The high court agreed with insurers that the congressional spending restrictions didn’t release the government from its original promise to fund the Obamacare program. The court said Congress had created “a rare money-mandating obligation” that later appropriations language couldn’t repeal.

“These holdings reflect a principle as old as the Nation itself: The Government should honor its obligations,” wrote Justice Sonia Sotomayor the majority opinion.

Justice Samuel Alito, in a dissenting opinion, criticized the ruling as effectively providing a massive bailout for the insurance industry.

“Under the court’s decision, billions of taxpayer dollars will be turned over to insurance companies that bet unsuccessfully on the success of the program in question,” Alito said in his dissent.

The decision will have little impact on Obamacare. The law faces a legal threat in a separate case brought by Republican-led states challenging the law’s constitutionality, which the Supreme Court has agreed to hear, likely later this year. But the ruling represents a loss for the Trump administration, which argued it wasn’t obligated to make the risk corridor payments and is supporting the red states’ lawsuit.

The three-year risk corridors program closed in 2016. Insurance experts said the program’s $12 billion shortfall contributed to turbulence in Obamacare’s early years, as health plans jacked up premiums to cover their losses or abandoned the marketplaces.

The Supreme Court case consolidated lawsuits brought by three small insurers, including one that blamed the risk corridors shortfall for its collapse in 2016. Today’s decision will also benefit insurers who brought dozens of identical lawsuits in lower courts.

Insurers hopes the decision will also bolster the industry in another pipeline of litigation challenging President Donald Trump’s elimination of a separate Obamacare subsidy program in 2017.

Insurers have filed numerous lawsuits, including a class action involving about 100 Obamacare plans, claiming that the federal government broke its promise to fund these so-called cost-sharing reductions, which helped insurers pay poor customers’ medical bills. Those lawsuits have so far been successful in lower courts, but appellate judges who heard arguments last year appeared skeptical of the insurers’ case.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/04/27/supreme-court-rules-government-must-pay-billions-to-obamacare-insurers-211184

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has pushed his military and national security advisers in recent days to pull all U.S. troops out of Afghanistan amid concerns about a major coronavirus outbreak in the war-torn country, according to two current and one former senior U.S. officials.

Trump complains almost daily that U.S. troops are still in Afghanistan and are now vulnerable to the pandemic, the officials said. His renewed push to withdraw all of them has been spurred by the convergence of his concern that coronavirus poses a force protection issue for thousands of U.S. troops in Afghanistan and his impatience with the halting progress of his peace deal with the Taliban, the officials said.

They said the president’s military advisers have made the case to him that if the U.S. pulls troops out of Afghanistan because of the coronavirus, by that standard the Pentagon would also have to withdraw from places like Italy, which has been hit particularly hard by the pandemic, officials said.

“There is concern from a variety of places that we could leave Afghanistan,” one senior U.S. official said, pointing to concerns voiced by U.S. allies, members of Congress and U.S. military officials.

One senior administration official and a defense official said that while the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan because of the coronavirus has been under discussion, a more likely outcome would be to consolidate American forces at bases in one or two parts of the country.

U.S. defense officials says cases of the coronavirus in Afghanistan are likely to be drastically underreported, estimating there could be at least 10 times as many cases there as the government has officially tallied. As of Monday, the Afghan Ministry of Public Health reported 1,703 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 57 deaths in a country with an estimated population of 35 million.

But in March the Afghan minister of public health, Ferozuddin Feroz, warned that as much as half of the country’s population could become infected and more than 100,000 could die without more precautions like hand washing and lockdowns in more populated areas.

Afghanistan is one of the poorest countries in the world, with a weak public health system. The government is building a 100-bed hospital in Herat, a province that borders Iran, but the country lacks protective gear and ventilators.

U.S. officials worry the virus could become rampant in Afghanistan, given its lack of health care and testing and its shared border with Iran, which has been hit hard by the pandemic.

“Afghanistan is going to have a significant coronavirus issue,” a former senior U.S. official said. “It hasn’t really manifested yet but it will.”

The U.S. military is in the midst of a drawdown in Afghanistan already. In early March it began decreasing its total footprint from more than 12,000 to 8,600 over 135 days. But troops have been leaving the country faster than originally planned, according to two U.S. defense officials, and the U.S. is now on track to beat the original deadline.

“U.S. Forces Afghanistan continues to draw down force levels and expects to be at 8,600 U.S. troops in 135 days (mid-July) in accordance with the U.S.-Taliban agreement. USFOR-A remains committed to supporting our Afghan partners throughout the process and maintains the capabilities and authorities necessary to accomplish our objectives,” said Lt. Col. Thomas Campbell, a Pentagon spokesperson.

Trump, who campaigned in 2016 with a promise to end wars like the one in Afghanistan, has frequently expressed frustration with progress there since his early days in office. But the recent political stalemate combined with the COVID-19 pandemic has reinvigorated his impatience.

“He is itching to get out. He’s pushing the Pentagon on it,” the former official said.

As the same time, the president has praised the U.S. military members who are deployed in the U.S., fighting against the spread of COVID-19. “Our great military is operating at 100 percent during this crisis, and thousands of troops are deployed alongside of civilians in the COVID hotspots,” he said last Wednesday.

