and local agencies and members of the public the role of the [Strategic National Stockpile].”

Four Democratic senators demanded Friday night HHS’s Office of Inspector General launch an independent investigation into the change to the description of the stockpile, describing the action as “potential improper interference … to advance a political agenda.”

“The timing of the deletion appears related to Jared Kushner’s inaccurate statement yesterday that, ‘And the notion of the Federal stockpile was it’s supposed to be our stockpile; it’s not supposed to be State stockpiles that they then use,'” wrote Sens. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii).

Another HHS spokesperson also told POLITICO Tuesday that the role of the stockpile “is to supplement state and local supplies during public health emergencies, limited displacements, localized disasters and terrorist attacks.”

Dr. Ali Khan, who oversaw the stockpile as the former director of the Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response, said the differing explanations of the national inventory amounted to a matter of “semantics,” and that all tiers of government “have a cascading responsibility for disasters.”

“For all emergencies you deplete local resources & recruit new resources in an escalating hierarchy before going to the feds,” he said in a statement.

Congress authorized the creation of the national stockpile of medical supplies in the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness Response Act, which passed in 2002, nine months after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.

The legislation orders the Secretary of Health and Human Services to “maintain a stockpile or stockpiles of drugs, vaccines and other biological products, medical devices, and other supplies … to provide for the emergency health security of the United States.”

The secretary, the law says, must also “devise plans for the effective and timely supply-chain management of the stockpile, in consultation with appropriate Federal, State and local agencies, and the public and private health care infrastructure.”

The shifting definition of the stockpile’s function comes as Kushner has seized greater influence over the administration’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic from a new perch within the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

The president’s son-in-law had until Thursday maintained a low public profile amid the federal response. But he has been working over the past month with a group of outside experts to improve testing capabilities and hasten the production and distribution of emergency supplies.

A White House spokesperson had no comment when asked whether the White House ordered the change to the stockpile’s webpage.

Oversight of the stockpile has come under increased scrutiny from health experts and lawmakers, including Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.), who is urging the HHS inspector general to investigate possible mismanagement of the repository’s cache of ventilators.

Gardner also expressed confusion Friday over Kushner’s comment regarding the stockpile, telling POLITICO: “I don’t know what Kushner was talking about, what he meant. But the stockpile is for the country. And the country is made up of states in the federal government.”

President Donald Trump and his allies have repeatedly sparred with state and local authorities in recent weeks over their requests for ventilators, personal protective equipment and other critical medical supplies needed to treat those suffering from Covid-19, the illness caused by the unique coronavirus.

On Thursday, Trump tweeted that some states “have insatiable appetites & are never satisfied (politics?),” adding: “Remember, we are a backup for them. The complainers should … have been stocked up and ready long before this crisis hit.”

Trump has specifically cast doubt on New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s demands, accusing him of asking for more ventilators than the state needs and fumbling management of his own local stockpiles.

Cuomo has denied exaggerating the nature of the threat in New York, the current epicenter of the outbreak in the U.S., and explained that he is simply building up reserves of supplies across the state for when its health care systems inevitably become overwhelmed.

David Lim, Daniel Lippman and Doug Palmer contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/04/03/strategic-national-stockpile-description-altered-after-kushners-remarks-163181

Jason Hargrove was behind the wheel of a bus in Detroit when he said a passenger began to cough. The middle-aged woman let loose four or five times without covering her mouth, he said, and watching her do this — at the same time Michigan was under a state of emergency for the coronavirus — got him so upset, he felt compelled to vent his frustrations in a video afterward.

“I’m mad right about now because that s*** was uncalled for. I’m trying to be the professional that they want me to be, and I kept my mouth closed,” he said, voice breaking with emotion. “I kept my mouth closed, but it’s at some point in time we’ve got to draw the line and say enough is enough.”

Now, nearly two weeks after he recorded the video, which viewers shared widely on Facebook Live, Hargrove himself has died of COVID-19. The Amalgamated Transit Union confirmed his death in a tweet posted Thursday.

The bus driver’s death “should touch everybody in the city of Detroit, should touch everybody in the country,” the city’s mayor, Mike Duggan, said at news conference Thursday, noting that Hargrove “knew the risks, was vocal about the risks, he went to work anyway.”

Duggan urged people to watch the video.

“Some of his language is graphic, but I don’t know how you can watch it and not tear up. He knew his life was being put in jeopardy — even though he was going to work for the citizens of Detroit every day — by somebody who just didn’t care, who didn’t take this seriously,” the mayor added. “And now he’s gone.”

Just days before Hargrove posted his video, bus drivers in Detroit refused to work, saying the city’s authorities were not doing enough to protect their health. The walkout, which ground Detroit’s public bus service to a halt, quickly prompted a spate of measures to keep drivers healthy amid the pandemic, including gloves for drivers and boarding at the back of buses.

Nevertheless, the danger has persisted — partly because of riders like the one Hargrove described in his video, half a week after the work stoppage, “who don’t take s*** for real while this s*** is still existing and still spreading.”

“I feel violated. I feel violated for the folks that was on the bus when this happened,” he said, adding: “To those who are watching, this — this is real. And y’all need to take this serious.”

Duggan said at his briefing Thursday that so far, eight Detroit Department of Transportation workers have tested positive for the coronavirus. Glenn Tolbert, who heads Hargrove’s transit union local, told the Detroit Free Press that drivers across the city are “obviously scared” and seeking further protection from city authorities.

Tolbert told the paper that he has tested positive for the virus, as well.

“Every time I see images of a group of people still clustering in this city or this country,” Duggan said Thursday, “I think about the Jason Hargroves on the buses, I think about the cops, I think about the nurses and the doctors in the hospitals who are going to work for you every single day. And for you not to honor the social distancing requests, you’re putting really good people like Jason Hargrove’s lives on the line.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/04/03/826817866/take-this-serious-bus-driver-dies-of-covid-19-after-calling-out-coughing-rider

The state of Wisconsin plans to hold an election on Tuesday, April 7, a vote that will include a Democratic presidential primary and an election for a seat on the state Supreme Court.

