“Vaccine or no vaccine, we’re back,” Trump said. “We’re starting the process.”

The president also said the United States will work closely with other countries — even those who aren’t allies, including China — to develop a vaccine. Trump said that cost will not be barrier to access. “The last thing anyone is looking for is profit.”

Operation Warp Speed will not only entail the development of a vaccine but also work to ensure that a successful vaccine can be produced rapidly and distributed efficiently, Trump said. Vaccine experts have expressed concern about whether there are sufficient supplies of materials such as glass vials to hold vaccine doses.

Slaoui said that he had recently seen encouraging unpublished data from a clinical trial of an unnamed vaccine candidate. “These data made me feel even more confident that we will be able to deliver a few hundred million doses of vaccine by the end of 2020,” he said.

Speaking minutes later, Azar gave a slightly different deadline, of January 2021, and said the goal was to make sufficient doses by then to vaccinate every American.

Public health experts, including National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci, have repeatedly cautioned that developing an effective vaccine will take at least a year to a year and a half.

“There are a couple of things that are inherent in all vaccine development. First of all, there’s no guarantee that the vaccine is actually going to be effective,” Fauci testified to the Senate HELP Committee Tuesday. “I still feel cautiously optimistic that we will have a candidate that will give some degree of efficacy,” he added.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/05/15/trump-coronavirus-vaccine-development-team-260678

WASHINGTON — At first glance, there seems little in common between red-hat-wearing admirers of President Trump and Democratic activists still nursing PTSD from Hillary Clinton’s loss. Yet these political opposites share an overriding conviction, one they are apt to invoke any time the president’s re-election prospects are questioned:

But 2016!

Mr. Trump’s surprise win in the Electoral College is their Exhibit A, cited repeatedly online or in real life, to counter any polls or election results or momentary events that cast doubt on the president’s electability in 2020.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/15/us/politics/trump-vs-biden-polls.html

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany speaks to press.

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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6h-KyntGTnQ

Cuomo said his rationale behind the decision was to work in conformity with the surrounding states, which he said were planning to open beaches, and he was concerned that there would be millions of New Yorkers crowding the Jersey Shore and other waterfronts. 

“We are one multistate region. What one state does will affect other states. That is probably nowhere more clear than when it comes to opening beaches,” Cuomo said. “One state doesn’t open beaches, another state does open beaches, you will see people flood to that state.”

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy announced on Twitter on Thursday that the Jersey Shore will reopen with social distancing guidelines in place in time for Memorial Day. 

Five of 10 regions in New York have met Cuomo’s seven metrics to move into phase one of the state’s reopening plan, Cuomo said. He said his statewide stay-at-home order “New York State on PAUSE,” which expires on Friday, will extend to the other regions that have not met the state’s metrics for reopening. 

Phase one allows regions to resume manufacturing, construction and agricultural operations and retailers to reopen with limitations, Cuomo said. 

In order to begin phase one of the state’s reopening plan, a region must report two weeks of declining Covid-19 hospitalizations or under 15 new hospitalizations on a three-day average, two weeks of declining coronavirus deaths or under five new deaths on a three-day average and under two new hospitalizations for Covid-19 per 100,000 residents on a three-day rolling average. 

A region must also have proper hospital and intensive-care bed capacity and meet an adequate threshold of contact tracers and testing. 

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/05/15/new-york-gov-cuomo-says-four-states-will-reopen-restricted-beach-access-for-memorial-day-weekend.html

WASHINGTON – Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has issued a rare mea culpa, saying he mistakenly accused the Obama administration of not leaving a plan for President Donald Trump on how to deal with a pandemic.

“I was wrong,” McConnell told Fox News Thursday. “They did leave behind a plan. So, I clearly made a mistake in that regard.”

McConnell was referring to remarks he made Monday to President Donald Trump’s daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, during a Trump reelection campaign livestream. Referring to the coronavirus crisis, he told Lara Trump that the Obama administration “did not leave any kind of game plan for something like this.”

Bashing Trump:US coronavirus response a ‘chaotic disaster,’ Obama tells former staffers in call

During Monday’s campaign appearance, the Kentucky Republican also slammed recent comments from former President Barack Obama for describing the Trump administration’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic as an “absolute chaotic disaster.” Obama’s remarks, made on a private call to supporters, were leaked to the media.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/05/15/mitch-mcconnell-wrong-say-obama-left-no-pandemic-plan/5197013002/

Los Angeles city and county this week imposed stricter rules requiring the wearing of masks outdoors to continue efforts to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

Face coverings, experts say, are a key component in combating COVID-19 because they can help block the transmission of respiratory droplets that carry the disease.

But the rules vary widely across Southern California. Here’s what they say:

City of Los Angeles

Where must you wear a face covering?