Last month Trump dispatched Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to Kabul to deliver a harsh message in hopes of salvaging a peace deal to ultimately end the war in Afghanistan. Pompeo told feuding leaders in Afghanistan that they needed to resolve their differences and begin negotiations with the Taliban or Trump could pull all U.S. troops out of the country, two current senior officials, one former senior official and a foreign diplomat told NBC News.

U.S. Envoy to Afghanistan Amb. Zalmay Khalilzad continues to travel to the region despite widespread travel restrictions meant to stop the spread of COVID-19. Last week he met with the Taliban in Qatar to “discuss current challenges in implementing the U.S.-Taliban Agreement,” according to a State Department statement.

Before departing for Qatar, he tweeted that both sides need to accelerate efforts to release prisoners, warning that prisoners are at risk of an outbreak of coronavirus. An official close to Khalilzad said he will continue to travel to the region to try to salvage the peace process.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/national-security/trump-tells-advisers-u-s-should-pull-troops-afghanistan-covid-n1191761

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Mayor de Blasio isn’t letting the controversy surrounding his wife’s embattled billion-dollar mental-health initiative stop him from appointing her to head a new coronavirus recovery task force.

Citing her work with the ThriveNYC initiative, de Blasio revealed on Sunday that First Lady Chirlane McCray, a rumored contender for Brooklyn borough president, would co-chair a Task Force on Racial Inclusion and Equity as the city plans its eventual reopening.

“The economic and racial disparities that have been made so clear by this crisis, we knew about them before,” said de Blasio, who was elected six years ago on a pledge to make the city more equitable and eliminate its “tale of two cities.” “A powerful, painful exclamation point has been put on them by this crisis.”

DE BLASIO SAYS TRUMP NEEDS ‘TO SPEAK UP’ TO SENATE TO GET STATES AND CITIES STIMULUS MONEY

New York’s poorest ZIP codes have been hardest hit by pandemic, city data show, and minorities — many among the city’s essential workers — have died at disproportionately high rates.

De Blasio said he formed the task force to ensure New York’s underdogs aren’t left behind in the recovery.

But city lawmakers on both sides of the aisle were scratching their heads over the appointment of McCray in light of her signature Thrive program, criticized as a billion-dollar money pit with a dubious record of results.

“Chirlane doesn’t have an impressive track record running task forces or agencies,” said Councilman Joe Borelli (R-SI), who has jousted with City Hall over Thrive’s alleged lack of help for the NYPD amid a spate of suicides by cops.

“This is too serious an issue to use it as profile raiser,” he added, referring to her potential political aspirations.

Chirlane McCray speaks during the Women’s Unity Rally at Foley Square on January 19, 2019 in New York City. Two years after millions gathered for the inaugural Women’s March, demonstrators around the world march again in solidarity with communities of women and allies who seek to create a future of equality, justice, and compassion for all. (Photo by Karla Ann Cote/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Councilman Robert Holden said the appointment reeks of political calculation by the mayor to up McCray’s visibility ahead of a widely rumored run for Beep.

“This is political. I wish de Blasio would stop doing this,” said the Queens Democrat. “Let her win the Brooklyn borough presidency on her own merits.

TAMMY BRUCE BLASTS MAYOR FOR CREATING HOTLINE TO ‘SNITCH’ ON NEIGHBORS AMID LOCKDOWN

“Her track record on Thrive and the statue commission hasn’t been so good,” he added, referring to another of McCray’s questionable forays into the spotlight.

During the city’s search for women to memorialize with public monuments last year, McCray ignited outrage by vetoing a public poll’s top choice for the honor — the sainted Italian-American nun Mother Cabrini.

“ ‘Putting @NYCFirstLady in charge of the newly created task force on racial inclusion and equity is a great idea,’ -said No One Ever,” Councilman Eric Ulrich (R-Queens) tweeted Sunday. “By the way, what ever happened to all that money for ThriveNYC?”

The initiative has been beset for years by criticism over its 10-digit price-tag and failure to make appreciable headway in helping New York’s mentally ill.

In an apparent admission of the Thrive’s inefficiency, the city last month announced plans to slash half of its 54 sub-programs and scale back spending — a move sources said at the time was meant to polish McCray’s reputation ahead of the Brooklyn Borough Hall race.

NEW YORK COUPLE SUING CHINESE GOVERNMENT: CORONAVIRUS’ ‘IMPACT HAS BEEN PRETTY BIG’

But de Blasio insisted at his Sunday briefing that McCray was the ideal candidate to shepherd the new coronavirus initiative — not despite her record at Thrive, but because of it.

“Of course not,” Hizzoner said when asked if Thrive’s performance gave him any misgivings about giving his wife the reins.

“I think what Chirlane has done over these last six years is take this issue, put it in the light, open up access for millions of people and then continue to build out a structure that could focus on effective delivery and equity.

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“I think that’s exactly the kind of mindset needed for this task force.”

Among the group’s goals will be ensuring that the hardest-hit communities as well as minority- and women-owned businesses get their fair share of help as the city rebuilds from the pandemic.

McCray will not be paid in the post, but the city didn’t respond to questions about what the task force’s dedicated budget is — or if it has one.

“She’s exactly who New Yorkers want in their corner and will help us rebuild this city stronger than it was before,” said City Hall spokeswoman Freddi Goldstein.

