Nine leading U.S. and European vaccine developers pledged on Tuesday to uphold the scientific standards that their experimental immunizations will be held against, amid a hurried global race to contain the pandemic.

The companies, including Pfizer, GlaxoSmithKline and AstraZeneca, in a joint statement made a “historic pledge… to uphold the integrity of the scientific process as they work towards potential global regulatory filings and approvals of the first Covid-19 vaccines.”

The unusual move to promise to play by well-established rules underlines a highly politicized debate over what action is needed to quickly rein in the spread of the deadly disease and to jumpstart global business and trade.

The head of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said last month that the normal approval process may be bypassed for a Covid-19 vaccine as long as officials were convinced the benefits outweigh the risks, prompting a call for caution from the World Health Organisation.

Developers globally have yet to produce large-scale trial data showing actual infections in participants, yet Russia granted approval to a Covid-19 vaccine last month, prompting some Western experts to criticize a lack of testing.

The head of China’s Sinovac Biotech said most of its employees and their families have already taken an experimental vaccine developed by the Chinese firm under the country’s emergency-use program.

“We want it to be known that also in the current situation we are not willing to compromise safety and efficacy,” said co-signatory Ugur Sahin, the chief executive of Pfizer’s German partner BioNTech.

“Apart from the pressure and the hope for a vaccine to be available as fast as possible, there is also a lot of uncertainty among people that some development steps may be omitted here,” he added.

BioNTech and Pfizer have raised the prospect of unveiling pivotal trial data in October, potentially placing it at the center of bitter U.S. presidential politics ahead of the Nov. 3 election.

According to the statement, the nine companies pledge to follow established guidance from expert regulatory authorities such as the FDA.

Among other hurdles, approval must be based on large, diverse clinical trials with comparative groups that do not receive the vaccine in question. Participants and those working on the trial must not know which group they belong to, according to the pledge.

BioNTech’s Sahin added there must be statistical certainty of 95%, in some cases higher, that a positive reading on efficacy does not just come from random variations but reflects the underlying workings of the compound.

The list of co-signatories is completed by Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Moderna, Novavax and Sanofi.

Sahin said inclusion in the pledge broadly reflected a significant vaccine market share or a leading position in coronavirus vaccine development.

The frenetic development race has intensified safety concerns about an inoculation, polls have shown.

Western regulators have stressed they would not cut corners but rather prioritize the review workload and allow for development steps in parallel that would normally be handled consecutively.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/09/08/nine-biopharma-ceos-pledge-to-make-safety-the-main-focus-in-coronavirus-vaccine-development.html

Wildfires have burned more than 2m acres (809,000 hectares) in California this year, setting a state record even as crews battled dozens of growing blazes in sweltering temperatures Monday that strained the electrical grid and threatened power outages for millions.

The previous high was 1.96m acres (793,184 hectares) burned in 2018. the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or Cal Fire, began tracking the numbers in 1987.

Lynne Tolmachoff, spokeswoman for Cal Fire, said the most striking thing about the record was how early it was set, with the most dangerous part of the year ahead.

“It’s a little unnerving because September and October are historically our worst months for fires,” she said. “It’s usually hot, and the fuels really dry out. And we see more of our wind events.”

Firefighters struggled to corral several dangerous blazes ahead of dry, hot winds predicted to raise fire danger to critical levels in the coming days. Evacuation orders were expanded to more mountain communities as the largest blaze, the Creek Fire, churned through the Sierra National Forest.

Debra Rios wasn’t home when the order came to evacuate her hometown of Auberry, just northeast of Fresno. Sheriff’s deputies went to her ranch property to pick up her 92-year-old mother, Shirley MacLean. They reunited at an evacuation center.

“I hope like heck the fire doesn’t reach my little ranch,” Rios said. “It’s not looking good right now. It’s an awfully big fire.”

Mountain roads were filled with cars and trucks leaving the community of about 2,300 people.

Firefighters working in steep terrain saved the tiny town of Shaver Lake from flames that roared down hillsides toward a marina. About 30 houses were destroyed in the remote hamlet of Big Creek, according to resident Toby Wait.

“About half the private homes in town burned down,” he said. “Words cannot even begin to describe the devastation of this community.”



San Diego Sheriffs and CDF firefighters stage on Lyons Valley Road during the Valley Fire on Sunday Photograph: KC Alfred/San Diego Union-Tribune/ZUMA/REX/Shutterstock

A school, church, library, historic general store and a major hydroelectric plant were spared in the community of about 200 residents, Wait told the Fresno Bee.

Sheriff’s deputies went door to door to make sure residents were complying with orders to leave. Officials hoped to keep the fire from pushing west, possibly toward Yosemite National Park.

The Creek Fire has charred more than 114 square miles (295 square kilometers) of timber after breaking out Friday. The 850 firefighters on the scene had yet to get any containment.

On Saturday, rescuers in military helicopters airlifted 207 people to safety after flames trapped them in a wooded camping near Mammoth Pool Reservoir.

Record-breaking temperatures were driving the highest power use of the year, and transmission losses because of wildfires have cut into supplies. The California Independent System Operator that manages the state’s power grid warned of possible power outages if residents didn’t curtail their electricity usage. None have yet to occur.

The weather was predicted to cool later in the day, but the weather change also was expected to bring winds that could fan wildfires.

Pacific Gas & Electric warned it might cut power starting late Monday to about 158,000 customers in parts of 21 Northern California counties because of the increased fire danger. Some of the state’s largest and deadliest fires in recent years have been sparked by downed power lines and other utility equipment.

PG&E received criticism for its handling of previous planned outages. The utility said it has learned from past problems, “and this year will be making events smaller in size, shorter in length and smarter for customers.”

In Southern California, crews scrambled to douse several fires that roared to life in searing temperatures, including one that closed mountain roads in Angeles National Forest and forced the evacuation of Mount Wilson Observatory. Cal Fire said a blaze in San Bernardino County called the El Dorado Fire started Saturday morning and was caused by a smoke-generating pyrotechnic device used by a couple to reveal their baby’s gender.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/sep/08/california-fires-burn-record-2m-acres

President Trump on Monday asked a reporter to remove his mask while asking a question, but the journalist instead offered to speak louder.

Trump told Reuters reporter Jeff Mason that his face mask “muffled” his question during an outdoors North Portico press conference.

Mason, a former president of the White House Correspondents’ Association, which requires reporters to wear masks during the coronavirus pandemic, politely rebuffed Trump.

“You’re going to have to take that off, please. Just, you can take it off. You’re, how many feet are you away?” Trump said.

Mason countered: “I’ll speak a lot louder.”

Trump objected: “Well, if you don’t take it off, you are very muffled. So if you would take it off, it would be a lot easier.”

