WASHINGTON (NEXSTAR) — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Sunday morning a deal on federal coronavirus aid needs to be struck within 48 hours to get relief to Americans before Election Day.

Pelosi spoke on ABC’s “This Week” saying she and the White House are at an “impasse” over a bipartisan deal that’s expected to send $1,200 checks to most Americans.

“We don’t have agreement on the language yet,” Pelosi said.

That language centers around testing requirements and contract tracing for coronavirus infections as well as ensuring the bill addresses “disproportionate impact on communities of color,” according to the New York Times.

As negotiations between Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin make little movement, the Senate is set to vote this week on a $500 billion “skinny” recovery bill that does not include stimulus checks.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announced plans for a Wednesday vote. He says the bill will include money for schools, expanded unemployment benefits and additional funding for the Paycheck Protection Program.

“Nobody thinks this $500B+ proposal would resolve every problem forever,” McConnell said in a Saturday statement. “It would deliver huge amounts of additional help to workers and families right now while Washington keeps arguing over the rest.”

The “skinny” bill is in stark contrast to a much larger package that would include additional $1,200 direct payments being pushed by President Donald Trump and shows a divide not only between Democrats and Republicans — but inside GOP leadership.

When the Senate votes on the measure this week, it will largely be symbolic. Democrats, including Pelosi, have gone on record saying they aren’t interested in a smaller-bore approach to virus relief.

According to the Washington Post, Pelosi and Mnuchin continued talks Saturday around a spending deal between $1.8 trillion and $2.2 trillion. Trump has said he would support even more and noted during Thursday’s town hall with NBC that Republicans “will agree with it.”

“They’ll go,” he told moderator Savannah Guthrie. “I haven’t asked them to because I can’t get through Nancy Pelosi.”

Right now, GOP senators being willing to “go” doesn’t seem likely.

McConnell and his colleagues in the Senate have expressed little to no interest in a bill larger than the approximately $500 billion proposal they’ll be rolling out. Many political insiders speculate Republican lawmakers are concerned about cutting a large spending bill with Pelosi just weeks before control of the Senate is put in the hands of voters.

Along those same lines, pundits question whether Pelosi would cut a deal with Republicans less than three weeks before a tight presidential election. While stimulus checks have been widely pushed by Democrats, they could also be viewed as a win for the president. When the first round of checks was distributed, Trump’s signature was on each of the payments. If Trump was able to get a second round of relief distributed as people are heading to the polls for early voting, it would certainly be something to brag about before the election.

“A fly on the wall or wherever else it might land in the Oval Office tells me that the President only wants his name on a check to go out before Election Day and for the market to go up,” Pelosi said in a letter to her colleagues last week.

She defended her hardline position, claiming Democrats have more leverage than ever. But the risk of emerging empty-handed until next year appears very real.

Talks on the latest potential round of COVID relief began in July, collapsed in August, and were revived last month. Two weeks ago, we saw Trump cause the talks to collapse, only to revive them heading into the weekend. They then cratered again last weekend after Trump’s latest $1.8 trillion proposal took heavy fire from both Democrats and Trump’s GOP allies.

Republicans are back to offering smaller, targeted aid that would permit endangered party members to again go on record in favor of aid, even if it’s a nonstarter with Democrats and opposed by Trump.

“What I hear from Sen. McConnell is once again take a little piece and be satisfied. What I hear from the president just the opposite,” said Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill. “Can the two of them sit down and agree? Wouldn’t that be a breakthrough?”

Some Democrats are convinced that Joe Biden is poised to reclaim the White House and have been pressuring Pelosi to strike a less ambitious deal that would deliver aid now rather than letting the economy to continue to struggle without help until next year. Pelosi’s response was to gather statements from a host of committee chairmen criticizing the administration’s latest offer.

