State officials on Monday reported 54 additional deaths, for a total of 3,459 deaths statewide since the pandemic began earlier this year. There were 1,266 new known cases of COVID-19 reported Monday, pushing the statewide known case total to 79,007.

Source Article from https://www.chicagotribune.com/coronavirus/ct-coronavirus-jb-pritzker-staff-20200511-pc2b5w74jvehfp7aisew7d42rm-story.html

Fox & Friends” co-host Brian Kilmeade responded Monday to a New York Times op-ed penned by former Obama strategists David Axelrod and David Plouffe in which they urged presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden to “up the tempo” of his campaign.

“This is unbelievable,” Kilmeade told “Tucker Carlson Tonight.”

“You have David Axelrod and David Plouffe, who helped get Barack Obama elected twice. They know Joe Biden very well … they worked with him side-by-side for eight years.

“Something is going on here because rather than talk to him, they wrote an editorial in The New York Times telling him, ‘You have to get out of the basement. You look like you are beaming in from the space shuttle.'”

BIDEN CAMPAIGN RAMPS UP DIGITAL STAFF AMID DEM PRESSURE

The op-ed, titled “What Joe Biden Needs To Do To Beat Trump,” came amid growing concern from senior Democrats that the Biden campaign is struggling behind the Trump team on the digital front. The online battleground is likely to be a vital part of the campaign since most traditional campaign avenues have been closed off due to the coronavirus pandemic, which has left the former vice presidentsequestered in his Delaware home.

The campaign’s digital operation deficit was on full display last week, when Biden attempted to hold a campaign rally for voters in Tampa, Fla. The glitch-riddled event ended up drawing mockery from Republicans and media outlets instead.

“He is doing a virtual rope line where he asks different people, one voter a day, how things are going,” Kilmeade said.

“So, David Axelrod and David Plouffe wrote an editorial … that is like you watching me in the morning and going, ‘Brian is bothering me. I think I’ll do an editorial in the New York Post rather than texting me,” Kilmeade told host Tucker Carlson.

BIDEN MOCKED FOR TECH GLITCHES IN VIRTUAL TAMPA CAMPAIGN RALLY

“It makes no sense. These are his supporters setting him on fire. What is crazy is that I think in most battleground states, he is actually leading or just behind Donald Trump. So he’s got his hands full.”

Kilmeade predicted the race will boil down to “Barack Obama against Donald Trump.”

“I would not be surprised if Joe Biden introduces Barack Obama,” Kilmeade said, “and then sits — I am not kidding — from August until November.”

Fox News’ Adam Shaw contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/kilmeade-axelrod-plouffe-biden-up-the-tempo

Germany does have one of the lowest mortality rates in the world, at 9.13 deaths per 100,000 people. The United States, by comparison, has a rate of 24.31 deaths per 100,000, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. That is lower than several other European countries, like Britain, Italy, Spain, France, Belgium and Sweden, but it is also higher than that of Canada, Japan, South Korea, Norway, Iran, Brazil and many others.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/11/us/politics/white-house-masks-trump-coronavirus.html

Donald Trump abruptly halted a press conference on Monday after being challenged by an Asian American reporter whom he told: “Don’t ask me. Ask China.”

With the stars and stripes at his back, Trump held his first press briefing since 27 April in the White House rose garden, flanked by testing equipment and swabs and signs that proclaimed: “America leads the world in testing.”

But during a question and answer session, Weijia Jiang, White House correspondent of CBS News, asked why the president constantly emphasises that the US is doing better than any other country when it comes to testing.

“Why does that matter?” she queried. “Why is this a global competition to you if every day Americans are still losing their lives and we are still seeing more cases every day?”

Trump retorted: “Well, they are losing their lives everywhere in the world. Maybe that is a question you should ask China. Don’t ask me. Ask China that question. When you ask China that question you may get a very unusual answer.”

The president then called on another reporter, Kaitlan Collins of CNN, but she paused as Jiang interjected: “Sir, why are you saying that to me, specifically?”

The president replied: “I am not saying it specifically to anybody. I am saying it to anybody who would ask a nasty question like that.”

The CBS correspondent pointed out: “That is not a nasty question.”



CNN correspondent Kaitlan Collins, center, tries to ask a question on the heels of Donald Trump’s exchange with CBS News correspondent Weija Jiang, left. Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

Collins, at the microphone, then tried to ask her question, but Trump said he was now looking to someone at the back. As Collins repeatedly objected, the president turned on his heel and left the podium.

Trump has frequently been criticised for adopting a particularly harsh or patronising tone at press conferences to women in general and women of colour in particular. Jiang was born in China but immigrated to America at the age of two.

Tara Setmayer, a political commentator, tweeted: “Another disgraceful, racist, temper tantrum by Trump b/c he was asked a pointed question by @weijia… Trump can’t handle smart, assertive women.”

Democratic Congressman Ted Lieu of California tweeted: “Dear @realDonaldTrump: Asian Americans are Americans. Some of us served on active duty in the U.S. military. Some are on the frontlines fighting this pandemic as paramedics and health care workers. Some are reporters like @weijia. Stop dividing our nation.”

Earlier at the briefing, Trump claimed that the US’s testing capacity is “unmatched and unrivalled anywhere in the world, and it’s not even close”. More than 9m tests have now been performed, he said, and where three weeks ago roughly 150,000 per day were done, the total is now 300,000 per day and will go up.

