They picked out his loss to Vanderbilt, a perennial underdog, in 2008 while he was the coach at Auburn University, a game that was nationally televised and an embarrassment for the football powerhouse, as well as his 36-0 loss to Alabama that year during the two universities’ annual matchup, known as the Iron Bowl. They also criticized Mr. Tuberville’s treatment, while he was at Auburn, of a player who had been charged with rape.

The morning outburst quickly sent the Alabama Democrats’ Twitter account trending nationally; the group tried to capitalize on the popularity of its tweets by including links to its ActBlue fund-raising page.

Many Democrats and progressive activists celebrated Mr. Jones’s successful 2017 campaign as a teachable moment for the party, offering a template for a way out of the political wilderness in a state that a year earlier had voted for Mr. Trump by nearly 30 percentage points. These Democrats said that if only more candidates took Mr. Jones’s approach, which leaned heavily on turnout among African-American voters, they would surprise themselves with more victories in the Deep South.

But Mr. Jones probably would not have become the first Democrat elected to the Senate from Alabama in a generation were it not for a unique turn of events, above all the fact that many Republicans found his opponent, Mr. Moore, so distasteful that they voted for write-in candidates instead.

And Ms. Lathan, the Alabama Republican chair, was quick to note that an overwhelming number of the state’s Republicans simply hadn’t voted in the election at all.

“If our voters show back up” in November, she said, “we’re unstoppable.” (Mr. Jones, in the interview, noted that in fact Republicans did not show up on Tuesday, when statewide turnout did not even reach 20 percent of registered voters.)

Mr. Jones’s considerable financial advantage in this year’s race is one of the brightest spots for his campaign, and it has allowed him to get in front of the public early with positive ads, which the Republicans have left unanswered and that stand in sharp contrast to the overwhelmingly negative ad war that played out on the Republican side in recent weeks. By one count, the Sessions-Tuberville race had the lowest share of positive ads of any Senate primary in the country.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/15/us/politics/alabama-tommy-tuberville-doug-jones.html

White House coronavirus advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said he hasn’t thought about resigning despite criticism in recent days from President Donald Trump and other administration officials about his response to the coronavirus pandemic. 

Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, said he told the White House he found it “bizarre” and thought the administration made a “big mistake,” but his job is too critical to quit now, according to an interview in “The Atlantic” magazine published Wednesday. Almost 3.5 million Americans have contracted Covid-19 so far and at least 136,400 have died from the virus, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. 

“I think the problem is too important for me to get into those kinds of thoughts and discussions,” he said, according to an edited transcript of the interview. “I just want to do my job. I’m really good at it. I think I can contribute. And I’m going to keep doing it.”

Fauci was appointed director of NIAID in 1984 and has worked under six U.S. presidents. 

The comment by Fauci came amid claims that the White House is seeking to discredit the top infectious disease expert as the coronavirus continues to rapidly spread across the U.S. In a scathing op-ed published Tuesday, Trump’s trade advisor Peter Navarro criticized Fauci, saying he “has been wrong about everything I have interacted with him on.”

The president has also been critical of Fauci recently. During an interview Thursday with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, Trump said, “Dr. Fauci’s a nice man, but he’s made a lot of mistakes.

“They’ve been wrong about a lot of things, including face masks,” he said. “Maybe they’re wrong, maybe not. A lot of them said don’t wear a mask, don’t wear a mask. Now they’re saying wear a mask. A lot of mistakes were made, a lot of mistakes.”

Fauci told “The Atlantic” he doesn’t know why he’s been criticized recently, adding that he stands by everything he said about the pandemic. 

“Contextually, at the time I said it, it was absolutely true … [The White House document] is totally wrong. It’s nonsense. It’s completely wrong. The whole thing is wrong. The whole thing is incorrect,” he said. 

 

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/15/fauci-says-he-hasnt-thought-about-resigning-despite-white-house-criticism.html

President Trump’s niece, Mary Trump, offered a bleak picture of her family’s purportedly toxic dynamic, telling ABC that her “sociopath” grandfather, Fred Trump Sr., taught his kids to treat other people as “expendable.”

“He had no empathy,” she said in an interview that aired Wednesday. “He was incredibly driven in a way that turned other people, including his children, his wife, into pawns to be used to his own ends. If somebody could be of service to him, then he would use them. If they couldn’t be, he excised them.”

During her interview, Mary Trump indicated that both she and her father, Fred Trump Jr., were pushed to the margins of the family. Before publishing the book, she faced a lawsuit from her other uncle, Robert Trump, who claimed she was barred from discussing certain information after signing a nondisclosure agreement as part of a testy battle over Fred Trump Sr.’s will.

STEPHANOPOULOS PRESSES MARY TRUMP ON WHY SHE VISITED WHITE HOUSE IN 2017 AND WHAT SHE TOLD HER UNCLE

According to Mary Trump’s telling, she got a raw deal after her grandfather died, and her family showed an excessive focus on money at the time.

“I’m a Trump. Everything’s about money in this family, but I’m also different from them, and for me, what I understood and one of the reasons it was so devastating, was that money stood in for everything else. It was literally the only currency the family trafficked in,” she said.

Mary Trump’s interview came after she released a memoir with explosive allegations about her uncle as he ran for re-election. More specifically, she alleges that Donald went to see a movie while his older brother and Mary’s father died alone in the hospital.

Mary Trump said she found out about her father’s death after Fred Sr. called and told her that his eldest son was in the hospital, but that it wasn’t “serious.” “Two minutes” after that call, Mary Trump said, she found out from her mother that her father had actually died two hours prior. She also alleges that her grandparents stayed at home rather than being with their son at the hospital.