Yet, due to the web of laws governing absentee ballots in that state and the unique constraints imposed by the coronavirus pandemic, the election was on track to be a debacle. Tens of thousands of voters were likely to be disenfranchised by laws imposing obstacles on voters who cannot leave their homes to go to the polls.

On Thursday afternoon, however, a federal court handed down a decision lifting some of these obstacles. Judge William Conley’s opinion in Democratic National Committee v. Bostelmann is not a panacea for voters struggling to exercise the franchise in an age of social distancing. But it does block what is probably the biggest obstacle to the right to vote in next week’s election.

Like many state governors, Gov. Tony Evers (D-WI) issued a stay-at-home order a week ago, hoping to slow the spread of coronavirus. State officials, meanwhile, have received a crush of absentee ballot requests from voters hoping to vote by mail. As Judge Conley notes in his opinion, the state has received at least 1,119,439 such requests. Meanwhile, “in the four spring elections from 2016 to 2019, the number of absentee ballots issued ranged from a low of 103,533 in 2017 to a high of 249,503 in 2016.”

Faced with so many requests, state officials have struggled to mail out ballots fast enough for voters to actually make use of them. Worse, a state law required the state to discard any ballot that did not arrive by 8 pm on Tuesday, April 7. As a result, it would literally be impossible for thousands of voters to receive their ballot, fill it out, mail it, and then have the postal service deliver that ballot before the deadline.

According to the state’s election administrator, “approximately 27,500 voters’ absentee ballots will be received after the receipt deadline of 8:00 p.m. on the day of the election, April 7, 2020, and, therefore, will not be counted.”

Judge Conley’s order mitigates this problem by extending the deadline for ballots to arrive to 4 pm on April 13. Conley also extended the deadline for voters to apply for an absentee ballot by one day — voters now have until 5 pm on April 3 to make such a request “by mail, fax or email (and if deemed administratively feasible in the sole discretion of the [election] Administrator, online).”

That takes care of one problem. A separate problem is that Wisconsin law requires absentee voters to have someone other than the voter sign the ballot as a witness. This provision potentially disenfranchises voters who live alone, and who may not be able to make use of a witness during a period of social distancing.

Conley did not block this requirement entirely — most voters will still need to have their ballots signed by a witness. But he also ordered the state “to accept an unwitnessed ballot that contains a written affirmation or other statement by an absentee voter that due to the COVID-19 pandemic, he or she was unable to safely obtain a witness certification despite his or her reasonable efforts to do so, provided that the ballot is otherwise valid.”

This is not a perfect solution. Among other things, it is unclear how voters are supposed to learn about Conley’s order when they are alone and at home. Moreover, Conley ruled that “it will be left up to the individual discretion of [election] clerks as to whether to accept a voter’s excuse for not completing the witness certification requirement based on the written affirmation by the individual voter.” It is likely that at least some voters will be disenfranchised by overzealous clerks.

Nevertheless, Conley’s opinion is heavy with the judge’s own knowledge that he can only push so far — Conley rejected a request to delay the election entirely. He also left in place a state law requiring absentee voters to provide a copy of their photo ID, a law strongly favored by the Wisconsin Republican Party (though, as Conley also notes, many voters may be already be exempt from this requirement under a provision allowing voters who are “indefinitely confined” to vote without an ID).

If the state or the state GOP decides to appeal any part of Conley’s order, that appeal will be heard by the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, which is dominated by Republicans. And any decision by the Seventh Circuit may be reviewed by a GOP-dominated Supreme Court that is generally very unsympathetic to voting rights plaintiffs.

Although there is little time remaining before Tuesday’s election, it’s possible that either the state or the state’s Republican Party will seek an emergency stay of Conley’s order from the Seventh Circuit or the Supreme Court.

Barring such a stay, however, Conley’s order is likely to govern Tuesday’s election. While Conley’s decision is not the ideal remedy for many Wisconsin voters, it is also likely to rescue tens of thousands of voters from disenfranchisement. And it will potentially prevent an election where voters lose their right to vote based on arbitrary factors like how quickly the postal service delivers their ballot.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2020/4/3/21206148/wisconsin-judge-order-coronavirus-election-voters-ballots

New York City’s mayor, Bill de Blasio, has called for a national enlistment program for doctors and nurses, to handle an expected surge in coronavirus cases in New York and across the US.

“If we’re fighting a war, let’s act like we’re fighting a war,” he told reporters on Friday.

De Blasio has said Sunday will be “D-Day” for the “war” against coronavirus in his city, as confirmed cases, deaths and hospitalizations continue to soar and as projections forewarn a potentially devastating toll on human life.

“If we have the personnel, if we have the equipment, lives are going to be saved. If we don’t, people will die who did not need to die,” De Blasio said earlier on CNN.

“Next week in New York City is going to be very tough. Next week in New York City and Detroit and New Orleans, and a lot of other places,” he said on MSNBC’s Morning Joe.

“And unless the military is fully mobilized and we create something we’ve never had before, which is some kind of national enlistment of medical personnel moved to the most urgent needs in the country constantly … if we don’t have that we’re going to see hospitals simply unable to handle so many people who could be saved.”

Five thousand Covid-19 patients in New York City will probably be intubated and on ventilators by early next week – “a staggering number”, De Blasio said. As of now, the city only has the resources to get through Monday or Tuesday. Beyond that, he said: “We don’t know.”

The frustrated mayor reiterated that he had requested backup from the federal government in the form of 1,000 nurses, 150 doctors and 300 respiratory therapists more than a week ago. At a press conference on Friday afternoon, he confirmed his request was finally being acted on but said that if assistance did not come by Sunday, the city would face immediate challenges.