“If Congress doesn’t act, the next president will inherit a real mess,” said Harvard economist Jason Furman, a former top adviser to President Barack Obama. “If the Mnuchin offer could be passed by the Senate — which is a huge “if” — that would be a lot better than waiting to get even more in January.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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The Biden campaign is facing renewed criticism over its deep connections with Big Tech after both Twitter and Facebook censored a story from The New York Post detailing allegedly corrupt business deals by Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden.

FORMER KAMALA HARRIS PRESS SECRETARY IS TOP TWITTER COMMUNICATIONS OFFICIAL, ANNOUNCED REMOVAL OF CLIP

The move prompted fresh criticism on social media over the Biden transition team’s hiring of top Facebook executive Jessica Hertz, which reportedly came days after the 2020 Democrat’s campaign penned a letter to the social media giant urging them to censor President Trump’s posts.

Twitter’s suppression of the Hunter Biden revelations also came days after the company’s director of public policy, Carlos Monje, reportedly left his post to work for the Biden transition team.

Joe Concha, a media reporter for The Hill, underscored the timing of the events on Twitter Sunday after a user observed that the New York Post is “still locked out of its Twitter account for publishing a story that made Joe Biden look bad.”

TWITTER LOCKS OFFICIAL TRUMP CAMPAIGN ACCOUNT AFTER SHARING HUNTER BIDEN VIDEO

“In a related story, Carlos Monje recently left Twitter as director of public policy to join Joe Biden’s transitional team,” Concha wrote. 

Other Twitter users accused the Biden campaign of “not even trying to hide it at all,” noting that both Hertz and Monje have history working for Democrats.

Hertz was principal deputy counsel in the Office of the Vice President from 2012 to 2014 according to her LinkedIn, while Monje worked on the Obama White House’s Domestic Policy Council according to his LinkedIn.

Hertz will oversee enforcement of the Biden campaign’s ethics plan and related matters.
“As the Vice President’s former deputy counsel with experience advising high-level federal agency officials, Jess is exactly the kind of thoughtful and principled decision-maker who can ensure the Vice President’s high standards are upheld during the transition,” a campaign spokesperson told the New York Post.

Biden has come under fire from progressives for criticizing Big Tech while hiring or accepting advice from some of its defenders.

Out of the Biden campaign’s nearly 700-person volunteer advisory group, eight members work for Facebook, Apple, Google or Amazon, the New York Times reported in August.

“Many technology giants and their executives have not only abused their power but misled the American people, damaged our democracy and evaded any form of responsibility,” a Biden spokesperson told the New York Times at the time. “Anyone who thinks that campaign volunteers or advisers will change Joe Biden’s fundamental commitment to stopping the abuse of power and stepping up for the middle class doesn’t know Joe Biden.”

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Fox News’ inquiries to the Biden campaign and Trump campaign were not immediately returned.

Fox News’ Yael Halon contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/social-media-backlash-facebook-twitter-hunter-biden

Thousands of American-flag-waving Trump supporters descended upon Newport Beach on Sunday in anticipation of the president’s arrival for a fundraiser to bolster his reelection bid on Nov. 3.

Red MAGA hats were ubiquitous in the crowd and masks were scant. The sound of country music mingled with shouts of “Four more years!”

Meanwhile, hundreds of Armenian Americans joined the demonstration, in a show of solidarity with Armenia in its battle with neighboring Azerbaijan over a small separatist region on the border of the former Soviet republics. They demanded that Trump take action against Turkey, which has expressed support for Azerbaijan.

“Armenia needs Trump!” a protester, his shoulders draped in the orange, red and blue Armenian flag, yelled into a megaphone. “Save Christian Armenia!” Many of the Armenian American demonstrators were also Trump supporters.

Read the full story on LATimes.com.

Source Article from https://ktla.com/news/local-news/thousands-of-trump-supporters-descend-on-o-c-ahead-of-his-arrival-for-newport-beach-fundraiser/

The Lefthand Canyon Drive has grown to about 300 acres and has now prompted evacuations for Ward, Sunshine Canyon and Gold Hill, but aerial firefighting efforts were able to help stop its spread Sunday afternoon.

