Just 40% of Americans approve of the job President Trump is doing and 58% disapprove, an NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll finds.

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Just 40% of Americans approve of the job President Trump is doing and 58% disapprove, an NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll finds.

Patrick Semansky/AP

After weeks of protests against police brutality and racism, and amid a renewed spike in coronavirus cases, the number of voters disapproving of the job President Trump is doing is at an all-time high, a new NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll finds.

Trump’s approval rating sits at just 40% overall, while a record 58% disapprove.

What’s more, a whopping 49% of voters “strongly disapprove” of the job Trump is doing. That kind of intensity of disapproval is a record never before seen for this president or any past one.

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In the general election matchup, former Vice President Joe Biden leads Trump by 8 percentage points, 52% to 44%. That’s a considerable margin, and it’s especially important that Biden is above — not just reaching — 50%.

But it’s not as wide a lead for Biden as other surveys have found recently. And it’s not dissimilar to what the NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll found earlier this month. Then, Biden led 50% to Trump’s 43%.

In the latest poll, conducted Monday through Wednesday this week, Biden has sizable leads with Black voters, people who live in big cities, women, white women with college degrees, young voters and suburban voters.

Trump’s strongest support comes from white evangelical Christians, white men without college degrees and people who live in rural areas.

But Biden leads or is eating into Trump’s margins with groups Trump won in 2016, including independents, whites, white men with college degrees and voters 65 and older.

Trump, for example, won white men with college degrees in 2016 by 53% to 39%. In this poll, Biden leads 54% to 42%. And for all the dissatisfaction about Biden voiced by young voters in the Democratic primary, 63% of voters ages 18 to 29 choose Biden over Trump. That’s a higher percentage than the 55% Hillary Clinton won in 2016.

The one group Biden continues to underperform with slightly is Latinos — 59% of Latinos said they’d vote for Biden over Trump, but Clinton won 66% of their votes in 2016.

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A major shift in American politics appears to be solidifying in America’s suburbs. In 2016, Trump won the suburbs 49% to 45%. In this poll, like in other polls, however, Biden is ahead in the suburbs, 60% to 35%. That is a major shift, one that was seen in the 2018 midterms and that handed Democrats control of the House of Representatives.

The high level of disapproval and Biden’s lead also coincide with two-thirds of Americans saying earlier this month in the poll that Trump has mostly increased tensions since George Floyd’s death at the hands of police in Minneapolis.

The bad news for the president also comes on the heels of an underwhelming rally in Tulsa, Okla. His campaign had promised an overflow crowd and outdoor festivities and speeches, which never came to fruition.

These are all eyebrow-raising numbers, and Trump’s handling of race and the coronavirus may have done irreparable damage to him, but his core voters are still enthusiastic for him — 90% of Republicans approve of the job he’s doing and 91% say they would choose him over Biden.

And Democratic strategists believe this is a low-water mark for Trump and expect a tightening of the race as the election gets closer.

The survey of 1,515 registered voters was conducted from June 22 through June 25, with live telephone callers via cellphone and landline by the Marist Institute for Public Opinion. The poll has a margin of error of +/- 3.5 percentage points.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/06/26/883336183/poll-trump-disapproval-hits-all-time-high-and-he-trails-biden-by-8

In a filing with the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday, the Trump administration reaffirmed its position that the entire Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional.

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In a filing with the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday, the Trump administration reaffirmed its position that the entire Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional.

Susan Walsh/AP

Updated at 9:25 a.m. ET

In a filing with the U.S. Supreme Court, the Trump administration has reaffirmed its position that the Affordable Care Act in its entirety is illegal because Congress eliminated the individual tax penalty for failing to purchase medical insurance.

Solicitor General Noel Francisco, the government’s chief advocate before the Supreme Court, said in a brief that the other provisions of Obamacare are impossible to separate from the individual mandate and that “it necessarily follows that the rest of the ACA must also fall.”

Shortly after the brief appeared on the court’s docket late Thursday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement: “President Trump and the Republicans’ campaign to rip away the protections and benefits of the Affordable Care Act in the middle of the coronavirus crisis is an act of unfathomable cruelty.”

The case before the high court began with a lawsuit brought by 20 states, led by Texas, calling for the elimination of the ACA. It has been consolidated for argument with another case brought by 17 states, led by California, seeking to preserve the law. The court is likely to hear the case in the fall.

“President Trump, in this cruel lawsuit, has shown us who he really is,” California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said in a statement. He added that they intend to prevail “with the facts, the law and the American people on our side.”

The lawsuit was first heard in Texas in 2018 by U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor, who struck down the entire ACA as unconstitutional. At the time, the Trump administration had not taken that all-or-nothing position but since then has come to support the lawsuit.