In addition to the task force, de Blasio unveiled a Fair Recovery Task Force to plan the city’s broader recovery and eight Sector Advisory Councils to advise the city on restoring various facets of city life, including business, arts and culture, labor and educational training.

Additional reporting by Lee Brown.

Click for more from the New York Post

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/de-blasios-wife-chirlane-mccray-appointed-head-of-coronavirus-racial-inequality-task-force-report

Hicks is not a scheduler, although she now works from the scheduler’s office in the West Wing, and she’s not a communications director, even though that was her old job. Now her responsibilities straddle both the management of the president’s daily calendar and the crafting of messaging based on news of the day, although it is quick to change. But most important, she has been a key figure in encouraging Trump to be front and center at briefings and events during the coronavirus response, viewing him as the voice that could break through and capture the most attention.

Trump’s decision to speak at almost every coronavirus task force briefing had the desired effect initially, leading to a bump in his approval ratings and a greater sense among Republicans and his base that the White House was taking major, if belated, steps to combat the pandemic. The president grew to look forward to the evenings when he could garner high TV ratings during the televised briefings, spar with reporters and defend his record.

But those appearances have run into trouble. After the president peddled scientifically dubious theories and dangerous treatments, like the injection of disinfectants, task force members held no briefings over the weekend.

Aides and close allies have begun to question the decision to give him so much airtime, according to interviews with a dozen current and former senior administration officials and Republicans close to the White House. And critics charge that the White House’s overwhelmingly positive messaging — on reopening the economy, testing, the manufacturing of supplies — is belied by reality.

“Look, the briefings were clearly created and designed to try to fix the president’s political health and had very little to do with public health,” said Robert Gibbs, the White House press secretary under President Barack Obama who now serves as senior counsel for Bully Pulpit Interactive Media. “Even before Thursday’s disinfectant fiasco, the level of misinformation and contradictory messaging at a moment when the country needs clarity has been jarring and dangerous.”

The White House press shop says the president has made himself available more than most leaders to take questions, even in tough times — a move that should be applauded.

The “president felt it was important in these challenging, difficult times to be honest and speak directly to the American people about the challenges we face,” said Hogan Gidley, the White House principal deputy press secretary.

“A lot of other people would not have done that, but it is a testament to his leadership that he was the one who wanted to deliver that news, so he could be honest with the American people but also offer a message of hope.”

Hicks reentered the West Wing just as chief of staff Mark Meadows has tried to find his place weeks into the job, and as he overhauls the press and communications teams that Hicks once oversaw.

For all her eagerness to be back in thick of things, Hicks didn’t expect to start work in the middle of a pandemic.

She had de-camped in 2018 from Washington to Los Angeles, where she worked as the chief communications officer for Fox. Friends say she did not love living in Southern California, wanted to be closer to her family on the East Coast and, most important, missed the pace and dynamism of the White House, where top aides are always in the middle of sweeping moments in history.

So, Hicks accepted a job as a counselor to the president, working within the office of Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser, where she intended to travel and offer advice heading into the November election.

The public announcement of her return came at a heady moment in Trump world. Aides felt confident about the prospects for a second term after impeachment, with a strong economy and a bump in the president’s approval ratings. Trump also traveled to Davos and India, acting a president on the world stage.

By March 9, when Hicks officially joined the White House, the severity of the pandemic had become clear. She quickly realized the whole government needed to zero in on the virus. She started to attend the daily task force meetings to offer advice on strategy and the best way to respond to the story of the day and communicate with the public.

Quickly she began to oversee the president’s schedule and focus on his events. She advocated for bringing business leaders to the White House and to the briefings, along with reaching out to groups as diverse as drug manufacturers and religious leaders, and involving the private sector as much as possible. Like the first lady, Ivanka Trump and Kushner, she felt that the entire White House megaphone should be dedicated to the response.

Hicks’s return, current and former senior administration officials say, gave the president a loyal and trusted aide. With her quick-witted sense of humor, she tends to get along with the majority of staffers inside the backbiting White House, and she can deliver advice to the president in an unfiltered way without angering him because Trump trusts her and views her like another daughter or member of his family.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/04/27/trump-hope-hicks-coronavirus-crisis-210808

President Donald Trump has several huge fights on his hands: America is under attack from a brutal pandemic. Its economy is collapsing. And he is facing a difficult reelection campaign.

In the absence of real plans to solve any of these, Trump is relying on a move that comes reflexively for him: Blasting out messages that are either pointless digressions or outright lies — not to persuade people, but to distract and confuse them.

Take, for instance, a tweet he took the time to fire off Saturday afternoon that seemed petty even by his own Twitter standards: He wanted people to know exactly who he was talking to when he made his jaw-dropping remarks last week about injecting light and disinfectant to cure Covid-19.

Like other things Trump says, this one has elements of truth embedded in a slurry of falsehood. We can sort through that shortly.

What’s more important than the message here is the tactic he’s using. Trump isn’t really interested in correcting the record, but he does want to create doubt. And that’s because a fog of generalized distrust is one of Trump’s primary political tools, as journalism critic Jay Rosen has pointed out.

“The Republican Party and the Trump campaign and the MAGA coalition are going to have to produce confusion and doubt on a scale that is unlike anything you’ve ever seen before,” Rosen told me in a recent conversation. “The key for the Trump campaign is to create confusion, not belief. And that’s what we’re going to see in the months ahead: the massive effort to create doubt and confusion about things that are overwhelmingly clear from the public record.”