  • If you visit any retail business (except those in indoor malls, which are still closed), including those that are open only for curbside or doorside pickup
  • If you exercise in your neighborhood or are on a trail, golf course or beach (where you must wear a face covering if you are out of the water and people are nearby)
  • If you ride on L.A. Department of Transportation transit buses, Metro buses or trains, or travel through Los Angeles International Airport
  • The new guidelines on face coverings exempt children under 2 and people with certain disabilities.

Mayor Eric Garcetti says the more stringent mask-wearing rules are a necessary step to help slow the spread of the coronavirus and eventually reopen the economy in a bigger way.

“Bring your mask with you whenever you leave your home,” Garcetti said. “That will help us get more freedoms.”

County of Los Angeles

Beaches: According to a county statement, “face coverings are required at all times on the beach and around other people, unless in the water, and the county urges everyone to keep at least six feet of physical distancing from other visitors. Once finished with an activity, all beachgoers are asked to head home.”

Further guidance: “Masks are, in fact, mandatory across the entire county when you’re outside of your home, not with members of your household and in any kind of contact with other people,” Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said.

Even when on a solitary walk or run, Ferrer said, “you now need to have a face covering with you, because if you came by other people, you were walking by other people, you tried to go into a grocery store, you absolutely have to have that face covering on.”

Residents should wear a cloth face covering “any time you’re out and there are people around, whether it be at a trailhead or a parking lot or a sidewalk,” she said. Officials also said visitors to the county’s beaches, which opened Wednesday for active recreational use, must cover their faces unless they are in the water.

San Diego County

Masks are required in public but only when the wearer is within six feet of others. Jogging, bicycling and other outdoor activities are exempt, though the city does require residents to carry a mask outdoors and have it readily available in case other people appear.

San Francisco

Face coverings are required in public indoor facilities and outdoors when waiting in line for public transportation or entering a store. But outdoor exercise such as walking, jogging and cycling can be done with fresh air on uncovered faces.

Orange County

Under a county ordinance issued last month, “all employees of any grocery store, pharmacy/drug store, convenience store, gas station, restaurant, food preparation establishment, or retail store in Orange County who may have contact with the public must wear a cloth face covering while at work.”

Riverside County

Different cities in the Inland Empire have different rules.

Coachella and Cathedral City officials voted Wednesday to require residents to wear face coverings in certain public settings, joining other Riverside County cities such as Desert Hot Springs, Palm Springs and La Quinta.

The regulation comes less than a week after the Riverside County Board of Supervisors voted to rescind several public health orders implemented by the county’s public health director, Cameron Kaiser. Following the vote, face coverings were no longer a requirement but were “strongly recommended whenever practical and within reason.”

San Bernardino County

Earlier this month, San Bernardino County rescinded its mandatory face-covering order.

“The County strongly urges everyone to continue wearing face coverings in public to slow the spread of the COVID-19 virus, and businesses may still require face coverings for customers and employees,” Board of Supervisors Chairman Curt Hagman said in a statement.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-05-15/where-do-i-need-to-wear-a-mask-the-rules-vary-across-southern-california

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued long-awaited guidance on how businesses, schools and other establishments should go about reopening safely to prevent the spread of the coronavirus as states lift stay-at-home orders.

The six one-page documents, though, are much shorter and less detailed than others that the CDC developed and Trump administration shelved, media reports say. 

Meanwhile, Friday will see parts of New York, the epicenter of the outbreak in the U.S., allowed to reopen but Gov. Andrew Cuomo warned residents to remain cautious. “Phased reopening does not mean the problem has gone away,” Cuomo said. “Follow the data, follow the science, follow the facts, follow the metrics.”

The U.S. has the largest coronavirus outbreak in the world by far. There are almost 86,000 deaths and 1.4 million confirmed cases, according to the Johns Hopkins University data dashboard. Worldwide, the virus has killed more than 302,000 people and has infected more than 4.4 million.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2020/05/15/coronavirus-updates-stimulus-bill-new-york-reopening-wisconsin/5196033002/

Donald Trump had planned to run on a pledge to “Keep America great”. But with a global pandemic claiming the lives of more than 85,000 Americans and causing economic devastation, the slogan does not seem to hold the same promise it did at the start of the year – even for his most ardent fans.

In a recently released campaign ad titled American Comeback, the president instead returned to the “Make America great again” slogan that first brought him to power and whose Maga initials have become global shorthand for Trumpism and its adherents.

“We’ve built the greatest economy the world has ever seen and we’re going to do it again,” Trump says in the ad. “With the grace of God, we will win this war, and we will win this war quickly, and we will make America great again.”

With few positive messages available to them amid a once-in-a-century pandemic, the president’s advisers now appear to have replaced their plans with a multi-pronged attack strategy against Trump’s presumptive Democratic opponent, Joe Biden, hoping to chip away at the former vice-president’s support enough to propel Trump to victory.

This approach was on vivid display in a Trump campaign statement to the Guardian. “This election will be about the contrast between President Trump’s proven record and Joe Biden‘s decades of failure,” Sarah Matthews, the campaign’s deputy press secretary, said. “From his job-killing Green New Deal to his support for TPP and Nafta to his repeated denials that China is a threat to American jobs, Biden’s record proves he won’t fight for America’s interests.”