Eliminating the ACA would end medical insurance for more than 20 million Americans. It would also end widely popular provisions of the law, such as extending parents’ coverage to children up to the age of 26 and prohibiting insurance companies from denying coverage based on preexisting conditions.

Trump and congressional Republicans have long said they want to “repeal and replace” Obamacare but have yet to offer legislation addressing what would take its place.

The cases before the Supreme Court are State of California, et al., v. State of Texas, et al. (19-840) and State of Texas, et al., v. State of California, et al. (19-1019).

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/06/26/883819835/obamacare-must-fall-trump-administration-tells-supreme-court

WASHINGTON — Former Vice President Joe Biden said in a Thursday television interview he would require wearing face masks in public to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. 

Asked by Pittsburgh CBS affiliate KDKA what he would do to help halt the surge in coronavirus cases, Biden said he would “go back to making sure that everyone had masks.” 

“The one thing we do know — these masks make a gigantic difference,” Biden said. “I would insist that everybody out in public be wearing that mask.”

When asked if he would use federal powers to require the wearing of masks, Biden said, “Yes, I would. From an executive standpoint, yes I would.”

“I would do everything possible to make it required that people had to wear masks in public,” he added.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2020/06/26/coronavirus-joe-biden-says-he-would-require-face-masks-slams-trump/3262581001/

The number of confirmed new coronavirus cases per day in the US hit an all-time high of 40,000 according to figures released on Friday, eclipsing the mark set during one of the deadliest stretches in late April – in a resurgence that has led some governors to backtrack or at least pause the reopening of their states.

While the increase is believed to reflect, in part, greatly expanded testing, experts say there is ample evidence the virus is making a comeback, including rising deaths and hospitalizations in parts of the country, especially in the south and west. Arizona, Texas and Florida are among the states that have been hit hard.

The number of confirmed infections soared past the previous high set on 24 Aprilof 36,400, according to the count kept by Johns Hopkins University.

Deaths from the coronavirus in the US are down to around 600 per day, compared with about 2,200 in mid-April.

Some experts have expressed doubt that deaths will return to that level, in part because of advances in treatment and prevention but also because a large share of the new infections are in younger adults, who are more likely than older ones to survive.

The virus is blamed for 124,000 deaths in the US and 2.4m confirmed infections nationwide, by Johns Hopkins’ count.

But US health officials said on Thursday that the true number of Americans infected is about 20 million, or almost 10 times higher. Worldwide, the virus has claimed close to a half-million lives, according to Johns Hopkins.

Arizona late Thursday joined Texas in putting the brakes on its reopening plans amid a sharp surge in coronavirus infections, as cases are now rising across 29 states.

Health experts warned on Friday that the US was not doing enough testing for Covid-19 and that simply pausing reopening plans in some states – as others continue to roar ahead – would not be enough to stem the spread of the disease.

“Pausing reopening is not enough. We have got to try to ‘put the horse back in the barn’, as it were … we need to start to reverse the opening up,” Ashish Jha, director of Harvard University’s Global Health Institute, told ABC on Friday morning.

He warned that hospitals are going to be overwhelmed in states across the south and west where infections are surging, unless leaders take stronger measures to stop the spread.

Jha urged more testing, saying the US was not doing enough, even though it is performing an estimated 500,000 tests per day, after the CDC on Thursday said that there were likely an estimated 10 times as many Americans who have or have had coronavirus than current statistics show.

“They are missing cases because there is not enough testing, they are way below where they need to be,” said Jha.

Donald Trump on Thursday repeated his false assertion that more testing is responsible for the increased numbers of cases being reported.

“If you did not do testing, you would not have cases,” he said on a trip to Wisconsin.

An ABC/Ipsos poll on Friday showed that 56% of Americans believe the country is opening back up too quickly, with no vaccine and no cure available for Covid-19.

Jha urged Americans to wear face masks in public. “It’s a pretty small step to take to make sure our hospitals don’t get overwhelmed,” he said, asserting that masks do help prevent the spread, despite a high-profile anti-mask backlash in some parts of the country.

In Texas the governor, Greg Abbott, abruptly halted the push to loosen more restrictions and is now urgently telling people to stay home.

Arizona governor Doug Ducey, like Abbott a Republican, did the same, declaring the state “on pause” as hospitals accelerate toward capacity.



Tubers float in the Comal River despite the recent spike in Covid-19 cases Thursday, in New Braunfels, Texas. Photograph: Eric Gay/AP

As an alarming coronavirus resurgence sets records for confirmed cases and hospitalizations across the US south and west, governors are retreating to measures they once resisted and striking a more urgent tone.