Mason insisted: “I’ll just speak a lot louder. Is that better?”

Trump, visibly annoyed, said, “It’s better. Yeah — it’s better.”

Trump previously failed to persuade Mason to remove his face mask during a Rose Garden press conference in late May.

“Can you take it off? Because I cannot hear you,” Trump told Mason in May. When Mason offered to speak louder instead, Trump said, “you want to be politically correct.”

Mason, who Trump praised in the past, often defends the independence of the press corps.

“I don’t think any of us came here for a lecture about our questioning,” he told former acting intelligence director Richard Grenell at a press briefing on Friday, defending another journalist.

On Monday, some journalists did remove their masks, including a correspondent for One America News and a reporter for The Guardian.

“You sound so clear, as opposed to everybody else,” Trump told The Guardian’s correspondent.

Most reporters did not wear masks during White House coronavirus press briefings in March and April, nor did health leaders such as Drs. Anthony Fauci and Deborah Birx.

More recently, journalists have embraced the health precaution as White House aides and some reporters test positive for the virus. Reporters at press briefings with Trump generally are not tested for COVID-19 unless they are part of a small daily press pool.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/09/07/trump-asks-reuters-reporter-to-remove-mask-is-rebuffed/

The Bobcat fire, one of multiple fires affecting California residents, continues to rage on north of Azusa. The fire, which broke out Sunday afternoon has burned down 4,871 acres near the Cogswell Dam and West Fork recreational area.

The U.S. Forest Service announced Monday the closure of several national forests, including the Angeles National Forest, in response to the numerous fires across the state. Additional forest under mandatory closures are San Bernardino National Forest, Cleveland National Forest, Los Padres National Forest, Inyo National Forest, Sequoia National Forest, Sierra National Forest and the Stanislaus NationalForest.

Officials have also ordered an evacuation of the Mount Wilson Observatory in response to the Bobcat Fire, which is still at 0% containment.

The closures also come two days after the use of pyrotechnics for a gender reveal party led to the El Dorado Fire near Oak Glen in San Bernadino County. The fire, which broke out in Yucaipa’s El Dorado Ranch Park, is only 7 percent contained as of Monday and has burned more than 8,500 acres.

Covering some communities in ashes and affecting the air quality for certain comprised groups, fires are far from the only natural occurrence affecting California residents the past weekend. The Bobcat and El Dorado fires broke out during the long Labor Day weekend, which also saw record-breaking heat in parts of Los Angeles County.

City News Service contributed to this report. 

Source Article from https://deadline.com/2020/09/bobcat-fire-southern-california-fires-1234572288/

President Donald Trump said on Monday he’d be open to an investigation into Postmaster General Louis DeJoy amid allegations that DeJoy encouraged his employees to make donations to Republican fundraising causes and then reimbursed them through bonuses.

The president, when pressed ABC News Correspondent Kyra Phillips, at first said, “I don’t know much about it,” at a news conference at the White House on Monday afternoon but that he would support an investigation into the issue, even as he signaled he’s not inclined to believe DeJoy engaged in unlawful behavior.

According to reporting in the Washington Post and The New York Times, DeJoy, a former GOP fundraiser whose political connections helped garner his position at USPS, encouraged employees of his former company, New Breed Logistics, to write fundraising checks and gave bonuses to offset the costs. DeJoy’s background in the private sector has shown significant financial stakes in companies that do business or compete with the Post Office.

ABC News has not independently confirmed these reports but has reached out to DeJoy for comment. It is against the law for an employer to reimburse employee campaign contributions.

“Let the investigations go. But he’s a very respected man,” the president continued on Monday from the White House’s North Portico. “Again, it was a bipartisan commission. Postmaster General is appointed by a bipartisan commission. We’ll see how that goes. I think he’s a very honest guy. We’ll see.”

Asked then by Phillips if DeJoy should lose his job if it is shown that he engaged in a campaign finance scheme, Trump said yes but again seemed to express doubt that wrongdoing would be proven by referring to his own scandals.

“Yes, if something can be proven, always. They have been looking at me for four years. They found nothing. Four years,” he said.

A spokesperson for DeJoy told the Washington Post that DeJoy believes that he has always followed campaign fundraising laws and regulations. A spokesperson for the U.S. Postal Service did not immediately respond to ABC News’ request for comment.

DeJoy has not offered a public reaction to the allegations, but he faced questioning about his possible use of straw donors during his testimony before the House Oversight committee last month.

Rep. Jim Cooper, D-Tenn., asked DeJoy whether he paid back several top executives for contributing to Trump’s campaign by providing them bonuses.

“That’s an outrageous claim sir, and I resent it,” DeJoy said. “The answer is no.”

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer over the weekend called for an investigation into DeJoy after the allegations surfaced that he had reimbursed former employees for GOP campaign contributions.

“These are very serious allegations that must be investigated immediately, independent of Donald Trump’s Justice Department,” Schumer said in a statement Sunday.

DeJoy’s former business, where the alleged activities took place, was based in North Carolina. On Sunday, North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein reacted to the Post’s reporting in a tweet.

“It is against the law to directly or indirectly reimburse someone for a political contribution,” Stein tweeted. “Any credible allegations of such actions merit investigation by the appropriate state and federal authorities. Beyond this, it would be inappropriate for me as Attorney General to comment on any specific matter at this time.”

The Senate minority leader threw his weight behind Stein to lead an investigation into the reported allegation.

“The North Carolina Attorney General, an elected official who is independent of Donald Trump, is the right person to start this investigation,” Schumer said in a statement.

DeJoy has been the focus of several Congressional inquiries in recent months as Democratic lawmakers have sought to understand changes at the postal service that they say has delayed the delivery of mail and could put the security of mail-in ballots at risk.

Wide range of topics covered

The president covered a wide range of topics in the Labor Day news conference, which was announced Monday morning on Twitter, as the presidential race heats up.

Trump also alleged Biden wanted to get the U.S. into “endless wars” and then suggested — in a striking comment from the commander-in-chief about the nation’s top military leaders and their motives — that “the top people in the Pentagon” aren’t happy with Trump because he wants to get the U.S. out of war.

“It’s one of the reasons the military — I’m not saying the military is in love with me — the soldiers are, the top people in the Pentagon probably are, because they want to do nothing but fight wars so that all of those wonderful companies that make the bombs and make the planes and make everything else stay happy,” he said.

Trump began by trumpeting economic recovery from the pandemic while threatening a crash “the likes of which you’ve never seen before” if Democratic nominee Joe Biden were elected president in remarks from an area from the White House usually reserved for greeting foreign leaders.