MARY TRUMP’S TELL-ALL BOOK COMES OUT CLAIMING TRUMP CHEATED ON SAT TEST

“I will never know why they didn’t go to the hospital to be with their son — who was clearly dying,” she said of her father. “So, maybe it isn’t surprising that Donald didn’t think he needed to be there. Maybe that would have looked bad to his father and maybe, sitting around waiting for the phone call was too burdensome — I don’t know. But, you know, I’ve often wondered what movie did he go see that seemed more compelling than sitting with his dying brother.”

Those were just some of many headline-grabbing revelations from the niece of one of the most powerful men in the world. Others include that a man named Joe Shapiro allegedly took President Trump’s SATs for him.

The White House has vehemently denied this accusation and alleged the book was full of “falsehoods.”

Despite a legal threat and protest from her own family, Mary Trump decided to speak out about the danger she thought her uncle posed to the country. At the beginning of July, a New York Supreme Court appellate judge ruled that Trump’s niece could release her 200-page missive on the family dynasty. Released on Tuesday, the book is titled “Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World’s Most Dangerous Man.”

MARY TRUMP TELL-ALL CAN MOVE FORWARD WITH PUBLICATION: JUDGE

Trump’s purported callousness, she said, stemmed from her grandfather’s influence, which suppressed feelings of sadness and a spark of kindness in her uncle.

“One of the unforgivable things my grandfather did to Donald was he severely restricted the range of human emotion that was accessible to him,” Mary Trump, a clinical psychologist, said.

She added that “certain feelings were not allowed.” That included “sadness, the impulse to be kind, the impulse to be generous — those things that my grandfather found superfluous, unmanly,” she said in the footage released by ABC.

On Wednesday, Trump’s son Eric tweeted an apparent attack on his cousin Mary.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“Every family has one…,” he tweeted. “It’s usually telling when that ‘one’ stands alone.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/mary-trump-money-family-drama

President Trump proposes changes to the National Environmental Policy Act at the White House in January. The final rules aims to speed approval of pipelines and other infrastructure.

Evan Vucci/AP


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Evan Vucci/AP

President Trump proposes changes to the National Environmental Policy Act at the White House in January. The final rules aims to speed approval of pipelines and other infrastructure.

Evan Vucci/AP

Updated 4:40 p.m.

In Atlanta today, President Trump announced a “top to bottom overhaul” of the regulations that govern one of the nation’s most significant environmental laws. The aim is to speed up approval for major projects like pipelines and highways, but critics say it could sideline the concerns of poor and minority communities impacted by those projects, and discount their impact on climate change.

Speaking at a UPS facility, Trump decried the “mountains and mountains of bureaucratic red tape in Washington, D.C.,” and recalled being frustrated by it as a builder in New York. He said one of the first projects to benefit from his streamlining would be the expansion of a freeway south of Atlanta.

“We are reclaiming America’s proud heritage as a nation of builders and an nation that can get things done,” he said.

The 50-year-old National Environmental Policy Act, or NEPA, was signed into law by President Richard Nixon. It requires federal agencies to consider the environmental effects of proposed projects before they are approved. It also gives the public and interest groups the ability to comment on those evaluations.

The administration’s new regulations are expected to reduce the types and number of projects that will be subject to review under the NEPA, shorten the timeline for reviews, and drop a requirement that agencies consider the cumulative environmental effects of projects, such as their contribution to climate change.

The changes weaken a law that’s played a major role in limiting the Trump administration’s agenda of “energy dominance.” In just the last week, environmental reviews have sidelined a series of controversial oil and gas pipeline projects, including the Keystone XL, the Dakota Access and the Atlantic Coast pipelines.

But environmental groups warn the new rules will sideline the environmental effects of pipelines, highways and other projects.

“What the Trump administration is doing is fundamentally changing those regulations and really gutting them,” says Sharon Buccino, a senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

What’s more, Buccino says the law was designed to give a voice to communities long hurt by pollution from highways, pipelines and chemical plants that are disproportionately located in their neighborhoods.

“NEPA gives poor and communities of color a say in the projects that will define their communities for decades to come. Rather than listen, the Trump administration’s plan aims to silence such voices,” says Buccino.

Trump announced the proposed rules at the White House in January and said he wanted to streamline an “outrageously slow and burdensome federal approval process” that can delay major infrastructure projects for years. He said the country’s infrastructure used to be the envy of the world but red tape has delayed projects making the U.S. “like a Third World country.”

The average times for agencies to complete an environmental impact statement is currently 4 ½ years, says Mary Neumayr, chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality. When the proposal was announced, she said this delay “deprives Americans of the benefits of modernized bridges and roads that enable them to get home to their families.”

The American Petroleum Institute was among the industry groups that sent a letter to the administration last November urging the White House to streamline NEPA reviews.

“NEPA modernization will help America streamline permitting to move job-creating infrastructure projects off the drawing board and into development,” says API President and CEO Mike Sommer.

The administration’s rule changes set a strict two-year time limit for agencies to issue environmental impact statements. The new regulations also require comments be submitted more quickly, and limit the topics that can be covered in those comments.

Buccino and other environmental lawyers believe the new regulations are illegal and say they will be challenged in court. That means if Trump loses his reelection bid in November, it’s likely the new rules would not take effect before he leaves office.

The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden has said he would reverse environmental rollbacks like this one. And he has set a very different tone from the Trump administration on environmental issues.