“I think they’re going to have to,” said Dr Mark McClellan, former head of the Food and Drug Administration. “It doesn’t take most people in a community getting sick to overwhelm health care systems.”

Critics bristle that the actions are too little, or worse, possibly too late as patients fill up intensive-care beds and the US closes in on hitting all-time highs for daily confirmed cases.

But Florida’s governor, Ron DeSantis, who until recently had rarely worn a face covering, has said he won’t impose statewide mask orders or delay reopening. And Abbott says shutting down the Texas economy again is a last resort.

The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research latest data says many Americans never fully embraced the reopening effort now underway in many states.

A majority of Americans still have concerns about contracting Covid-19, and significant shares still support the kinds of public health restrictions that states have rolled back.

The number of cases in Duval county, which is home to Jacksonville, Florida, where the Republicans plan to hold their convention in August, after switching from North Carolina because of greater restrictions on gatherings, has shot up along with statewide numbers.

Congresswoman Donna Shalala of Florida, a former secretary of Health and Human Services during the Clinton administration, called on DeSantis to make a course correction.

“He followed the president’s leadership, and people have died because of it,” she said. “He can pivot and take very strong steps.”

In Arkansas, governor Asa Hutchinson has urged people to cover their faces and even begins his daily briefings by showing off his mask. But the Republican governor has resisted calls to require them, arguing that it would be difficult to enforce in a rural state.

In Arizona, Ducey resisted pressure to close businesses as the virus first spread in March.

Now Ducey has put the brakes on reopening.

The numbers “continue to go in the wrong direction,” Ducey said Thursday.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/jun/26/arizona-joins-texas-halting-reopening-amid-surge-covid-coronavirus-cases

President Donald Trump on Thursday promised “retribution” against protesters nationwide who tore down statues and referred to Wisconsin demonstrators as “terrorists.”

“Every night, we’re going to get tougher and tougher,” Trump said at a Fox News town hall in Wisconsin on Thursday night, in response to an audience question about his plan to tamp down protests there. “And at some point, there’s going to be retribution because there has to be. These people are vandals, but they’re agitators, but they’re really — they’re terrorists, in a sense.”

It’s unclear what the president meant by “retribution,” but Trump earlier in the town hall called for prison time for protesters who tear down monuments. And in a Tuesday tweet, Trump promised 10 years in jail for “anyone who vandalizes or destroys any monument, statue or other such federal property,” citing the 2003 Veterans’ Memorial Preservation Act.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/26/trump-retribution-protesters-statues-340957

Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan speaks on the floor of the Georgia State Senate on Feb. 4.

John Bazemore/AP


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Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan speaks on the floor of the Georgia State Senate on Feb. 4.

John Bazemore/AP

The state of Georgia is juggling three crises: a rising number of COVID-19 cases, problems with voting access as the general election approaches, and the killings of two Black men, Ahmaud Arbery and Rayshard Brooks.

Georgia hit a record high of new confirmed cases this week. But Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan says he stands by the decision to begin opening up the state at the end of April.

“You can’t just open a book and see exactly what to do and when to do it,” he tells NPR’s Ari Shapiro on All Things Considered. “This continues to be so valuable, for individuals to practice social distancing to the best of their abilities, to set up best practices inside of businesses. We’re going to continue to take great strides in that direction.”

The state is also reckoning with the deaths of Arbery, who was chased by three white men and fatally shot while jogging in South Georgia in February, and Brooks, who was shot and killed by Atlanta police in June.

In the aftermath, Georgia state lawmakers met to push for a hate crimes law. The bill passed the state legislature on Tuesday and now heads to Gov. Brian Kemp, who has indicated his support. Georgia is one of only handful of states that currently does not have such legislation on the books.

Earlier this month, many Georgia voters encountered long lines and delays during the primary election on June 9, due to logistical problems and technical issues that seemed to disproportionately affect Black voters.

Duncan discusses the state’s urgency to find solutions to these crises in tandem.

Interview Highlights

On how the state should address the rise in coronavirus cases

I think we continue to make sure that we understand hot spots. I think that was a huge lesson learned by all 50 states. But we know that when we flood the zone with messaging, with PPE, with hospital resources and ventilators and all of the other tools and resources that we’ve learned over the past three months, that that absolutely is an imperative step.

On why it took so long to pass a hate crimes bill, and why he pushed for it now

Certainly there is a sense of urgency. The absolute tragedies that have played out all across the country — they have been brought into our living rooms, including mine, sitting on the couch with my three kids, trying to explain to them what was happening and what were the remedies.