Trump said this week the US will pass 10m tests, nearly double the number of any country and more per capita than South Korea, the UK, France, Japan, Sweden, Finland and many others. But critics point out that South Korea implemented its testing much quicker, flattening the curve of cases so fewer tests were required.

The president announced his administration is sending $11bn to states, territories and tribes to boost testing. He described it as an effort to “back up” states but did not unveil the national testing strategy that many experts have called for.

Trump also claimed without basis that “if somebody wants to be tested right now, they’ll be able to be tested”, echoing a spurious claim he made way back on 6 March.

“In every generation, through every challenge and hardship and danger, America has risen to the task,” he said. “We have met the moment and we have prevailed.”

Trump, who has been encouraging states to reopen, promised: “We will defeat this horrible enemy, we will revive our economy and we will transition into greatness. That’s a phrase you’re gonna hear a lot.”

Democrats expressed scepticism. Daniel Wessel, Democratic National Committee deputy war room director, said: “Trump says we ‘prevailed’ on testing, but his response has been a complete failure and made this crisis worse than it needed to be.

“Trump still hasn’t helped states reach the testing capacity they need, every American who wants a test can’t get a test, and he is only now taking steps that should’ve happened weeks ago. While Trump wants to declare mission accomplished, the American people are still suffering and will not forget how he gave up on them.”

The campaign group Protect Our Care noted that it was 13 days since Trump said the US will run 5m daily tests “very soon” Zac Petkanas, director of its coronavirus war room, recalled that Donald Trump promised that anyone who wants a test could get a test and that the US would soon be testing 5m Americans per day.

“This wasn’t true when he said it and it’s not true today. What is true is that more than 80,000 Americans have lost their lives in large part because Donald Trump still hasn’t taken testing seriously. The only thing that the president has prevailed at is making America first in reported deaths and infections.”

The White House itself is not immune from coronavirus. Katie Miller, the press secretary for vice-president Mike Pence, and a personal valet who works for Trump both tested positive last week. Those entering the West Wing are now required to wear a mask or face covering, after a new memo was issued on Monday. Trump and Pence are being tested every day. Trump, however, is exempt from wearing a mask in the White House. It’s not clear if Pence will wear one or not.

The president said it is “shocking” how many people come in and out of the White House every day. “I’ve felt no vulnerability whatsoever,” he said.

During the press conference, Trump’s presidential election opponent, Joe Biden, tweeted: “Donald Trump and his team seem to understand how critical testing is to their own safety. So why are they insisting that it’s unnecessary for the American people?”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/may/11/trump-us-latest-coronavirus-reporters

This year, Sanders quit the race on April 8 and formally endorsed Biden five days later, followed by former President Barack Obama and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). The consolidation of support allowed Biden to strike a joint-fundraising agreement with the Democratic National Committee, giving his campaign a big financial boost.

The month before, Biden’s campaign reported raising $46.7 million. April is the first month the campaign and the DNC reported their totals together.

But Biden is woefully trailing Trump’s fundraising juggernaut, which through March had a cash advantage over the Democrat of about $187 million.

While Biden did not release cash on hand totals for April, the Trump operation said it had over $255 million in the bank.

“Once again the Trump campaign’s colossal fundraising haul reaffirms that President Trump will lead an unstoppable juggernaut this November,” said Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale.

Biden tacitly acknowledged in a written statement that the economic devastation of the coronavirus pandemic had made money scarce.

“I am especially humbled because I know what a sacrifice it is to give in economic times as difficult as the one we’re in,” the former vice president said in a written statement. “When staring down the face of economic uncertainty, you chose to put your money behind me. For that, I will always be eternally thankful.”

Trump has developed a high-powered digital fundraising machine that has allowed him to build a massive campaign apparatus. There are indications his support from small dollar contributors has overcome the economic calamity brought upon by the coronavirus.

Trump’s operation said it had raised more than $742 million over the course of the campaign, $288 million more than Barack Obama’s political apparatus had raised at the same point in his 2012 reelection bid.

“While day-to-day life may have slowed this past month, enthusiasm and support for this president has not,” said RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel.

Both campaigns stressed they are relying heavily on small donors. The Biden camp said in a news release that its average online donation was $32.63, “showing continued grassroots strength even in this time of crisis.”

The pandemic, though, has also helped Biden save money. Staying at home, Biden has not hit the campaign trail in nearly two months. So the campaign hasn’t spent a dime on rallies or flying the candidate and campaign staff across the country for events. When money was tight, the campaign also held off on hiring more staff.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/05/11/biden-60-million-campaign-249578

Cobb County, Ga., District Attorney Joyette Holmes will lead the prosecution of two men in the Ahmaud Arbery case.

Cobb County District Attorney’s Office


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Cobb County District Attorney’s Office

Cobb County, Ga., District Attorney Joyette Holmes will lead the prosecution of two men in the Ahmaud Arbery case.

Cobb County District Attorney’s Office

Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr on Monday tapped a new lead prosecutor in the murder case of Ahmaud Arbery — the fourth since the young black man was killed in February while jogging in Glynn County, Ga.

Joyette Holmes, district attorney of the Cobb County Judicial Circuit and the first black woman to serve in that position, is taking over the case following a video of the shooting that went viral after it was posted online last week. The footage ignited national outcry and a cascade of questions over why no arrests were made in the 10 weeks since Arbery’s Feb. 23 killing.