Biden outlined his climate change plan Tuesday, vowing to invest $2 trillion to boost clean energy and rebuild infrastructure. His plan includes environmental justice components with language that suggests he would reject Trump’s NEPA regulations. One section reads, “Biden will ensure that frontline and fenceline communities are at the table when enforcement, remediation, and investment decisions affecting those communities are made.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/07/15/891190100/trump-overhauls-key-environmental-law-to-speed-up-pipelines-and-other-projects

Updated 7:16 PM ET, Wed July 15, 2020

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/15/health/coronavirus-under-control-states/index.html

White House trade adviser Peter Navarro tore into Dr. Anthony Fauci in a stunning op-ed on Wednesday, saying the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases director, who has been a leading voice on the Coronavirus Task Force, has been “wrong about everything.”

“Dr. Anthony Fauci has a good bedside manner with the public, but he has been wrong about everything I have interacted with him on,” Navarro wrote in a blistering op-ed for USA Today.

TRUMP WHITE HOUSE SLAMS FAUCI, CANCELS HIS TV APPEARANCES

Navarro began by saying that Fauci “fought against” Trump’s “courageous decision” in late January to suspend flights from China as the novel coronavirus began to spread, arguing that that decision “might well have saved hundreds of thousands of American lives.”

He continued: “When I warned in late January in a memo of a possibly deadly pandemic, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases was telling our news media not to worry.”

Further, he wrote that in February, “Fauci was telling the public the China virus was low risk.” Navarro went on to complain Fauci was “flip-flopping on the use of masks.”

He dinged Fauci for downplaying falling mortality rates, amid the debate over whether businesses should be allowed to reopen or stay shuttered. Navarro added: “So when you ask me whether I listen to Dr. Fauci’s advice my answer is: only with skepticism and caution.”

WHITE HOUSE MEMO WARNED IN RUN-UP TO PANDEMIC OF UP TO 2M DEATHS, ECONOMIC DEVASTATION

Navarro’s comments come as tensions have been bubbling between the White House and Fauci. Officials have reportedly been concerned about the number of times Fauci has “been wrong on things,” according to a report last week.

A senior administration official, though, told Fox News that Navarro’s op-ed slamming Fauci was “definitely not approved by the White House.”

Another White House official told Fox News that Navarro is “going rogue.”

Alyssa Farah, White House director of strategic communications, said on Twitter that the piece “didn’t go through normal White House clearance processes and is the opinion of Peter alone.”

She said President Trump “values the expertise of the medical professionals advising his Administration.”

Trump, on his part, has said Fauci is “a nice man, but he’s made a lot of mistakes,” and has criticized him for his back-and-forth guidance over masks.

“I disagree with him. You know, Dr. Fauci said ‘don’t wear masks,’ and now he says ‘wear them.’ And you know, he’s said numerous things,” Trump said in an interview last week with Greta Van Susteren. “‘Don’t close off China. Don’t ban China.’ And I did it anyway.”

FAUCI SAYS IT’S ‘FALSE NARRATIVE’ TO TAKE COMFORT IN LOW COVID-19 DEATH RATES

He added: “I sort of didn’t listen to my experts and I banned China.”

The president last week also said he had a “very good relationship” with Fauci, while saying: “I don’t always agree with him.”

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, during an interview on “Fox & Friends” on Monday, described Fauci as representing “one viewpoint within the administration.”

“The point of the task force is to be a whole of government look at what is best for this country,” she said. “That includes Dr. Fauci’s opinion…Ultimately, those conclusions are taken to the president.”

McEnany added: “Dr. Fauci is one member of a team, but rest-assured his viewpoint is represented and the information gets to the president through the task force.”

Fox News’ Kristin Fisher contributed to this report. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trade-adviser-peter-navarro-tears-into-fauci-in-blistering-op-ed-wrong-about-everything

“Centralizing control of all data under the umbrella of an inherently political apparatus is dangerous and breeds distrust,” said Dr. Nicole Lurie, who served as assistant secretary for preparedness and response under former President Barack Obama. “It appears to cut off the ability of agencies like C.D.C. to do its basic job.”

The shift grew out of a tense conference call several weeks ago between hospital executives and Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator. After Dr. Birx said hospitals were not adequately reporting their data, she convened a working group of government and hospital officials who devised the new plan, according to Dr. Janis Orlowski, the chief health care officer of the Association of American Medical Colleges, who participated in the group’s meetings.

While she said she understood Dr. Lurie’s concern, Dr. Orlowski said the administration had pledged in “a verbal discussion” to make the data public — or at least give hospitals access to it.

“We are comfortable with that as long as they continue to work with us, as long as they continue to make the information public, and as long as we’re able to continue to advise them and look at the data,” she said, calling the switch “a sincere effort to streamline and improve data collection.’’

The change exposes the vast gaps in the government’s ability to collect and manage health data — an antiquated system at best, experts say. The C.D.C. has been collecting coronavirus data through its National Healthcare Safety Network, which was expanded at the outset of the pandemic to track hospital capacity and patient information specific to Covid-19.

In its new guidance, Health and Human Services said that going forward, hospitals should report detailed information on a daily basis directly to the new centralized system, which is managed by TeleTracking, a health data firm with headquarters in Pittsburgh. However, if hospitals were already reporting such information to their states, they could continue to do so if they received a written release saying the state would handle reporting.

Senator Patty Murray of Washington, the top Democrat on the Senate health committee, has raised questions about the TeleTracking contract, calling it a “noncompetitive, multimillion-dollar contract” for a “duplicative health data system.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/14/us/politics/trump-cdc-coronavirus.html

WASHINGTON – If you were hoping for another stimulus check from the federal government, you might be in luck. 

Well, some of you might be in luck.

Congressional leaders are hoping to have another coronavirus aid package ready by the end of the month, another tranche of funds to pile on to the stunning $3 trillion already passed to counter the pandemic and its sweeping impacts on the country. 

