LONDON (Reuters) – British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s closest aide refused to resign on Monday, saying he had done nothing wrong by driving 250 miles from London to access childcare when Britons were being told to stay at home to fight COVID-19.

Dominic Cummings has faced calls to quit from lawmakers, Church of England bishops, police officers and scientists over his trip to County Durham, northern England, which they said had damaged citizens’ trust in public health messaging.

But he plays a vital role for Johnson, and the prime minister’s own judgment has been called into question for defending him and keeping him in his job, leaving many Britons thinking the rules did not apply to the people in charge.

“I did what I thought was the right thing to do,” Cummings said in response to reporters’ questions after reading a statement defending his decision to travel 400 km to Durham with his wife, who was ill at the time, and his four-year-old son.

“I think … I behaved reasonably,” he said.

Johnson had come out fighting for Cummings at a news conference on Sunday, but his intervention backfired after he failed to provide any detailed justification for his adviser’s actions.

With a growing number of lawmakers from his own Conservative Party openly defying him by calling on Cummings to quit, Johnson asked his trusted aide – who normally stays behind the scenes – to explain himself in public on Monday.

The stakes are high for Cummings, Johnson and the nation. The furore has overshadowed and muddled the government’s public health messaging as the country gradually starts to ease the lockdown.

With a death toll of around 43,000, Britain is the worst-hit country in Europe and the government had already been under pressure over its handling of the pandemic.

EYE TEST?

In an extraordinary scene in the rose garden at 10 Downing Street, the official prime ministerial residence and office, Cummings, 48, sat at a desk on the grass for an hour, subjecting himself to detailed questions.

The choice of venue underscored Cummings’ power at the heart of government and his importance to Johnson, whom he helped to secure Britain’s exit from the European Union in a 2016 referendum, and later helped to win power.

He said he undertook the trip soon after learning that Johnson had tested positive for the new coronavirus. Cummings’ wife was already ill and he feared if he too fell ill neither parent would be strong enough to care for their son.

He said he decided they should go and stay in an isolated cottage on his father’s farm so that his 17-year-old niece could look after his son if necessary. Cummings did fall ill while they were there, as did his son who briefly went to hospital.

Asked whether he tried to find a childcare option in London before leaving, he said he did not think it would have been reasonable to ask friends to expose themselves to the virus.

Cummings answered questions about whether he had stopped for petrol or for his son to go to the toilet during the long drive.

Slideshow (9 Images)

Whether or not Cummings’ sometimes convoluted explanations win over critics may take time to become clear.

Quizzed about a drive he took with his wife and son from the family farm to a local beauty spot, Barnard Castle, he said his eyesight had been affected by his illness and they wanted to check he would be able to undertake the journey back to London.

Additional reporting by Alistair Smout and Paul Sandle; Editing by Timothy Heritage

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSKBN2310UI

  • Earlier this week, President Donald Trump reportedly refused to host a White House ceremony to unveil former President Barack Obama’s official portrait. 
  • Trump and Obama have traded barbs in recent weeks, particularly over Trump’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak.
  • But they are far from the first American presidents not to see eye to eye.
  • Here are eight other presidential feuds, dating as far back as Thomas Jefferson and John Adams. 
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

The bad blood between President Donald Trump and his predecessor Barack Obama boiled over this week when NBC News reported that Trump was refusing to hold a White House ceremony to unveil Obama’s official portrait. 

The ceremony is a long-held White House tradition, whereby the current president, usually in their first term, invites their predecessor back to the White House to see the painting unveiled. 

But according to sources who spoke to NBC News, there is so much animosity between Trump and Obama that the ceremony is not likely to happen. Trump in recent weeks also been accusing Obama of committing a political crime, which he has called “Obamagate” without explaining what it is.

With presidential power swinging back and forth between parties for decades, Trump and Obama certainly are not the first presidents not to see eye to eye. 

Here are eight other major presidential feuds in American history, from Thomas Jefferson and John Adams to Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan. 

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/presidential-feuds-history-trump-obama-jefferson-adams2020-5

President Donald Trump has threatened to scrap plans to hold the upcoming Republican National Convention in North Carolina and move the event elsewhere if the state’s governor does not agree to allow “full attendance” at the August event.

Currently, under North Carolina’s coronavirus response measures, gatherings of more than 10 people in indoor settings are not permitted under “most circumstances,” while outdoor gatherings are limited to a maximum of 25 people.

Demanding an answer on whether Republicans would be able to move forward with a fully-attended convention in August, Trump said that if North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat, could not commit to the allowance, the RNC would be reluctantly forced to move the convention and “all of the jobs and economic development it brings” to another state.