“Right now, it’s New York City, and we see it starting in some other cities as well. But I guarantee you, all 50 states will have their own battle,” De Blasio said.

His renewed pressure on Washington marks a return to normal for the mayor after a few days of unusual optimism and gratitude toward his federal counterparts.

“The cavalry keeps coming,” he said earlier in the week, as 250 ambulances and 500 EMTs and paramedics poured in from around the country thanks to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema).

Meanwhile, the crisis in New York City has grown worse. As of Friday morning, the city had 57,159 confirmed Covid-19 cases. More than 1,500 deaths had been reported. Before the health crisis, the city’s hospitals only supported roughly 20,000 beds in total; now, more than half of the system’s capacity from just a month ago has been swallowed exclusively by coronavirus patients.

De Blasio said just to get through the coming week, New York City will need a minimum of 2,500 to 3,000 ventilators. He applauded Governor Andrew Cuomo, as well as New Jersey’s governor, Phil Murphy, for announcing another drastic measure in an effort to drum up enough life-saving medical equipment and get through another day..

Cuomo said he would sign an executive order that allows the national guard to take ventilators and personal protective equipment from institutions that don’t need them right now, and redistribute them to those that do. He said those institutions would either have their ventilators returned to them or get reimbursements. Cuomo said there may be several hundred ventilators available because of the order.

Right now, the state is fielding a daily need for about 300 additional ventilators, he said. Those ventilators, officials have repeatedly explained, make the difference between life and death.

“Am I willing to deploy the national guard and inconvenience people for several hundred lives? You’re damn right I am,” Cuomo said.

Cuomo also confirmed that an 2,500-bed emergency field hospital set up at the Jacob K Javits Center in midtown Manhattan will transition to treating Covid patients, after opening to accommodate non-Covid patient overflow.

Donald Trump announced the change on Thursday amid confusion over why temporary treatment facilities meant to help overwhelmed New York City hospitals currently have few patients.

The USNS Comfort, a navy hospital ship, only had 20 patients in its 1,000 beds as of Thursday, the New York Times reported. De Blasio said he believed the floating hospital will fill up in coming days.

The Comfort is not intended to treat patients with Covid-19 and there are few non-coronavirus patients who need care, according to Cuomo.

“Hospitals have now turned into effectively ICU hospitals for Covid patients,” he said.

Cuomo also said he was concerned about an increase in Covid-19 cases on Long Island, where there are not as many resources as in New York City.

As officials respond to the crisis, the New York economy has sputtered to a halt while residents ordered to stay home lose their jobs. Unemployment insurance initial claims have soared by more than 2,700% compared with this same time last year, according to a new analysis by WalletHub of US Department of Labor data.

Almost 10 million Americans filed unemployment claims in the last two weeks of March, in light of the pandemic.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/apr/03/de-blasio-new-york-coronavirus

WASHINGTON – The Trump administration is advising people to start wearing face masks in public to stop the spread of the coronavirus, a reversal on previous guidance that urged people not to wear masks.

President Donald Trump said at a White House news conference Friday that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines are strictly voluntary. “You can do it – you don’t have to do it. It’s only a recommendation.”

Trump repeatedly stressed it is voluntary. “I don’t think i’m going to be doing it,” he said.

Trump stressed that the CDC is not calling for Americans wear medical-grade masks. Medical protective gear must be preserved for health care officials who are on the front lines treating coronavirus patients, he said.

For months, the federal government has recommended that the general public not wear masks, in part to help preserve them for health care workers. Guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention until now has said the general public did not need to wear masks unless they came into contact with coronavirus patients or if they were sick. 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/04/03/coronavirus-trump-says-cdc-recommending-voluntary-use-face-masks/2938705001/


U.S. Rep. Tom Reed | J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo

04/03/2020 03:53 PM EDT

Updated 04/03/2020 04:22 PM EDT


ALBANY, N.Y. — A dozen prominent Republicans are attacking New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s decision to seize medical equipment from upstate facilities and send it to downstate hospitals.

“[W]e have an increase in cases, hospitalizations and deaths in other parts of New York,” the Republicans said in a statement distributed by Rep. Tom Reed’s office. “Taking our ventilators by force leaves our people without protection and our hospitals unable to save lives today or respond to a coming surge. We stand together opposing the Governor’s very dangerous and reckless action. He is leaving our communities in a terrible position which will cost lives.”

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Most Republicans have previously been relatively muted in their comments on Cuomo’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic. A recent Siena poll found that 75 percent of self-identified conservatives approve of the job he’s done handling the pandemic, a number not that far off from the 79 percent who approved of President Donald Trump’s handling.

But there are always tensions between upstate and downstate lying near the surface of New York politics, with numerous upstaters believing their region is shortchanged by politicians from the city. In the first weeks of the crisis, there has been some grumbling that upstate cities are being slighted on items like tests, though it hasn’t been deafening due to the universal agreement that New York City is the epicenter or the pandemic.

As the virus spreads elsewhere, it’s a safe assumption that there will more regularly be backlash against decisions like the one Cuomo made on Friday, regardless of how many net lives the triaging of equipment ultimately saves. Some of the people who have grumbled in the past will certainly get louder.

“If I was an upstate New York sheriff, I would immediately put every ventilator and all the medical supplies in my county under armed guard,” conservative Rochester radio host Bob Lonsberry tweeted Friday afternoon. “In another era among a freer people, Andy’s theft of the medical supplies necessary to save our people would be met with forcible resistance.”

Cuomo said the medical supplies that would be redistributed would come from places such as “who are not dealing with Covid” and “are seeing very low activity.”