Ward, along with homes along Spring Gulch Road and on the 13,000 block of Lefthand Canyon, was evacuated shortly after 1 p.m., when a neighbor called in the fire. Altogether, at least 145 homes have been evacuated, according to the Boulder Office of Emergency Management.

Homes north of Ward, Gold Hill and Sunshine Canyon area are now also under mandatory evacuation orders, which can be found at bouldercounty.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=13ab214fe2bb4da5a850df0ca0f00fc5.

Jamestown, which was under voluntary evacuation for the Cal-Wood Fire, is now also under voluntary evacuation for this fire as well.

Boulder County officials said that due to an error with some third-party alert systems such as Amazon’s Alexa, some residents of Boulder and Longmont were told evacuate even though those cities are not in the evacuation area.

The fire was reported shortly before 1 p.m. and was growing because of heavy winds, according to scanner traffic. Crews initially estimated the Lefthand Canyon Fire at five acres, and by about 7 p.m. Boulder County sheriff’s Division Chief Mike Wagner said the fire was estimated to be 312 acres in size.

However, a difference in weather conditions between the two burn areas allowed aerial units that could not operate on the Cal-Wood Fire to divert to the Lefthand Fire, which Wagner said was a large factor in crews being able to keep the fire north of Lefthand Canyon.

At this time, no cause is known and Wagner said it is not known if any structures were lost.

Lefthand Canyon Drive is closed at Peak to Peak Highway and Sawmill Road. Old Depot Road, Humboldt Street, Gold Lake Road and County Road 100 are all closed at Peak to Peak Highway.

Nederland deputy town administrator Miranda Fisher, left, and Nederland Police Officer Erich Gerthe direct evacuees from the Lefthand Canyon Fire to the lower parking lot of the Nederland Community Center on Sunday in Nederland. (Timothy Hurst/Staff Photographer)

An evacuation point has been set up at Nederland Community Center, 750 Peak to Peak Highway. Large animals can be taken to the Gilpin County Fairgrounds, 230 Norton Drive in Blackhawk.

Several evacuees brought their campers to the Nederland Community Center and planned to spend the night in the parking lot, including Becky Martinek.

Martinek, whose home is in Indian Gulch below Ward, said this is the first time she’s had to evacuate in her 45 years living there — though she did have evacuated friends stay at her house previously during both the Fourmile Fire and the floods.

She planned to spend the night in her camper with her dog, Maybelline, allowing her to check the fire’s progress from a nearby overlook. If she isn’t allowed home Monday, she plans to stay with friends in east Boulder County.

She said she first got notice of the Lefthand Canyon Fire on Facebook, then was told five minutes later by a Forest Service employee to evacuate. The fire started one ridge over from where she lives, she said, adding she was able to pack quickly using the same list she made 10 years ago during the Fourmile Fire.

“I was organized and already on alert because of the (Cal-Wood Fire),” she said.

The fire started as crews in Boulder County were already fighting the Cal-Wood Fire, which has grown to almost 9,000 acres just north of the Lefthand Canyon Fire.

Source Article from https://www.dailycamera.com/firefighters-responding-to-wildfire-at-lefthand-canyon-property-near-ward

Supporters listen as Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden speaks during a drive-in campaign event at Riverside High School in Durham, N.C., on Sunday.

Carolyn Kaster/AP


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Supporters listen as Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden speaks during a drive-in campaign event at Riverside High School in Durham, N.C., on Sunday.

Carolyn Kaster/AP

Joe Biden’s campaign is urging its supporters not to become complacent in the final weeks of the presidential race, even as polling suggests the former vice president remains ahead of President Trump in several key swing states.

“The very searing truth is that Donald Trump can still win this race, and every indication we have shows that this thing is going to come down to the wire,” Biden campaign manager Jen O’Malley Dillon wrote in a memo to supporters on Saturday.

“The reality is that this race is far closer than some of the punditry we’re seeing on Twitter and on TV would suggest,” O’Malley Dillon wrote. “In the key battleground states where this election will be decided, we remain neck and neck with Donald Trump.”