“As you probably see, the numbers are terrific. So, we called some people, wished them a very happy Labor Day, and they told us how they’re doing. And we really celebrate the American worker. We are in the midst of the fastest economic recovery in U.S. history,” Trump claimed.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/trump-open-investigation-postmaster-general-dejoy-amid-reports/story?id=72863185

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden says he’d follow the advice of scientists about whether he’d get a coronavirus vaccine if one became available before November’s presidential election, as President Trump tore into the Democratic ticket over vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris’s recent comments on the issue.

“I would want to see what the scientists said,” the former vice president told reporters Monday of a vaccine after speaking with supporters during a stop in Lancaster, Pa.

CORONAVIRUS IN THE U.S. – STATE BY STATE BREAKDOWN

Biden also emphasized he’d welcome an effective vaccine regardless of the consequences to his campaign.

“If I could get a vaccine tomorrow I’d do it,” he stressed. “If it cost me the election I’d do it. We need a vaccine and we need it now.”

Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks during an event with local union members in the backyard of a home in Lancaster, Pa., Monday, Sept. 7, 2020. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Biden – who’s heavily criticized Trump’s steering of the federal government’s response to the pandemic — also called for “full transparency on the vaccine.” And he once again argued that the president’s repeated misstatements and falsehoods regarding when a vaccine will become available are “undermining public confidence.”

Biden charged that when it comes to a vaccine, Trump’s “playing with politics. He said so many things that aren’t true.” And he cautioned that “if we do have a really good vaccine people are going to be reluctant to take it.”

TRUMP SAYS A BIDEN-HARRIS ADMINISTRATION WOULD ‘DESTROY’ COUNTRY, ECONOMY

Harris has taken heat after answering a question during a CNN interview that aired on Sunday about a possible vaccine by saying “I would not trust Donald Trump and it would have to be a credible source of information that talks about the efficacy and the reliability of whatever he’s talking about. I will not take his word for it.”

The president fired back Monday during a news conference.

Trump emphasized that Biden and Harris “should immediately apologize for the reckless anti-vaccine rhetoric that they’re talking right now, talking about endangering lives and it undermines science.”

And the president claimed that a vaccine could become available “during the month of October,” ahead of the presidential election.“You could have a very big surprise coming up.”

“The vaccine will be very safe and effective,” he speculated. “The people will be happy, the people of the world will be happy.”

Nearly 190,000 people in the U.S. have died from COVID-19 since the coronavirus swept the nation in February and March, with nearly 6.3 million total cases across the country.

Also on Labor Day, Biden showcased his support for organized labor.

“You’re going to have the best friend labor has ever had in the White House,” Biden told a small group of union members gathered in Lancaster.

The former vice president, who’s long been a strong supporter of organized labor, later headed to Harrisburg – Pennsylvania’s capital city. Biden stopped at the state AFL-CIO headquarters to join a virtual event with union President Richard Trumka, and take questions from rank and file members.

Besides being a crucial  general election battleground state, Pennsylvania’s also Biden’s native state. He was born and spent his first decade in Scranton, a working class city in the northeastern part of the state. And it’s no surprise that Biden – who spotlights his working-class roots and middle-class values – has won the lion’s share of union endorsements in the general election race.

Biden took to Twitter to praise organized labor, noting that “The 40-hour workweek Minimum wage Overtime pay Health care Workplace safety protections They’re all because of unions — and it’s time we recognize that.”

And in a video released ahead of his trip, Biden spotlighted one of the core themes of his campaign, that “Wall Street didn’t build this country, unions built it, unions built the middle class.”

And he emphasized that if elected, he’d push for the “the dignity of workers at the center of this economy, raising wages and safeguarding pensions, empowering unions, and investing in a true made in America future that spurs of new well, paying jobs.”

The economy and creating jobs was the president’s wheelhouse – but that was before the coronavirus pandemic swept the nation and flattened the nation’s economy.

Biden has repeatedly slammed the president’s performance on trying to re-inflate the economy.

On Monday, he told AFL-CIO members that Trump’s economy has “been great for his rich friends,” but emphasized that it hasn’t “been great for the rest of us.”

And he pledged if elected that “we’re going to make sure we pay people what they’re worth. It’s not enough to praise essential workers, it’s about time we start paying you. We’re going to empower workers and empower unions.”

On Friday he said that “Donald Trump may be the only president in modern history to leave office with fewer jobs that when he took office.”

Biden spoke a couple of hours after the Labor Department reported that employers continued to bring back furlough workers last month – but at a much slower rate than in the late spring, when the economy began reopening after being shuttered in March as coronavirus cases surged.

The U.S. economy added 1.4 million jobs in August, according to the Labor Department, down from 1.7 million in July and a plunge from the 4.8 million added in June. But the unemployment rate fell to 8.4%, down from 14.7% in April and 10.2% in July.

The president tweeted soon after the report’s release, touting “Great Jobs Numbers! 1.37 Million Jobs Added In August. Unemployment Rate Falls To 8.4% (Wow, much better than expected!). Broke the 10% level faster and deeper than thought possible.”

On Monday, the president touted his job handling the economic reoovery, and looking ahead to next year once again vowed to “create 10 million jobs at least in the first 10 months.”

Trump also pledged to pass “new tax cuts to boost take home pay. We’re going to be cutting taxes very substantially and get it back through growth.”

The “great American comeback” – as the president and his campaign call the recovery – is also the theme of a new Trump re-election campaign commercial that’s running this week in 6 battleground states and on national cable TV.

The announcer in the spot emphasizes that “the greatest economy the world has ever seen coming back to life.”

While Biden noted that “I’m grateful for everyone who found work again and found a glimmer of hope,” he highlighted that “28 million people have filed for unemployment and after six months of the pandemic, we’re less than half way back to where we were, with 11.5 million not getting their jobs back.”

According to the Labor Department report released Friday, manufacturing employment rose by 29,000. But despite gains in recent months, employment in manufacturing is 720,000 below February’s level. The government’s figures also indicated that there was little change in employment in mining, construction, and information.

“I talk to a lot of real working people. Ask them, they feel like they’re being left behind,” the former vice president stressed. “The report reinforces the worst fears and painful truths, the economic inequities that began before the downturn have only worsened under a failed presidency.”

And comparing the nation’s jobless rate to other nations, Biden argued that “during the pandemic our unemployment rate is still more than double, while other nations have only gone up by half. Why, because the president has botched the COVID response, botched it badly.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-trump-clash-over-coronavirus-vaccine

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/07/politics/donald-trump-news-conference/index.html

Fire crews elsewhere in California were trying to contain new blazes:

  • A 7,000-acre fire in San Bernardino County in Southern California that Cal Fire, the state fire agency, said was started when a “smoke-generating pyrotechnic device.” A family was using the device in a gender-reveal celebration when it ignited four-foot-tall dry grass. (A 2018 wildfire in Arizona was also set off during a gender-reveal party.). Capt. Bennet Milloy of Cal Fire said Monday morning that the family called 911, stayed at the scene and provided photos to investigators. Charges were being considered, he said, but their scope would not be determined until the fire was extinguished.