“In addressing the coronavirus pandemic, it is essential that we all work together,” Cuomo adviser Rich Azzopardi said. “Ventilators literally save lives. They will be returned or reimbursed to those hospitals. Moreover, when the pandemic wave hits upstate New York, the governor will ask downstate hospitals for similar help. We are not upstate or downstate, we are one state and we act that way.”

In addition to Reed, the statement was signed by Rep. Elise Stefanik; state Sens. Rob Ortt, George Borrello, Chris Jacobs, Pamela Helming, Rich Funke and Fred Akshar; and members of the Assembly Phil Palmesano, Christopher Friend, Andy Goodell and Marjorie Byrnes.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/new-york/albany/story/2020/04/03/new-york-republicans-lash-out-over-cuomos-plan-to-reallocate-medical-equipment-9422383

The impact of his chief legislative achievement — a big tax-cut bill heavily focused on corporations — is now moot after mostly delivering stock buybacks and dividend payments rather than a boom in corporate investment. Perhaps the big increase in corporate investment would have eventually materialized. But now we will never know.

Economic growth is dropping off a cliff, with estimates for a first-quarter decline of around 4 percent and a second-quarter plunge of 25 percent or more. Stocks have crashed around 30 percent since setting record highs in February. Oil prices are tanking, which means cheap gas but also a massive hit to the energy sector, slamming red states the hardest and undermining Trump’s boast of America’s energy dominance.

Trump will head into reelection as the economy struggles to dig out of a deep recession that some economists fear could become a depression. The pieces are in place for Trump to wind up like Herbert Hoover, who saw his presidency destroyed by the Depression and his response. Trump’s challenge will be to quickly reverse that impression by rallying Republicans to enact even more deficit-fueled spending and social programs, forcing the president to appear more like Franklin D. Roosevelt and less like the smaller-government conservatives who helped fuel his rise to the White House.

“The economic and social underpinnings of the Trump era are giving way to the economic logic of pandemics,” said Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at financial firm RSM U.S. “In a clear-eyed, sober assessment, if on November 3, 2020 there are more than 100,000 dead and the unemployment rate is at 15 percent, Trump is not going to get reelected. We could resurrect George Washington and Thomas Jefferson and I doubt they could survive that either.”

There are other possible outcomes, of course.

If efforts to restrain the growth of the virus succeed quickly and if an effective vaccine is discovered sooner than expected, then perhaps the economy can recover faster than many expect. The Trump administration, Congress and the Federal Reserve moved relatively quickly to pump trillions of dollars into the economy to stem the flood of layoffs and push money into the pockets of millions of Americans — potentially creating conditions for a sharp, V-shaped bounce-back in the economy.

Some of those efforts — especially emergency loans to small businesses — are off to a rocky start with many large banks like JPMorgan Chase saying the rules are not clear enough for them to start making loans. It also may take weeks for millions of Americans to get their direct cash stimulus payments.

But the president is nothing if not a master of reframing the narrative in any way he deems helpful. And early positive poll numbers for his handling of the virus — though now fading — suggest there is at least the possibility that he could campaign as the president who beat back the virus and got the economy moving forward again after taking such a massive punch to the face. But that requires an awful lot of things to go remarkably — if not impossibly — right. And thus far that has not happened.

“He can still resurrect his agenda — if the virus tapers off by summer,” said Gregory Valliere, chief U.S. policy strategist at AGF investments. “But he’s in danger of losing in November, and the risks are growing daily. The public will not give him high grades for anticipating and dealing with this crisis. But he’s a master salesman and could spin a story by October that things are turning around. But the Democrats’ ads will just keep repeating his dismissive comments on the virus from this March.”

Other analysts note that Trump’s odds of winning in online betting markets have actually risen during the coronavirus crisis. And the nation is now so polarized — and Trump’s base support so solid — that the presidential election will likely be close no matter what happens with the economy.

“He can certainly win if this turns into a fast recovery and he can point to an improving trend and take credit for it,” said Scott Clemons, chief investment strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman. “And he can make the argument, which has been made before, that ‘How do you fire a war-time president in the middle of the fight?’”

The question is whether it appears that Trump is a war time president who is losing the fight.

Most economists suggest the economic hit from the coronavirus will be vastly higher in the April jobs report, due out on May 8. That figure is likely to send shock waves through Washington and Wall Street and underscore the challenge Trump faces in avoiding a Hoover-style loss in November.

“Given the close to 10 million initial claims for unemployment insurance the economy will lose closer to 15 million jobs in next month’s report for April,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. “The economic damage is due to the business shutdowns across the country necessary to contain the virus. GDP is over one-fourth lower today as a result of the impact of the fallout.”

Trump and other White House advisers have regularly lamented that the economy was booming before the coronavirus hit and should have set up the president for a strong run to reelection. They now know that the president’s future depends on a quick decline in new coronavirus cases and a fast snap back in the economy in the second half of the year.

Trump himself has cycled between bitter clashes with Democrats and state governors over the virus response and high-minded calls for the country to unite and fight back together.

“The American spirit is unyielding, unwavering and unbreakable,“ the president said this week. “It is incredible. I have never seen anything like it, the way — the way the people have pulled together, the unity of this country.“

And he predicted a dramatic rebound later this year, before his electoral fate is determined, supported by a fourth aid package to support the coronavirus response. “I think we are going to have a tremendous rebound and there’s a great energy and a great pent-up demand and as you know ‘phase three’ was terrific and ‘phase four’ if that happens will be great,“ Trump predicted.

There are significant hurdles to making Trump’s rebound scenario occur. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said Thursday that the federal government should impose a nationwide stay-at-home order to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus. That could help on the health front but would cause even more near-term economic pain.

“I don’t understand why that‘s not happening,“ Fauci told CNN on a national stay-at-home order. “If you look at what’s going on in this country, I just don’t understand why we’re not doing that. We really should be.”