Trump’s message this weekend is a perfect encapsulation of the strategy. It doesn’t exonerate him in any way. But it is supposed to chip away at the authority of the media outlets that cover him. The accumulated weight of these niggles are meant to dissuade persuadable voters from believing … anything.

Surrounding a little bit of truth with a lot of misleading other stuff helps create distrust

Trump does have the smallest of points with respect to his Saturday tweet: At various points in his April 23 press conference, he was indeed addressing Bill Bryan, an official from the Department of Homeland Security, who had given a presentation about how sunlight might affect the coronavirus.

In the viral clip where Trump muses about bringing UV light inside the body or using an “injection” of disinfectant, Trump is talking to Bryan, who is sitting next to Birx, but mostly obscured by Trump’s podium.

And the viral clip of Birx reacting to Trump’s comments can make it appear as if he was talking to her:

On the other hand, Trump did indeed spend some of the press conference telling Birx she should be looking into his idea that you could “apply light and heat to cure.”

It’s even spelled out in the White House’s own transcript of the event:

THE PRESIDENT: Deborah, have you ever heard of that? The heat and the light, relative to certain viruses, yes, but relative to this virus?

DR. BIRX: Not as a treatment. I mean, certainly fever —

THE PRESIDENT: Yeah.

DR. BIRX: — is a good thing. When you have a fever, it helps your body respond. But not as — I’ve not seen heat or (inaudible).

THE PRESIDENT: I think it’s a great thing to look at. I mean, you know. Okay?

But of course it doesn’t matter — at all — whether Trump was speaking to Birx or Bryan during the event. What matters is that he was telling government officials — on camera, at his press conference — that he has nonsensical and potentially dangerous ideas about how Americans should respond to the pandemic.

Trump first floated his “I was talking to him, not her” defense on Friday, but that was only in passing. At the time, he was focused on his argument that his light/disinfectant theories weren’t theories at all — he was being sarcastic.

But the sarcasm argument quickly fizzled — even Fox News wouldn’t support it — so Trump has moved on to a new one.

Maybe he’ll stick with it. Maybe he won’t. But the underlying strategy is one the president clearly believes in. He used it separately Saturday over a different point: Relitigating whether he called the coronavirus a “hoax,” or if he was calling critics of his slow, ineffective response to the virus a “hoax.”

And just in case you missed it, Trump tried it again, seven hours later:

You can go to the tape on this one, too, and find evidence to support Trump.

On the other hand, if you do watch the same tape, you’ll see that on February 28, Trump was boasting about “losing nobody, so far” to the virus, compared to reports of “35, and 40,000 people — and we’ve lost nobody.”

The CDC now says the virus has killed more than 50,000 in the US.

But, again: Trump and his team don’t expect you to go to the tape, or spend more than a second thinking about this.

All they want is for you to doubt the things you see, hear, and read. And they’ll keep at it.


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Source Article from https://www.vox.com/recode/2020/4/26/21237373/trump-tweet-coronavirus-disinfectant-birx-confusion-strategy

Americans receiving stimulus checks amid the coronavirus pandemic will also get a letter signed by President Donald Trump explaining the reason for the payment.

The federal government has included a one-page letter in an envelope with all stimulus payment checks sent to recipients. A copy of the letter, seen by Newsweek, shows Trump’s signature at the bottom of the page.

“We are fully committed to ensuring that you and your family have the support you need to get through this time,” the letter reads. It also states the amount the person is receiving and instructions for how to claim the funds. The page is double sided with a Spanish version on the backside.

“Our great country is experiencing an unprecedented public health and economic challenge as a result of the global coronavirus pandemic,” Trump wrote. “Our top priority is your health and safety. As we wage total war on this invisible enemy, we are also working around the clock to protect hardworking Americans like you from the consequences of the economy shutdown.”

The president acknowledged the letter during Friday’s White House Coronavirus Task Force press briefing, and said the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) mandates that his government “send out a notice of what benefits Americans are receiving.” He added, “to fulfill the requirement, the Treasury Department is mailing a letter to me.”

In the letter, Trump thanks Congress for collaborating with his administration to pass the CARES act, which he “proudly signed into law.”

More than 88 million people have received the letter and check over the past week, according to the Treasury Department on Friday. It is currently unclear how many are still waiting. But on April 17, the department indicated 62 million had yet to receive their payments, according to CNN.

The Treasury Department reportedly ordered the Internal Revenue Service to print Trump’s name on the stimulus checks earlier this month. At the time, senior agency officials told the Washington Post that the order could result in the checks being delayed by several days or longer. The decision to include Trump’s name was unprecedented as usually the president’s name does not appear on such checks to keep payments non-partisan.

Trump administration officials who spoke anonymously because they weren’t authorized to publicly discuss the matter told the publication that Trump had asked Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin if he could sign the checks, but was denied authority to do so.

Chris Hooper, the national president of the IRS’s Professional Managers Association (PMA), accused the administration of abusing federal resources by placing Trump’s name on the paper stimulus check. “In this time of need for additional resources, anything that takes our focus from getting those checks out the door and hampers the equitable, fair administration of the tax code is not something we can support,” Hooper told the Post, calling it “an abuse of government resources.”