On explaining this moment to his kids

Well, we walked through it, and that was a great example of the [state] General Assembly. Every day, my kids wanted to see what the progress was [on the hate crime bill], and my oldest son asked, the day that we passed the bill out of the Senate, tapped me on the shoulder, early that morning, and said, “Can I go to work with you?” So I was able to have my oldest, 18-year-old son, who’s going to go off to college, be by my side, watching us pass what no doubt will be a story told way longer than anybody will ever remember me.

On polling place issues that resulted in long lines

As you know, elections aren’t just about the state, they’re about the counties, they’re about the county election offices and they’re about the secretary of state. … And I really think that what we’ve seen is this really comes down to training. Training is executed from state resources but also at the county level. … If there’s faulty equipment, I am certain that equipment will be dealt with. I will point you to an overwhelming majority of the counties did not report any sort of issues and so that’s a great starting point to make sure that we understand the best lessons going forward.

On how to address voting problems that happened mostly in majority-Black areas

I think the greatest starting point for all of us is to make sure that every voice is heard and every person has an opportunity to vote that shows up to the polls and we’re going to continue to make sure that happens.

Listen to the full interview at the audio link above.

Dave Blanchard, Art Silverman and Justine Kenin produced and edited the audio version of this story.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/06/25/883330901/georgia-lt-gov-on-covid-19-the-states-hate-crimes-bill-and-voting-access

The U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C. Thursday the Trump administration reaffirmed its position that the entire Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional.

Susan Walsh/AP


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Susan Walsh/AP

The U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C. Thursday the Trump administration reaffirmed its position that the entire Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional.

Susan Walsh/AP

In a filing with the Supreme Court, the Trump administration has reaffirmed its position that the Affordable Care Act in its entirety is illegal because Congress eliminated the individual tax penalty for failing to purchase medical insurance.

Solicitor General Noel Francisco, the government’s chief advocate before the Supreme Court, said in a brief that the other provisions of Obamacare are impossible to separate from the individual mandate and that “it necessarily follows that the rest of the ACA must also fall.”

Shortly after the brief appeared on the court’s docket late Thursday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement: “President Trump and the Republicans’ campaign to rip away the protections and benefits of the Affordable Care Act in the middle of the coronavirus crisis is an act of unfathomable cruelty.”

The case before the high court began with a lawsuit brought by 20 states, led by Texas, calling for the elimination of the ACA. It has been consolidated for argument with another case brought by 17 states, led by California, seeking to preserve the law. The court is likely to hear the case in the fall.

The lawsuit was first heard in Texas in 2018 by U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor, who struck down the entire ACA as unconstitutional. At the time the Trump administration had not taken that all-or-nothing position but since then has come to support the lawsuit.

Eliminating the ACA would end medical insurance for more than 20 million Americans. It would also end widely popular provisions of the law, such as extending parents’ coverage to children up to the age of 26, and prohibiting insurance companies from denying coverage based on pre-existing conditions.

Trump and congressional Republicans have long said they want to “repeal and replace” Obamacare, but have yet to offer legislation addressing what would take its place.

The cases before the Supreme Court are State of California, et al., v. State of Texas, et al. (19-840) and State of Texas, et al., v. State of California, et al. (19-1019).

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/06/26/883819835/obamacare-must-fall-trump-administration-tells-supreme-court

As the US opens back up, the coronavirus is taking advantage of the new opportunities to spread.

As of Thursday, at least 29 states are seeing increases in daily coronavirus cases. The inclines are particularly steep in a number of Southern states, including Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, and Texas. Many are reporting more cases than they’ve ever seen on a daily basis.

“This is a continuation of the first wave,” Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security, told Business Insider. “Some places that might have been relatively spared early on in the winter and the spring are now facing cases higher than they had before.”

As a result, many states and cities are dialing back their reopening efforts, reverting to earlier phases or postponing next steps.

Here are the places that are slowing down or walking back their reopening plans.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/states-and-cities-slowing-pausing-coronavirus-reopening-plans-2020-6

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., took Democrats to task Thursday for blocking the Senate Republican police reform bill a day earlier, calling their treatment of Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., “appalling.”

“You know what Nancy Pelosi said yesterday, and doubled down [on], that Tim Scott and the Republicans were supporting murder,” McCarthy said on “The Daily Briefing with Dana Perino.” “She says this to Tim Scott, who didn’t start working on this bill a month ago after the death of George Floyd. He’s worked it his entire life. Tim Scott’s legislative achievements [are] opportunity zones, criminal justice reform, funding of black colleges.”

SENATE REPUBLICANS’ POLICE REFORM BILL FAILS ON TEST VOTE AMID DEM OPPOSITION

Pelosi asserted in an interview Tuesday that Republicans are “trying to get away with murder, actually — the murder of George Floyd” using the reform bill introduced by Scott.