Campaigns often have motivation to keep backers invested in the race. But in fact it is polling — in addition to some punditry — that finds Biden leading.

In the latest NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll, published Thursday, Biden leads Trump 54% to 43% nationally among likely voters.

And the Democratic nominee is ahead by several percentage points in critical states like Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, according to Real Clear Politics polling averages — with smaller margins in places like Florida and North Carolina.

Biden campaigned in Durham, N.C., on Sunday, urging supporters gathered at a drive-in event to vote and noting that the state’s early voting period began Thursday.

President Trump attends services at the International Church of Las Vegas on Sunday.

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Trump, meanwhile, has had a busy weekend of campaigning. He made stops in Michigan and Wisconsin Saturday, before heading west. He visited a church in Las Vegas Sunday morning, and then holds a rally in Carson City, Nev., on Sunday evening. On Monday he heads to Arizona.

In her memo, O’Malley Dillon referenced 2016, when Trump won the Electoral College (despite losing the popular vote), though polls had Hillary Clinton as the favorite.

“If we learned anything from 2016, it’s that we cannot underestimate Donald Trump or his ability to claw his way back into contention in the final days of a campaign,” she wrote.

She noted a recent injection of millions of dollars to pro-Trump super PACs, saying they could “very easily erase our financial advantage with the stroke of a pen.”

She was likely referring to the $75 million cash infusion to Preserve America PAC by casino magnate and billionaire Sheldon Adelson and his wife, Miriam.

Although Trump began his reelection campaign with a big financial advantage, Biden and his allies have raked in record-breaking hauls each month since the summer.

Last week, Biden’s campaign announced that along with allied Democratic groups it raised $383 million in September alone.

His campaign says it currently has $432 million on hand and has been outspending Trump by $240 million on TV ads in six key states.

In the memo, O’Malley Dillon said the campaign is projecting to raise another $234 million before Nov. 3.

She wrote that the campaign is investing over $100 million in on-the-ground organizing, with nearly 3,500 staff in key states.

The Biden operation had eschewed in-person canvasing for months, due to concerns about the pandemic, before reversing its decision early this month.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/10/18/925102703/biden-campaign-warns-supporters-donald-trump-can-still-win-this-race

Without a deal within 48 hours, there won’t be enough time to pass a coronavirus stimulus bill before Election Day, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Sunday.

Pelosi, D-Calif., said on ABC’s “This Week” that she wanted to make a deal before Nov. 3, but there had to be a deadline so the bill could be drafted and passed in time. The House has passed a $2.2 trillion measure while the White House has offered $1.8 trillion.

“We’re saying to them, ‘We have to freeze the design on some of these things. Are we going with it or not, and what is the language?’ ” Pelosi said.

“I’m optimistic because, again, we’ve been back and forth on all of this,” she said. “Because we want to have an agreement, we can come to negotiation. And we can do it now.”

She repeated that optimism later in a letter to members of the House Democratic Caucus.

Senate Republicans, meanwhile, scheduled votes on their own scaled-down legislation Tuesday and Wednesday.

As the debate over a new stimulus bill continued, Raphael Bostic, chief executive of the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank, said Sunday that the economy has yet to come back in many areas and for many people, particularly low-income residents.

“In some segments, the economy is recovering and rebounding in a very robust way but in other segments, things like hotels and restaurants, small businesses, particularly in minority and low- income communities, those places are seeing much more difficult situations,” Bostic said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

“Those segments where we’re not seeing that recovery, that’s really what I’m concerned about as we move forward,” he said. “What the virus has done is put a wedge in our economy. Those that have been in distress are in much more distress while others are not feeling that at all.”

CORONAVIRUS RESOURCES: Live map tracker | Newsletter | Homepage

One of the main sticking points on negotiations between the White House and Pelosi remain the Democrats’ insistence on a $75 billion national plan for testing, contract tracing and treatment to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

“’Shall,’ is different from ‘may,’” Pelosi said. “If you think of it this simple way: when you say ‘may,’ you’re giving the president a slush fund. He may do this, he may grant, he may withhold. When you say ‘shall,’ according to the scientific – science tells us must happen.”