While the coronavirus pandemic could make it difficult for Trump to find another state willing to hold the mass event, another clear hurdle stands in the president’s way: the fact that few states wanted to host the event in the first place.

An article published by New York Magazine’s Intelligencer blog laid out the GOP’s struggle with the headline: “GOP Awards Its 2020 Convention to the Only City That Sorta Kinda Wanted It.”

At the time, Charlotte, which had previously hosted the 2012 Democratic National Convention, had been the only city to publicly pursue the convention, while other cities, including Philadelphia, San Antonio and Nashville, backed away from the potential bid.

In an op-ed, San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg explained the city’s decision, asserting that “national political conventions aren’t the great deal for cities that the parties and their advocates want us to believe.”

“That’s the reason San Antonio hasn’t pursued a bid for either national political convention in 20 years,” Nirenberg said, noting that “only one city seems to be aggressively pursuing the 2020 Republican National Convention this time around.”

In a separate statement Councilwoman Shirley Gonzales said that she further believed that holding the GOP event in San Antonio would break with the city’s commitment to “cultural inclusion.”

While Las Vegas had also been in the running to host the event, the city’s Convention and Visitors Authority reportedly overruled local Republicans officials’ efforts to see the RNC held there.

In the end, Charlotte, which was actively pursuing the chance to host the event, appeared to be the best, and perhaps only, choice.

Now, however, Trump has threatened to pull the plug on plans to host the RNC in the North Carolina city.

Gov. Cooper’s office has responded to the threat, with a spokesperson asserting that the state would continue to work with Republicans on planning the event, but would also rely on “data and science to protect our state’s public health and safety.”

As of Monday morning, the state had more than 23,200 confirmed coronavirus cases and at least 744 deaths, according to government data.

On Friday, North Carolina entered “Phase 2” of its plans to reopen amid the coronavirus pandemic, with restaurants and some businesses allowed to open, with enforced limitations on capacity.

Phase 2 is expected to be in place until at least June 26. That is when officials are expected to make a decision on whether to extend it or relax the rules.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/trump-says-republican-national-convention-might-move-charlotteno-other-city-wanted-host-it-1506350

Hundreds of people gathered at a popular Daytona Beach boardwalk during Memorial Day weekend and were seen partying and dancing despite social distancing restrictions imposed by the state, authorities said Sunday.

Police responded, attempting to disperse the crowds along A1A in Daytona Beach that were there for an annual gathering not authorized by the local government this year.

The Volusia County Sheriff’s Office released helicopter images showing the large crowds surrounding a car outside a beachfront mall as a man stood on the sunroof and other men hung out the windows throwing money around and blocking traffic. (See video below: 1:08). “Looks like that white car, there’s two people out the sunroof throwing money; they are clearly throwing cash at the crowd,” said a deputy.

City officials received numerous phone calls and messages worried for their safety as large crowds began to form on A1A, according to Orlando TV station Local 6.

Police said a shooting also was reported outside a nearby convenience store, with two people taken to the hospital with gunshot wounds and four injured by shrapnel. Officers were not involved.

Officials said they were criticized for not making use of force against the crowds and declining to make arrests for social distancing violations. Coronavirus social distancing rules in the Florida state that people must be in groups of 10 or fewer.

In South Florida, Broward County and Miami-Dade County waited until after Memorial Day to open their beaches.

Local 10′s Michelle Solomon contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.local10.com/news/local/2020/05/24/no-social-distancing-here-crowds-pack-daytona-beach/

“While they’re having a bag up time on the water in their boats, there are elderly people within 300 feet of where we’re standing trapped in their homes knowing if they contract this disease, they’re likely to die,” resident William Hamilton said.

Source Article from https://www.wsoctv.com/news/local/hundreds-show-off-water-sc-maga-boat-parade/7GVFRC5YJVCMXKVWK5VMBERSLQ/

The U.S. has also been vocal about its support for Taiwan, incurring the wrath of Beijing, which has said that the island is the most sensitive issue in the Sino-American relationship.

On Sunday, China’s top diplomat Wang Yi said the U.S. should not challenge China’s red line on Taiwan.

“There’s growing concern in the mainland around the potential for Taiwan to enhance its international standing in part as a result of support from the United States, but also frankly from the outstanding job that Taiwan has done in battling the Covid-19 pandemic,” Elizabeth Economy, C.V. Starr senior fellow and director for Asia studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, said Friday.