Newsweek reached out to the IRS for comment.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/americans-receiving-stimulus-checks-will-also-get-trump-signed-letter-explaining-why-1500298

The prevalence of such rumors was also fueled by fears over what might happen to the unpredictable, nuclear-armed regime in Pyongyang should its totalitarian leader be incapacitated. Although most past rumors about the health of North Korean leaders have turned out to be groundless, some proved true, like the speculation that Mr. Kim’s father, Kim Jong-il, had a stroke in 2008.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/26/world/asia/kim-jong-un-health.html

The briefing came after the state’s toll of confirmed COVID-19 deaths rose by 367, to a total of 16,966, on Saturday. There were 1,087 new hospitalizations Saturday, bringing the total to 12,839 — the 10th day in a row with a decrease in new hospitalizations.

Source Article from https://www.nydailynews.com/coronavirus/ny-coronavirus-new-york-state-reopening-andrew-cuomo-20200426-fxmgu6koonernpbtjjovovloti-story.html

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President Trump refuted speculation that he intended to remove Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar from his post, instead tweeting Sunday evening, “Alex is doing an excellent job!”

“Reports that H.H.S. Secretary @AlexAzar is going to be “fired” by me are Fake News,” Trump wrote. “The Lamestream Media knows this, but they are desperate to create the perception of chaos & havoc in the minds of the public. They never even called to ask.”

WHITE HOUSE PUSHES BACK ON REPORTS OF HHS SECRETARY AZAR’S POSSIBLE REMOVAL

Politico article citing four sources familiar with the situation reported that the White House considered removing Azar after Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) Director Rick Bright controversially was transferred to the National Institutes of Health. Bright threatened to file a whistleblower complaint alleging that the move was “retaliatory treatment” for his doubts on the Trump-touted drug to fight coronavirus, hydroxychloroquine. However, HHS argued that Bright had worked to advance administration priorities on the controversial treatments and a report by Politico indicated Bright had been on thin ice with his superiors for months, if not more.

The White House apparently was caught off guard in recent days by Bright’s pushback, apparently convinced by Azar that the move to NIH was a promotion. The Wall Street Journal reported that while officials acknowledged a change was discussed, the White House was hesitant to make a change during the coronavirus pandemic.

Fox News reached out to the White House and HHS for additional comment, but they did not immediately respond.

Angst against Azar allegedly had been brewing for weeks, with the White House said to be displeased by his initial handling of the coronavirus response. Azar led the efforts in the early days of the pandemic Vice President Pence replaced him in to oversee the pandemic’s task force.

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His office has remained still in charge of researching vaccines and hunting for a cure to COVID-19 which has killed over 54,000 Americans and infected over 954,000 others, according to recent estimates. Azar also was responsible for distributing $100 billion in federal aid to hospitals and physicians on the front lines of the pandemic.

Fox News’ Ronn Blitzer, Tyler Olson and John Roberts contributed to this report. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-hhs-secretary-alex-azar-excellent-job-reports-fired-false

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the U.S. was closing in on 1 million Sunday, but new cases appear to have reached a plateau, one of the nation’s top experts said.

“Unfortunately, it is a very high plateau,” said Tom Inglesby, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the daily death total in his state, the epicenter of the U.S. outbreak, fell below 400 for the first time in weeks. When the state does begin to reopen, construction and manufacturing will be in the first wave, he said.

Cuomo’s counterpart in Maryland, Republican Larry Hogan, said President Donald Trump should focus on delivering factual information about the virus to Americans, not f whatever pops into his mind.

And in China, the hot-spot city of Wuhan reported that its last hospital patient had been discharged.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2020/04/26/coronavirus-updates-georgia-mayor-asks-churches-not-open/3013443001/

Gov. Cuomo doubled down Sunday on the state’s controversial directive ordering nursing homes to admit COVID-19 patients.

The governor — who himself has described nursing homes as a “feeding frenzy’’ for the deadly coronavirus — said that the facilities can’t challenge a state regulation forcing them to admit patients with the contagion.

But he insisted that nursing homes could transfer those ill with the virus to another facility if the centers lacked such things as quarantine space, proper protective equipment and staff.

Asked by a reporter at his daily briefing Sunday if there was anything contradictory about his statements, the governor replied, “No.”

“A nursing home can only provide care for a patient who they believe they can provide adequate care for,’’ Cuomo said. “If they cannot provide adequate care for a patient, they must transfer that patient.”

He said that if the nursing home can’t find another adequate facility, it should call the state Department of Health.

“I have John, I don’t know where to send John,’’ Cuomo said of a possible nursing-home scenario. “Call the DOH, we’ll find a place for John. That’s how it works.

“We have vacancies in nursing homes and facilities,’’ the governor said.

The CEO of a hard-hit Brooklyn nursing home, where 55 patients have died from the coronavirus, told The Post last week that he’d been warning state Health Department officials for weeks he had staffing and equipment issues — yet received little help.

“There is no way for us to prevent the spread under these conditions,’’ the head of the Cobble Hill Health Center, Donny Tuchman, wrote in an e-mail to the department on April 8.

He said he asked to move some patients to the makeshift wards at Manhattan’s Javits Center and aboard the city-docked USNS Comfort amid the pandemic, only to be told those two spots were receiving only patients from hospitals.

“I made specific requests to transfer patients, and it didn’t happen,’’ Tuchman told The Post. “There weren’t options.”