  • A 9,850-acre fire burning in the Cleveland National Forest east of San Diego that had destroyed 11 structures by Sunday night.

The fires have added to the pain of an already brutal wildfire season across the West. More than 1.6 million acres have burned in California alone.

Fire officials in Montana were trying to assess the damage of the Bridger Foothills Fire, which exploded over the weekend near Bozeman and burned at least 7,000 acres, destroying an as yet unknown number of homes.

Around Denver, ash fell from the sky on Sunday from a huge wildfire burning north of Rocky Mountain National Park, which forced park officials to close a popular sightseeing road. Hot, dry weather in the area was expected to give way to an early-season snowstorm on Tuesday, raised hope for some relief from the fires.

Christina Morales contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/07/us/ca-wildfires-heatwave.html

Democrats are bracing for potential chaos on Election Day, fearing that the combined force of President TrumpDonald John TrumpSchumer calls for investigation into reports of campaign finance improprieties by DeJoy’s former company McCarthy told Trump trashing mail-in voting will hurt Republicans: report Iran broadcasts wrestler’s confession following Trump tweet MORE’s warnings of voter fraud and the expected influx of absentee ballots will lead to a bitter and protracted fight over the election’s results.

The party has been concerned for months about Trump’s efforts to sow doubt in mail-in and absentee voting amid the coronavirus pandemic. But two developments this week renewed and worsened those fears.

A top Democratic digital firm warned of a potential “red mirage” on Election Night, in which in-person vote tallies show Trump in the lead until mail-in ballots counted after Nov. 3 swing the race in the direction of former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenTrump campaign works to set narrative ahead of pivotal debates with Biden Massachusetts proves Puerto Ricans are the secret key to Dem victory in November Trump says officials will investigate whether California is using 1619 Project in classrooms MORE.

And on Wednesday, Trump suggested that supporters attempt to vote twice — by mail and in person — to test the ability of election systems to detect fraud, prompting an outcry from state officials who warned that casting more than one ballot is illegal.

Taken together, the concerns add up to what Democrats fear will be an election mired in confusion and potential uncertainty.

“I don’t think people have fully grasped how difficult and challenging the Trump campaign is going to try to make the administration of this election,” Guy Cecil, the chair of the largest Democratic super PAC, Priorities USA, told reporters in a video briefing this week.

Democratic operatives and officials in some battleground states are already taking steps to reassure voters that their election systems are up to expectations.

After Trump suggested this week that his supporters try to cast two ballots, Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson released a statement emphasizing that the state’s election system has already been “stress-tested” and includes protections to “ensure that each person gets only one vote.”

North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein, a Democrat, called Trump’s remarks on voting “troubling,” accusing him of trying to “undermine people’s faith in the integrity of our elections.”

There are also fears among Democrats that Trump may try to call the vote count itself into question, given the expected surge in mail voting this year and the possibility that many ballots may not be counted on Election Day.

More Democrats are expected to cast their ballots by mail this year than Republicans, given concerns about the coronavirus pandemic and Trump’s previous claims that mail-in voting is rife with fraud. A Quinnipiac University poll released this week underscored the difference between voters, with 51 percent of Democrats saying they plan to vote by mail and 64 percent of Republicans saying they will vote in person.

In an interview this week with “Axios on HBO,” Josh Mendelsohn, the CEO of the Democratic data and analytics firm Hawkfish, warned of a situation in which the vote count on election night could show a massive victory for Trump. But after mail-in and absentee votes are counted, he said, it will show that Trump’s election night lead was “a mirage.”

“We are sounding an alarm and saying that this is a very real possibility, that the data is going to show on election night an incredible victory for Donald Trump,” Mendelsohn told Axios.

“When every legitimate vote is tallied and we get to that final day, which will be some day after Election Day, it will in fact show that what happened on election night was exactly that, a mirage,” Mendelsohn said. “It looked like Donald Trump was in the lead and he fundamentally was not when every ballot gets counted.”

A poll released this week by The Guardian and Opinium Research underscored the extent of Democrats’ fears that Trump could refuse to accept the outcome of the November election if it’s not in his favor.

Three in four respondents who support Biden in the presidential race said they are worried about the possibility of Trump rejecting the election results, compared to only 30 percent of Trump’s supporters, the poll found.

Thea McDonald, a spokesperson for the Trump campaign, said that the president is “fighting for a free, fair, transparent election in which every valid ballots counts – once,” and accused Democrats of trying to create a pretext for rejecting the election results themselves.

“Rather than peddling conspiracy theories and paving the way for Joe Biden to refuse to accept the results when President Trump wins, just as Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonThe Atlantic’s Trump report: We should know the sources of a story this important What the numbers say about Trump’s chances at reelection Biden outlines post-Labor Day strategy to win White House MORE did four years ago, Democrats ought to take responsibility for their attempts to throw our electoral system into chaos 60 days out from Election Day,” McDonald said in a statement to The Hill.

Democrats say that Trump has already laid the groundwork for questioning the election’s legitimacy, pointing to his rhetoric around the gubernatorial and Senate elections in Florida in 2018.

That year, the Election Day vote count showed Republicans Rick Scott and Ron DeSantisRon DeSantisOvernight Health Care: White House denies Trump has embraced ‘herd immunity’ strategy on COVID-19 | Penn State doctor: About a third of tested athletes with COVID-19 had heart inflammation | Fauci says Midwestern states should be on alert this Labor Day The Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by Facebook – Markey defeats Kennedy; Trump lauds America’s enforcers in Wisconsin Florida lifting ban on nursing home visits MORE leading their Democratic opponents. But the results narrowed in the days that followed as more absentee ballots were counted, prompting Trump to cry foul play and demand that the races be called based on the Election Day vote.

“The Florida Election should be called in favor of Rick Scott and Ron DeSantis in that large numbers of new ballots showed up out of nowhere, and many ballots are missing or forged,” Trump tweeted. “An honest vote count is no longer possible-ballots massively infected. Must go with Election Night!”

Ultimately, Scott defeated former Sen. Bill NelsonClarence (Bill) William Nelson Trump, facing trouble in Florida, goes all in NASA names DC headquarters after agency’s first Black female engineer Mary W. Jackson NASA, SpaceX and the private-public partnership that caused the flight of the Crew Dragon MORE (D-Fla.) by about 10,000 votes, while DeSantis beat Democrat Andrew Gillum in the governor’s race by roughly 32,000 votes.

The 2020 presidential race is also shaping up to be a close one. Several public polls released this week showed Biden with a sizable national lead over Trump. But the margins separating the two candidates in key battleground states are tightening.