Two white men, a father and son, were arrested Thursday in connection with the killing and face murder and aggravated assault charges. The arrests came two days after the Georgia Bureau of Investigation took over the case from local authorities.

Also on Monday, the U.S. Department of Justice confirmed it was considering whether to charge Gregory McMichael, 64, a retired police detective, and his son Travis, 34, with federal hate crimes.

In a statement on the Cobb County district attorney’s Facebook page, Holmes said, “Our office will immediately gather all materials related to the investigation thus far and continue to seek additional information to move this case forward.”

She added, “We appreciate the confidence that Attorney General Carr has in our office’s ability to bring to light the justice that this case deserves.”

In a statement, the state attorney general thanked Atlantic Judicial Circuit District Attorney Tom Durden, who had led the case since mid-April, but added the “case has grown in size and magnitude since he accepted.” Carr said that “another office is better suited from a resource perspective to now handle the case.”

People leave a gathering Saturday after honoring the life of Arbery in Brunswick, Ga. He was shot and killed Feb. 23 while jogging in a local neighborhood.

Sean Rayford/Getty Images


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People leave a gathering Saturday after honoring the life of Arbery in Brunswick, Ga. He was shot and killed Feb. 23 while jogging in a local neighborhood.

Sean Rayford/Getty Images

Holmes has led the Cobb County District Attorney’s Office since July. She previously was both a prosecutor and defense lawyer in the county, according to her biography on the county website.

Before Durden’s appointment, two other district attorneys recused themselves from the case. On Sunday, Georgia’s attorney general requested that the Justice Department investigate local authorities’ handling of the investigation.

Justice Department spokesperson Kerri Kupec said Monday that it is “assessing all of the evidence to determine whether federal hate crimes charges are appropriate.”

“In addition, we are considering the request of the Attorney General of Georgia and have asked that he forward to federal authorities any information that he has about the handling of the investigation. We will continue to assess all information, and we will take any appropriate action that is warranted by the facts and the law,” she said.

As NPR has reported, Georgia, along with Arkansas, South Carolina and Wyoming, are the only states that do not have hate crime laws and also don’t require officials to collect data on such crimes, according to the DOJ.

Benjamin Crump, an attorney for the Arbery family, praised the Holmes appointment and urged her to be “zealous in her search for justice.”

“In order for justice to be carried out both effectively and appropriately in the murder of Ahmaud Arbery, it is imperative that the special prosecutor has no affiliation with the SE Georgia legal or law enforcement communities,” the statement said.

“We implore District Attorney Joyette Holmes to be zealous in her search for justice, as she works to hold all of those responsible for the unjustifiable execution of an unarmed young Black man in broad daylight,” Crump added.

Since the shooting, Brunswick Judicial Circuit District Attorney Jackie Johnson recused herself over a conflict of interest due to the fact that the elder McMichael had worked in her office, as Georgia Public Broadcasting reported.

Next, George Barnhill, of the Waycross Judicial Circuit, recused himself at the request of the Arbery family. The family complained that Barnhill also had a conflict of interest because his son worked in Johnson’s office as an assistant district attorney, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.

Durden took over the case on April 13. Last week, he formally requested that the GBI become involved after the video of the shooting became public.

Holmes will now prosecute the case. Her predecessor in the Cobb County District Attorney’s Office was Vic Reynolds, who now leads the GBI. In a press conference Friday, Reynolds left open the possibility that more people could be charged in Arbery’s death.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/05/11/854011906/georgia-attorney-general-names-new-prosecutor-in-ahmaud-arbery-case

What do Americans have to say about a second stimulus check? How do they feel about getting a $2,000 monthly stimulus check? Is a second stimulus check on the way? What is Congress doing right now to provide more relief? These are the questions being asked by millions of Americans as this pandemic rolls on.

If Speaker Pelosi and several other Democrats in Congress have their way, you’ll get another stimulus check, albeit the amount could differ from the proposed $2,000 stimulus check. But it’s not only about what Democrats want. Republicans and Democrats must agree and pass something that can get through both Houses of Congress and then gain the approval and signature of President Trump.

While the conversation continues within Congress and between congressional leaders and the White House, it might be good to assess what the American people actually have to say on the issue of more stimulus checks. So let’s look at that.

Do Americans actually want a second stimulus check?

The answer is a solid yes. The research and data strongly support that Americans want another stimulus check. And though a specific dollar amount wasn’t part of the survey, the responses indicate that Americans are waiting—and hoping—for Congress to do something. A majority—both unemployed and employed—remain very uneasy about this coronavirus economy.

Based on the recent survey conducted by WalletHub, we have the ability to know what Americans have to say about the matter. Here are the results.

  • A whopping 84% of Americans say they want a second stimulus check, with only 16% reporting that a second round of stimulus checks are not necessary.
  • A significant majority, 62%, of those surveyed agree that a second stimulus check should be sent to everyone rather than focusing it on the underemployed or unemployed.
  • Finally, a full 64% of respondents report that they will completely run out of money within three months or less.

Do Americans actually want monthly stimulus checks?

Again, the answer is a solid yes. The research and data strongly support that Americans want Congress to pass regular monthly stimulus checks to cover people throughout the entirety of this public health and economic crisis. A majority—both Republicans and Democrats—agree that coronavirus relief should be sent to those most affected by the pandemic, though a specific dollar amount wasn’t part of this poll.