But while both sides of the aisle agree more funds will be necessary to help families, workers, businesses and the country’s economy recover, Republicans, Democrats and the administration still have significantly different ideas of what should be included in the next package, including the possibility of another stimulus check for some Americans.

Congress and the administration will have to work through their issues as coronavirus continues to spike in states across the U.S. and as crucial enhanced unemployment insurance benefits, which have helped millions of Americans stay afloat, are set to dry up in about two weeks. 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/07/15/covid-19-could-another-round-stimulus-checks-coming/5431596002/

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s political advisers have bluntly told him he can’t win the November election if the campaign is about him, and for weeks they unsuccessfully urged him to pivot to a new strategy focused on his general election opponent, Joe Biden.

Trump finally appeared to heed the advice Tuesday, although the setting and the tone of the political broadside may not have been what his advisers had envisioned. Trump’s remarks, which mentioned Biden 31 times, were monotone, and the backdrop — the White House Rose Garden — was a break from longtime presidential efforts to separate official and re-election business.

And while the president delivered the criticism his aides had been hoping for, he also reminded voters of his impeachment by throwing in attacks on the former vice president’s family and the Ukrainian company at the center of the investigation.

“Biden was here 47 years,” Trump said in a hastily arranged news conference that followed a televised appearance by the Democrat before he pivoted to Biden’s son, Hunter, and Burisma. “Hunter, where’s Hunter? Where is Hunter, by the way?”

Trump’s advisers have been encouraging him to zero in on Biden’s long public record to deflect any focus on his own 3½ years in office.

But the president has insisted on pushing back against anything he perceives as a slight — including rising numbers of cases of the coronavirus — while airing old grievances and nursing new ones. In recent days he has criticized NASCAR, the media and the NFL, defended the Confederate battle flag and escalated fights with his former attorney general and his top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, even though, Trump’s advisers said, he recognizes he’s on a potential course to be unseated by Biden.

“He knows he could lose,” a White House official said.

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Still, allies say, Trump — rightly or wrongly — sees everything as personal. And his penchant for giving his opponents nicknames and pointing out what he sees as their physical faults has kept him from landing a real punch on Biden. He has tried tagging Biden as untrustworthy — “Corrupt Joe” — and lethargic — “Sleepy Joe” — but it hasn’t dragged Biden down with voters as Trump had hoped.

“Sleepy sounds pretty good when you’ve had four years of exhaustion,” a White House official quipped.

Another person close to the president echoed the argument that the strategy hasn’t worked, “given the chaos” of the administration.

The strategy Trump’s advisers hope he’ll embrace includes reviving controversial statements Biden has made over the years on race, gay rights and women, as well as drawing attention to Biden’s record in ways that put him at odds with the white working-class voters he and Trump are vying to win over in November.

The plan is to sharpen criticism of Biden’s position on trade, including the North American Free Trade Agreement, and the continued loss of manufacturing jobs while he was vice president, despite an overall slump in recent decades reaching into the current administration.

“We have to make this a contrast. It has to be a choice between Donald Trump and Joe Biden,” a person close to the president said. “It’s not just gaffes — we are always going to focus on what he said — but you are starting to see more of an attempt to highlight his record.”

Trump said Tuesday that “Biden was a leading advocate of the Paris Climate Accord, which was unbelievably expensive to our country, would’ve crushed America’s manufacturers, while allowing China to pollute the atmosphere with impunity.”

The president has falsely accused Biden of being a criminal who, with former President Barack Obama, “spied” on his campaign, seeking to attach the same implication of corruption and wrongdoing to Biden that he did to Hillary Clinton in 2016.

Part of the challenge is that the president himself — while acutely aware that his campaign’s internal polling mirrors public polls that show him trailing Biden in key battleground states and by double digits nationally — isn’t fighting as hard this time as he did in 2016.

A source familiar with the president’s campaign said there’s a growing perception that “he’s not trying” and that it seems like “his heart is not in it.” The notion seemed to manifest itself in his uninspired delivery in the Rose Garden, where the audience was a few dozen seated reporters, not cheering supporters at a rally.

“There’s probably never been a time when the candidates are so different,” Trump said, making a clear electoral pitch from the White House complex.

The president’s aides and allies are concerned that a lack of rallies and normal campaign activities this summer will contribute to his inability to land a punch. Those events are usually the best way for Trump to test new material, but the lack of consistent events with his followers due to the pandemic makes that all the more challenging.

Further complicating the president’s approach is that Biden is so well known to voters, who view him much more favorably than they did Clinton.

The Trump team is still struggling to figure out how to define and campaign against Biden less than four months before the election.

By contrast, in 2012, Obama’s campaign launched a targeted effort, including the spending of millions of dollars on ads, to define his opponent, Mitt Romney, six months before the election.

Trump has tried to tether Biden to the “radical left,” but that hasn’t stuck, either. The adviser involved with the campaign said Trump has been advised to mount more “traditional attacks,” such as the accusation that Biden would raise taxes, while Trump would bring business back.

Trump, instead, has latched onto the culture wars, including defending Confederate monuments, but some of his advisers worry that that’s the wrong message when voters are so concerned about the economy.

Trump and his advisers believe the debates will be an opportunity to draw a contrast with Biden, and he is already preparing.

That was partly why his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani recently visited the White House. The two met for about 45 minutes discussing the debates and the campaign, Giuliani said, as well as some legal matters he wouldn’t disclose.

Giuliani said he wants at least two of the debates to be in a format in which Trump and Biden question each other, which he suggested would be aimed at showing any cognitive deficiencies on Biden’s part.