“And if we test and trace and treat, masks, separate, ventilate, sanitize, and all the rest of that, we can open our schools, we can open our businesses.”

Another issue has been funding for state and local governments.

“The administration continues to fail to meet the well-documented need for funds to protect frontline workers in health care, first responders, sanitation, transportation, food workers, teachers and others, and to prevent service cuts to struggling communities,” Pelosi told House Democrats in her letter.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., announced Saturday that his chamber was prepared to vote on a $500 billion bill that does not include a new round of stimulus payments nor any state and local aid.

He said the Senate would vote Tuesday to extend the paycheck protection program for small businesses, and on a larger measure on Wednesday that included PPP funding, extra unemployment insurance benefits, school aid, and money for testing, tracing and vaccine research and distribution.

“Nobody thinks this $500B+ proposal would resolve every problem forever,” McConnell said. “It would deliver huge amounts of additional help to workers and families right now while Washington keeps arguing over the rest.”

There was no indication whether the Senate measure protects businesses from lawsuits from employees and customers infected by the virus, or includes increased federal subsidies for religious and other private schools. Those provisions were part of a $500 billion GOP bill that failed to get enough votes last month.

Jonathan D. Salant may be reached at jsalant@njadvancemedia.com.

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Source Article from https://www.nj.com/coronavirus/2020/10/second-stimulus-check-pelosi-sets-48-hours-for-pre-election-deal-senate-prepares-to-vote-on-scaled-down-bill-heres-the-latest.html

House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy slammed Big Tech on Sunday for censoring users who tried to share a New York Post article about Hunter Biden, saying Facebook and Twitter should “be ashamed of how they’re so clearly trying to aid the Joe Biden campaign.”

McCarthy, R-Calif., made the comment during an exclusive interview with “Sunday Morning Futures.

“Just as China’s trying to influence our election, we now find that Twitter and Facebook are doing the exact same thing and they should be ashamed and the American public is outraged about this,” McCarthy added.

On Wednesday afternoon, New York Post business reporter Noah Manskar first alerted that the outlet’s official Twitter account had been locked due to the Biden story being sourced from allegedly “hacked” information.

Twitter also locked several other accounts, including that of White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany and NewsBusters managing editor Curtis Houck after they shared the article. Facebook also limited the distribution of the story, claiming that they would rely on its fact-checking partners to determine its legitimacy.

The Post report, which Fox News has not independently verified, contained a purported email between Hunter Biden and an adviser to Ukrainian energy company Burisma Holdings, who thanked the younger Biden for “giving an opportunity” to meet the then-Vice President.

The Biden campaign said the former vice president engaged in “no wrongdoing” and the alleged meeting didn’t take place.

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey addressed the controversy late Wednesday, calling his company’s actions “unacceptable.”

“Our communication around our actions on the @nypost article was not great,” he tweeted. “And blocking URL sharing via tweet or DM with zero context as to why we’re blocking: unacceptable.”

Republican Sens. Ted Cruz, Lindsey Graham and Josh Hawley on Thursday called on the heads of Twitter and Facebook to testify before Congress, as critics claimed the social media platforms have been censoring reporting critical of Democrats.

A Facebook spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment, while Twitter declined to comment on the GOP requests to appear on Capitol Hill.

On Sunday, McCarthy pointed to Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act saying, “it is time now that we scrap Section 230 and we start over.”

SENATE REPUBLICANS CALL ON TWITTER, FACEBOOK BOSSES TO TESTIFY AMID CENSORSHIP CLAIMS, SAY SUBPOENA IN WORKS

Section 230 states that “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.”

It has been pivotal in the rise of social media by allowing not only Internet service providers, but also Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and others to be shielded from liability from content posted on their platforms by third parties in most cases.