Several campaign communications experts said the pandemic had left Trump with few options but to attack his Democratic opponent in any way possible, including repeatedly mocking Biden as “Sleepy Joe” to question his mental acuity.

“They can’t run on the economy, and despite all their efforts to blame everyone else, they can’t run on their handling of the pandemic,” said the longtime Democratic strategist Bob Shrum. “Right now, I think that their only message is to go after Biden. … They’re just throwing up everything against the wall and hoping something sticks.”

Trump and his allies appear to be taking a localized approach, criticizing Biden on everything from trade to China relations to climate policy depending on which battleground state is the focus. As the president visited Pennsylvania on Thursday, the Republican National Committee went after Biden over the Green New Deal, whose framework the Democratic candidate has endorsed.

The president’s campaign was also eager to pounce on Biden’s verbal slip during a March primary debate when he appeared to endorse a ban on all fracking, a comment that the former vice-president’s team was forced to quickly clarify.

Local strategists say the president attacking Biden over fracking could prove effective in Pennsylvania, which Trump won by less than one point in 2016, because the state economy is propped up by fossil fuels.

“Hillary Clinton lost in 2016 largely because she was unpopular, but if there was a single issue that worked against her in Pennsylvania, it was her war on fossil fuels,” said Charlie Gerow, a veteran Republican strategist based in Harrisburg, the state capital.

But several recent polls show Trump losing ground in key battleground states that were critical to his 2016 victory, including Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.



Joe Biden in Philadelphia in March. He has headquartered his campaign in the city. Photograph: Matt Rourke/AP

Four years ago, Hillary Clinton’s primary losses to Bernie Sanders in Michigan and Wisconsin were “a sign of things to come”, said Ben Tulchin, a pollster for Sanders’ 2016 and 2020 presidential campaigns.

“They exposed weaknesses that her campaign never really addressed,” he said. “But Biden doesn’t have those same kind of vulnerabilities.”

In 2020, Biden dominated Sanders in the primaries in Michigan and Wisconsin. Though Pennsylvania hasn’t held its primary yet, it is the state where Biden has headquartered his campaign and where he was born, factors that could hinder a localized attack strategy from the president and his allies.

Other presidential campaign alumni added that Trump’s localized attacks would only prove successful if he could find a centralized message uniting all the various pieces of criticism.

“The attacks the president’s team are making to try to chip away at [Biden’s] advantages in those critical states [are] absolutely smart, absolutely make sense, but they need to be part of an overall structure,” said Michael Steel, who served as a senior adviser on Jeb Bush’s 2016 presidential campaign.

Steel suggested the Trump campaign’s criticism of China might fuel the “likeliest effective attack” against Biden, as the president tries to blame Beijing for the spread of coronavirus.

The Trump campaign released a new ad last week featuring some of Biden’s past comments on China to depict the former vice-president as too cozy with Beijing. The pro-Trump America First Action Pac has also launched a $10m ad buy in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin as part of its “Beijing Biden” ad campaign.

“He’s been very successful at identifying an enemy and so that’s his formula,” Paul Maslin, a longtime Democratic pollster based in Wisconsin, said of the attack ads. “And right now, what other choice does he have?”

But despite the president’s efforts to deflect blame, Maslin predicted the November election would ultimately come down to voters’ opinion on Trump’s handling of the pandemic.

“In a time of unbelievable national angst and worry, of economic dislocation and with concerns about health and everything that this virus has become, if he can’t win back voters on his own merit, then all the rest of it is going to be mostly irrelevant,” Maslin said.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/may/15/trump-2020-campaign-strategy-attack-biden

Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …

Pelosi calls Democrats’ $3T coronavirus relief bill a starting offer as White House threatens veto: ‘We’re open to negotiation’
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi acknowledged Thursday that the Democrats’ $3 trillion coronavirus relief legislation does not have a good chance of becoming law and suggested the massive bill could be a starting point for talks with the White House and Senate.

“We’re putting our offer on the table, we’re open to negotiation,” Pelosi said Thursday on the eve of the planned vote on the HEROES Act. Her comments came just as the White House issued an official veto threat on the proposal, accusing Democrats of wanting to pass “long-standing partisan and ideological wish lists” rather than addressing the nation’s public health and economic challenges.

The White House chided Democrats for looking to make some illegal immigrants eligible for a second round of $1,200 direct payments, and for including a $25 billion “bailout” for the U.S. Postal Service and funding vote-by-mail and same-day registration.

But at the Capitol, Pelosi framed the legislation — the biggest relief package in history — as a necessary expense to deal with the unprecedented economic and health crisis that has left nearly 85,000 Americans dead and 36 million jobless. Click here for more on our top story.