With the latest developments in Hong Kong, the Taiwanese people are likely to be even more wary about China’s pursuit.

Major political parties in Taiwan have rejected the “one country, two systems” model that China has been trying to sell the island. Hong Kong operates under that framework, which is supposed grant the city legal and economic systems that are separate from those of the mainland.

“I don’t think anyone in Taiwan, (or) very few people will believe in the ‘one country, two systems’ formula. So this means that Taiwan is going to drift much more out of the category of the One China complex,” said Orville Schell, Arthur Ross director of the Center on U.S.-China Relations at the Asia Society.

“That’s very, very fraught, because then you end up with a cross-strait situation and a potential military conflict should Taiwan drift far enough that China feels it has to take some kind of demonstrative, (or) at least symbolic action to prevent it,” Schnell told CNBC on Friday.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/05/25/taiwans-tsai-backs-hong-kongers-after-china-proposes-security-law.html

Reporting was contributed by Iliana Magra, Raphael Minder, Melissa Eddy, Megan Specia, Ben Dooley, Joshua Barone, Jesse Drucker, Sarah Kliff, Mark Landler Stephen Castle, Damien Cave, Joshua Barone, Mariel Padilla, Michael Paulson, Jessica Silver-Greenberg, Knvul Sheikh, Ben Sisario, Michael Wilson, Zachary Woolfe, Kai Schultz and Ellen Barry.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/25/world/coronavirus-news-cases-deaths.html

Prime Minister Boris Johnson did not provide further details on the £1 billion widening of the A66 across the Pennines in Northern England at the 10 Downing Street coronavirus briefing on May 24. Nor did he elaborate on another of yesterday’s announcements by Transport Secretary Grant Shapps who revealed that the U.K. would be following France in providing £50 bicycle repair vouchers to citizens.

Those two critical omissions could form part of the explanation for a heartfelt, career-ending, short-lived tweet sent out from the official U.K. Civil Service Twitter feed.

The tweet—which quickly went viral—was posted shortly after the end of the widely-derided briefing by the Prime Minister, who backed his chief advisor Dominic Cummings for having good “instincts” in breaking both lockdown and quarantine during a 260-mile drive from London to the North East England cathedral city of Durham.

The message—“Arrogant and offensive. Can you imagine having to work with these truth twisters?”—was removed within about 10 minutes of first appearing, but not before it had been “liked” by more than 30,000 Twitter users. It has been archived for posterity, and to head off claims it was “Photoshopped.”

During the briefing the Prime Minister was asked about evidence that Cummings had been seen in the County Durham town of Barnard Castle during the height of the lockdown, which would be a clear breach of the government’s guidelines, guidelines in part developed by Cummings who has contributed to the government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE) coronavirus crisis meetings.

Johnson did not provide an answer to the question.

Barnard Castle is situated on the A67, close to the A66, and any improvement to this cross-Pennine route would no doubt aid a lockdown-breaking journey in any future killer pandemic.

The widening of the A66 has been promised by numerous governments since the 1970s.

The U.K.’s Civil Service—staffers who carry out the day-to-day work of the government and who remain in place when governments change—has 256,000 Twitter followers and now probably one less member of staff.

“An unauthorised tweet was posted on a government channel this evening,” said the U.K. government’s Cabinet Office Twitter account. (The Cabinet Office is the government department responsible for supporting the Prime Minister and ministers in his top-table team.)

“The post has been removed and we are investigating the matter,” continued the account, which was met with anger, re-postings of the “unauthorised tweet” and mockery. “The official Civil Service account was only following its instincts,” snarked journalist Michael Deacon.

Source Article from https://www.forbes.com/sites/carltonreid/2020/05/24/civil-service-tweet-goes-viral-arrogant-and-offensive-can-you-imagine-having-to-work-with-these-truth-twisters/

Sheriff’s deputies and beach patrols tried to make sure people kept their distance from others as they soaked up the rays on the sand and at parks and other recreation sites around the country.

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In the Tampa area along Florida’s Gulf Coast, the crowds were so big that authorities took the extraordinary step of closing parking lots because they were full.

On the Sunday talk shows, Dr. Deborah Birx, coordinator of the White House coronavirus task force, said she was “very concerned” about scenes of people crowding together over the weekend.

“We really want to be clear all the time that social distancing is absolutely critical. And if you can’t social distance and you’re outside, you must wear a mask,” she said on ABC’s “This Week.”