“The American public desires free speech, so the federal government created a liability protection for tech companies to have a platform like Facebook and Twitter for liability protection where they cannot be sued so they just let information out and people are able to say what they want,” McCarthy said.

“But now, we’re watching that Big Tech is using this and censoring individuals,” he continued, adding that the social media platforms are “censoring” the federal government, newspapers and Americans “based upon what they believe.”

McCarthy said he thinks Big Tech “want to influence you for what you can think and what you can say.”

Host Maria Bartiromo asked McCarthy when she thinks new legislation is expected.

He responded that if if Republicans “become the majority” following the 2020 election, “I could promise you, you’ll see this legislation in January.”

“But just as [House Speaker] Nancy Pelosi has held any COVID relief for the American public, she has held up any legislation that will hold Big Tech accountable,” McCarthy continued.

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FOX Business’ Evie Fordham and Fox News’ Brooke Singman and Marisa Schultz contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/big-tech-should-be-ashamed-for-censorship-of-hunter-biden-report-rep-mccarthy

Thousands of American-flag-waving Trump supporters descended on Newport Beach on Sunday as the president arrived for a fundraiser to bolster his reelection bid on Nov. 3.

Red MAGA hats were ubiquitous in the crowd, and masks were scant. The sound of country music mingled with shouts of, “Four more years!”

The rally along Pacific Coast Highway and Newport Boulevard was raucous and confrontational at times.

A man from Tustin in a Trump-themed cowboy hat taunted a female Los Angeles Times reporter for wearing a mask.

When the reporter thanked him for the interview and walked away, the man followed her for several minutes, yelling, “Fake news!” while tailing her closely and inviting others in the crowd to harass her.

Shortly afterward, two counter-demonstrators holding a pride flag and a Biden sign were surrounded and heckled by dozens of Trump supporters who shouted, “Biden’s a pedophile!”

Meanwhile, hundreds of Armenian Americans joined the demonstration, in a show of solidarity with Armenia in its battle with neighboring Azerbaijan over a small separatist region on the border of the former Soviet republics. They demanded that Trump take action against Turkey, which has expressed support for Azerbaijan.

“Armenia needs Trump!” a protester, his shoulders draped in the orange, red and blue Armenian flag, yelled into a megaphone. “Save Christian Armenia!” Many of the Armenian American demonstrators were also Trump supporters.

The cash-strapped president comes to deep blue California to raise money 16 days before election day, heading to Newport Beach for a high-dollar fundraiser.

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Melimeh Soukiasian, 36, of Los Angeles said she wasn’t sure yet who she would cast a vote for in November but said she would support Trump if he spoke out against Turkey’s actions.

“Our U.S. tax dollars,” she said, “are funding the weapons that are being used to target civilians and hospitals, sacred churches in Armenia.”

Despite an announced truce, Armenia and Azerbaijan are trading accusations of violating the cease-fire in their conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Teresa Wallace, 67, drove all the way from Palm Springs on Sunday morning to welcome the president to Newport Beach. She was dressed head-to-toe in Trump- and America-themed regalia.

“He’s transparent and he’s handled the coronavirus as well as anybody else could’ve handled it,” Wallace said. “I trust him. He’s a Christian man.”

Lizanne Witte, a 63-year old from Laguna Beach, joined a small group of Biden supporters. She carried a sign that said “Science Makes America Great.”

A few Trump supporters chanted “Four more years” at the group, while others honked from their cars with American flags hanging out of the windows. Some shouted obscenities at Witte, a 32-year resident of Orange County.

“I’ve never seen this side of Orange County,” the community organizer said. “Even in protests about women’s rights and detained children, the reception had been respective differences in opinion. This is just nasty.”

Matt Stoutenburg, a 50-year-old electrical contractor from Tustin, said it was a “chance of a lifetime” to see the president.

“I would love to meet Trump and see Trump,” he said. “Who in their right mind wouldn’t, actually?”

He said he knew he’d be around like-minded people. “When the motorcade came it was that same kind of energy that you feel when you’re in a big stadium and they’re doing the wave,” he said.