Other related developments:
EXCLUSIVE: McConnell predicts ‘high likelihood’ of new stimulus bill, dismisses Dem proposal as ‘parade of absurdities’
– Democrats’ $3T coronavirus relief bill is too small for some progressives
– Mnuchin: Dem plan ‘not in the spirit of anything that has been bipartisan’

Trump wants FBI’s original ‘302’ report on Flynn case, says former adviser ‘persecuted’
President Trump late Thursday night inquired about the fate of the FBI’s “302” report on the Michael Flynn case that officials say vanished after the president’s first national security adviser met with federal agents in January 2017.

“Where is the 302? It is missing. Was it stolen or destroyed? General Flynn is being persecuted!” Trump tweeted.

Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, told Fox Business’ Maria Bartiromo that the original 302 document — which typically summarizes witness interviews with agents — was “missing.” Nunes said the document is where Flynn is accused of lying to investigators.

Bartiromo pointed out that federal agents usually summarize their interviews with subjects on forms known as 302s. Nunes laid out what he said he knows about the original report. He said it was written and transcribed and recalled FBI sources saying, “Look, there’s nothing to see here, Flynn wasn’t lying.” Click here for more.

Other related developments:
Susan Rice ‘would say yes’ if asked to be Biden’s running mate
MSNBC host fails to ask Biden about Flynn unmasking request after he denied any involvement in case
– Lawyer appointed by judge in Flynn case once said government has ‘near-absolute power’ to ‘extinguish a case’

CDC issues health advisory about mysterious coronavirus-related condition found in children
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued an advisory on Thursday regarding a severe inflammatory condition found in children believed to be associated with the coronavirus.

Doctors describe the inflammatory condition MIS-C as similar to Kawasaki disease, a rare illness that causes swelling in medium-sized arteries throughout the body. MIS-C can cause persistent fever and symptoms that include hypotension, rashes, gastrointestinal symptoms such as vomiting and diarrhea, as well as elevated inflammatory markers, the CDC said.

“Healthcare providers who have cared or are caring for patients younger than 21 years of age meeting MIS-C criteria should report suspected cases to their local, state, or territorial health department,” the CDC advisory said.

The condition has been reported in recent weeks in pediatric coronavirus cases in a handful of U.S. states and elsewhere. It’s raised concern for doctors in New York and California as well as those in Britain. Click here for more.

Other related coronavirus developments:
– To get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox, sign up here.
– HHS spokesman calls coronavirus whistleblower ‘second coming of Christine Blasey Ford’
Missouri restaurant’s coronavirus surcharge causes social media backlash
De Blasio expands NYC coronavirus testing criteria, calls on feds for help

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TODAY’S MUST-READS
America Together: Send us your photos and we’ll tell your story as the nation battles coronavirus.
Two NFL players face arrest warrants in Florida armed robbery, police say.
Biden says he doesn’t remember Tara Reade, tells women they ‘probably shouldn’t vote for me’ if they believe her.
EXCLUSIVE: Jim Jordan seeks State Department files on Burisma, after release of new emails
Staff Sgt. Ron Shurer, Medal of Honor recipient who saved lives in Afghanistan, dead at 41 after cancer battle.
ICYMI: Sen. Burr steps aside as Intelligence Committee chairman amid stock sale investigation.

THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS
Coronavirus likely hammered US retail sales again in April.
Coronavirus forces Disney to close ‘Frozen’ on Broadway.
Taiwan Semiconductor to build Arizona manufacturing plant.

#TheFlashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
 
SOME PARTING WORDS

Mark Levin blasts U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan on “Hannity,” and accuses him of “going rogue” in his handling of the case of former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

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Click here to find out what’s on Fox News, Fox Business and Fox News Radio today!
 
Fox News First is compiled by Fox News’ Bryan Robinson. Thank you for making us your first choice in the morning! Keep your chin up — we will get through this coronavirus crisis together. Stay safe, stay healthy, and we’ll see you in your inbox first thing Monday morning.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/pelosi-looks-to-negotiate-3t-coronavirus-relief-bill-as-white-house-threatens-veto

The day after Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti asserted that that every person in the city was mandated to wear masks outdoors, L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said the same restriction applied countywide.

“Our Health Officer order is very clear,” said Ferrer at her Thursday COVID briefing. “Masks are, in fact, mandatory across the entire county when you’re outside of your home, not with members of your household and in any kind of contact with other people.”

“We are all required to use those cloth face coverings,” the director continued.

Both officials did see an exception for individual exercise, such as jogging. In that case, said Garcetti, residents should have a mask with them and be prepared to put it on.

During Garcetti’s Q and A session on Wednesday, a member of the media asked him when facemasks went from being a recommendation to a requirement.

“It wasn’t just stern advice before. It was always a mandate,” said the mayor. “I’m proud that L.A. led that movement in this country. We’re requiring all people…to wear face masks when you’re around other people you don’t live with.”

“This isn’t about government doing something to us,” reasoned Garcetti. “This is about collective decisions.”