“That’s much harder,” Giuliani said of the format. “You’ve got to think up the subject.”

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2020-election/inside-trump-campaign-s-struggle-land-punch-biden-n1233825



SARAH MCCAMMON, HOST:

California’s two largest school districts, Los Angeles and San Diego, both said yesterday that students will not be headed back to school campuses this fall. Instead, classes will be online. But school board leaders in Orange County, which sits between LA and San Diego, have decided the opposite. Last night, the Orange County Board of Education voted to approve recommendations that school campuses reopen in the fall without masks or social distancing. Lisa Sparks is one of the board members who voted in favor of those guidelines, and she joins me now.

Welcome, Lisa.

LISA SPARKS: Thank you.

MCCAMMON: And we should note that your recommendations are not binding recommendations, but they are what your board is advising. They say that masks may be harmful to students and that social distancing causes, quote, “child harm.” How so?

SPARKS: I think that the data is not completely conclusive. And that is the main point of all of this COVID crisis is we just don’t have enough data. We’re in kind of a Wild West situation here where we really don’t know the impact long term of any of the decisions that are being made. And so we’re really the voice of the parents in a lot of ways. The parents are reaching out to us and wanting us to show leadership so that parents have choices for reopening.

MCCAMMON: Of course, there’s a lot that’s still being learned about this pandemic. This is something none of us in our lifetimes have ever faced. But there is data out there and there are scientists and experts who have expertise in this and who are looking at the data. And the CDC has created the guidelines it’s created. Do you disagree with the CDC scientists?

SPARKS: No, absolutely not. I am a big proponent of the CDC. My area of research itself is in the area of health communication and public health. So I absolutely support many of the recommendations. The data indicate for young children that we need to find creative ways for reopening the schools in a very responsible, safe way.

MCCAMMON: You talk about being creative, but, I mean, there is a limit to how creative you can be when you’re talking about a pandemic and you’re talking about a virus that is killing people every day in this country. As you noted, your expertise is in health messaging. Is there a risk that endorsing school reopening without masks and without social distancing is sending the wrong message?

SPARKS: We’re not endorsing that students return to school without masks or without social distancing. We’re saying that that may – that 100% compliance may be unrealistic.

MCCAMMON: You say this to me, but your white paper, which is part of the policy you supported, says, quote, “requiring children to wear masks during school is not only difficult – if not impossible to implement – but not based on science. It may even be harmful and is therefore not recommended.” Do you think wearing masks is not based on science, however difficult it may be? Is it not scientific?

SPARKS: That line was – that line was from the experts on our panel. And we had pediatric experts on our panel. We had policymakers on our panel. So the white paper was reflecting what the expert panelists purported in their – in – during the forum.

MCCAMMON: But that line is just not accurate, at least if you, as you say you do, endorse the CDC scientists’ guidelines. It’s just not true. I mean…

SPARKS: That’s why we included in the – that’s why we included in the appendices all those citations to support the aspects of the white paper and to show the evidence from the scientific research out there and – but at the same time, the forum – the purpose of the forum was to bring the expert testimony into that – you know, in summarizing what they had said.

MCCAMMON: Orange County is logging an average of nearly 1,000 new coronavirus cases every day. If the schools in your area go back to normal and there is a major outbreak, if the death toll starts to climb, what should happen?

SPARKS: Yeah. It’s my understanding from the research that the kids age 25 and below, certainly 18 below, in Orange County, there are zero – I think there’s zero deaths. There are very, very low deaths with young children under the age of – I believe it’s 25. So I think that’s another big, important component here to the decision-making about reopening K-12 schools.

MCCAMMON: Yes. But, again, what about the people who are not under 25, all of the people in the community that live with those children and have contact with them on a regular basis?

SPARKS: Absolutely. And those are decisions that families are going to need to make based on their own family situation. But to have that parent choice, that family choice, is going to be really important.

MCCAMMON: Lisa Sparks is a member of the Orange County Board of Education and dean of the School of Communications at Chapman University.

Thanks so much for joining us.

SPARKS: Thank you.

Copyright © 2020 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

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Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/07/14/891119489/orange-county-education-board-member-on-her-vote-for-schools-to-reopen-without-m

China has said it would retaliate after US President Donald Trump ordered an end to preferential trade treatment for Hong Kong and signed legislation allowing sanctions over Beijing’s enactment of a draconian security law in the semi-autonomous city. 

In a statement on Wednesday, China’s foreign ministry said it “firmly opposes and strongly condemns” the Hong Kong Autonomy Act, which unanimously passed the US Congress earlier this month and approves sanctions on Chinese officials and banks over Beijing’s clampdown in Hong Kong.

“China will make necessary responses to protect its legitimate interests, and impose sanctions on relevant US personnel and entities,” the ministry added, without elaborating.

The Chinese warning came amid mounting tensions with the US – not just over Hong Kong – but also over trade, the global coronavirus pandemic, China’s military buildup in the South China Sea and its treatment of Uighur Muslims in the western region of Xinjiang. 

Trump on Tuesday stepped up the pressure to punish Beijing for what he called its “aggressive actions” in Hong Kong, a former British colony that was returned to Chinese rule in 1997 with the promise of autonomy and freedoms not known in mainland China.

“Today I signed legislation, and an executive order to hold China accountable for its aggressive actions against the people of Hong Kong,” Trump told reporters at the White House.


“Hong Kong will now be treated the same as mainland China – no special privileges, no special economic treatment and no export of sensitive technologies,” he said.

“Their freedom has been taken away; their rights have been taken away,” Trump added. “And with it goes Hong Kong, in my opinion, because it will no longer be able to compete with free markets. A lot of people will be leaving Hong Kong.”