A Quinnipiac University survey of Florida, for instance, placed Biden only 3 points ahead of Trump. In Pennsylvania, a Monmouth University poll showed the former vice president with a scant 4-point lead. And in North Carolina, another Monmouth poll put them within 2 points of one another.

“Everybody’s asking me: ‘Do you trust the polls, do you feel confident about Biden’s chances?’ ” one veteran Democratic operative in Florida said. “I keep saying, yes, I trust the polls. What I don’t trust is the president.”

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/515191-democrats-sound-alarm-on-possible-election-chaos

Ominous images captured by passengers aboard planes above California show them flying through thick clouds of smoke thousands of feet as devastating wildfires continue to rage across the state.

A Twitter user, identified as Gabriela, captured on video the moment her flight approached LAX airport for landing on Sunday, with a dense smog of grey and orange smoke surrounding the wing of the plane – completely obscuring the ground below.

Similar unsettling scenes were captured by family members of CNN’s Oliver Darcy on Sunday evening, who were flying out from Fresno to Salt Lake City.

An orange glare is seen breaking through the center of a billow of grey smoke. When sharing the pictures on Twitter, Darcy said that passengers aboard the flight could reportedly smell the smoke from the wildfires inside the cabin.

Fire Departments across California have battled more than 900 wildfires since August 15, many of which have been spurred by record-breaking temperatures and other freak weather conditions, including concentrations of thousands of lightning strikes in a number of different areas.

The blazes have burned more than 1.5 million acres – or 2,434 square miles, destroyed nearly 3,300 structures and caused eight deaths. 

Cal Fire said 14,800 firefighters were continuing to battle 23 major fires in the state as of Monday.

Scroll down for video 

Troubling scenes were captured by family members of CNN’s Oliver Darcy on Sunday evening, who were flying out from Fresno to Salt Lake City. An orange glare is seen breaking through the center of a billow of grey fumes

Darcy said that passengers aboard the flight could reportedly smell the smoke from the wildfires inside the cabin

A Twitter user, identified as Gabriela, captured on video the moment her flight approached LAX airport for landing on Sunday, with a dense smog of grey and orange smoke surrounding the wing of the plane and completely obscuring the ground below

Cal Fire said 14,800 firefighters were continuing to battle 23 major fires in the state as of Monday. A total 28 active fires are currently listed on Cal Fire’s website

While officials said the fires across the state were around 91 percent contained as of Monday morning, another devastating fire erupted in El Dorado on Saturday, so far destroying more than 7,000 acres of land with the blaze only five percent contained.

The fire, now burning around 70 miles east of Los Angeles, began when a smoke-generating pyrotechnic device used at a gender reveal photo shoot set foliage alight.

Amid a record-breaking heatwave, with record temperatures of 121 degrees, the state has been turned into a tinder box, officials said.

The fire started on Saturday at 10:23am, and 527 people from 10 fire crews are currently trying to halt the fire’s progress.

It spread from the El Dorado Ranch Park north, onto the Yucaipa Ridge. The ridge separates Mountain Home Village and Forest Falls from the City of Yucaipa.

Bennet Milloy, spokesman for the department, told DailyMail.com that the people hosting the photo shoot were still on the scene when the firefighters arrived.

‘We know how it started because they were still there,’ he said. ‘That, and the fact that there were surveillance cameras in the park.’

Milloy said that it was a relatively small family gathering, and that the relatives had got together for a photo opportunity.

He did not know if they were local people, but he said they were potentially both civilly and criminally responsible for the fire – facing jail time and a massive fine. The family could be held responsible for the entire cost of putting the fire out, amounting to many millions of dollars, he said.

‘CAL FIRE reminds the public that with the dry conditions and critical fire weather, it doesn’t take much to start a wildfire,’ the department said in a press release. ‘Those responsible for starting fires due to negligence or illegal activity can be held financially responsible and criminally responsible.’

Fire Departments across California have battled more than 900 wildfires since August 15, many of which have been spurred by record-breaking temperatures and an intense freak series of thousands of lightning strikes (pictured: A firefighter douses flames as they push towards homes during the Creek fire in the Cascadel Wood)

The blazes have burned more than 1.5 million acres – or 2,434 square miles, destroyed nearly 3,300 structures and caused eight deaths

While officials said the fires across the state were around 91 percent contained as of Monday morning, another devastating fire erupted in El Dorado on Saturday morning, so far destroying more than 7,000 acres of land with the blaze only five percent contained

The El Dorado wildfire (pictured), which broke out on Saturday morning, was started by a gender reveal photo shoot, it has been confirmed

Amid a record-breaking heatwave, with record temperatures of 121 degrees turning the state into a tinder box, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said on Sunday night that a smoke-generating pyrotechnic device caused the fire (pictured)

The fire spread from the El Dorado Ranch Park north, onto the Yucaipa Ridge and into the San Bernardino National Forest

Satellite images on Saturday gave a sense of the scale of the El Dorado fire, which was started by a gender reveal photo shoot 

Temperatures in the fire zone were in the 90s while downtown Los Angeles reached 111 degrees. A record-shattering high of 121 degrees was recorded in the nearby Woodland Hills neighborhood of the San Fernando Valley.

It was the highest temperature ever recorded in Los Angeles County, according to the National Weather Service. It rivaled the high in California’s Death Valley, typically the hottest place in the country.

Meanwhile, downtown San Francisco set a record for the day with a high of 100F, smashing the previous mark by 5 degrees.

‘By our calculations, over 99 percent of California’s population is under an Excessive Heat Warning or Heat Advisory today,’ the weather service in Sacramento tweeted Sunday afternoon.

Wildfires have burned more than 2 million acres in California this year, setting a state record even as crews battled dozens of growing blazes in sweltering temperatures Monday.

The most striking thing about the record is how early it was set, with the most dangerous part of the year ahead, said Lynne Tolmachoff, spokeswoman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

‘It’s a little unnerving because September and October are historically our worst months for fires,’ she said. ‘It’s usually hot, and the fuels really dry out. And we see more of our wind events.’

The previous high was 1.96 million acres burned in 2018. Cal Fire began tracking the numbers in 1987.

In Northern California, rescuers in military helicopters airlifted 207 people to safety over the weekend after an explosive wildfire trapped them in a popular camping area in Sierra National Forest that has burned since Friday afternoon.

The California Office of Emergency Services said Black Hawk and Chinook helicopters were used for the rescues that began late Saturday and continued into Sunday morning at Mammoth Pool Reservoir.

At least two people were severely injured and 10 more suffered moderate injuries. Two campers refused rescue and stayed behind, the Madera County Sheriff’s Office said, and there was no immediate word on their fates.