And, reminded Garcetti, “One percent of people can screw this up for everybody else.”

Source Article from https://deadline.com/2020/05/l-a-county-coronavirus-update-public-health-director-says-masks-are-in-fact-mandatory-across-the-entire-county-1202935226/

Confirmed: the House will vote today on The Heroes Act—the latest stimulus relief bill that includes, among other things, a second round of $1,200 stimulus checks, $200 billion in hazard pay for essential workers and a six-month extension to the COVID-19 unemployment program.

So far, Congress has passed several large stimulus packages in response to the coronavirus pandemic. Now, the House has put forward another one and will vote on it today. The details of this latest coronavirus stimulus relief package were released Tuesday. If this stimulus package becomes law, it would insert an additional $3 trillion into the economy in the ongoing effort to address the outstanding concerns and needs of those most impacted by the pandemic. It would also help to fill state, local and tribal government budget shortfalls.

Key aspects of The Heroes Act:

  • $200 billion for essential workers to get hazard pay.
  • $1 trillion for state, local and tribal governments to help pay “vital workers like first responders, health workers, and teachers” who could be on verge of losing their jobs. Here’s a breakdown of estimated allocations the states and territories would receive.
  • A second stimulus check for Americans in the amount of $1,200 (this would be a one-time payment as with the first stimulus check). However, instead of $500 for children, families would get $1,200 for each household member up to a max of $6,000.
  • $175 billion in housing assistance to help renters and homeowners with rent, mortgage and utility payments.
  • $75 billion for coronavirus testing, tracing and isolation efforts.
  • An extension of the COVID-19 unemployment program providing that the extra $600 per week benefit would last until January 2021 instead of expiring in July 2020 as it currently stands.

The Heroes Act also modifies or expands the following programs and policies as listed here on Congress.gov.

  • Medicare and Medicaid,
  • health insurance,
  • broadband service,
  • medical product supplies,
  • immigration,
  • student loans and financial aid,
  • the federal workforce,
  • prisons,
  • veterans benefits,
  • consumer protection requirements,
  • the U.S. Postal Service,
  • federal elections,
  • aviation and railroad workers, and
  • pension and retirement plans.

What aspects do most Americans and employees care about right now?

Americans—including the employed and unemployed—mostly want more stimulus checks, and they’ve had something to say about a second one-time stimulus check and the prospect of getting monthly stimulus checks.

WalletHub conducted a survey where a full 84% of respondents indicated a strong need and desire for more stimulus checks. And CNBC/Change Research conducted a poll where Americans living in political swing states expressed that people should get monthly stimulus checks that continue throughout the pandemic. Coronavirus has greatly increased financial and economic anxiety, and most respondents report that they will be completely broke within three months or less.

Learn more about what Americans are saying about stimulus checks.

Will it pass?

Though not all Democrats are on board with this stimulus relief package—some argue that it goes too far and others argue that it doesn’t go far enough—it is believed that there are indeed enough votes to pass The Heroes Act today. It is also estimated that up to a handful of Republicans will sign on to the bill as well and vote yes because the bill provides large sums of money for states and local governments. Some Republican representatives would be hard pressed by their constituents if they vote against money for state and local governments in this time of crisis.

What happens next?

If the House passes this new stimulus relief package today, it moves on to the Senate where it has been described as “dead on arrival.” Democrats hold a majority in the House, and Republicans have a majority in the Senate. Republicans are overwhelmingly against providing any more stimulus funds at this time.

Nancy Pelosi has indicated that the House will pass this stimulus relief package and put it forward as a starting point of negotiations with Republicans. However, even if Congress—the House and the Senate—eventually end up making something law, it will likely look different from what the House is voting on today because both sides will surely have to narrow down which priorities they are willing to fight for and then make compromises to get anything passed through both houses of Congress.

To learn more about the various stimulus check proposals, hazard pay for essential workers or unemployment and the economy, check into the recommended reading below.

Recommended reading:

Stimulus checks.

The $2,000 Second Stimulus Check: What Americans Say About It

The $2,000 Vs. The $1,200 Stimulus Check: Four Key Payment Differences

Emergency Cash: Monthly Payments Up To $5,500 For Families And $2,000 For Individuals

Hazard pay for essential workers.

These Two Groups Of Employees Need New Stimulus Checks More Than Most

$200 Billion In Hazard Pay: These Essential Workers Must Get Their Fair Share

New Proposal: $1,920 Monthly Pay Raise For Essential Workers

Up To $25,000 Hazard Pay For Essential Workers ‘One Of Our Very Highest Priorities’

Senate Proposal: Up To $25,000 Pay Raise For These Essential Workers

Unemployment and the economy.