Trade surpluses, sanctions, travel bans

China had defied international warnings earlier this month by imposing the national security law, which criminalises offences it broadly defines as subversion, secession, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces. The legislation sent a chill through Hong Kong, which last year saw massive, and sometimes violent, pro-democracy protests.

In response, the US Congress unanimously passed the Hong Kong Autonomy Act, which targets police units that have cracked down on Hong Kong protesters as well as Chinese Communist Party officials responsible for imposing the new security law.

Mandatory sanctions are also required on banks that conduct business with the officials. 

Trump’s executive order on Tuesday said the US property of any person determined to be responsible for or complicit in “actions or policies that undermine democratic processes or institutions in Hong Kong” would be blocked.

It also directs officials to “revoke license exceptions for exports to Hong Kong”, and includes revoking special treatment for Hong Kong passport holders.

However, analysts say that completely ending Hong Kong’s special treatment could prove self-defeating for the US.


Hong Kong was the source of the largest bilateral US goods trade surplus last year, at $26.1bn, US Census Bureau data shows. According to the US Department of State, 85,000 US citizens lived in Hong Kong in 2018, and more than 1,300 US companies operate there, including nearly every major US financial firm.

The territory is also a major destination for US legal and accounting services.

Al Jazeera’s Divya Gopalan, reporting from Hong Kong, said Washington’s move has worried businesses in the city.

“The Hong Kong government says this is likely to hurt the US more than it will hurt Hong Kong, and indeed, if you look at the numbers, the US has a bigger trade surplus with Hong Kong. But the reality is there are many Hong Kong businesses that rely on this special status with the US,” she said.

“Hong Kong is a re-exporting hub, which means that goods and services come through Hong Kong into the US to avoid those trade sanctions or restrictions that China may have in dealing with the US.”

The US began eliminating Hong Kong’s special status under US law in late June, halting defence exports and restricting the territory’s access to high-technology products. 

Other actions in the works include suspending an extradition treaty with Hong Kong, something Australia has already done, as well as ending legal cooperation agreements, taxation accords and financial understandings that cover accounting rules for Chinese businesses that work in the US.

At the same time, the Trump administration has pressed ahead with travel bans for Chinese, Hong Kong and Communist Party officials the US believes are responsible for curtailing democracy in Hong Kong.

The administration has also gone after China by imposing travel bans on officials for repressing minorities in Xinjiang and hindering foreigners’ access to Tibet.

On Monday, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that the US had decided to reject outright virtually all Chinese maritime claims in the South China Sea, a determination that could lead to increased tensions in disputed, critical international shipping lanes.

Source Article from https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/07/china-vows-retaliation-hong-kong-sanctions-200715033941380.html

But Mr. Trump’s strong support had always been expected to provide a huge lift for Mr. Tuberville. “The president has endorsed Coach Tuberville because he knows Tommy will stand up for America and not be controlled by the deep state and the big money lobbyists,” said Perry Hooper, a former state representative in Montgomery.

In Texas, Ms. Hegar, a former Air Force helicopter pilot who had the support of Senate Democrats, defeated State Senator Royce West in a Democratic runoff to determine who will take on Senator John Cornyn.

Mr. Trump scored a victory in an open West Texas House seat, where his preferred candidate, the former White House doctor Ronny Jackson, won a runoff.

In the race for the seat currently held by Representative Will Hurd, who is not seeking re-election, Mr. Trump and Senator Ted Cruz were on opposite sides of the runoff. The president offered a late endorsement of Tony Gonzales, the establishment favorite, while Mr. Cruz backed Raul Reyes, a more conservative candidate. With 95 percent of precincts reporting by late Tuesday night, Mr. Reyes had a 132-vote lead.

The most surprising news Tuesday came in a contest that won’t even be decided until next month. Shortly before he was to debate his primary opponents, Steve Watkins of Kansas, a first-term Republican congressman, was indicted on felony charges related to whether he voted illegally in 2019.

In terms of determining the balance of power in Washington, though, no race on Tuesday may have been more consequential than the Maine primary. The Senate race there is one of a handful that could determine control of the chamber, where Republicans have a majority, 53 to 47.

Ms. Gideon has already raised nearly $23 million, much of it from Democrats who are angry at Ms. Collins for confirming Justice Kavanaugh and not taking a harder line against Mr. Trump.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/14/us/politics/Election-primary-runoff-results.html

The Five” co-host Greg Gutfeld argued Tuesday that Joe Biden‘s strategy to combat climate change is not based on established science but rather left-wing “hysteria” conjured by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y.

“Biden, economically, is kind of terrifying because he’s all in on the Green New Deal, including this apocalyptic nine-year vision that is not based on any science but rather AOC-led hysteria,” The “Greg Gutfeld Show” host said.

During his remarks in Wilmington, Biden accused President Trump of considering climate change a “hoax,” while claiming that “science tells us we have nine years before the damage is irreversible.”

“We are going to make historic investments, so we will seize the opportunity to meet this moment in history,” the former vice president said. “We are going to get to work delivering results right away on day number one.”

Later in the segment, Gutfeld mused that while Democrats have long claimed to be protecting America’s social “safety net,” Republicans and President Trump are now the true holders of that mantle.

“I want people to just think about what the experience of 2020 was,” he said. “When we had a Republican-built, Trump-designed economy that was essentially a safety net that was tested, it was actually tested [by the pandemic], and it actually succeeded.

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“Unlike the safety nets created by Democrats, this safety net was tested by a novel catastrophe that we had never experienced in our lives. Nobody has starved, we have made it through … We are getting it done largely because of this incredible economy that allowed a safety net to occur that gave out these payments to make sure people were OK. This was a Republican-built safety net that blew the doors off of any Democrat safety net of the last 50 years.”