The state said at the time that the facility was “able to meet basic needs under the directive — which included having adequate facilities.’’

State health workers also “conducted a focus survey at Cobble Hill and found no deficient practices,’’ a rep said.

“Additionally, as we track inventory for all facilities daily, our records indicate they have more than a week’s supply of N95 masks, two months’ supply of surgical masks, and nearly two weeks’ supply of gloves,” the spokesman added.

At least 3,500 nursing-home residents in the state have died from the coronavirus to date, including 2,000 in New York City, part of more than 16,000 overall.

Additional reporting by Bernadette Hogan and Carl Campanile

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/04/26/cuomo-doubles-down-on-sending-coronavirus-patients-to-nursing-homes/

This was a recent birthday celebration in North Korea’s capital, Pyongyang. It was held in honor of the country’s founder, Kim Il-sung, who died in 1994. The festivities may have appeared routine. But something, someone, was missing. Kim Jong-un, North Korea’s ruler. Here he is at that same celebration in past years. Kim’s absence has led to questions about his health and whereabouts. But details from the secretive regime are hard to come by. “They have such control over information. They are so good at restricting access.” So how do North Korea watchers try to discern what’s happening during moments like this? We spoke to several experts to understand some of the main techniques that they rely on. Satellite images are a key tool. Analysts use them to look for changes or patterns that can help explain what might be happening in the country and to track Kim Jong-un’s movements. Take the Central Party Complex, for example, the regime’s headquarters. “The Central Party Complex is located right next to where they have the military parades. In Pyongyang, it is called North Korea’s Forbidden City, because you cannot go there without showing your ID. You’ve got to go through four lines of security before you go in to the actual building. But it is where all of North Korea’s top officials have residences.” But from above, there are ways around the secrecy. “You could tell if Kim Jong-un is in the office based on the guard deployments around the buildings. It’s like when the president’s in the White House. You can see it. There’s a state security presence by the Secret Service.” The complex also includes Kim’s reported personal medical clinic. But in April, we detected a change. The clinic had just been demolished, making way for a much larger structure. It’s the kind of visual clue that analysts tend to keep a close eye on. If Kim Jong-un does have health issues, there are other places experts look to for indicators, like North Korea’s most elite hospital where the Kim family has its own wing. Analysts might look for certain vehicles outside. Here’s what a motorcade looks like near one of Kim’s homes. If this appears near the hospital, it may mean he’s there. “We would look at vehicles parked outside of the hospital — outside of the entrance. They would, of course, be parked very orderly. It would be very clean and neat. And anywhere from six to 10 Mercedes Benz sedans. And then after that, we would probably start to see what are called ACVs, armored combat vehicles, and any other deployment of Kim Jong-un’s body guard units.” Another area that observers look at is this train station in Wonsan, near one of Kim’s favorite homes. Recently, what is likely his personal train was spotted parked nearby. [MUSIC PLAYING] If Kim’s health was of serious concern, or if the regime felt its very survival was in immediate danger, analysts may look to a compound and surrounding area in the country’s north. “This is where the Kim’s and the North Korean officials would travel and issue commands and instructions. It is geographically isolated. It is a special district where Kim Jong-un has his panic room and has a command and control facility where he would be able to command North Korea’s armed forces in the event of an invasion or in the event of an insurrection against his leadership. And it also has the value-added benefit of being so close to the North Korea- China border that he could drive into China if they felt that the emergency was that bad.” If Kim were recovering from an ailment, he might do it at this residential compound. It’s where Kim’s father, Kim Jong-il, made his first public appearance at a soccer game after having a stroke in 2008. “It is located about 20 to 30 minutes from central Pyongyang. So that would allow him to recover in privacy, and quietly. But if he needed to go to Pyongyang to exercise his authority or show his face at a political meeting, it’s a short drive.” But satellite imagery doesn’t always provide a clear answer. “We also need to be mindful of the fact that North Korea is very aware that we are watching them from above. And so I have seen in the past that North Korea uses that satellite imagery to conceal what they’re doing and to deflect what they’re doing.” “Sometimes when he’s gone abroad, they will put the guard deployments up there to make it look like he’s in there. He’s not in there.” Another area North Korea watchers look to for clues about the regime is state-run news outlets. Although the media treats North Korean leaders as godlike figures, experts say there are ways to tell if Kim is in trouble. “If there’s a major crisis today, tomorrow, within a few days, what we will see are very long editorials or very long essays published in North Korea’s newspapers, which will talk about the virtues of Kim family leadership. They won’t refer directly to Kim Jong-un necessarily. But they will talk about virtues and trace those virtues back to all three of the Kims.” [CHOIR SINGING IN KOREAN] The presence or absence of the ruler during major media spectacles may also be a worrying sign, like in 2008 when Kim Jong-un’s father and then leader was due at a major military parade to celebrate the country’s founding. “We’re expecting then leader Kim Jong-il to come out and wave, salute the troops. So it was my first day of work. I was watching this. And lo and behold, as the camera scanned to the viewing platform, he wasn’t there. And I cannot tell you, that just sent shivers down my spine. We finally got intel sources in Washington, D.C., to confirm that they believed that Kim Jong-il had suffered a stroke several weeks earlier in August and was in a coma.” State television didn’t cover Kim Jong-il’s ailments. “All they showed on state TV was old documentary footage but no new images that have been moving for months. North Korea never acknowledged his illness — never.” Finally, there is the tracking of commercial and private flights. This website shows flights over a typical 48-hour period. Notice how empty it is over North Korea. Only about half a dozen commercial airliners land in Pyongyang’s airport each day. So any unscheduled flight should stand out. If Kim Jong-un was severely ill, analysts may watch for a specific type of flight arriving in Pyongyang. “I would look for charter flights because if it was a major medical procedure, there’s a very high chance that they would have retained foreign physicians to do the procedure.” North Korea watchers have used flight tracking in the past for clues about the ruler’s intentions. In 2018, unscheduled cargo plane flights were quickly spotted leaving Pyongyang bound for Vladivostok, Russia. Both were believed to have been involved in sanctions violations by the regime. None of these techniques alone can provide a full picture of Kim’s life. Analysts also heavily rely on human and intelligence sources. And despite modern technology and expertise, the regime still manages to keep most of its internal affairs away from prying eyes. [CHOIR HUMMING]