A photo tweeted by the California National Guard showed more than 20 evacuees packed tightly inside one helicopter, some crouched on the floor clutching their belongings. In another photo taken on the ground from a helicopter cockpit, the densely wooded hills surrounding the aircraft were in flames.

The blaze, dubbed the Creek Fire, has charred nearly 80,000 acres of timber, and the 800 firefighters on the scene had yet to get any containment after more than two days of work on steep terrain in sweltering heat.

A photo tweeted by the California National Guard showed mdozens of evacuees packed tightly inside one helicopter, some crouched on the floor clutching their belongings 

A business owner, who declined to give his name, looks up at the smoke-covered sky from the Creek Fire at his boat rental place on Sunday

The blaze, dubbed the Creek Fire, has charred nearly 80,000 acres of timber, and the 800 firefighters on the scene had yet to get any containment after more than three days of work on steep terrain in sweltering heat

Smoke from the Creek Fire billows beyond a ridge as seen from Huntington Lake on Saturday, September 5

Firefighter Ricardo Gomez, of a San Benito Monterey Cal Fire crew, sets a controlled burn while fighting the Creek Fire

At least two people were severely injured and 10 more suffered moderate injuries. Two campers refused rescue and stayed behind, the Madera County Sheriff’s Office said, and there was no immediate word on their fates.

Embers fly off burning timber as flames push towards homes during the Creek fire in the Cascadel Woods area of unincorporated Madera County

Firefighters walk through the site near Shaver Lake as they continue to battle against the Creek Fire which started on Friday afternoon before spreading across 73,278 acres

Some homes and businesses have burned, but there was no official tabulation yet. Officials said at least 2,000 structures were threatened in the surrounding 290 miles of the blaze. The cause of the fire has not yet been determined.

‘The lake is totally engulfed with smoke. You can’t hardly see in front of you,’ area resident Jack Machado said. ‘The sky’s turning red. It looks like Mars out there.’

The exceptionally hot temperatures statewide were driving the highest power use of the year, and transmission losses because of the wildfires have cut into supplies. Eric Schmitt of the California Independent System Operator that manages the state´s power grid said up to 3 million customers faced power outages if residents didn’t curtail their electricity usage.

At 7pm on Sunday, the California Independent System Operator declared an emergency and said power outages were imminent because a transmission line carrying power from Oregon to California and another in-state power plant went offline unexpectedly. The cause of the outages is unknown at this time, the agency said.

By 8:30pm, the agency issued a tweet calling off the emergency ‘thanks to conservation of Californians!’ It said no power outages were ordered by operators of the grid.

Pacific Gas & Electric, the state’s largest utility, warned customers that it might cut power starting Tuesday because of expected high winds and heat that could create even greater fire danger. Some of the state’s largest and deadliest fires in recent years have been sparked by downed power lines and other utility equipment.

In Southern California, crews scrambled to douse several fires that popped up, including one that closed mountain roads in Angeles National Forest.

The largest was a blaze in the foothills of Yucaipa east of Los Angeles that prompted evacuation orders for eastern portions of the city of 54,000 along with several mountain communities. Cal Fire said the fire scorched at least 4.7 square miles of brush and trees. 

‘By our calculations, over 99 percent of California’s population is under an Excessive Heat Warning or Heat Advisory today,’ the weather service in Sacramento tweeted Sunday afternoon 

Firefighters keep an eye on the Creek Fire along state Highway 168, late on Sunday, September 6

Cal Fire firefighters protect a structure near Montiel Truck Trail during the Valley Fire, in San Diego County on Sunday

Firefighters struggled to corral several dangerous blazes Monday ahead of dry, hot winds predicted to raise fire danger to critical levels in the coming days. Evacuation orders were expanded to more mountain communities as the largest blaze churned through the Sierra National Forest.

Debra Rios wasn’t home when the order came to evacuate her hometown of Auberry, just northeast of Fresno. Sheriff’s deputies went to her ranch property to pick up her 92-year-old mother, Shirley MacLean. They reunited at an evacuation center.

‘I hope like heck the fire doesn’t reach my little ranch,’ Rios said. ‘It’s not looking good right now. It’s an awfully big fire.’

Mountain roads were filled with cars and trucks leaving the town of about 2,300 people.

Firefighters working in steep terrain saved the tiny town of Shaver Lake from flames that roared down hillsides toward a marina. About 30 houses were destroyed in the remote hamlet of Big Creek.

‘About half the private homes in town burned down,’ resident Toby Wait said. ‘Words cannot even begin to describe the devastation of this community. And it is a very close-knit community.’

An elementary school, church, library, historic general store and a major hydroelectric plant were spared in the community of about 200 residents, Wait told the Fresno Bee.

Sheriff’s deputies went door to door to make sure residents were complying with orders to leave. Officials hoped to keep the fire from pushing west, possibly toward Yosemite National Park.

Plumes of smoke rise into the sky as a wildfire burns on the hills near Shaver Lake. Fires in the Sierra National Forest have prompted evacuation orders as authorities urged people seeking relief from the Labor Day weekend heat wave to stay away from the popular lake

The wind whips embers from a tree burned by a wildfire Yucaipa. Three fast-spreading California wildfires sent people fleeing Saturday, with one trapping campers at a reservoir in the Sierra National Forest, as a brutal heat wave pushed temperatures into triple digits in many parts of state

In eastern San Diego County, the Valley Fire broke out Saturday afternoon, and fire officials warned the blaze was burning at a ‘dangerous rate of speed.’

By Sunday morning it had destroyed at least 10 structures after burning 6.25 square and prompted evacuations near the remote community of Alpine in the Cleveland National Forest.

At least two of the lost structures were homes, ABC10 News in San Diego reported.

Cal Fire said 14,800 firefighters were continuing to battle 23 major fires in the state as of Monday.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has declared a statewide emergency because of the widespread fires and extreme weather conditions. He has also secured a Presidential Major Disaster Declaration to bolster the state’s emergency response.

Additionally, Newsom issued an emergency proclamation for the counties of Fresno, Madera and Mariposa, which are fighting the Creek Fire; for San Bernardino County, which is battling the El Dorado Fire; and for San Diego County because of the Valley Fire.

Newsom also urged state residents to keep their thermostats at 78 degrees or higher, to use appliances sparingly and to keep lights switched off whenever possible.

‘Power outages were avoided … due in large part to individual conservation efforts,’ Newsom said. ‘Even more conservation efforts are needed.’

Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8706551/Passengers-photo-shows-plane-flying-clouds-smoke-California-wildfires-continue.html

In a Labor Day news conference at the White House, when asked if he was open to a campaign finance investigation of DeJoy, Trump said, “Sure, sure, let the investigations go.” And he also said DeJoy should lose his job “if something can be proven that he did something wrong.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-says-hes-open-to-investigation-of-campaign-finance-allegations-against-dejoy/2020/09/07/48458ee4-f13a-11ea-9279-45d6bdfe145f_story.html

A scientist at work on a COVID-19 vaccine candidate at Bogazici University in Istanbul in August.