According to this CNBC/Change Research poll conducted across six key political swing states (Arizona, Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin), bipartisan support exists for monthly stimulus checks going directly to the people.

Here are some the findings as they relate to additional and monthly stimulus checks.

  • A full 94%—nearly unanimous—support exists for sending recurring direct monthly payments specifically to those who have lost jobs or wages, and respondents support sending the monthly checks until the pandemic ends.
  • A significant majority, 74%, support recurring direct monthly payments to individuals (regardless of whether they have lost their jobs) until the pandemic ends.
  • The bipartisan support for continuing to make direct payments to qualifying individuals until the pandemic ends breaks down as follows: 96% of Democrats, 74% of Independents, and 53% of Republicans support such a policy.
  • Only 22% of voter respondents indicate a belief that too much money has already been spent on relief for the impact of COVID.

What is Congress doing now?

There is a growing consensus that the first stimulus check of $1,200 grossly fails to meet the moment and won’t cut it over the long haul as COVID-19 continues to ravage the economy and threaten the lives and health of Americans.

The $2,000 a month stimulus check gains traction.

Just Thursday, Speaker Pelosi said, “We need [to get] the money in the pockets of the American people.” She expressed her commitment for another stimulus check—and even monthly payments. And she is not alone in this. Several other senators and representatives have expressed this same sentiment, and many have put forward proposals. The White House and Congress are currently negotiating what, if any, additional stimulus checks should go directly to regular folks.

The proposal that continues to get discussed is the Emergency Money for the People Act. Two key advocates for this proposal are Representatives Tim Ryan (OH-13) and Ro Khanna (CA-17). Though more in Congress continue to step forward with various proposals and plans, these two were early out of the gate calling for second stimulus checks and saying that the first stimulus check of $1,200 was woefully inadequate.

The Emergency Money for the People Act basically calls for sending monthly checks of up to $2,000 for individuals, $4,000 for married couples and up to $5,500 for families with children. If interested, take the time to learn about eligibility details, and compare the $2,000 stimulus payment to the $1,200 payment.

The $2,000 a month proposal is gaining traction in Congress. A new proposal that picks up on this theme was rolled out Friday by Senators Harris, Sanders and Markey.

The coronavirus economy will lead the way.

Yesterday, on Fox News Sunday, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin acknowledged that “real” unemployment is much higher than the recently reported 14.7%. Secretary Mnuchin also said that we’ve likely already hit 25% unemployment and indicated that things would get worse before getting better.

Certainly, the economy will lead the way. The more quickly the economy bounces back, the less likely it will be for Congress to act. The longer the economic suffering drags on, the more pressure there will be on Congress to act. Primarily, three factors will override all others when it comes to decisions about more stimulus checks.

  1. What’s happening with job losses? Do the jobs return? How fast do they return? Or, are a large percentage of the job losses permanent?
  2. What’s happening with the economy? How deep is the recession? How long does the recession linger? Does it risk becoming another depression? What is the economy doing—shrinking, growing or remaining stagnant?
  3. What’s happening with unemployment? Are the levels reducing back to pre COVID-19 levels? What about the “real” unemployment level? How does it impact different ethnicity and age groups?

The answers to these questions and others will propel lawmakers to act or not. Right now, the projections are dire and lead us to three inescapable and bitter truths. When it comes to job losses, the economy and unemployment, more suffering, discomfort and pain are expected. These three bitter truths will surely impact whether or not Congress acts at all and how fast.

Related reading:

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

IRS Sent Stimulus Checks To 127.5 Million People: Here’s The Updated State-By-State Breakdown

3 Bitter Truths About Coronavirus Job Losses And The Economy

This Is The Most Important Question Leaders Ask During A Crisis

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

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

Source Article from https://www.forbes.com/sites/terinaallen/2020/05/11/the-2000-second-stimulus-check-what-americans-say-about-it/

As Americans start planning summer vacations, health officials in California urged the public to not take leisure trips, including weekend trips, in the middle of the coronavirus crisis.

“We are, in fact, asking people in our health officer order to avoid nonessential travel and we would ask that our neighbors across the state and across the country do the same,” said Barbara Ferrer, director of public health for Los Angeles County. “There’s probably very few places in the world right now that would like to see travel into their communities.”

There is no mandatory 14-day mandatory quarantine for visitors coming to California, as is the case in Hawaii, which is punishable by a $5,000 fine and a year in imprisonment.

But Ferrer requested that people coming to L.A. County “do self-quarantine when you come in [and] you do keep yourself away from other people … for that 14-day period.”

The San Francisco director of public health, Dr. Grant Colfax, echoed his L.A. County counterpart.

“It’s best for people to limit their travel to essential travel. This is not the time to go on a trip for recreation or vacation, even to visit family and friends,” Colfax said.

Last week, Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin offered a different message in an interview on Fox Business Network, where he said President Trump was looking at ways to stimulate travel.

“We want people to travel safely, to be able to visit places safely,” Mnuchin said. “This is a great time for people to explore America. A lot of people haven’t seen many parts of America.”

The suggestions come as officials are slowing trying to ease stay-at-home rules.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday that while there are signs of progress, such as a modest decrease in patients in intensive care, the number of coronavirus cases and deaths remains an obstacle.