Scott himself ripped Democrats Wednesday after his bill failed to receive the 60 votes required to open debate, accusing them of punting on the issue until after the election and abusing what he described as their “monopoly” on black voters.

McCarthy also blasted Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., who used the word “token” to describe the bill authored by Scott, the lone African-American GOP senator. Durbin later apologized.

“What’s most frustrating to me is watching the speaker of the House call Tim Scott, in essence, his bill as murder,” Scott said. “And the number two individual in the Democrat Senate side said it was ‘a token.’ That’s what they said to a man who rose above it all and sits in the U.S. Senate.”

McCarthy then recalled Scott telling him a story saying he had been stopped from entering the Senate because security didn’t believe he was a senator. According to McCarthy, Scott said he showed a guard his Senate pin, only to be asked who he had taken it from.

“That’s the passion that Tim Scott has to do something about this to unite this nation,” McCarthy said. “And the only people who are denying this is [Sen. Chuck] Schumer and Pelosi. It’s appalling.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

McCarthy also criticized Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., for voting to block debate on Scott’s bill.

“Why wouldn’t she vote to go forward, knowing what has gone on and knowing you need police reform and knowing you’re going to get 20 amendments?” McCarthy said. “No, she’s making a decision that she wants … to try to be a vice president instead of … represent the people [to whom] she swore that she would uphold the Constitution for. That’s appalling to me.”

Fox News’ Adam Shaw and Gregg Re contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/kevin-mccarthy-senate-democrats-appalling-tim-scott

Coronavirus cases are trending upward in about half of U.S. states, and several have reported record-breaking daily new case counts this week, according to Johns Hopkins University.

But the true number of coronavirus cases in the U.S. is likely ten times the number of reported cases, Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said Thursday.

While some states are pushing ahead to the next phase of reopening, Texas hit pause on its reopening plan Thursday and suspended elective surgeries in the state’s largest counties. The state reported record-high new daily coronavirus cases on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, when it also broke it record for hospitalizations for the 14th day in a row.

Alabama and Missouri also reported record-high daily increases Thursday, according to the respective health departments.

Here are the most significant developments of the day:

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2020/06/25/coronavirus-updates-texas-florida-report-rise-covid-19-cases/3258599001/

Allan Larson, 83, a recently retired mechanical engineer in Apache Junction, Ariz., began to regret his vote for the president shortly after he took office — he said Mr. Trump tried to do away with too many things President Obama had done, and kept firing good people — but his handling of the pandemic solidified his views.

“He’s not doing anything about this here virus,” said Mr. Larson, who plans to vote for Mr. Biden. “Just the way he’s running things, I don’t think he’s doing the job he should do.”

On these recent issues, voter disapproval reflects more than just general dissatisfaction with the state of the country. It seems to reflect deeper disagreement with the president’s prioritization of the economy over stopping the spread of coronavirus, and with his focus on law and order over criminal justice.

A majority of voters, 63 percent, say they would rather back a presidential candidate who focuses on the cause of protests, even when the protests go too far, while just 31 percent say they would prefer to support a candidate who says we need to be tough on demonstrations that go too far.

Despite double-digit unemployment, 55 percent of voters in these six states say the federal government’s priority should be to limit the spread of the coronavirus, even if it hurts the economy, while just 35 percent say the federal government’s priority should be to restart the economy. Even the newly unemployed, who would seem to have the most to gain from a reopened economy, say stopping the coronavirus should be the government’s priority.

A high-profile clash with Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan encapsulates the president’s challenge. Mr. Trump sided with protesters who opposed her stay-at-home orders, but voters in the state oppose the protests against social distancing restrictions by 57 percent to 37 percent.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/25/upshot/poll-2020-biden-battlegrounds.html

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., took Democrats to task Thursday for blocking the Senate Republican police reform bill a day earlier, calling their treatment of Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., “appalling.”

“You know what Nancy Pelosi said yesterday, and doubled down [on], that Tim Scott and the Republicans were supporting murder,” McCarthy said on “The Daily Briefing with Dana Perino.” “She says this to Tim Scott, who didn’t start working on this bill a month ago after the death of George Floyd. He’s worked it his entire life. Tim Scott’s legislative achievements [are] opportunity zones, criminal justice reform, funding of black colleges.”

SENATE REPUBLICANS’ POLICE REFORM BILL FAILS ON TEST VOTE AMID DEM OPPOSITION

Pelosi asserted in an interview Tuesday that Republicans are “trying to get away with murder, actually — the murder of George Floyd” using the reform bill introduced by Scott.