In Missouri, people packed bars and restaurants at the Lake of the Ozarks, a vacation spot popular with Chicagoans, over the weekend. One video showed a crammed pool where vacationers lounged close together without masks, St. Louis station KMOV-TV reported.

In Daytona Beach, Florida, gunfire erupted Saturday night along a beachside road where more than 200 people had gathered and were seen partying and dancing despite the restrictions. Several people were wounded and taken to the hospital, authorities said.

“Disney is closed, Universal is closed. Everything is closed so where did everybody come with the first warm day with 50% opening? Everybody came to the beach,” Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood said at a Sunday news conference, referring to crowds in the Daytona Beach area.

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On Georgia’s Tybee Island, the beach was filled with families, bicyclists, beach chairs, games, swimmers and more. On a main drag, people lined the sidewalk at Wet Willie’s, a chain bar that sells frozen cocktails. Most stood close together — not nearly 6 feet (2 meters) apart — and none wore masks.

But at a nearby grocery store, staff members handed customers gloves and a number to keep track of how many people were inside at a time. Shoppers had their own masks.

Officials in California said most people were covering their faces and keep their distance even as they ventured to beaches and parks. Many Southern California beaches were open only for swimming, running and other activities.

At New York’s Orchard Beach in the Bronx, kids played with toys, and people sat in folding chairs. Some wore winter coats on a cool and breezy day, and many wore masks and sat apart from others.

“Good to be outside. Fresh air. Just good to enjoy the outdoors,” said Danovan Clacken, whose face was covered.

The U.S. is on track to surpass 100,000 coronavirus deaths in the next few days, while Europe has seen over 169,000 dead, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University that almost certainly understates the toll. Worldwide, more than 5.4 million people have been infected and nearly 345,000 have died.

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The New York Times marked the horror by devoting Sunday’s entire front page to a long list of names of those who have died in the United States. The headline: “An Incalculable Loss.”

Meanwhile, President Donald Trump, who went golfing for the second day in a row after not playing for weeks, said on the syndicated Sunday program “Full Measure With Sharyl Attkisson” that he is feeling fine after a two-week course of the unproven drug hydroxychloroquine and a zinc supplement.

The president has spent weeks pushing the drug against the advice of many of his administration’s top medical professionals. Hydroxychloroquine can have deadly side effects.

The issue of wearing masks in public and staying several feet apart has become fraught politically, with some Americans arguing such rules violate their rights.

Republican Gov. Mike DeWine of Ohio, who has been targeted by such demonstrations, insisted the precautions should not be a partisan issue.

“This is not about whether you are liberal or conservative, left or right, Republican or Democrat,” DeWine said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “Its been very clear what the studies have shown, you wear the mask not to protect yourself so much as to protect others.”

Critics chided Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam, who has repeatedly urged Virginians to cover their faces in public, for not heeding his own words when he posed mask-less for photographs with residents this weekend. A spokeswoman for the governor’s office said that Northam should have brought a mask out with him — but that he hadn’t been expecting to be near anyone.

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On Sunday, the Trump administration added Brazil to the list of countries it has banned travel from. Brazil is second only to the U.S. in reported coronavirus cases.

The ban, which takes effect Thursday, applies to foreign nationals who have been in Brazil in the 14 days before they hoped to enter the United States. It does not apply to U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents or some of their relatives.

Across Europe, meanwhile, a mishmash of travel restrictions appears to be on the horizon, often depending on what passports visitors carry.

Beginning Monday, France is relaxing its border restrictions, allowing in migrant workers and family visitors from other European countries. Italy, which plans to open regional and international borders on June 3 in a bid to boost tourism, is only now allowing locals back to beaches in their own regions with restrictions.

For the first time in months, the faithful gathered in St. Peter’s Square for the traditional Sunday papal blessing, but they kept their distance from one another. Some 2,000 Muslims gathered for Eid al-Fitr prayers at a sports complex in a Paris suburb, spaced 3 feet (1 meter) apart and wearing masks.

Beachside communities in England urged Londoners and others to stay away after rules were eased to allow people to drive any distance for exercise or recreation. The southern coastal city of Brighton said: “Wish you were here — but not just yet.” Wales kept up its “Later” tourism campaign, reminding people that its hotels, restaurants and tourist sites are still closed.

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___

Mahoney reported from New York. Associated Press writers around the world contributed to this report.

___

Follow AP pandemic coverage at http://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak.


Source Article from https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/05/24/business/memorial-day-weekend-draws-big-crowds-lake-ozarks-missouri-beaches-florida-despite-warnings/

A law in Florida requiring felons to pay legal fees as part of their sentences before regaining the vote is unconstitutional for those unable to pay, or unable to find out how much they owe, a federal judge has ruled.