“We’re still seeing lives lost from this pandemic,” he said. “It is absolutely incumbent on all of us to be thoughtful and judicious as we move into this next phase.”

California over the last few days has allowed some retail businesses to reopen for curbside service, and local governments have allowed many beaches and trails to reopen with social distancing.

Los Angeles County beaches, which have been closed since late March, will reopen Wednesday with some new rules.

Surfing, swimming, running and walking will be allowed. Biking, playing volleyball, sitting, sunbathing and picnicking will be banned. Coolers and canopies are not allowed. Parking lots, bike paths, piers and boardwalks will remain closed.

Everyone will be required to wear masks and stay at least six feet away from others, officials said.

Crowds did not storm newly reopened businesses, trailheads and parks, Ferrer said. Of 410 reopened businesses surveyed, 162 were found to be in violation, and some were instructed to close.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-05-11/avoid-weekend-trips-and-summer-vacations-for-now-california-health-officials-say

The Chinese foreign ministry has rejected new U.S. rules for Chinese journalists, introduced last week, as an attempt to suppress Beijing-backed media organizations, demanding that Washington, D.C. walk back the new restrictions or face countermeasures.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian hit out at the new measures during a daily briefing with reporters on Monday. On Friday, the U.S. announced it would only issue 90-day visas for Chinese reporters with no option of extension. The new rules come into force on Monday.

Previously, visas were often open-ended and did not require extension, Reuters noted. Reporters would only have to apply to extend the visa if they moved to a different company or type of reporting. The new rules will not apply to reporters carrying passports issued by the semi-autonomous Chinese territories of Hong Kong and Macau.

Zhao said Monday that the new U.S. restrictions were an escalation of suppression against Chinese media, Reuters reported. He added that Washington should immediately reverse the decision or Beijing will have to take countermeasures.

The new rule is the latest move in a recent U.S.-Chinese spat over journalistic freedoms, occurring while the two nations fight a PR war over the coronavirus pandemic.

The dispute began in February, when the U.S. said it would start treating five Chinese state-run news organizations as “foreign missions.” The next day, the Chinese government retaliated by expelling three Wall Street Journal correspondents—two Americans and an Australian—over an opinion column dismissed by Beijing as racist.

In March, the State Department then said that the five Chinese media outlets now treated as “foreign missions” would have to reduce their total number of staff from 160 to 100. Beijing responded by effectively expelling U.S. journalists working at three American newspapers in China.

Explaining the new visa rules, the Department of Homeland Security said Friday the measures were in response to Beijing’s “suppression of independent journalism.” An anonymous senior DHS official told Reuters that the move would also “create greater national security protections” by reducing the number of Chinese journalists operating in the U.S.

U.S.-China relations have sunk to a historic low amid the coronavirus pandemic. The COVID-19 strain originated in the Chinese city of Wuhan and has now spread worldwide, infecting more than 4.1 million people and killing more than 282,000, according to Johns Hopkins University.

President Donald Trump’s administration has accused China of failing to adequately warn the international community of the coronavirus threat, while underreporting its number of infections and deaths.

The president and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo have also claimed that the virus escaped from a research lab in Wuhan—though neither has provided evidence—rather than originating at a wildlife market as most experts have thus far suggested.

Beijing has rejected international criticism of its response as racist politicking. The government has reserved its most cutting attacks for the Trump administration, which it says is seeking to shift blame to China to divert attention from its own bungling of the pandemic and motivate his base ahead of the November presidential election.

The U.S. has now become the global epicenter of the pandemic, with more than 1.3 million reported infections and almost 80,000 deaths.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/china-threatens-retaliation-new-us-visa-restrictions-chinese-reporters-1503060

Tesla parking lot appears full. May 11, 2020

Even before the sun came up Monday, it appears as though the parking lot was full at the Tesla factory in Fremont.

That’s news because over the weekend, CEO Elon Musk sued Alameda County over the shelter-in-place order. 

Tesla says they have a plan to get employees back to work safely and the county won’t let it happen.

Tesla is allowed to maintain minimum services at the factory, like payroll and product inventory, so it was not immediately clear who was at work on Monday, or if manufacturing started up again.

KTVU received a call from a Tesla employee who said he was at work from 6 p.m. Sunday until 6 a.m. Monday. He said Tesla is “up and running” and he feels like health guidelines aren’t being followed.

Tesla did not immediately respond if they’re starting production again. 

At a news conference on Monday, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said he thought Tesla could resume operations next week. 

Vehicle production stopped in Fremont on March 23 and has been on hold ever since because of Alameda County’s shelter-in-place order. 

Because of that, Tesla filed a lawsuit in federal court against the county for overstepping federal and state coronavirus restrictions.

In a statement, Alameda County health officials say they’ve been working closely with Tesla and are creating a safety plan that allows people to get back to work while protecting their health and hope to come to an agreement soon.

Musk was outspoken this weekend on Twitter about his issues with not being allowed to reopen. He threatened to move the company’s Palo Alto headquarters and Fremont plant out of state.

Michael Coates, an auto expert, explained how the timing of the shelter in place is hurting the company.

“The end of the quarter big push for Tesla try to help their numbers,” he said. “Th shut down came at that point at end of the quarter. I think Musk was particularly upset.” 

Tesla’s headquarters employs 1,500 people and the factory employs 10,000. It’s Fremont’s largest employer. 