Scott himself ripped Democrats Wednesday after his bill failed to receive the 60 votes required to open debate, accusing them of punting on the issue until after the election and abusing what he described as their “monopoly” on black voters.

McCarthy also blasted Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., who used the word “token” to describe the bill authored by Scott, the lone African-American GOP senator. Durbin later apologized.

“What’s most frustrating to me is watching the speaker of the House call Tim Scott, in essence, his bill as murder,” Scott said. “And the number two individual in the Democrat Senate side said it was ‘a token.’ That’s what they said to a man who rose above it all and sits in the U.S. Senate.”

McCarthy then recalled Scott telling him a story saying he had been stopped from entering the Senate because security didn’t believe he was a senator. According to McCarthy, Scott said he showed a guard his Senate pin, only to be asked who he had taken it from.

“That’s the passion that Tim Scott has to do something about this to unite this nation,” McCarthy said. “And the only people who are denying this is [Sen. Chuck] Schumer and Pelosi. It’s appalling.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

McCarthy also criticized Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., for voting to block debate on Scott’s bill.

“Why wouldn’t she vote to go forward, knowing what has gone on and knowing you need police reform and knowing you’re going to get 20 amendments?” McCarthy said. “No, she’s making a decision that she wants … to try to be a vice president instead of … represent the people [to whom] she swore that she would uphold the Constitution for. That’s appalling to me.”

Fox News’ Adam Shaw and Gregg Re contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/kevin-mccarthy-senate-democrats-appalling-tim-scott

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is considering tapping social media platform TikTok to encourage more young Americans to practice public health precautions as coronavirus cases surge among younger people, officials said Thursday.

Data indicates that the new infections seen across the country “are targeting younger individuals,” CDC Director Dr. Robert Redfield said on a conference call with reporters. Redfield said that while young people face a lower risk of severe disease and death due to Covid-19, a high rate of infection among young Americans increases the chances that they go on to infect older, at-risk people.

Young people might not be taking the pandemic as seriously as older Americans, CDC’s deputy director for infectious diseases, Jay Butler, said on the call.

“We may need to get out the message that young people are not somehow naturally immune to this virus, although they may be at lower risk of severe infection,” he said. “The tools that can be used include social media. We’re exploring TikTok.”

Operated by Beijing-based tech giant ByteDance, TikTok, is a social media platform focused on short-form video. The app uses an algorithm to determine what kind of videos a user likes and delivers them on a scrollable page. Organizations can also pay to place short-video advertisements on users’ pages. The app has exploded in popularity, especially among young people, in recent years.

Representatives of TikTok were not immediately available to comment on whether the CDC has been in touch about a public health campaign.

“That is something we’re looking into and I’m of the age that I have to stop and think what is a TikTok, but I’ve learned that over the past month,” Butler added. Beyond TikTok and other social media strategies, Butler said the CDC might issue public service announcements to urge Americans to practice physical distancing and to wear a mask. 

Multiple officials in states with expanding outbreaks have attributed the rise in cases to young people failing to practice social distancing at bars that are overcapacity. In Florida, the average age of an infected person has continued to decline in recent weeks. On Wednesday, the state reported that the average age of patients was 33 years old, down from over 65 years old in March. 

Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis has pointed to the decreasing average age of patients as evidence that the state is effectively protecting its most vulnerable residents. However, White House coronavirus advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci warned Tuesday that scientists are seeing “more and more” complications with Covid-19 in young people.

DeSantis as well as Texas Gov. Greg Abbott have both attributed rising cases in their states to young people failing to practice social distancing, especially in bars. 

While young people infected with the coronavirus who are otherwise healthy face a lower chance of dying or being hospitalized than older individuals, “there is some risk of severe illness, including among younger people,” Butler said. Scientists are also still researching the long-term health effects of getting infected with the coronavirus, which could lead to quality-of-life issues for young patients later in life.

Now, as the virus continues to spread widely among younger people, putting many people throughout the country at risk and setting back the country’s response to the pandemic, Redfield acknowledged the public health messaging has to be more effective.

“Whereas the impact and consequences of Covid infection on them may not be highly associated with hospitalization and death, they do act as a transmission connector for individuals that could in fact be at higher risk,” Redfield said of young people. “I remain concerned about trying to understand effective public health messaging that we need to get to those individuals that are under the age of 45, under the age of 30.”

Some public health officials have expressed frustration that the CDC remained largely quiet through March and April as the virus took hold, mostly in New York and the Northeast. It wasn’t until June that the CDC resumed regular news briefings after a hiatus that began in March.

Dr. Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, for example wrote in an op-ed in April that “the CDC has been inexplicably absent, and Americans are suffering and dying for it.”