3 Bitter Truths About Coronavirus Job Losses And The Economy

16% Unemployment This Summer: CBO’s Prediction And How To Prepare For It

Source Article from https://www.forbes.com/sites/terinaallen/2020/05/15/house-votes-today-another-1200-stimulus-check-200-billion-for-hazard-pay-extended-unemployment/

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    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/15/politics/trump-vaccine-effort-coronavirus/index.html

    WASHINGTON – Ivanka Trump, daughter and senior adviser to President Donald Trump, says she wears a mask at the White House, and that’s one reason the president doesn’t have to.

    “There are different procedures as it relates to interacting with the president,” Ivanka Trump told USA TODAY on Thursday when asked about criticism her father has received for declining to wear a mask in public.

    The president “is tested on a daily basis – all those who come into contact with him are tested on a daily basis,” she said in an interview. “No one is in close proximity to him that isn’t wearing a mask.”

    She added: “I always wear a mask when I am with the president, and everyone is instructed to do so as well.”

    As has happened on previous trips, Trump was notably among the few people not wearing a mask during a tour of a medical supply distributor Thursday in Allentown, Pennsylvania.

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/05/14/ivanka-trump-wear-mask-near-donald-trump-he-doesnt-have/5194628002/

    President Donald Trump suggested on Thursday that the U.S. could “cut off the whole relationship” with China, claiming that doing so would save the country $500 billion.

    “There are many things we could do,” Trump told Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo on Thursday morning. “We could cut off the whole relationship.”

    The U.S. and many other nations have become increasingly critical of China amid the ongoing novel coronavirus pandemic, which first arose in the Chinese city of Wuhan. China has been accused of covering up the extent of the outbreak and failing to be transparent about the seriousness of the virus. China has attempted to dismiss these criticisms and claimed that the Trump administration is trying to deflect criticism of its own response to the crisis.

    The president suggested on Thursday that cutting ties with China would save the U.S. money.

    “Now, if you did, what would happen?” he asked. “You’d save $500 billion if you cut off the whole relationship.”

    Newsweek reached out to the White House as well as the Chinese embassy in Washington, D.C. for further comment.

    Prior to the novel coronavirus pandemic, Trump had long been critical of China, even before entering the White House. The president has repeatedly raised concerns about the trade deficit between the two nations, as the U.S. historically has imported significantly more from the Asian nation than it has exported to the country.

    This spurred Trump to add tariffs to hundreds of billions of Chinese goods starting in mid-2018, which led China to respond in kind. The situation escalated into a trade war that analysts have estimated cost the U.S. hundreds of thousands of jobs and forced American importers to shell out billions more than they would have to pay tariffs. But that situation appeared to be resolving in mid-January, with the signing of a new phase one trade agreement.

    Now as the U.S. has become the nation in the world with the highest number of confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus, as well the highest number of deaths, the Trump administration has faced criticism at home for its handling of the crisis. The president largely dismissed the seriousness of the virus through February, even suggesting that it would simply “disappear.” Supporters of the president argue that he acted quickly by implementing travel restrictions on foreigners who had visited China.

    China has faced significant international criticism of its handling of the virus, particularly due to the fact that Chinese officials initially covered up the outbreak, even detaining doctors who raised alarms about the growing outbreak in Wuhan. Newsweek also reported on Tuesday that a CIA report has assessed that China threatened the World Health Organization (WHO) in January, urging it not to declare a global health emergency.

    “Some people in the US failed to fight the epidemic themselves and failed the trust of the American people. But they have not made reflections of how to improve their work,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijia said on Thursday, the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported.

    “We urge the US to stop slandering and discrediting China, stop promoting relevant bills, and playing this nonsense blame game. On whether China has any disciplinary measures, I have no further comments,” Zhao added.

    This article has been updated to include Newsweek reporting on a CIA report regarding China and the WHO.

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    Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/trump-threatens-cut-off-whole-relationship-china-says-us-would-save-500-billion-1504042

    WASHINGTON – The Wisconsin Supreme Court decision overturning the state’s stay-at-home orders added fuel Thursday to a widening U.S. debate over how and when to lift restrictions put in place to limit the spread of the coronavirus.

    President Donald Trump in a tweet called the Wisconsin ruling a win for the state, adding that “people want to get on with their lives.” But Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat, warned that the decision by the court – an elected body that tilts conservative – would put “public health and lives at serious risk.”

    Across the country, tensions have flared as people experienced months of restrictions to combat a virus that has infected 1.4 million and killed more than 85,000. Health experts such as Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease specialist, have credited the lockdowns with saving lives and have said the death rate could march higher if the restrictions are eased too quickly.

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/05/14/coronavirus-wisconsin-supreme-court-enters-widening-fight-pandemic/5192518002/

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    Former Trump campaign adviser and new Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) spokesman Michael Caputo blasted whistleblower Rick Bright Thursday, claiming he is disgruntled over his “profile” during the coronavirus pandemic.

    “I come to work here in Washington 24/7, like everybody else does,” Caputo told “The Ingraham Angle.” “There are 84,000 people at HHS who are working every day and Dr. Bright, who makes $285,000 a year, can’t find his way to work.