Fremont Mayor Lily Mei said she’s worried about the economic impact if Tesla can’t open.

Mei says tesla is critical to the city’s employment base and if essential businesses can operate with safety guidelines – so can others

Palo Alto Mayor Adrian Fine says he values having companies like tesla in the city and would be disappointed if they left.

Sara Zendehnam is a reporter forKTVU.  Email Sara at sara.zendehnam@foxtv.com(opens in new tab) and follow her on Twitter@szendehnam

Source Article from https://www.ktvu.com/news/parking-lot-appears-full-at-tesla-after-ceo-elon-musk-sues-over-shelter-in-place

President Trump takes questions during a news conference on the novel coronavirus in the Rose Garden of the White House Monday afternoon.

Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images


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President Trump takes questions during a news conference on the novel coronavirus in the Rose Garden of the White House Monday afternoon.

Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

Updated at 5:51 p.m. ET

President Trump took a combative stance with reporters in the White House Rose Garden on Monday to address the nation’s coronavirus testing capabilities, days after several COVID-19 cases near his inner circle heightened concerns of the nation’s ability to safely reopen.

Last week, a military valet for the president, as well as the press secretary of Vice President Mike Pence, tested positive for coronavirus.

Despite the close proximity of those cases, Trump said on Monday he felt “no vulnerability whatsoever” and still expected country to move swiftly towards reopening.

“I want our country open. I want it open safely, but I want it open. Don’t forget, people are dying the other route. You can go with the enclosed route, everything’s closed up. You’re in your house, you’re not allowed to move. People are dying with that too,” Trump said.

Health experts have pointed to social distancing as one of the most key measures, alongside robust testing, to containing the virus and preventing new outbreaks.

Still, the White House has now directed staff in the West Wing to wear masks while they are in the building, except when they are at their own desks, a senior administration official said.

The latest rash of infections led to three members of the White House coronavirus task force — head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Dr. Anthony Fauci, Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Stephen Hahn, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Robert Redfield — moving to self-quarantine for two weeks.

Trump’s return to the podium comes after he had previously signaled that he had soured on the once-daily briefings.

However, as the nation moves to relax coronavirus restrictions and social distancing rules, the White House COVID-19 cases have highlighted experts’ concerns of possible new case spikes during the country’s return to normal.

Trump on Monday sought to assuage those concerns and push his desire to relieve the battered national economy, and promote an image of personal health, during the briefing.

“In the fourth quarter, we’re going to do very good. And next year I think we’re going to have one of the best years we’ve ever had because there is a tremendous pent-up demand,” Trump said.

Following the new coronavirus diagnoses last week, Trump announced that coronavirus testing at the White House would now be a daily undertaking for him and those closest to him, rather than weekly.

Franco Ordoñez contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/05/11/853720236/watch-trump-holds-briefing-after-white-house-staffers-test-positive-for-coronavi

The assignment of a new prosecutor in Arbery’s killing marks the beginning of yet another chapter in a winding case that has garnered tremendous national attention, prompting advocates to call for the resignations of some authorities involved in the original investigation. It took more than two months and the publicization of a graphic, viral video in the incident before authorities arrested McMichael and his son, Travis, on charges of murder and aggravated assault in connection to the incident.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2020/05/11/ahmaud-arbery-new-prosecutor/

Nearly 2,000 former Justice Department and FBI officials on Monday signed an open letter strongly critical of Attorney General William Barr’s decision to abandon the prosecution of Michael Flynn, calling the action “extraordinarily rare, if not unprecedented.”

If anyone else who is not a friend of the president “were to lie to federal investigators in the course of a properly predicated counterintelligence investigation, and admit we did so under oath, we could be prosecuted,” the letter said.

The letter calls on Barr to resign and encourages Congress to formally censure Barr over “his repeated assaults on the rule of law in doing the President’s personal bidding rather than acting in the public interest.”

Barr directed federal prosecutors to abandon their prosecution of Michael Flynn, who served briefly as national security adviser in the early days of the Trump administration. Flynn admitted that he had lied to the FBI about his conversations during the transition with Russia’s ambassador to the U.S.

The letter urges the judge who is in charge of the Flynn case, Emmet Sullivan, to “take a long, hard look at the government’s explanation and the evidence.” Barr is using the Justice Department to further President Donald Trump’s personal and political interests, it says, and “has undermined any claim to the deference that courts usually apply to the department’s decisions about whether or not to prosecute a case.”

Most of the signers are former career lawyers from both Republican and Democratic administrations, though many former political appointees are included. The highest-ranking to sign so far is Stuart Gerson, who served briefly as acting attorney general at the start of the Clinton administration after leading the Justice Department Civil Division in the first Bush administration.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/justice-department/2-000-former-doj-fbi-officials-call-barr-resign-over-n1204601

Mike Pence will not enter quarantine despite a rash of coronavirus cases in the White House in recent days, including a positive test for the vice-president’s own press secretary.

“Vice-President Pence has tested negative every single day and plans to be at the White House tomorrow,” Devin O’Malley, a backup spokesman for Pence, said in a statement on Sunday night.

As the Trump administration urges Americans to return to workplaces and Donald Trump touts a “transition to greatness” ahead, the White House faces a delicate balancing act in projecting business as usual even as coronavirus cases spread through the halls of power.