And as of now there is little agreement in Congress on what exactly a phase four federal relief package would look like. Trump wants $2 trillion in infrastructure spending. Senator Mitch McConnell has said he wants to wait to see the impact of Phase 3 before considering a new package. And Democrats led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi have a long list of demands including more aid for states, localities and individuals that Republicans may oppose.

The brutal numbers expected in coming months could rally Washington to come up with another big, bipartisan rescue package. But by then it may be too late to boost Trump’s electoral prospects.

“If economists and the markets see a light at the end of the tunnel this fall, maybe Trump has a chance,” said Valliere. “But much will depend on whether we’ll get a quick recovery, and that’s far from certain. A more likely scenario is a modest, halting recovery that may not accelerate until early next year. But that would be too late for Trump.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/04/03/trump-economic-record-coronavirus-163076

In late March, Jason Hargrove, a public bus driver in Detroit, posted a live Facebook video about a woman coughing on his bus several times without covering her mouth.

“That lets me know that some folks don’t care,” he said, in an emotional live stream. “You all need to take this shit seriously. There’s folks dying out here.”

Less than two weeks later, he died of coronavirus, Detroit’s mayor announced in a press conference on Thursday.

The president of the local transit union told the Detroit Free Press that Hargrove had started feeling sick just a few days after he posted the video. Hargrove’s death “should touch everyone in the country”, Mayor Mike Duggan said. “Everyone in Detroit and everybody in America should watch it,” he said of Hargrove’s video. “I don’t know how you can watch it and not tear up.”

The mayor pledged to extend additional safety protection measures to all public bus drivers, similar to ones already in place for the city’s police officers and firefighters.

In his 21 March Facebook live video, recorded outside and inside a bus, Hargrove, visibly shaken, describes a female passenger in her 40s or 50s who coughed “four or five” times on the bus without attempting to cover her mouth.

“I feel violated,” he said. “I feel violated for the folks that were on the bus when this happened.”

There were at least eight or nine passengers on the bus while the woman was coughing, he said, and she made no attempt to cover her mouth. There was no excuse for that kind of carelessness, he said. “They’re telling you every day what to do: if you cough, cough in your arm. Sneeze in some tissue,” he added.

“For us to get through this and get over this, man, you all need to take this shit seriously,” he warned.

He said in his live stream that he was not trying to blame anyone else – not the mayor, not the city, not the state of Michigan, not the president – except the woman who coughed. “It’s her fault,” he said.

Hargrove said he had tried to disinfect his bus afterwards, and promised that he would take off all his clothes and shower as soon as he got home so he wouldn’t bring the virus home to his family.

The day after Hargrove posted his video he updated his Facebook profile picture with an icon of a bus as a reminder that he was serving on the frontlines of the epidemic: “I cannot stay home,” it read. “I’m on the road 4 u.”

Michigan is emerging as one of America’s troubling coronavirus hotspots, with nearly 11,000 confirmed cases and more than 400 deaths as of Wednesday. The virus has taken a toll on many public employees in Detroit, including the city’s police chief. The mayor said on Thursday that 106 members of Detroit’s police department, and 24 members of the fire department, have tested positive for Covid-19, while hundreds more are in quarantine.

Public health data from the state of Michigan shows coronavirus is having a disproportionate toll on the state’s black residents. In a state where only 14% of the total population is black, at least 35% of people who have been confirmed to have coronavirus, and 40% of the dead, are black.

Four days before Hargrove’s live stream, Detroit’s public bus drivers had shut down most of the city’s bus service for the day to protest for safer conditions for themselves and their passengers.

In response to drivers’ concerns, the city announced on 17 March, the day of the protest, that all bus fares would be eliminated during the pandemic, that buses would be cleaned more regularly, that drivers would receive gloves and sanitary wipes, and that passengers would be required to board and exit at the back door of the bus, rather than the front door, directly by the drivers.

Duggan announced additional protections for bus drivers on Thursday, including daily temperature checks for drivers, closer health monitoring and the option for drivers with vulnerable family members at home to stay free of charge in a hotel room, so they would not put their families at risk.

Hargrove leaves behind a wife, the Amalgamated Transit Union said in a tribute to him on social media.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/apr/03/detroit-bus-driver-dies-coronavirus-video-passenger-coughing

Another big coronavirus outbreak like the one New York City is bracing for could “dramatically change” the death rate of COVID-19 in the U.S., White House coronavirus task force coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx said Friday.

White House officials earlier this week projected between 100,000 and 240,000 people will die from the coronavirus in the U.S. Birx said the mortality models are updated every night to take into account new data, which generally include how the disease is progressing in other countries, social distancing restrictions imposed by states and the rise in new infections.

The estimates currently project between 40,000 and 178,000 deaths, according to the data cited by Birx, who added that the average number of deaths is expected to be around 93,000. 

“All of that can be changed by our behaviors, and all of that can be changed in a different way if we don’t follow those behaviors,” Birx said at a White House press briefing with President Donald Trump and other members of the coronavirus task force. “If another major metropolitan area ends up having an epidemic like the New York metro area, that could dramatically change, not the model, but the reality of the impact of this virus on Americans.” 

The virus has spread rapidly throughout New York City which has more than 57,159 confirmed cases, accounting for more than 20% of all cases in the U.S., according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio has warned that the influx of patients threatens to overwhelm the hospital system any day.

“About a quarter of all the cases in this entire country are right here in New York City,” de Blasio said earlier Friday. “And we’re the tip of the spear, and everyone I talk to in Washington acknowledges it. We’re about to hit a huge surge in these coming days. They all know it.”

The virus has begun to spread broadly elsewhere. Along with New York, New Jersey and Louisiana are experiencing “really rough” outbreaks of their own, President Donald Trump said.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/03/white-house-advisor-says-another-coronavirus-epidemic-like-nyc-could-change-us-mortality-rate.html

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Friday that 2,935 New Yorkers have died from the coronavirus so far with 562 new deaths over the last 24 hours — a 23% jump and the single-biggest daily increase in deaths in the state since the outbreak began a few weeks ago.