    “To me, that’s just — I mean, for everybody back in my hometown who are locked down, who are losing their businesses, who aren’t able to go to school, that’s got to really smell up to high heaven.”

    OUSTED HHS OFFICIAL WARNS OF ‘DARKEST WINTER IN MODERN HISTORY’ IF PROPER VIRUS STEPS NOT TAKEN

    HHS pushed back on Bright’s testimony and whistleblower complaint earlier Thursday, accusing him of “politicizing the response” to coronavirus.

    Bright has said he was removed for opposing the use of unproven antimalarial drug  hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for coronavirus, but the department has claimed Bright was actually a proponent of the drug.

    “Everybody I’ve talked to around here just remembers him being a documented supporter of hydroxychloroquine,” Caputo said. “When he’s filed his whistleblower complaint, he made it all about that drug because he knew it was a hit right at President Trump. And that’s what this is.”

    CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

    The HHS official then compared Bright to Christine Blasey Ford, who accused then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct during his confirmation process in 2018.

    “He’s really just a second coming of Christine Blasey Ford,” Caputo said. “It’s an attack on President Trump. It’s an attack on [HHS] Secretary [Alex] Azar. And it’s an attempt to really politicize this for November.”

    Fox News’ Morgan Phillips contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/hhs-michael-caputo-rick-bright-blasey-ford

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released flowchart-like decision tools on Thursday designed to guide businesses, schools, mass transit and other organizations through the process of reopening.

    Jon Elswick/AP


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    Jon Elswick/AP

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released flowchart-like decision tools on Thursday designed to guide businesses, schools, mass transit and other organizations through the process of reopening.

    Jon Elswick/AP

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a set of documents on Thursday designed to provide guidance on how childcare centers, schools, restaurants and bars, and other establishments could begin the process of reopening in the face of coronavirus. The direction comes after calls from lawmakers and state officials mounted for the CDC to weigh in on how regions should reopen their economies.

    The decision tools the agency released recommend that all workplaces hold off on reopening unless they are ready to protect employees at higher risk for severe illness, including those 65 and older and people of all ages with underlying medical conditions.

    If an organization can protect workers and goes forward with reopening, the CDC recommends intensifying cleaning and sanitation and establishing health and safety actions “as feasible,” such as hand washing, wearing a cloth face covering and social distancing. The documents also advise employers to encourage workers to stay home if they feel sick.

    Schools, childcare centers and camps should not reopen, the guidelines stipulate, unless they are able to implement coronavirus screening protocols, evaluating employees and children daily for symptoms and potential past exposures to COVID-19.

    Restaurants, bars, mass transit and other workplaces are encouraged to implement similar monitoring systems for their employees. In particular, mass transit should not increase services unless they can put in place measures to protect employees at high risk, according to the CDC.

    The flowchart-like documents released by the CDC also ask businesses, schools and workplaces to first and foremost consider whether adherence with the agency’s reopening guidelines is consistent with state and local stay-at-home orders.

    “It is important to check with state and local health officials and other partners
    to determine the most appropriate actions while adjusting to meet the unique needs and circumstances of the local community,” the documents say.

    Compliance with the CDC direction will depend on whether states adopt the decision tools into their own local policies — and whether the Trump administration supports and promotes the agency’s guidelines.

    Last week, the Associated Press obtained an earlier draft of the CDC decision tool documents, which at that time also contained guidance for faith communities. The AP also reported that earlier version would have stipulated that summer camps only reopen if they limited attendance to people who lived in that community.

    Those earlier documents did not issue guidance for schools, which the agency specifically addressed in Thursday’s version of the decision tools.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/05/14/856483424/cdc-issues-decision-tools-to-guide-reopening-of-schools-businesses-transit

    Speaking to her caucus on Thursday evening, Pelosi warned of the tough questions they would face back home if they voted down billions in local aid.

    “If you vote against this and all this funding for your state, then you have to go home and defend it. And if you can defend that no vote, then you’re a better politician than me,” Pelosi told her members on a caucus call Thursday evening, according to multiple people on the call.

    At least one moderate Democrat, Rep. Kendra Horn (D-Okla.), has said she’ll oppose the package, dismissing it as a “messaging bill” with no GOP support. More than a half-dozen others have said they are leaning against the bill, citing the overall cost of the bill as well as provisions to provide undocumented immigrants with some aid or to repeal the cap on state and local tax deductions.

    Other Democrats are raising alarm bells over a pension provision that is detested by some key labor groups. The package includes an existing bill that some labor advocates complain would weaken the multi-employer pension system.

    Key liberal Democrats are also withholding support for now and are even mulling a floor strategy to block consideration of the package by opposing an initial procedural vote.

    Reps. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) and Mark Pocan (D-Wis.), the chairs of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, had unsuccessfully lobbied Pelosi to delay consideration of the bill until next week. They spent much of Thursday surveying their roughly 100 members about how to proceed, though people familiar with the discussions say it’s unlikely the caucus would seek to upend the legislation completely.