Three members of the White House coronavirus taskforce – Dr Anthony Fauci of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; Dr Stephen Hahn, commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration; and Dr Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention – have entered two weeks of isolation, after having contact with someone who later tested positive.

Senator Lamar Alexander, a Republican from Tennessee who chairs the health committee, has entered self-quarantine after a staffer tested positive. A senior admiral on Trump’s top military advisory committee, chief of naval operations Michael Gilday, has isolated following contact with an infected family member, Bloomberg News reported. Top general Joseph Lengyel tested positive at the White House on Saturday in a spot check, before he was to meet Trump.

A valet for Trump, who had served the president food without wearing a mask, also recently tested positive. The White House is considering new rules under which aides must maintain a distance of 6ft from the president, ABC News reported.

Pence’s spokeswoman, Katie Miller, the wife of Stephen Miller, one of the president’s closest aides who is in frequent close contact with the Trump family, tested positive last week. It was unclear if Stephen Miller had entered self-isolation.

“There is extreme sensitivity inside the White House right now at the current state of affairs – officials recognize the contradiction in telling states to reopen while the White House enhances protocols to prevent spread of the virus,” CNN quoted an anonymous Trump administration official as saying.

On Monday morning the number of recorded Covid-19 deaths in the US was close to 80,000, and while the rate of new cases appears to be slowing in the New York City area and other sites of major outbreaks, elsewhere new infections are rising.

Nowhere is testing and contact-tracing for the virus as thoroughly as the White House, where aides and senior officials including Trump and Pence receive both spot checks and repeated testing in various forms, some on a daily basis. Without such testing, cases could go undetected, leading to a potentially wide outbreak.



Katie Miller, Vice-President Mike Pence’s press secretary, has tested positive for coronavirus. Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

Yet that is the risk Trump is urging Americans to take in the coming weeks and months as they return to work without the protection of regular testing.

On Sunday, Trump retweeted an announcement by Trump National Golf Club Los Angeles of its reopening.

“So great to see our country starting to open up again!” he wrote.

“If we do this carefully, working with the governors, I don’t think there’s a considerable risk,” the treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin, told Fox News Sunday. “Matter of fact, I think there’s a considerable risk of not reopening. You’re talking about what would be permanent economic damage to the American public.”

But such downplaying of the risks the public faces could be undercut as the Senate holds public hearings with social distancing measures in place.

The key committee on health will on Tuesday convene its first public hearing. Alexander will chair the hearing remotely, senators attending will wear masks and be seated 6ft apart, and experts including Fauci are scheduled to testify by video link.

Fauci has repeatedly contradicted, gently, Trump’s most reckless claims about the coronavirus. On Monday morning the president claimed: “Great credit being given for our Coronavirus response, except in the Fake News.”

He also addressed one Democratic-run state seeking to reopen when he wrote: “The great people of Pennsylvania want their freedom now, and they are fully aware of what that entails. The Democrats are moving slowly, all over the USA, for political purposes … Don’t play politics. Be safe, move quickly!

On Sunday, however, the White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett told CBS’s Face the Nation it was “scary to go work”.

“I think that I’d be a lot safer if I was sitting at home than I would be going to the West Wing,” he said.

O’Malley, the Pence spokesman, said the vice-president “will continue to follow the advice of the White House medical unit and is not in quarantine”. Pence himself, who notoriously did not wear a mask when touring the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota recently, was asked by Axios if staff should wear masks in the White House.

“Some people do,” he said.

While Trump was reportedly “spooked” by the revelation that his valet had carried the virus, it has also been reported that he told confidants he fears he would look ridiculous in a mask and the image would appear in negative ads.

“It’s a vanity thing, I guess, with him,” the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, said on MSNBC. “You’d think, as the president of the United States, you would have the confidence to honor the guidance he’s giving the country.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/may/11/mike-pence-quarantine-coronavirus-white-house

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s lawyers will urge the Supreme Court on Tuesday to let him block access to his tax returns and other financial documents sought by three congressional committees and a New York prosecutor.

In one of the most closely watched disputes of the court’s term, the cases will test the justices’ independence and could yield major rulings on the power of Congress to demand documents from a sitting president — or the authority of a president to refuse.

The court will hear the two separate cases by telephone conference call with each justice taking a turn to ask questions, a process that began May 4 and for the most part has worked smoothly, despite a toilet flushing faux pas. It has, however, tamed the normal back and forth of oral argument, and the questioning has been less aggressive. Live audio of the argument will be available on C-SPAN.

Whichever way the court rules, the decisions — there will be one for each case — will be a blockbuster. The rulings will probably be released by late next month.

Trump’s lawyers say the document demands are politically motivated fishing expeditions. But House Democrats say the president cannot block the subpoenas because they have nothing to do with his official duties, are directed at his banks and accountants — not him — and don’t require him to do anything in response.

In the first case, the Democratic majorities of three House committees are seeking several years’ worth of financial records from Mazars, the Trump organization’s accounting firm, and two banks that loaned money to Trump businesses — Capital One and Deutsche Bank.

The Oversight Committee acted last year after former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen testified that “Mr. Trump inflated his total assets when it served his purposes and deflated his assets to reduce his real estate taxes.” The Financial Services and Intelligence committees said they were looking into money laundering and lending practices.