“The curve continues to go up,” Cuomo said at a news conference in Albany, referring to the number of new COVID-19 cases across the state. There are 102,863 confirmed cases across New York, a 10% jump overnight, according to charts presented at the news conference. New York City alone accounts for 57,159 total cases, up 5,350 over the last 24 hours. 

The Jacob K. Javits Conference Center, where the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has built a temporary hospital, will be fully dedicated to coronavirus patients, Cuomo said. It was originally designed to handle other patients to free up hospital beds across New York City. Cuomo also said he’s signing an executive order that will allow the state to take whatever personal protective equipment, including medical masks and gloves, and ventilators from public or private organizations the state needs to treat CV-19 patients. 

“I’m not going to let people die,” Cuomo said. “I’m not going to get into a situation where I know we are running out of ventilators and we could have people dying because there are no ventilators, but there are hospitals in other parts of the state that have ventilators that they’re not using.”

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/03/new-york-gov-cuomo-says-state-saw-its-single-biggest-increase-in-coronavirus-deaths-yesterday.html

WASHINGTON – Videos posted on social media showed a huge send-off for Navy Capt. Brett Crozier, the commander of an aircraft carrier who was ousted Thursday after sending a letter pleading with Navy leadership to protect his crew from the spreading coronavirus.

One video from the Facebook account of Michael Washington shows hundreds of service members on the hanger deck of the USS Theodore Roosevelt, which is currently docked in Guam, chanting “Captain Crozier! Captain Crozier!” and clapping. 

Someone in the video says, “and that’s how you send off one of the greatest captains you’ve ever had,” and adding “The GOAT [Greatest Of All Time], the man for the people.”

Crozier was fired just four days after he pleaded for help as the coronavirus ravaged his crew on the Roosevelt. Crozier had sent an urgent letter to the U.S. Navy on Sunday, seeking to evacuate and isolate the crew as cases of coronavirus infection increased on the vessel. The letter, which was published in the San Francisco Chronicle, had been sent out broadly via email, creating “panic” on the vessel, according to Acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly. Modly said Crozier had “exercised extremely poor judgment.”

But overnight Thursday, videos surfaced on social media showing a raucous going-away for Crozier and the term “Captain Crozier” started trending on Twitter as many praised his decision to protect his crew.

A video from Facebook user Taliah Peterkin appears to show Crozier walking down the gangway of the ship before saluting the ship and waving good-bye.  

In the four-page letter to Navy officials, Crozier had asked for the crew of the aircraft carrier to be evacuated and for “decisive action” as the coronavirus spread onboard. 

“We are not at war, and therefore cannot allow a single Sailor to perish as a result of this pandemic unnecessarily,” Crozier wrote. 

Democrats who lead the House Armed Services committee blasted Modly for firing Crozier. The lawmakers acknowledged Crozier improperly went outside the chain of command in releasing his letter, but they called his dismissal an overreaction. 

More:Navy fires USS Theodore Roosevelt captain days after he pleaded for help for sailors with coronavirus

More:Captain of aircraft carrier asks U.S. Navy to evacuate crew amid ‘accelerating’ COVID-19 outbreak

As of Wednesday, about one-quarter of the 4,800 member crew had been tested for the virus, and 93 had been found to have COVID-19. About 1,000 sailors had been evacuated from the ship.

Contributing: Jeanine Santucci, Tom Vanden Brook

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/04/03/coronavirus-capt-brett-crozier-gets-send-off-uss-roosevelt/2939098001/

Seth Meyers

On Thursday’s Late Night, Seth Meyers turned his trademark Closer Look to the dire shortage of ventilators and the negligent federal response, advised by Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, to address the problem. “We have a situation where states are begging for life-saving ventilators and the Trump team is in disarray,” Meyers explained.

“Governors are literally outbidding each other on the open market, and dealing with shady middlemen and price gouging to buy ventilators wherever they can get them,” Meyers said. New York’s governor, Andrew Cuomo, compared the experience to eBay; Connecticut’s governor, Ned Lamont, said it was like Uber surge pricing, except “at the last moment, the car drives away because somebody has outbid you”.

“That’s right, governors are comparing buying life-saving ventilators for a pandemic to surge pricing,” Meyers said. “This is capitalism at its absolute worst. While Trump waits for the market to decide, people are literally going to die, and states are getting ripped off like they’re trying to call an Uber in the rain in midtown after a Broadway show.

“And you’ll never guess who’s in charge of this shitshow,” Meyers continued. “The guy Slenderman has nightmares about: Jared Kushner.” Kushner reportedly pushed back on Cuomo’s request for 30,000 ventilators; he called Cuomo an alarmist and said in a White House meeting: “I have all this data about ICU capacity. I’m doing my own projections, and I’ve gotten a lot smarter about this. New York doesn’t need all the ventilators.”

“Oh, you’re doing your own projections? Did your parents just buy you a TI-84 [graphing calculator]?” Meyers retorted. “You’re not qualified to do anything, let alone tell New York how many ventilators they need. You’re a nepotism case, and you only got the White House job because you married into the family, and because the security guards believed your fake ID.

“I hope when the time for accountability comes, we can all remember that it didn’t have to be like this,” Meyers concluded, noting that countries such as South Korea and Iceland have contained their coronavirus outbreaks better than the US. “Other countries responded to this pandemic with competence, and they avoided the worst. Now, we’re bracing for an unimaginable tragedy and as we speak, the president is leaving besieged states and hospitals to fend for themselves, putting lives at risk.”

Stephen Colbert

On A Late Show, Stephen Colbert noted that “every member of my family has been terrific” on his first week of home-produced TV (including his affable spaniel, Benny) “which statistically means I’m the bad roommate. But what are we going to do? We have no choice. Right now, inside is the place to be, because the news from the outside is alarming.” The government this week predicted a coronavirus death toll of between 100,000 and 240,000 Americans. “That’s why it is so important that everyone stay safe, stay focused and stay inside.