The 125-page ruling, issued by US district court Judge Robert Hinkle in Tallahassee on Sunday, involves a state law to implement a 2016 ballot measure approved by voters to automatically restore the right to vote for many felons who have completed their sentence.

The Republican-led legislature stipulated that fines and legal fees must be paid as part of the sentence, in addition to serving any prison time.

Hinkle has acknowledged he is unlikely to have the last word in the case, expecting the administration of Republican governor Ron DeSantis to launch an appeal.

The case could have deep ramifications in the crucial electoral battleground given that Florida has an estimated 774,000 disenfranchised felons who are barred because of financial obligations. Many of those felons are African Americans and statistically more likely to vote for the Democratic party. Florida was also the scene of the infamous “hanging chad” controversy in the 2000 US election.

The judge called the Florida rules a “pay-to-vote system” that were unconstitutional when applied to felons who were otherwise eligible to vote but genuinely unable to pay the required amount.

A further complication was how to set the exact amount in fines and other kinds of legal fees owed by felons seeking the vote. Hinkle said it was unconstitutional to bar any voter whose amount owed “could not be determined with diligence”.

Hinkle ordered the state to require election officials to allow felons to request an advisory opinion on how much they owe, essentially placing the burden on election officials to seek that information from court systems. If there was no response within three weeks, then the applicant should not be barred from registering to vote, the ruling said.

Hinkle said the requirement to pay fines and restitution as ordered in a sentence is constitutional for those who are able to pay if the amount can be determined.

The case, Kelvin Jones vs Ron DeSantis, consolidates five lawsuits filed by advocates of disenfranchised felons, including the American Civil Liberties Union, the Brennan Center and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

“This is a tremendous victory for voting rights,” Julie Ebenstein, senior staff attorney with ACLUs voting rights project, said in a statement. “The court recognized that conditioning a persons right to vote on their ability to pay is unconstitutional. This ruling means hundreds of thousands of Floridians will be able to rejoin the electorate and participate in upcoming elections.”

The 2018 ballot measure, known as amendment four, does not apply to convicted murderers and rapists.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/may/25/us-judge-rules-florida-felons-can-vote-without-paying-legal-fees

President Trump late Sunday lashed out at Joe Biden after the likely Democrat nominee criticized his golf outing earlier in the day as the country approaches 100,000 coronavirus deaths.

TOP GOP REP BLASTS FLYNN JUDGE

Biden has been a fierce critic of Trump’s handling of the outbreak and the ad juxtaposed Trump playing golf at the Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Va., and the death toll numbers.

“Nearly 100,000 lives have been lost, and tens of millions are out of work,” Biden tweeted. “Meanwhile, the president spent his day golfing.”

Trump took to Twitter himself to call out “Sleepy Joe.”

DOJ’S FLYNN FILING RENEWS FOCUS ON MYSTERIOUS SUSAN RICE EMAIL FROM TRANSITION

He said Biden’s team apparently thinks he “should stay in the White House at all times.”

“What they didn’t say is that it’s the first time I’ve played golf in almost 3 months, that Biden was constantly vacationing, relaxing & making shady deals  with other countries, & that Barack [Obama] was always playing golf, doing much of his traveling in a fume spewing 747 to play in Hawaii—Once even teeing off immediately after announcing the gruesome death of a great young man by ISIS!”

Trump did not specify the instance. But in 2014, then-President Obama faced criticism over his reaction to the death of James Foley, an American journalist. The New York Times reported at the time that Obama spoke with Foley’s parents and as soon as “the cameras went off,” he headed to a golf course on Martha’s Vineyard. The paper reported, “He spent the rest of the afternoon on the links even as a firestorm of criticism erupted over what many saw as a callous indifference to the slaughter he had just condemned.”

Trump critics likely see Biden engaging in the same technique Trump has employed to damage political rivals. Mediate pointed out that Trump has long criticized Obama for playing golf during his presidency.

“President Obama has a major meeting on the N.Y.C. Ebola outbreak, with people flying in from all over the country, but decided to play golf!” Trump wrote in 2014.

The Twitter exchange may be a preview of what is still to come before the 2020 elections. Trump has recently tried to go on the offensive over the unmasking tied to the Gen. Michael Flynn case. He told Fox News exclusively last week that the Russia probe was the “greatest political crime in the history of our country.”