On the other hand, Gutfeld went on, Biden and the Democrats have posited an “apocalyptic vision” that “chooses the ‘mob’ over the individual.”

“Biden is pushing the politics of envy,” he said, “and that will get us nowhere in the long run, or even the short term.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/greg-gutfeld-biden-climate-change-apocalyptic-vision

The coronavirus outbreak surging across the nation could be controlled in 4-6 weeks if people were disciplined about wearing masks, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says.

While the comments from Robert Redfield and encouraging news about a top vaccine candidate were fueling some optimism Wednesday, struggling California was tightening restrictions on testing in an effort to improve turn-around time for results in overwhelmed labs.  The state’s Department of Public Health released new guidelines Tuesday that say people without symptoms and not in essential jobs won’t be prioritized for testing until results can be turned around in less than 48 hours. 

A USA TODAY study found almost half of all states are spiking at a faster rate than they had been in the spring. In Texas, officials once again reported a daily record-breaking number of 10,745 new cases on Tuesday. The previous record was 10,351 on Saturday. 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2020/07/15/covid-19-california-testing-moderna-vaccine-best-buy-requires-masks/5436928002/

President Trump speaks during a news conference in the Rose Garden of the White House, on Tuesday.

Evan Vucci/AP


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Evan Vucci/AP

President Trump speaks during a news conference in the Rose Garden of the White House, on Tuesday.

Evan Vucci/AP

China on Wednesday promised to retaliate against “U.S. institutions and individuals” after President Trump signed legislation and an executive order sanctioning Beijing for imposing a sweeping new national security law on Hong Kong.

Trump on Tuesday signed the Hong Kong Autonomy Act, which approves sanctions on Chinese officials and banks, as well as an executive order ending Hong Kong’s preferential trade treatment.

“Today I signed legislation, and an executive order to hold China accountable for its aggressive actions against the people of Hong Kong,” Trump told reporters at the White House Rose Garden.

“Hong Kong will now be treated the same as mainland China,” he said. “No special privileges, no special economic treatment and no export of sensitive technologies.”

China’s foreign ministry condemned the move, saying Beijing would protect “its legitimate interests” by imposing sanctions “against related U.S. institutions and individuals.”

Although the foreign ministry did not elaborate, Maryland Democrat Sen. Chris Van Hollen and Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Patrick Toomey, who introduced the Hong Kong Autonomy Act, were likely to be among the sanctioned individuals, Chen Long, a partner at the independent research agency Plenum, told the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post.

Hong Kong, a former British colony, reverted to Chinese control in 1997 under an agreement with London that was to have guaranteed a “high degree of autonomy” for the territory, including substantial political freedoms, for a period of 50 years.

However, Beijing has slowly eroded those freedoms and reneged on promises for more representative government in Hong Kong. Mass protests in 2014 and again in recent months in Hong Kong have opposed what activists see as Beijing’s heavy handling of the territory. Late last month Beijing imposed the national security law, which criminalizes — in the words of the law — secession, subversion of state power, terrorism and collusion with foreign entities, with penalties of up to life in prison.

The Hong Kong Autonomy Act and Trump’s executive order eliminate special treatment for Hong Kong passport holders and end an extradition agreement between Hong Kong and the U.S. The executive order eliminates joint U.S.-Hong Kong police training and revokes license exceptions for exports to Hong Kong.

It also ends cooperation between U.S. and Chinese agencies, such as the U.S. Geological Survey.

The Trump administration’s latest moves against Beijing follow a souring of relations that has come amid the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, which originated in central China and has since spread globally, infecting and killing more people in the U.S. than in any other country.

Washington blames China for covering up the extent of the outbreak in its earliest days and Trump has even suggested that the virus may have escaped from a Chinese lab, a scenario widely dismissed by scientists.

On Monday, the Trump administration rejected Beijing’s maritime claims in the South China Sea, a long-running conflict between China and several Southeast Asian countries over control of key islands in the region.

“We are making clear: Beijing’s claims to offshore resources across most of the South China Sea are completely unlawful, as is its campaign of bullying to control them,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement.

Just prior to the pandemic, Trump had praised China’s President Xi Jinping after the two leaders negotiated a Phase 1 trade deal. However, at Tuesday’s White House news conference, Trump said he had no interest in talking with Xi.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/07/15/891291258/china-threatens-response-after-u-s-sanctions-over-crackdown-on-hong-kong

“Resign,” she replied.

Her book, “Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World’s Most Dangerous Man,” has generated widespread news coverage for its intimate look into the president’s upbringing and personal life before he came to the White House. It was released by Simon & Schuster on Tuesday and tops the Amazon bestseller list.

Mary Trump, who is the first relative of the president’s to open up about the family’s secrets, detailed a visit she made to the White House in April 2017 to see the president during which she told him, “Don’t let them get you down.”

“He already seemed very strained by the pressures. He had never been in a situation before where he wasn’t entirely protected from criticism or accountability or things like that, and I just remember thinking, ‘He seems tired,’” Mary Trump said.

When asked by Stephanopoulos what is the single most important thing the country needs to know about her uncle, Trump didn’t mince words.

“He’s utterly incapable of leading this country — and it’s dangerous to allow him to do so,” she said.

The snippet of Mary Trump’s interview, which aired Tuesday night on “World News Tonight with David Muir,” came after a New York Supreme Court judge ruled Monday that the president’s niece was free to discuss her book after being blocked by a temporary restraining order. Robert Trump, the president’s brother, argued that the whole premise of the book violated a confidentiality agreement signed in 2001 to settle a family lawsuit.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/07/14/mary-trump-interview-resign-362485

House Democrats urged the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday to speed up the process for getting the legal battle over President Donald Trump‘s business records back into the lower courts.