“And I know you, the American people, get it,” Colbert continued, “but some of our elected officials are slow on the uptake.” Republican governors in 11 states have still refused to issue stay-at-home orders. “They’re defiant to the end,” Colbert said, though some are coming around, such as Florida’s governor, Ron DeSantis, who finally ordered people home on Thursday, citing the president’s “demeanor the last couple days”.

“So it wasn’t the data, or the scientists – it was Trump’s demeanor,” Colbert said. “How does that work? Is he the coronavirus groundhog?”

Meanwhile, Georgia’s governor, Brian Kemp, started taking things seriously because “we didn’t know until yesterday” that asymptomatic people can spread the virus (it’s been widely known for months). “You didn’t know that until yesterday? It’s all anyone’s been talking about since January!” Colbert exclaimed. “You’re like a guy saying: ‘You know, I finally started watching this Game of Thrones. No one told me there were dragons in it! This is a game-changer.’”

Trevor Noah

The Daily Show
(@TheDailyShow)

Gun sales are up, jobs are down, and Dr. Fauci is assigned a security detail. pic.twitter.com/uFCRZIgz9C


April 3, 2020

And on the Daily Social Distancing Show, Trevor Noah discussed the breakout media figure of America’s pandemic, Dr Anthony Fauci, “the man whose calm leadership during this crisis has won him the respect of all intelligent people and President Trump”, said Noah. Fauci has reportedly been assigned a security detail due to conspiracy-related threats.

“Now, unfortunately, getting threats is fairly standard for anyone in the public eye,” said Noah. “But what’s not standard is that Dr Fauci is also receiving lots of ‘unwelcome communications from fervent admirers’. Yes, that’s a nice way to say that your groupies are crazy. And who would’ve thought one day we’d be living in a world where the whole planet would be grounded, and an epidemiologist would be the hottest man on earth.

“People are just like: ‘I gotta get me some of that Fauci. You know he got that vaccine, girl,’” Noah continued. “Who’s sexier than Fauci? No one’s sexier. If People magazine doesn’t put him on the cover, they’re wasting their lives.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2020/apr/03/seth-meyers-late-night-recap-jared-kushner-coronavirus

Researchers examined all 243 coronavirus cases that were reported in Singapore from Jan. 23 to March 16. They identified seven clusters of cases where presymptomatic transmission most likely occurred. 

The seven clusters occurred between Jan. 19 and March 12 and involved from two to five patients each, according to the report. Ten of the cases within the clusters could be attributed to presymptomatic transmission, and accounted for 6.4% of the 157 locally acquired cases reported as of March 16, researchers added. 

“The possibility of presymptomatic transmission of [the coronavirus] increases the challenges of COVID-19 containment measures, which are predicated on early detection and isolation of symptomatic persons,” researchers said in their findings. “The magnitude of this impact is dependent upon the extent and duration of transmissibility while a patient is presymptomatic, which, to date, have not been clearly established.”

Researchers said that in four of the clusters, they determined transmission exposure occurred one to three days before the source patient developed symptoms. 

The study had three limitations, researchers said. There’s the possibility of an unknown source transmitting the virus to the clusters, recall bias could affect the accuracy of symptom onset dates, and under-detection of asymptomatic cases is possible, researchers said. 

New York City joined Los Angeles in recommending the general public wear face coverings, which officials initially said was not necessary in order to maintain supply for health-care workers. President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence also said Thursday night that the CDC will issue new nationwide guidance “in the next several days” about wearing masks to prevent the spread of COVID-19. 

Read the full report from the CDC here. 

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/03/heres-the-study-behind-why-nycs-mayor-now-recommends-masks-in-public.html

The US has been accused of “modern piracy” after reportedly diverting a shipment of masks intended for the German police, and outbidding other countries in the increasingly fraught global market for coronavirus protective equipment.

About 200,000 N95 masks made by the manufacturer 3M were diverted to the US as they were being transferred between planes in Thailand, according to the Berlin authorities who had ordered the masks for the police force.

Andreas Geisel, the interior minister for Berlin state, described the diversion as “an act of modern piracy” and appealed to the German government to demand Washington conform to international trading rules. “This is no way to treat trans-Atlantic partners,” Geisel said. “Even in times of global crisis there should be no wild west methods.”

He joined a growing chorus of complaints about the Trump administration’s practice as the US wields its clout in a marketplace for scarce medical supplies that is becoming a free-for-all, with nation competing against nation.

Valérie Pécresse, the influential president of the Île-de-France region, which includes Paris, described the race to get masks as a “treasure hunt”.

“I found a stock of masks that was available and Americans – I’m not talking about the American government – but Americans, outbid us,” Pécresse said. “They offered three times the price and they proposed to pay upfront. I can’t do that. I’m spending taxpayers’ money and I can only pay on delivery having checked the quality,” she told BFMTV. “So we were caught out.”

Pécresse said she had finally obtained a consignment of 1.5m masks thanks to the help of Franco-Chinese residents in the Paris area.

Her comments follow allegations from two other French regional heads that unidentified American buyers outbid on mask shipments, including one instance when a consignment was reportedly “on the tarmac” to be flown to France.

“We really have to fight,” Jean Rottner, a doctor and president of the Grand Est regional council, told RTL radio. His area had been particularly badly hit by Covid-19 cases.

Following reporting on his comments, Rottner said on Twitter that it was not his order of 2m masks that had been diverted, although it was “common practice”.

The French media have started calling the rush for equipment “mask wars”.

The American 3M company, which makes the N95 mask (commonly known as a respirator, which provides better protection than an ordinary surgical mask) said on Friday that the Trump administration had asked it to increase shipments to the US from its factories overseas, and it had secured agreement from China to ship 10mmasks from 3M plants.