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/25/cdc-eyes-tiktok-to-revamp-coronavirus-messaging-for-younger-people-as-infections-surge.html

President Trump weighs in on John Bolton’s new book in a Fox News Town Hall hosted by Sean Hannity. #FoxNews

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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nfCQVxBVcO0

“I am encouraged that Joe Biden is a person of humility and empathy and character,” she added. “I think he’s demonstrated that through his life.”

The president responded to Fiorina’s remarks later Thursday morning, ridiculing her in a Twitter post.

“Failed presidential candidate (thank you President Trump!), Carly Fiorina, said she will be voting for Corrupt Joe Biden,” he wrote online. “She lost so badly to me, twice in one campaign, that she should be voting for Joe. No complaints!!!”

Fiorina, who served as CEO of Hewlett-Packard before launching failed bids for the Senate in California in 2010 and the White House in 2016, previously divulged during a podcast interview with The Bulwark in May that she would not vote for Trump.

Fiorina had been open to supporting the president’s reelection effort as recently as December 2019, when she argued that it was “vital” Trump be impeached by the House of Representatives but refused to rule out voting for him in 2020.

Although Fiorina voted for Trump in 2016, the two candidates feuded bitterly in that year’s Republican nominating contest, with Trump mocking Fiorina’s physical appearance and Fiorina dismissing Trump as the “Kim Kardashian of politics.”

After Fiorina dropped out of the primary in February 2016, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz announced two months later that he would select her as his running mate should he triumph in the race for the Republican nomination.

He did not, instead withdrawing from the primary less than a week after tapping Fiorina as his prospective vice presidential nominee and finishing as the runner-up to Trump.

In July 2016, Cruz was booed off the floor of the Republican National Convention for urging GOP voters to “vote your conscience,” and has since become a vocal defender of the president in Congress.

Asked Thursday about Fiorina’s interview and opposition to Trump, Cruz told POLITICO, “I very much respect Carly, but I disagree with her on this.”

Andrew Desiderio contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/25/carly-fiorina-plans-to-vote-joe-biden-339391

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., joined by House Democrats spaced for social distancing, spoke at a press conference on the House East Front Steps of the Capitol ahead of ahead of the House vote on the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020.

Carolyn Kaster/AP


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Carolyn Kaster/AP

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., joined by House Democrats spaced for social distancing, spoke at a press conference on the House East Front Steps of the Capitol ahead of ahead of the House vote on the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020.

Carolyn Kaster/AP

House Democrats made good on their plans to respond to a national outcry for reform of the nation’s law enforcement departments, with the chamber approving wide-ranging efforts to overhaul the way police do their jobs.

The legislation’s prospects, however, are short-circuited by a lack of bipartisan consensus on an ultimate plan. Democrats developed their bill without GOP input, leaving Republicans to push their own counter proposal in the Senate. Without any efforts to work on a bipartisan compromise the issue is likely stalled, potentially until after the fall election.

Nevertheless, Democrats said the moment marked a victory in the ongoing, national conversation raising alarms of misconduct, brutality and systemic racism in policing. The House approved the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act by a vote of 236 to 181 one month to the day the bill’s namesake was killed. Three Republicans supported the legislation.

“Americans from every walk of life and corner of the country have been marching, protesting and demanding that this moment of national agony become one of national action,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said from the Capitol’s East front steps ahead of passage. “Today, with the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, the House is honoring his life and the lives of all killed by police brutality, and pledging: never again.”

Pelosi asked the Congressional Black Caucus to lead the effort on the legislation, introduced two weeks after Floyd was was killed on May 25 in Minneapolis police custody. Soon after, Floyd’s brother, Philonise, testified in a House Judiciary Committee hearing.

Buoyed by support from civil rights organizations, Democrats are betting their legislation could get a shot at passage should they perform well in the November elections.

Their bill drew most of the caucus as sponsors to ensure floor passage. And it marks one of the most comprehensive efforts in modern times to re-imagine law enforcement departments across the country.

The measure bans federal police from using chokeholds and other dangerous restraints, as well as no-knock warrants in drug-related cases. It also lowers legal standards to pursue criminal and civil penalties for police misconduct.

“We are supposed to be the beacon of hope for human rights in other countries and the Justice In Policing Act is a bill for human rights in our country,” said California Rep. Karen Bass, chair of the Congressional Black Caucus.

Senate Republicans separately fast-tracked their own plan for police reform, but Democrats blocked the effort from reaching the floor for debate on Wednesday. Due to Senate rules the GOP needed 60 votes to advance the bill, but in the closely divided chamber they fell short of the support required from Democrats or Independents. Democratic leaders there insisted the Republican bill, drafted by the lone GOP Black Senator Tim Scott, was not salvageable, so they resisted calls to engage in a process to debate and amend it.