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/26/world/asia/kim-jong-un-absence-north-korea.html

Two prominent, female Democratic vice-presidential front-runners appeared on three national political shows Sunday morning and neither were asked about explosive allegations against their potential running mate Joe Biden.

A now-infamous clip from a 1993 episode of CNN’s “Larry King Live” resurfaced on Friday, appearing to include the mother of Tara Reade — who has accused Biden of past sexual assault while in the Senate — alluding to “problems” her daughter faced while working as a staffer for the then-U.S. senator from Delaware. Reade later confirmed to Fox News that it was her mother on the call, and the allegations against Biden reclaimed the spotlight.

CLIP SURFACES OF BIDEN ACCUSER TARA READE’S MOTHER PHONING INTO ‘LARRY KING LIVE’ IN 1993 ALLUDING TO CLAIM

However, CNN’s Jake Tapper interviewed former candidate for governor in Georgia Stacey Abrams about her ambitions to Biden’s running mate on “State of the Union” and failed to ask about the allegations.

NBC’s “Meet the Press” host Chuck Todd also gave Abrams a pass during an interview on Sunday.

CNN’s Jake Tapper, ABC’s George Stephanopoulos and NBC’s Chuck Todd failed to ask Joe Biden’s potential running mates about sexual assault allegations against the 2020 Democratic frontrunner.

“Joe Biden is going to be the president of the United States,” Abrams told Todd while the Peacock Network host ignored the allegation.

Abrams wasn’t the only potential Biden running mate to appear on television on Sunday – less than 48 hours after the Media Research Center found the clip of Reade’s mother calling into CNN.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar appeared on ABC’s “This Week with George Stephanopoulos,” but the Bill Clinton staffer-turned-ABC News anchor didn’t ask about the claims against Biden, either.

Biden’s campaign has adamantly denied the allegations, calling the claim concerning the purported incident decades ago “false.”

BIDEN SKATES THROUGH TV INTERVIEWS AS ANCHORS AVOID QUESTIONS ABOUT TARA READE’S ASSAULT CLAIM

There is growing anger from conservatives, progressive Democrats and supporters of the #MeToo movement about the lack of response from Democratic leaders toward the allegations, with many noting how it has differed from the response given to Supreme Court Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s accuser Christine Blasey Ford during his confirmation hearings.

Reade’s story first resurfaced in an article in The Intercept on March 24. Podcast host Katie Halper then interviewed Reade, who said that in 1993 a more senior member of Biden’s staff asked her to bring the then-senator his gym bag near the U.S. Capitol building, which led to the encounter in question.

“He greeted me, he remembered my name, and then we were alone. It was the strangest thing,” Reade told Halper. “There was no like, exchange really. He just had me up against the wall.”

CNN FINALLY COVERS LARRY KING CLIP IN WHICH BIDEN ACCUSER’S MOTHER PURPORTEDLY ALLUDES TO DAUGHTER’S SEXUAL ASSAULT

Reade said that she was wearing “a business skirt,” but “wasn’t wearing stockings — it was a hot day.”

She continued: “His hands were on me and underneath my clothes, and he went down my skirt and then up inside it and he penetrated me with his fingers and he was kissing me at the same time and he was saying some things to me.”

Reade claimed Biden first asked if she wanted “to go somewhere else.”

“I pulled away, he got finished doing what he was doing,” Reade said. “He said: ‘Come on, man. I heard you liked me.’”

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Reade said she tried to share her story last year, but nobody listened to her. Earlier this month, she filed a criminal complaint against Biden with police in Washington, D.C.

Fox News’ Joseph A. Wulfsohn and Andrew O’Reilly contributed to this report. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/potential-biden-running-mates-not-asked-sexual-assault-allegations

Image caption

Italy imposed strict restrictions seven weeks ago to curb the spread of the coronavirus

Italy has outlined plans to ease the strict restrictions imposed seven weeks ago to curb the spread of the coronavirus as it recorded its lowest daily death toll since mid-March.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said curbs would be relaxed from 4 May, with people being allowed to visit their relatives in small numbers, in masks.

Parks will reopen, but schools will not restart classes until September.

Other countries like Switzerland and Spain are also relaxing their measures.