Biden was recently asked by ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos about the Obama administration’s investigation into Flynn and about a mystery Jan. 5, 2017 meeting at the Oval Office. He said he was “aware that there was—that they asked for an investigation, but that’s all  I know about it, and I don’t think  anything else…”

The 2020 election will likely hinge on the way the public perceives Trump’s handling of the virus. Democrats, like Biden, have been critical of what they said was a slow response and inconsistent messaging. Biden wrote in the Washington Post earlier this month that Trump has failed to unify the country and instead “is reverting to a familiar strategy of deflecting blame and dividing Americans.”

Trump said his early travel ban with China saved lives. He launched “Operation Warp Speed” in an effort to create and distribute a coronavirus vaccine by combining the military, private industry and other government agencies.

Trump said one of his top priorities is getting the country reopened.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-slams-biden-ad-critical-of-golf-outing

The U.S. has also been vocal about its support for Taiwan, incurring the wrath of Beijing, which has said that the island is the most sensitive issue in the Sino-American relationship.

On Sunday, China’s top diplomat Wang Yi said the U.S. should not challenge China’s red line on Taiwan.

“There’s growing concern in the mainland around the potential for Taiwan to enhance its international standing in part as a result of support from the United States, but also frankly from the outstanding job that Taiwan has done in battling the Covid-19 pandemic,” Elizabeth Economy, C.V. Starr senior fellow and director for Asia studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, said Friday.

With the latest developments in Hong Kong, the Taiwanese people are likely to be even more wary about China’s pursuit.

Major political parties in Taiwan have rejected the “one country, two systems” model that China has been trying to sell the island. Hong Kong operates under that framework, which is supposed grant the city legal and economic systems that are separate from those of the mainland.

“I don’t think anyone in Taiwan, (or) very few people will believe in the ‘one country, two systems’ formula. So this means that Taiwan is going to drift much more out of the category of the One China complex,” said Orville Schell, Arthur Ross director of the Center on U.S.-China Relations at the Asia Society.

“That’s very, very fraught, because then you end up with a cross-strait situation and a potential military conflict should Taiwan drift far enough that China feels it has to take some kind of demonstrative, (or) at least symbolic action to prevent it,” Schnell told CNBC on Friday.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/05/25/taiwans-tsai-backs-hong-kongers-after-china-proposes-security-law.html

When one story mentioned suicide as a possibility, Klausutis’s father-in-law, Norm, wrote a letter to the editor: “Losing Lori was the most painful event in my life of 62 years. It was far more painful for her husband. . . . She was extremely happy with her life, job and family. For those who knew Lori, the thought of suicide, as your published reports suggested, is absolutely unthinkable.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/florida-family-grieves-as-trump-spreads-debunked-conspiracy-theory-to-attack-msnbc-host/2020/05/24/8a0a45a6-9dcd-11ea-b5c9-570a91917d8d_story.html

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    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/25/asia/hong-kong-china-national-security-law-intl-hnk/index.html

    The White House on Sunday announced a ban on non-citizens travelling from Brazil to the US.

    The Trump administration said it is suspending entry to the US by anyone who has been in the coronavirus-stricken country in the past 14 days.

    “The potential for undetected transmission of the virus by infected individuals seeking to enter the United States from the Federative Republic of Brazil threatens the security of our transportation system and infrastructure and the national security,” President Trump said in a proclamation.

    “I have determined that it is in the interests of the United States to take action to restrict and suspend the entry into the United States, as immigrants or nonimmigrants, of all aliens who were physically present within the Federative Republic of Brazil during the 14-day period preceding their entry or attempted entry into the United States.”

    After originating in China and traveling abroad to ravage nations including Italy, Spain and the US, the coronavirus has gained a toehold in Brazil to terrifying effect.

    Members of the Brazilian navy disinfecting Tom Jobim Galeao International Airport in Rio de Janeiro.

    Photo by CARL DE SOUZA/AFP via Getty Images

    President Bolsonaro’s supporters at a rally in Brasilia, Brazil.

    Photo by EVARISTO SA/AFP via Getty Images

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    As of Sunday afternoon, Brazil had seen 347,398 confirmed cases of the disease according to Johns Hopkins University, the most reported in any nation in the world other than the US.

    The South American nation has also lost 22,013 citizens to the pandemic.

    White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany said that the move is intended to keep Brazil’s bout with the bug from spilling over into the US, but stressed that the trade between the two nations won’t be impacted.

    “Today’s action will help ensure foreign nationals who have been in Brazil do not become a source of additional infections in our country,” said McEnany in a statement. “These new restrictions do not apply to the flow of commerce between the United States and Brazil.”

    Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/05/24/trump-restricts-travel-from-brazil-to-us-over-exploding-coronavirus/


    I voted stickers | AP Photo

    OAKLAND, Calif. — The Republican Party has thrown its full weight behind challenging California’s move to a mail-ballot November election during the coronavirus pandemic.

    A lawsuit from the Republican National Committee, the National Republican Congressional Committee and the California Republican Party seeks to invalidate Gov. Gavin Newsom’s order that county election officials mail every registered California voter a ballot. While Newsom and California election overseers have said the switch is necessary to balance public health with civic participation, opponents argue that Newsom has overstepped his authority.

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    The lawsuit argues that Newsom exceeded the limits of his powers by not seeking the consent of the state Legislature, accusing him of a “brazen power grab” that “was not authorized by state law” and transgressing the Constitution.

    Republicans in California and nationally have battled efforts to expand remote balloting for the November election, warning that mail ballots increase the risk of voter fraud. President Donald Trump has amplified that critique, including a string of Memorial Day weekend tweets, and additionally bemoaned mail ballots on the grounds that they disproportionately benefit Democrats.

    A complaint filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California emphasizes those arguments, alleging that Newsom has “created a recipe for disaster” with an ill-conceived voting plan.

    “No State that regularly conducts statewide all-mail elections automatically mails ballots to inactive voters because it invites fraud, coercion, theft, and otherwise illegitimate voting,” it states. “Fraudulent and invalid votes dilute the votes of honest citizens and deprive them of their right to vote in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.”

    Newsom was already facing legal challenges to his all-mail election order, including one filed last week by former Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), who is seeking to return to the House this year. The governor said Friday that he believed he was well within his authority.

    “We’re on firm legal ground,” Newsom said, arguing that “public health is a nonpartisan issue.”

    Millions of California voters already participate in mail-focused elections thanks to a state law that encourages counties to send ballots to all registered voters in an effort to lift participation.

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/california/story/2020/05/24/national-republicans-sue-california-to-block-mail-ballot-november-election-1286119

    A tour bus, sponsored by the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition, pulls up to a Miami-Dade County courthouse ahead of a hearing aimed at restoring the right to vote under Florida’s Amendment 4 on Nov. 8, 2019.

    Zak Bennett/AFP via Getty Images


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    A tour bus, sponsored by the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition, pulls up to a Miami-Dade County courthouse ahead of a hearing aimed at restoring the right to vote under Florida’s Amendment 4 on Nov. 8, 2019.

    Zak Bennett/AFP via Getty Images

    In a decision with potentially far-reaching implications for November’s election, a federal judge in Florida has determined a state law that would have required felons to pay any outstanding court fees and fines before they can register to vote is unconstitutional.

    The ruling on Sunday by U.S. District Judge Robert L. Hinkle moves hundreds of thousands of felons who have completed “all terms of their sentence including probation and parole” one step closer to winning back their right to vote.

    The case at the center of the decision stems from a constitutional amendment overwhelmingly approved by Florida voters in 2018 overturning a 150-year-old law that permanently disenfranchised people with felony convictions.

    The result was celebrated by supporters as the nation’s largest expansion of voting right in decades, but seven months later, the state’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, signed a bill limiting the law only to those who have successfully paid their court-related debts. DeSantis said the law was needed in order to clarify what the amendment meant by “all terms,” but critics charged that the measure amounted to a “poll tax.”

    In a 125-page ruling, Hinkle sided with critics of the bill, saying it discriminates against those who cannot afford to pay. The judge said the law is a violation of the 24th Amendment, which says the right to vote shall not be denied “by reason of failure to pay poll tax or other tax.”

    “A state may disenfranchise felons and impose conditions on their reenfranchisement,” Hinkle wrote in his opinion. “But the conditions must pass constitutional scrutiny. Whatever might be said of a rationally constructed system, this one falls short in substantial respects.”

    Hinkle allowed that the state “can condition voting on payment of fines and restitution that a person is able to pay but cannot condition voting on payment of amounts a person is unable to pay or on payment of taxes, even those labeled fees or costs.”

    The judge faulted the state for failing to come up with a way for felons to determine what they may owe the state or for them to show they are unable to afford payment. He ordered the division of elections to put in place a new process for felons to request an advisory opinion on whether they are eligible to vote. If they are not given an answer within 21 days, they will be allowed to register.