On Thursday, House Republicans cried foul, slamming Democrats for thwarting the Senate bill and also opposing GOP amendments in the House.

“From committee to floor, not one Republican amendment is going to be allowed. Never consulted us on the creation of this bill. I’ve reached out to those on the Democratic side explaining that I wanted to make law,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, D-Calif., told reporters. “I wanted to work together. And I still do.”

Scott lamented the setback after the failure of his bill to advance on Wednesday dealt a significant blow to the prospects for any deal on the issue.

“Today, we lost a vote on a piece of legislation that would have led to systemic change in the relationship between communities of color and the law enforcement community,” Scott said on the Senate floor. “We would have broken the concept in this nation that you have to be for law enforcement or for communities of color. That is a false binary choice. My friends on the other side just said no.”

The Senate Republican proposal steered away from outright bans, and changes to the legal shield that protects police from punishment in certain misconduct cases. Instead, it focused on training for de-escalation tactics, new federal reporting requirements and incentives for the use of police body cameras.

Scott’s bill, which drew most of his chamber’s GOP members as co-sponsors, also included several Democratic provisions, such as the creation of a national database to track police misconduct and a provision to make lynching a federal crime.

Scott said he had tried to negotiate an “open amendment” process with Democrats, but they refused, saying there needed to be bipartisan talks on the bill before they could green-light floor debate.

In the end, only two Democrats, Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Doug Jones of Alabama, and one independent, Angus King of Maine, joined the Republicans in their procedural motion.

Democrats insist that public pressure will force congressional Republicans to want to revisit the issue and move forward with a bipartisan measure.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/06/25/883263263/house-approves-police-reform-bill-but-issue-stalled-amid-partisan-standoff

California Governor Gavin Newsom reported 5,349 new coronavirus cases on Thursday. That’s down from the all time high of 7,149 just the day before, but the governor was not enthusiastic about the drop, saying the number is “still higher than it should be.”

Newsom continued by warning that “We’ve seen 56,000 new cases just in the past 14 days.” That’s over a quarter of the total 195,000 cases identified so far. Some of that can be attributed to increased testing, said Newsom. But not all of it.

The positivity rate of tests each day has been rising, up 5.1 percent over the past 14 days. The World Health Organization recommends regions open up only after the positivity rate falls below 5 percent. In the past seven days, said the governor, that rate is clocking in at 5.6 percent.

Yesterday Newsom revealed a 29 percent increase in total hospitalizations over the past 14 days. Today that number rose to 32 percent.

Total hospital space being used remains at 8 percent.

When asked by one reporter about the fact that L.A. County is over the number of maximum number of cases for reopening, Newsom said it is a situation “we are monitoring very closely.” He said that counties were being held to the attestations that they have made in order to reopen. “When people are out of compliance [with those promises] they go on this guidance system,” said the governor, noting that state officials are engaged daily with Los Angeles County officials.

ICU numbers are increasing over the past 14 days, also. “Roughly 34 percent of the available ICU beds in our hospital system are being used,” said the governor. That’s up from 31 percent just 24 hours before.

Referencing the ICU numbers, Newsom said they are key to the decision about whether to retighten restrictions or continue reopening. “When our system cannot absorb, when there’s a capacity or limitation,” said the governor, “that’s when we put out alarm bells. When we see resource depletion, resource restraints, that’s when we get concerned.”

Newsom announced the launch of a new aggregated reporting and forecasting site, the California COVID Testing Tool, which he called the “model of models.” The idea is to help Californians to understand the data and see what the trends are. Newsom said this is the same information that health directors are using to guide their decisions. That site can be found here.

Newsom said that a dashboard also will be released each morning.

While speaking about forecasts and data, Newsom went out of his way to praise Disney for not reopening its Orange County Park. “I want to compliment Disney and their team for making that determination.”

He indicated that Disney’s decision may have come as a result of state guidance, or lack thereof. “They noted that the state had ceased offering guidelines in those categories. That is an example of the data informing decision making.”

Newsom on Wednesday reported the state had seen another record number of newly-diagnosed COVID-19 cases, 7,149 new infections. That’s a jump of 2,000 infections in just 24 hours.

“We cannot continue to do what we have done over the past weeks,” said Newsom. He said some people got cabin fever, “some people just let down their guard.”

“I’m not naive,” said Newsom. “People are mixing. We are spreading this virus. It is our behaviors that are leading to these numbers.”

Source Article from https://deadline.com/2020/06/california-coronavirus-gavin-newsom-25-percent-new-covid-infections-in-past-2-weeks-1202970053/