Italy recorded 260 new virus-related deaths on Sunday, the lowest daily figure since 14 March. The total is now at 26,644, Europe’s highest official toll.

The country has confirmed 197,675 cases of the virus, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, which is tracking the disease globally.

The number of cases has been falling, and authorities now believe the contagion rate – the number of people each person with the virus infects – is low enough to justify a cautious easing of curbs.

What has been announced?

Speaking on television, Mr Conte outlined how the country would begin “Phase Two” of lifting its coronavirus lockdown. The measures include:

  • People will be allowed to move around their own regions – but not between different regions
  • Funerals are set to resume, but with a maximum of 15 people attending, and ideally to be carried out outdoors
  • Individual athletes can resume training, and people can do sports not only in the vicinity of their homes but in wider areas
  • Bars and restaurants will reopen for takeaway service from 4 May -not just delivery as now – but food must be consumed at home or in an office
  • Hairdressers, beauty salons, bars and restaurants are expected to reopen for dine-in service from 1 June
  • More retail shops not already opened under the earliest easing measures will reopen on 18 May along with museums and libraries
  • Sports teams will also be able to hold group training from 18 May

There was no announcement on the possibility of Italy’s premier football league Serie A resuming, even behind closed doors.

Mr Conte stressed that social distancing measures would need to continue for months to come, and said church services would remain banned. He urged people to stay a metre (3ft) away from each other.

“If we do not respect the precautions the curve will go up, the deaths will increase, and we will have irreversible damage to our economy,” the prime minister said. “If you love Italy, keep your distance.”

What is the background?

Italians have been living under a national stay-at-home order since 9 March, with everyone required to remain within a few streets of their door.

The country brought in very limited easing of its virus control measures on 14 April
, permitting some small shops – including bookstores, dry cleaners and stationers – to reopen. The businesses chosen were deemed to be lower risk as they rarely attract crowds.

This is a roadmap to reopening for a country that has endured hell, but it could take years for it to recover, the BBC’s Mark Lowen in Rome reports.

If infections show an increase again, the government will have powers to intervene to reintroduce certain restrictions, our correspondent adds.

Video caption

The mental health toll as Italians struggle to cope with Europe’s strictest and longest-running lockdown

What’s happening elsewhere?

Spain
– the European country with the highest number of deaths after Italy – reported its lowest daily death toll in more than five weeks on Sunday, with 288 new fatalities. On Sunday, children could go outside for the first time in six weeks.

In
Switzerland
, garden centres and hairdressers will open their doors on Monday, followed by schools and shops selling items other than food in two weeks’ time.

But gatherings of more than five people remain banned until 8 June, and it is unclear when bars and restaurants will be allowed to reopen.

In neighbouring
Germany
, facemasks have become mandatory in public transport. The new rules have created huge demand for the product and, as a result, a growing shortage, so the government is planning to manufacture millions of masks in Germany.

More states in the
US
are easing lockdown restrictions, with
Tennessee, Colorado and Montana joining four other states in allowing certain businesses to reopen
.

Eight states led by Republican governors – Arkansas, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming – never issued mandatory orders to stay at home. The US has recorded more than 54,000 deaths and over 940,000 confirmed cases.

Meanwhile,
UK
Prime Minister
Boris Johnson returns to work on Monday
, after recovering from the virus. Mr Johnson spent a week in hospital, including three nights in intensive care, after being admitted on 5 April.


Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/amp/world-europe-52435273

EL PASO, Texas — A man shot in the Aug. 3 attack targeting Latinos in an El Paso Walmart died after months in the hospital, raising the death toll from the attack to 23, according to a hospital official.

“After a nearly nine-month fight, our hearts are heavy as we report Guillermo ‘Memo’ Garcia, our last remaining patient being treated from the El Paso shooting, has passed away,” said Del Sol Medical Center CEO David Shimp.

Garcia and his wife Jessica Coca Garcia were fundraising for their daughter’s soccer team in the Walmart parking lot when the suspected gunman opened fire that Saturday morning.

Garcia is survived by his wife, who suffered leg wounds but recovered. A week after the shooting, she rose from her wheelchair to give a speech across the road from the county jail where the suspected shooter was being held.

“Racism is something I always wanted to think didn’t exist. Obviously, it does,” she said.

The suspect, Dallas-area man Patrick Crusius, 21, remains in the same jail awaiting trial. State prosecutors have charged him with murder and are pursuing the death penalty, and federal prosecutors charged him with hate crimes.

Police said they arrested Crusius near the shooting after he surrendered to officers, telling them he was targeting “Mexicans.” They also attributed to him a four-page racist screed that decried a Hispanic “invasion” of Texas and the U.S., and called for ethnic and racial segregation.

The shooting was the largest terrorist attack targeting Latinos in modern history and spread fear throughout the Latino community.

In the wake of the attack, El Paso police said the Walmart had previously hired armed off-duty police officers to guard larger stores but removed them at some point.

The Garcia family joined a number of victims who sued the Walmart over lack of security on the busy Saturday shopping day when about 3,000 people were in the store. The lawsuit is ongoing.

Following the attack, the Bentonville, Arkansas-based company added armed and unarmed officers to all of its stores. It stopped selling handguns and short-barrel rifle ammunition.

The store where the shooting took place reopened in November.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/el-paso-walmart-shooting-victim-dies-death-toll-now-23-n1193016