The justices ruled last week that the president did not have an absolute right to refuse to comply with legitimate congressional subpoenas for documents. But they also said Congress does not have unlimited authority to seek materials from a president because its demands must be connected to a legitimate legislative purpose.

Supreme Court decisions ordinarily do not have legal effect until 25 days after the rulings are issued. In the Trump cases, that would be Aug. 3. But the three committees that sought Trump’s taxes and other records told the court that its investigations “are ongoing, remain urgent, and have been impeded by the lack of finality in these litigations, which were initiated in April 2019.”

Given that the term of the current House expires Jan. 3, the committees said their ability to continue the legal fight, “then obtain and review the subpoenaed documents, evaluate their significance to potential or pending legislation, draft such legislation or amendments, and shepherd that legislation through the bicameral process diminishes by the day.”

Speeding up the Supreme Court’s final steps would move things along quickly in the lower courts,” the lawmakers wrote, “so that the committees may obtain the materials necessary to undertake any needed legislative reforms as quickly as possible to address, among other issues, conflicts of interest that threaten to undermine the presidency, money-laundering and unsafe lending practices, and foreign interference in U.S. elections and any other ongoing threats to national security arising from President Trump’s foreign financial entanglements.”

Chief Justice John Roberts ordered Trump’s lawyers to respond by Thursday afternoon.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/supreme-court/house-dems-ask-supreme-court-speed-trump-financial-docs-cases-n1233790

Presumptive Democratic nominee Joe BidenJoe BidenBiden campaign slams Trump’s Rose Garden event as ‘sad affair’ New shutdowns add to Trump woes CNN cuts away from Trump’s ‘campaign-type’ Rose Garden speech MORE on Tuesday released a $2 trillion plan to address climate change with an emphasis on correcting racial economic disparities.

Speaking from a gymnasium in his home state of Delaware, Biden made the case that communities of color have been especially victimized by corporate polluters. 

He said those communities have borne “the environmental and health burdens but shared none of the profits.”

“As we do this work, we need to be mindful of the historical wrongs and damage that American industries have done in the 21st century, inflicting environmental harm on poor and vulnerable communities, so often Black and brown and Native American communities,” Biden said.

“Included here are polluted water, toxins pouring down on communities that bore the environmental and health burdens but shared none of the profits. Growing up and breathing that each and every day, it’s poison,” he added.

“It’s partly why there’s such incredible rates of childhood asthma in Black and brown communities. Why Black Americans are almost three times more likely to die of asthma-related causes than white Americans. It’s cancer alley in St. James Parish in Louisiana and the cancer-causing clusters around Route 9 right here in Delaware,” he also said.

Biden said that poor communities and communities of color would receive 40 percent of the investments he’s proposing to build new sustainable houses, reduce pollution and invest in clean energy workforce development and transportation.

“This is an area of incredible opportunity for growth in our country but we have to make sure that the first people who benefit from this are the people who were worst hurt by it historically in the last century by the structural disparities that exist,” Biden said.

The former vice president’s newly-unveiled climate and infrastructure plan aims for carbon-free electricity generation by 2035. The plan would invest in 500,000 electric vehicle charging stations, while providing new government jobs to plug abandoned oil wells, among other initiatives.

One major emphasis of the climate plan is aimed at addressing racial inequality, which has become a top concern for Democrats following the death of George Floyd while in police custody.

The Biden plan would overhaul the Environmental Protection Agency’s External Civil Rights Compliance office to bring new focus to how companies have “allowed state environmental agencies to issue dangerous permits, and to conduct its business in a way that harmed communities” of color.

Biden says he’ll use a new screening tool to publish annual maps that “identify disadvantaged communities; including disproportionately burdened tribal areas” to ensure companies are not taking advantage of that land to pollute the air and water.

The Biden plan will also establish an Environmental and Climate Justice Division within the Department of Justice to “to pursue anti-pollution cases” and “hold corporate executives personally accountable.”

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/507294-bidens-2-trillion-climate-plan-aims-to-correct-racial-disparities

For instance, in discussing cooperation agreements with Central American countries to stop illegal immigration, he had this to say: “We have great agreements where when Biden and Obama used to bring killers out, they would say don’t bring them back to our country, we don’t want them. Well, we have to, we don’t want them. They wouldn’t take them. Now with us, they take them. Someday, I’ll tell you why. Someday, I’ll tell you why. But they take them and they take them very gladly. They used to bring them out and they wouldn’t even let the airplanes land if they brought them back by airplanes. They wouldn’t let the buses into their country. They said we don’t want them. Said no, but they entered our country illegally and they’re murderers, they’re killers in some cases.”

At another point, he took a jab at Mr. Biden’s mental acuity. “Let him define the word carbon, because he won’t be able to,” Mr. Trump said. That has been a theme of his lately, unsubtly implying that Mr. Biden has grown senile. Just last week, Mr. Trump, 74, boasted that he had recently taken a cognitive test and “aced it,” while insisting that Mr. Biden, 77, “couldn’t pass” such an exam.

The disjointed monologue, however, may not have been the most convincing evidence. On Twitter, his critics quickly compared him to a grandfather who had broken into the sherry cabinet. “Trump is a truly sick individual,” wrote Jon Favreau, who was President Barack Obama’s chief speechwriter. Rick Wilson, a founder of the Lincoln Project, a group of anti-Trump Republicans, called it “rambling verbal dysentery.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/14/us/politics/trump-news-conference.html