But 3M said the administration had also told the company to stop exporting masks from US production sites to Canada and Latin America. The company said the demand raises “significant humanitarian implications” from stopping shipments intended for healthcare workers, and warned it would backfire by triggering retaliation from other countries.

“If that were to occur, the net number of respirators being made available to the US would actually decrease,” the statement said. “That is the opposite of what we and the administration, on behalf of the American people, both seek.”

Canada’s prime minister, Justin Trudeau, said the US move was a “mistake”, noting that the US also imports medical supplies from Canada.

A shipment of 10,000 masks bought for hospitals in Montreal was mysteriously rerouted to the US state of Ohio last week, according to the Canadian tabloid Le Journal de Montréal.

The buyer, Fan Zhou, had flown them to Canada using the shipping company DHL, and was attempting to contact the shipping firm to ascertain why they had been taken to the Ohio city of Cincinnati. Zhou did not suggest the masks had been purposefully diverted to Ohio. After the story was published in Le Journal de Montréal and mentioned it in his daily a press briefing, DHL told Zhou a “computer error” had suggested the masks were en route for Ohio, but they had never left Quebec.

Zhou told the paper he had received some of the masks but not all and was sceptical of DHL’s response as to why the full order had not been delivered on the expected date. “That is their explanation. That is not my explanation,” Zhou said.

Le Journal de Montréal cited him as saying it had been hard to source the masks, as the Chinese government took priority on any orders, meaning foreign deals needed to go through “non-traditional channels”.

In the scramble for masks and other critical medical supplies, the US has a significant advantage in its fleet of large air freighters, three times the size of China’s. Buyers from national governments, US states and private buyers are going through a network of brokers, many in Shanghai.

One broker, Michael Crotty, who runs Golden Pacific Fashion & Design in Shanghai, told the New York Times that Chinese factories sometimes move the highest-paying customers to the front of the line. “It’s a seller’s market,” Crotty said. “You don’t see this very often.”



Workers unload a jet used by the New England Patriots after it landed at Logan Airport from Shenzhen, China with a shipment of over one million N95 masks. Photograph: Jim Davis/EPA

Personal connections often provide a decisive edge. Robert Kraft, an American billionaire businessman, lent a Boeing 767 to the Massachusetts governor, Charlie Baker, who was trying to transport 1.2m masks he had bought in China to Massachusetts.

The plane was one of two Kraft bought for the New England Patriots NFL team, which helped organise the shipment, with the help of China’s consul general in New York, Huang Ping, who kept his office open over the weekend to process the documentation, according to an account on the Patriots website. The plane was allowed to land as long as the crew did not disembark and it stayed on the ground in Shenzhen for less than three hours. The plane left with three minutes to spare.

Speaking on Thursday in front of the plane, Baker choked up with emotion. “This gear will make an enormous difference,” the Republican said. “It’s not a secret that securing [personal protective equipment] has been an enormous challenge. And we will continue to come up with ways to chase more gear to keep our frontline workers and patients safe. We need more, we will always need more.”



Massachusetts governor Charlie Baker speaks to the press on Thursday in front of a plane that delivered masks from China. Photograph: Jim Davis/EPA

US states have found themselves competing against each other and the federal government for equipment. The New York governor, Andrew Cuomo, said this week that it was like “being on eBay with 50 other states”.

State governors learned they could not rely on the rapidly depleting national stockpile, especially after Donald Trump made it clear that federal help would be affected by political preference, saying he wanted governors to be “appreciative”.

“I’ve got to tell you that on three good orders, we lost to the feds,” Baker told Trump during a teleconference. “I’ve got a feeling that if someone has the chance to sell to you and to sell to me, I am going to lose on every one of those.”

Trump later said the federal government would attempt to drop bids if there were a conflict.

The US Federal Emergency Management Agency is coordinating flights for US buyers but has so far not nationalised the distribution network, arguing that private distributors can do a better job.

Governments have been accused of using other underhand methods to acquire supplies, including banning exports of protective equipment.

Brazil, too, has said recent attempts to purchase protective gear from China had fallen through. “There is a problem of hyper-demand,” the health minister, Luiz Henrique Mandetta, said on Wednesday.

The US has the largest number of confirmed coronavirus case of any country with about 245,000 reported infections and more than 6,000 deaths. Domestic stocks of masks and other vital equipment are scarce.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/03/mask-wars-coronavirus-outbidding-demand

Toddlers are natural contrarians, who love to test boundaries by pushing back on whatever they’re told. So is Trump. In the first two months of the outbreak, he insisted that the coronavirus would never spread within the United States, despite expert assessments to the contrary. In late February, he said: “It’s going to disappear. One day — it’s like a miracle — it will disappear.” He repeatedly claimed that the virus was not a serious problem, even as mayors, governors and his own administration said otherwise. After finally declaring a national emergency, he clung to the idea that most of the country would be back to normal by Easter. And he insisted that anti-malarial drugs offered an effective treatment despite minimal evidence because, according to one source, he “wants this magical moment when this is all over.” Each time, Trump’s advisers have had to expend precious time and energy to change his mind and soothe his ego rather than focus on the crisis at hand.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/trump-toddler-coronavirus-pandemic/2020/04/02/163f5c04-7435-11ea-85cb-8670579b863d_story.html

At a news briefing Sunday, Birx explained the process this way: Her task force initially reviewed the work of 12 models. “Then we went back to the drawing board over the last week or two, and worked from the ground up, utilizing actual reporting of cases,” Birx said. “It’s the way we built the HIV model, the TB model, the malaria model. And when we finished, the other group that was working in parallel — which we didn’t know about,” referring to the IHME group.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2020/04/02/experts-trumps-advisers-doubt-white-houses-240000-coronavirus-deaths-estimate/