Onur Coban/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images


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Onur Coban/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

A scientist at work on a COVID-19 vaccine candidate at Bogazici University in Istanbul in August.

Onur Coban/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Several vaccines are currently in large-scale studies to see if they can prevent COVID-19, and more are on the way.

President Trump has been hinting that a vaccine could be ready before the end of October, but Moncef Slaoui, chief scientific adviser to the administration’s Operation Warp Speed, downplayed that possibility in an interview on NPR’s All Things Considered.

“There is a very, very low chance that the trials that are running as we speak could read before the end of October,” Slaoui said.

Here are some answers to frequently asked questions about the large-scale vaccine efficacy studies that Slaoui was discussing.

How big are these trials?

The intention is to enroll at least 30,000 volunteers per trial. Half will get an injection containing the vaccine candidate, and half will get an injection of an inert placebo. Neither the person giving the injection nor the person getting the shot knows which is being administered. This is so neither party has a predetermined idea of what the outcome might be. Studies like this are called double-blind, placebo-controlled trials, and they are generally considered the best design to get definitive answers.

Researchers chose enrolling 30,000 people as a target for pragmatic reasons. To test a vaccine, it needs to be given to enough people who will subsequently be exposed to the virus. But researchers didn’t know for sure where the virus would be circulating when they were ready to test their vaccine.

So the researchers hedged their bets and chose a large number, “primarily due to the uncertainty as to where those infections … will happen,” says Holly Janes, a biostatistician at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.

What determines whether the trial is successful?

By conducting a large trial, researchers hope to learn whether the vaccine is safe and whether it prevents infection.

Initial safety studies were done by testing a small number of healthy volunteers. A large trial should reveal less common side effects.

To determine whether the vaccine is working, researchers will compare the number of infections in the people receiving the active vaccine with the number of infections in the people receiving the inert placebo.

The Food and Drug Administration is the federal agency that will decide whether to authorize the use of the vaccine. It has said a vaccine must reduce infections in the vaccinated group by at least 50% to be considered.

When will we know if the vaccine is working?

That’s not clear.

These are what’s called event-driven trials. “An event-driven trial means that the primary analysis of the trial happens when you get enough events,” Janes says. “We don’t know how long that’s going to take.”

By “events,” Janes means laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 disease. Janes says the trial now underway aims to get at least 150 events among the trial participants.

To make sure the researchers are unaware of who’s getting the vaccine and who’s getting a placebo, an independent body will track the data as they’re collected. That data safety monitoring board is made up of experts in all aspects of clinical trial design and implementation.

What’s the drawback to putting out a vaccine too soon?

If the vaccine doesn’t work well, people would continue to get sick and die. A vaccine that is only 50% effective would still mean people could get COVID-19, but even a partially effective vaccine would make the pandemic more manageable.

Releasing a vaccine with serious side effects, even rare ones, would mean perfectly healthy people would put their health at risk if they got the vaccine.

If the vaccine is perceived as a flop by the public, it will undermine confidence in the government.

What vaccines are being tested now, and how can I sign up?

All vaccines being tested in the U.S. can be found on the government website ClinicalTrials.gov. Moderna, Pfizer and AstraZeneca are conducting large studies now. Johnson & Johnson and Novavax should be starting their big tests in the next month or two.

You can contact NPR science correspondent Joe Palca at jpalca@npr.org.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/09/07/909713885/how-can-you-tell-if-a-covid-19-vaccine-is-working

California fire officials have sourced the ongoing 7,000-acre El Dorado Fire burning near Oak Glen in San Bernardino County to a “smoke generating pyrotechnic device” at a gender reveal party Saturday morning in Yucaipa’s El Dorado Ranch Park.

“The fire spread from the park to the north on to Yucaipa Ridge that separates Mountain Home Village and Forest Falls from the City of Yucaipa,” said the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or Cal Fire, in a statement posted on Instagram last night. The statement also “reminds the public that with the dry conditions and critical fire weather, it doesn’t take much to start a wildfire. Those responsible for starting fires due to negligence or illegal activity can be held financially and criminally responsible.”

Devices that release pink or blue smoke are sometimes used at gender reveal parties. According to reports, the family that hosted the Yucaipa party remained at the scene, where they told officials the fire was an accident. The family could be held financially or criminally responsible, and security footage apparently captured the incident.

The El Dorado blaze is only one of various wildfires that ignited since Friday as California experiences a record heatwave. Los Angeles has reported a temperature of 121 degrees, the city’s highest ever.

Late Sunday, California Governor Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency in five counties, including Fresno, Madera, Mariposa, San Bernardino and San Diego, the governor’s office said in a statement. According to the governor’s office, the fires have burned tens of thousands of acres, destroyed homes and caused the evacuation of thousands of residents.

“Governor Newsom has declared a statewide emergency due to the widespread fires and extreme weather conditions, and secured a Presidential Major Disaster Declaration to bolster the state’s emergency response to the Northern California wildfires,” Newsom’s office said in a statement. “California has also secured Fire Management Assistance Grants from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to support the state’s response to fires burning in Santa Clara, Stanislaus, Santa Cruz, San Mateo, Napa, Nevada, Lake, Solano, Yolo and Monterey counties.”

The state’s death toll from wildfires over the last three weeks has reached eight. Newsom’s declaration was prompted by the Creek Fire that has swept across thousands of acres in the Sierra National Forest since its start on Friday night.

Source Article from https://deadline.com/2020/09/california-wildfire-gender-reveal-party-pyrotechnics-el-dorado-1234572107/

Rochester, N.Y., Mayor Lovely Warren (D) on Sunday vowed to enact police reforms amid protests in response to the death of Daniel Prude, a Black man who died of asphyxiation earlier this year after local police put a hood over his head and pressed his head to a street for two minutes.

“Over the last few nights, we have seen righteous anger and heartfelt protests from many residents of our community. I know the vast majority of the people that have taken to our streets do so with pure hearts, good intentions to ensure tragedies like the death of Mr. Prude never happen again,” she said at a press conference.

“It is my solemn duty as the mayor of this city to honor Mr. Prude and to not let his death be in vain and to do everything possible to transform how we police our city, to truly protect and serve our residents,” she said.

Prude died at the age of 41 in March after police in Rochester were seen putting a hood on his face and holding his face to the ground for two minutes. He had been apprehended by local police after running naked outside, according to The Associated Press.

He was reportedly placed on life support within days of the encounter and died after being taken off. The case only garnered widespread publicity following the release of videos of records by Prude’s family last week.