House Democrats have said they believe Trump’s tax returns might provide insights into a question special counsel Robert Mueller never answered: Did Trump borrow money from Russian entities or otherwise do business with them before he became president? He has denied any such relationship. Democrats say that if any existed, that would give Russian President Vladimir Putin leverage over Trump.

The president’s personal lawyers argue that Congress has the power to issue subpoenas only for the purpose of writing laws. The demands for Trump’s documents, they say, are instead an effort to conduct investigations, not to legislate. Simply claiming that the information might lead to changing existing laws cannot transform a law enforcement effort into a law-making one, they say.

“These subpoenas are no more valid than would be demands for the president’s medical records so Congress may consider health care reform,” they write in their Supreme Court brief.

Besides, they say, it’s been clear since Trump was elected that Congress was determined to dig into his family’s financial history. “Exposing private details about individuals is not a power Congress holds,” the lawyers write. “Yet that has been the goal here from the start.”

In response, House Democrats say Congress has the power to issue subpoenas when it needs to know how current federal laws are working.

“It is scarcely surprising that investigators need to conduct a thorough investigation when seeking to determine whether money laundering, election and national security, disclosure and conflict of interest laws are sufficient,” they argue.

While Trump says Congress has never before subpoenaed the private records of a sitting president, lawyers for the House say Congress has been seeking information about the public and private conduct of presidents for nearly 200 years.

In the second case on Tuesday, the president’s lawyers will argue that a local prosecutor in New York had no power to seek a grand jury subpoena for Trump’s tax records from his accountants. Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance is investigating hush money payments made to two women who claimed they had affairs with Trump — allegations the president has consistently denied.

Trump’s team says that because a president cannot be indicted while in office, he is immune from any part of the criminal justice process, including grand jury subpoenas. One of his lawyers told an appeals court that a sitting president could not be investigated even for shooting someone on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan.

It’s even worse, they say, to imagine that every local prosecutor in the country could target the president for investigation. “The risk that politics will lead state and local prosecutors to relentlessly harass the president is simply too great to tolerate,” Trump’s lawyers argue.

While the demand for his taxes is directed at his accountants, not him, the president’s lawyers say “there is no dispute that the subpoena itself targets the president — it names him personally and seeks his private records.” He’ll have to consult with his lawyers and consider possible court fights, which will distract him from his official duties, the president’s lawyers say.

The House lawyers say the president’s immunity from the burdens of legal process applies only to his official acts, not his personal ones. Grand juries cannot be blocked from investigating a president’s private conduct, they say, because that could hinder the prosecution of a president after leaving office.

The Supreme Court has never ruled on the issues raised in either case before it. But in two unanimous decisions, the court said President Richard Nixon had to respond to a subpoena for White House tapes in a criminal case and President Bill Clinton was not immune from a civil lawsuit while in office, despite the potential distraction the litigation might cause.

In 2000, the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel researched the issue and concluded, as previous opinions did, that a sitting president cannot be indicted. But it said, “A grand jury could continue to gather evidence throughout the period of immunity, even passing this task down to subsequently empaneled grand juries if necessary.”

Mueller’s team took a similar view during the special counsel investigation. Mueller’s final report said while a sitting president can’t be prosecuted, “a criminal investigation during the president’s term is permissible.”

The accounting firm and both banks have taken no position in either of the cases, saying the dispute is between the president — who is represented by his personal lawyers, not the Justice Department — and Congress and the New York district attorney.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/supreme-court/secrecy-trump-s-taxes-financial-records-line-supreme-court-arguments-n1203951

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/11/politics/mike-pence-iowa-video-masks/index.html

Vice President Mike Pence was back to work at the White House on Monday after Trump administration officials denied a report Sunday that he was self-isolating.

Meanwhile, in New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo is scheduled to release more details about reopening, a day after revealing new rules for nursing homes, a hot spot for coronavirus deaths in the state.

There were nearly 80,000 deaths and more than 1.3 million confirmed coronavirus cases in the U.S. early Monday, according to the John Hopkins University data dashboard. Worldwide, the virus has killed more than 282,000 people and surpassed 4.1 million infections.

Our live blog is being updated throughout the day. Refresh for the latest news, and get updates in your inbox with The Daily Briefing. Scroll down for more details.

Here are some of the most significant developments Monday:

  • Trump administration officials denied a report that Vice President Mike Pence is self-isolating and said he would be back at work in the White House on Monday.
  • The man identified as New York’s coronavirus “patient zero” is home now and says he feels much better. 
  • Foodborne illness investigations have slowed and food recalls have plummeted  because of disruptions in the U.S. food safety system caused by the coronavirus, a USA TODAY investigation found. 

Good news: Visitors in face masks streamed into Shanghai Disneyland as the theme park reopened Monday in a high-profile step toward reviving tourism.

What we’re talking about today: A photo of a crowded flight posted on Twitter by a California cardiologist returning from the New York City area may hint at the difficulties of social distancing as air travel picks up again.

MLB plan for games in July ‘an aggressive timetable,’ KC mayor says

Major League Baseball’s hopes of playing games without fans in attendance as early as July in as many of its home cities as possible “is an aggressive timetable,” Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas says. USA TODAY Sports reached out to the mayors of all MLB cities, as well as governors in select states, and the roughly one-third who responded, Lucas among them, revealed a caution to bringing back sports before data indicate it is safe.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2020/05/11/coronavirus-live-updates-mike-pence-white-house-fauci-reopenings/3089822001/