    Hinkle’s ruling could dramatically expand the rolls in a battleground state that President Trump narrowly won in 2016 by less than 115,000 votes. One analysis by Daniel Smith, a professor of political science at the University of Florida, found that more than 774,000 Florida citizens who have fulfilled the terms of their felony convictions have outstanding legal financial obligations.

    “Today’s decision is a landmark victory for hundreds of thousands of voters who want their voices to be heard,” said Paul Smith, vice president of the Campaign Legal Center, one of the groups that challenged the law. “This is a watershed moment in election law. States can no longer deny people access to the ballot box based on unpaid court costs and fees, nor can they condition rights restoration on restitution and fines that a person cannot afford to pay.”

    The governor’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but the state is expected to appeal the decision.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/05/24/861776313/federal-judge-rules-florida-law-restricting-voting-rights-for-felons-unconstitut

    Republican Congressman Adam Kinzinger of Illinois on Sunday asked President Donald Trump to stop spreading baseless conspiracy theories about Joe Scarborough.

    Trump earlier Sunday shared a tweet urging his 80 million followers to read a story shared by conservative publication True Pundit that claims Scarborough, the co-host of MSNBC’s Morning Joe program, was involved in the death of 28-year-old Lori Klausutis in 2001.

    At the time, Klausutis was working for Scarborough, then a Republican congressman from Florida. Police said they found no evidence of foul play in relation to Klausutis’ death. Medical examiners reported that the woman had a heart condition, which caused her to faint and accidentally smack her head on a table.

    Trump has revived attention to Klausutis’ death almost 20 years later by repeatedly touting unproven conspiracy theories speculating that she was murdered.

    “A lot of interest in this story about Psycho Joe Scarborough,” the president tweeted. “So a young marathon runner just happened to faint in his office, hit her head on his desk, & die? I would think there is a lot more to this story than that? An affair? What about the so-called investigator?”

    In response, Kinzinger called Trump’s claims “completely unfounded conspiracy,” and urged the president to “stop spreading it, stop creating paranoia.”

    “It will destroy us,” the GOP lawmaker added.

    Newsweek reached out to the White House for comment. This article will be updated with any response.

    The president also shared a story on Saturday that called for a new probe to be conducted into the circumstances surrounding Klausutis’ death. In the tweet, he called Scarborough a “nut job” and claimed that the 2001 case was now the “big topic of discussion in Florida.”

    “Did he get away with murder? Some people think so,” Trump said in a previous tweet last week.

    Scarborough has been fiercely critical of Trump over his alleged slow and inadequate response to the coronavirus. He recently expressed outrage against Trump live on-air for aggressively promoting baseless theories that have hurt the Klausutis family.

    Scarborough’s wife and Morning Joe co-host, Mika Brzezinski, recently called Trump a “cruel, sick, disgusting person” over the remarks, and explained that the president was merely attempting to use the theory to distract from the abysmal job he’s doing in the White House to contain the pandemic.

    The president’s remarks come as COVID-19 deaths in the United States is about to hit a grim new milestone of 100,000 fatalities.

    Kinzinger remarks on Sunday were not the first time the Republican had been publicly critical of the president. Last October, the lawmaker condemned the president over reports that the U.S. had bombed an American munitions storage bunker at a base in Syria.

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    Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/gop-congressman-asks-trump-stop-spreading-unfounded-joe-scarborough-conspiracy-it-will-destroy-1506273

    Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro is seen at a demonstration in favor of his government on Sunday.

    Andressa Anholete/Getty Images


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    Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro is seen at a demonstration in favor of his government on Sunday.

    Andressa Anholete/Getty Images

    President Trump is barring the entry of non-U.S. citizens who have been in Brazil within the past 14 days, the White House announced on Sunday, citing concerns over the country’s rapidly worsening coronavirus crisis.

    “Today’s action will help ensure foreign nationals who have been in Brazil do not become a source of additional infections in our country,” White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany said in a statement.

    The new restrictions take effect beginning Thursday, but according to McEnany, they only apply to travel, not “the flow of commerce between the United States and Brazil.”

    Brazil has the world’s second-highest number of confirmed coronavirus infections, behind only the United States, according to tracking by Johns Hopkins University. As of Sunday, the country had reported more than 347,000 cases of the virus and at least 22,000 deaths.

    Despite the country’s growing infection rate, President Jair Bolsonaro has downplayed the risks of the pandemic. He has dismissed the virus as “a little flu” and in April joined protesters calling for the lifting of social isolation measures.

    The Trump administration has already suspended travel from China, Iran and parts of Europe.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/05/24/861749690/white-house-restricts-travel-from-brazil-where-coronavirus-cases-near-350-000