Amid continued protests in the city over the death of Prude, Warren said on Sunday that the city will be doubling its availability of mental health professionals. She also said the city will be taking its family crisis intervention team “out of the police department and move it and its funding to the Department of Youth and Recreation Services.”

She also said she will be working with a race commission to better the city’s response to mental health crises and reenvision our police department.”

“However, this work wont be done in a week or in a weekend,” she said, adding, “To do this right, we would need to continue to deliver consistent progressive the coming weeks, months and years.”

“But I am committed addressing these challenges and ensuring that change truly comes,” she said.

La’Ron Singletary, the local police chief, also delivered remarks at the press conference on Sunday, saying he understands “there are certain calls that law enforcement shouldn’t handle alone” as concerns rise over the department’s handling of mental health cases following Prude’s death.

He also said and other officials are “looking at ways to reimagine policing surrounding mental health and have been for the last several months.”

This past week, New York Attorney General Letitia James (D) said her office will be selecting a grand jury as part of its “exhaustive investigation” into Prude’s death. Warren also suspended the seven officers that were involved in his death last week.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/515344-rochester-mayor-announces-reforms-after-daniel-prudes-death

“Michael Cohen is a disgraced felon and disbarred lawyer who lied to Congress,” she said in a statement. “He has lost all credibility, and it’s unsurprising to see his latest attempt to profit off of lies.” A spokeswoman for the Trump Organization did not respond to an email seeking comment.

In Mr. Cohen’s telling, his lies were on behalf of Mr. Trump, whether it was in investigations or in trying to win him good headlines. Mr. Cohen pleaded guilty in 2018 to a handful of financial crimes and a campaign finance violation related to the payments to the former adult-film actress, Stephanie Clifford, who went by the stage name Stormy Daniels.

Mr. Cohen is defiant about those actions in the book, maintaining that he is innocent of some of the crimes he pleaded guilty to and that he was a victim of “the conviction machine” of the U.S. government, which also threatened his wife. He writes in detail about how he was released from a minimum security prison in Otisville, N.Y., to serve the rest of his sentence at home, only to be thrown back in prison because he would not initially sign a document prohibiting him from publishing the book. A judge later ruled that the move by the government was retaliatory, and Mr. Cohen was released to home confinement for the remainder of his sentence.

He sheds little new light on what he shared with Robert S. Mueller III, the former special counsel investigating possible ties between the Trump campaign and Russian officials, and maintains that Mr. Trump’s soft spot for Mr. Putin is mostly about possible business deals and a general admiration for authoritarian power, as well as a shared hatred of Hillary Clinton.

Mr. Trump loved Mr. Putin for his audacity “to take over an entire nation and run it like it was his personal company — like the Trump Organization, in fact,” Mr. Cohen writes.

The possibility of a Trump Tower project in Moscow was enticing to his boss, Mr. Cohen writes, saying that the businessman’s children did not favor Felix Sater, a felon and consultant with deep ties to Russia who had brought in the project. So Mr. Cohen handled it, he writes. That project became something that was examined by Mr. Mueller.

Mr. Cohen describes the Trump Organization as loosely reminiscent of the mafia, with Mr. Trump as the would-be family don.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/06/us/politics/cohen-book-trump.html

President Donald Trump says Congress should send second stimulus checks now and use $300 billion in remaining Covid relief funds.

Here’s what you need to know.

Stimulus Package

During remarks Friday at The White House, Trump said Congress should redirect unused Coronavirus relief funds to fund second stimulus checks for the American people.

“Now, we have $300 billion in a — an account that we didn’t use — $300 billion,” Trump said. “And we are willing to use that. I would be willing to release it, subject to Congress, and use that as stimulus money, and it would go right to the American people. So we have $300 billion sitting in an account that we didn’t need because things are going so well with the economy.”

According to Fox Business, Trump may be referring to money appropriated for small business loans. As part of the Cares Act — the $2.2 trillion stimulus package that that Congress approved in March — Congress appropriated $500 billion. Of that amount, $454 billion was appropriated to cover losses on lending programs. Of that funding, $259 billion remains uncommitted.

“Again, we have $300 billion ready to go,” Trump said. “All Congress has to do is say, “Use it.” If they say, “Use it” — I’d like to use it without their permission, but I guess I’m not allowed to do that. I did ask that question. So Congress has to just say, “Use it.” All they have to do is say, “Use it”; $300 billion gets immediately put into our system, and will really help the American people. There’s nothing else to do — just a very quick statement.”

Democrats and Republicans in Congress have agreed in principle on a $1,200 second stimulus check for individuals and $2,400 check for married/joint filers, which is the same amount as the first stimulus check. However, Republicans want $500 for dependents, while Democrats called for $1,200 for each dependent, with a maximum of three dependents. After an impasse on a broader stimulus package, Congress has not approved a second stimulus check since leaving for summer recess in mid-August.


Stimulus update: Congress back in session

The Senate is back in session tomorrow. What’s the latest update on the stimulus? Senate Republicans may propose a new “skinny” stimulus bill as early as this week. The new stimulus legislation could be approximately $500 billion, which is roughly half the size of the Heals Act, which Senate Republicans proposed earlier this summer. This new stimulus bill could include several areas where there may be bipartisan support on policy topics, but not necessarily on funding amounts:

  • $300 weekly unemployment benefits
  • $105 billion in school funding
  • $250 billion in funding for the Payment Protection Program (PPP)
  • $10 billion grant to the U.S. Postal Service

However, the new stimulus bill is not expected to include any stimulus checks. However, it’s possible after Trump’s remarks that Republicans could alter the proposed legislation to include a second round of checks. Will this new legislation pass? It’s unlikely. While more Senate Republicans would support a smaller legislative proposal, Democrats want a larger bill. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-CA) are likely unwilling to agree on an even smaller bill than the Heals Act, which at $1 trillion was deemed too small. Democrats initially proposed a $3 trillion stimulus package (the Heroes Act), although Pelosi said Democrats would be willing to agree to a $2.2 trillion bill.

“The speaker has refused to sit down and negotiate unless we agree to something like a $2.5 trillion deal in advance,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Fox News Sunday. “Let’s do a more targeted bill now and if we need to do more in 30 days we’ll continue to do more, but let’s not hold up the American workers and the American businesses that need more support.”

Democrats want $1 trillion in funding for state and local governments, $600 weekly unemployment benefits and $60 billion for food insecurity, among other initiatives.


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Trump: Student loans may be extended for “additional periods of time”

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Stimulus: here are the latest numbers for second stimulus checks and more

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Don’t expect student loan forgiveness in next stimulus bill

Student loan refinancing rates are incredibly cheap

Source Article from https://www.forbes.com/sites/zackfriedman/2020/09/07/second-stimulus-checks-trump/