    Rep. Ro Khanna, a member of CPC leadership, said Thursday the group has not yet settled on a plan. Asked whether progressives would be willing to vote against the bill or the rule to govern debate, Khanna said: “I’m hoping it won’t come to that.”

    The California Democrat said he’s still reviewing Pelosi’s coronavirus package, but acknowledged it would be difficult to vote against nearly $1 trillion in cash for state and local governments that could otherwise be forced to cut public services.

    “These things have all been difficult choices, because our states and counties so desperately need the trillion dollars, but there are parts of it that are problematic,” Khanna told reporters.

    Progressives are demanding more money for safety net programs, including Jayapal’s signature proposal to stave off unemployment by letting the federal government cover payroll for struggling companies for at least three months. Others wanted Democrats to expand health benefits under Medicare and the Affordable Care Act, rather than shore up the costly and unpopular temporary workplace insurance program, COBRA.

    Still, most House Democrats have touted Pelosi’s vast proposal to deliver $3 trillion to governments, businesses and individuals facing financial hardships because of the coronavirus pandemic. Besides the money for state and local governments, it would deliver another round of cash payments to millions of Americans, offer rent and mortgage relief and extend the duration of unemployment benefits.

    The Democratic bill would also relieve some student debt, though lawmakers significantly scaled back the provision on Thursday. A new version of the bill would forgive debt only for borrowers who were “economically distressed” at the onset of the pandemic; the initial version would have applied to all of the nation’s more than 45 million student loan borrowers, regardless of financial circumstances.

    Democrats also added language to prevent registered lobbyists from accessing small business loans during the pandemic — a loophole that drew complaints from moderates who feared it would be turned into a GOP attack ad.

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/05/14/nancy-pelosi-coronavirus-relief-plan-259502

    Los Angeles residents are now required to wear masks when going outside for any tasks.

    The new rule marks a significant increase in the city’s mandates, one that Mayor Eric Garcetti says is a necessary step to help slow the spread of the coronavirus and eventually reopen the economy in a bigger way.

    “Bring your mask with you whenever you leave your home,” Garcetti said. “That will help us get more freedoms.”

    Where must you wear a face covering?

    • If you visit any retail business (except those in indoor malls, which are still closed), including those that are open only for curbside or doorside pickup
    • If you exercise in your neighborhood or are on a trail, golf course or beach (where you must wear a face covering if you are out of the water and people are nearby)
    • If you ride on L.A. Department of Transportation transit buses, Metro buses or trains, or travel through Los Angeles International Airport
    • The new guidelines on face coverings exempt children under 2 and people with certain disabilities.

    Why is this action being taken?

    Many experts have said masks can provide some protection against the spread of the virus. Up to now, the city has required face coverings only while conducting essential business, such as grocery shopping. The city also require workers to wear masks.

    “Face coverings help stop the spread of the virus, and wearing them in public creates a layer of protection. However, a face covering is not a substitute for other critical measures to slow the spread of COVID-19 — most importantly, staying home as much as possible, washing hands frequently, and practicing safe physical distancing of at least 6 feet in all settings,” the city said in its order.

    Where is this coming from?

    In recent weeks, Los Angeles leaders have been discussing whether to require Angelenos to have masks or other facial coverings at hand whenever they leave their homes, a proposal championed by City Councilman Paul Koretz as a way to prevent new infections.

    “The last thing we need is another spike in cases to set us back as we’re trying to move forward,” Koretz said earlier this month.

    “People still walk dogs. They still ride bicycles. They still may stop and chat with their neighbors,” he said. “This would reduce the spread.”

    The councilman argued that mandating mask wearing would help keep people who are infected but asymptomatic from unknowingly transmitting the virus. He pointed to the Czech Republic, which imposed a similar requirement, as an example of how the mandate could reduce new infections.

    Some council members raised concerns about racially discriminatory enforcement of mask rules against African Americans.

    What are some face covering basics?

    Here’s some advice from California health officials:

    • Wash your cloth face covering frequently, ideally after each use, or at least daily.
    • Have a separate bag or bin to keep used cloth face coverings in until they can be laundered with detergent and hot water and dried on a hot cycle.
    • If you must rewear your cloth face covering before washing, wash your hands immediately after putting it back on and avoid touching your face.
    • Discard cloth face coverings that no longer cover the nose and mouth, have stretched-out or damaged ties or straps, cannot stay on the face, or have holes or tears in the fabric.

    Health experts also have suggested routinely washing your hands with soap and water or using hand sanitizer before and after touching your face or face coverings.

    Once surgical masks get moist, experts say their effectiveness diminishes. If a makeshift mask gets moist or is visibly soiled, it’s time to switch to a clean one.

    To clean them, run masks through the laundry or hand wash them with soap and water.

    More tips can be found here.

    Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-05-14/l-a-now-requires-face-coverings-even-when-outside-here-are-the-rules