Claudine Abraham, a 53-year-old attorney, said the energy in the crowd was electric. “He loves this country and he wants everyone to do well,” she said of the president.

Abraham came with her friend, Laura Alterman, a 54-year-old social worker, and their daughters. While Abraham supports Trump, Alterman and her daughter are liberal. Laura Alterman wore a white HRC hat.

“We’re friends, even though she’s really right, and I’m really left,” Alterman said.

She said she was there “just to witness it all. It’s a big deal, he’s in our town.”

“This has been interesting. I’ve never been this close to the president,” said Laura’s 12 year old daughter Shira Alterman. She said she and her friends call him “a walking Cheeto puff.”

Sabrina Jane Ramos, 37, of Brea, posed with a group of women who shouted “Latinas for Trump” as they waited for the president’s motorcade along Newport Boulevard.

“He rarely comes to California and I wanted the president to know that some of us support him,” the graphic designer said.

Stephanie Lo, 47, of Pomona, said she did not vote for Trump in 2016, but that she is backing him this time around. She wore a navy blue Trump hat as a show of her support.

“I don’t like his personality, but he’s efficient,” she said.

Trump was in Orange County for a fundraiser at the home of Palmer Luckey, a 28-year-old tech mogul. The Long Beach native, among California’s top GOP donors, is working on a defense startup whose projects include using technology to detect immigrants crossing illegally over the border.

Luckey’s Lido Isle mansion overlooks Newport Bay and sits at the tip of a manmade island that is home to about 800 residences and connected to Newport Beach by a two-lane bridge.

Times staff writer Seema Mehta contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-10-18/demonstrators-counter-protesters-president-trump-visit-orange-county

A second wildfire broke out in Boulder County on Sunday, forcing new evacuations in and around Ward.

A map updated as of 3 p.m. Sunday showing the CalWood and Lefthand Canyon fires evacuation zones (in red), pre-evacuation zones (in yellow) and closed road.

The Lefthand Canyon fire burned at least 303 acres after starting near the 14000 block of Lefthand Canyon Drive Sunday.

Homes in Ward, north of Ward and the Gold Hill area and in Sunshine Canyon were ordered to evacuate Sunday.

The evacuation point for the Lefthand Canyon fire is the Nederland Community Center located at 750 CO-72.

Livestock can be housed at the Gilpin County Fairground at 230 Norton Drive in Black Hawk.

About 145 residences must evacuate, according to the Boulder Office of Emergency Management. Evacuation alerts were erroneously sent to some residents in some areas that are not close to the fire, including in Longmont and Louisville, the office said. Those not in the immediate vicinity of the fire do not need to evacuate.

“We use [the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration] to send out alerts because phone lines go down and power outages occur,” the office said in a statement. “We apologize for any confusion or panic that the alerts caused. We are doing our best to get out information to as many people as possible but unfortunately the system didn’t work perfectly.”

The office later clarified in a statement that some third-party alert systems, like Amazon Alexa, sent out notifications to all of Boulder County, instead of just the evacuation areas, because of an issue in the code.

Road closures in the area include:

  • Lefthand Canyon Drive (Nelson St.) at Peak to Peak Highway
  • Old Depot Road at Peak to Peak Highway
  • Humboldt St. at Peak to Peak Highway
  • Lefthand Canyon Drive at Sawmill Road
  • CR 100 at Peak to Peak Highway
  • Gold Lake Road at Peak to Peak Highway

The fire was reported shortly before 1 p.m. and was “pushing uphill” because of heavy winds, The Daily Camera reported.


Wildfire map

Click markers for details, use buttons to change what wildfires are shown. Map data is automatically updated by government agencies and could lag real-time events. Incident types are numbered 1-5 — a type 1 incident is a large, complex wildfire affecting people and critical infrastructure, a type 5 incident is a small wildfire with few personnel involved. Find more information about incident types at the bottom of this page.


Source Article from https://www.denverpost.com/2020/10/18/lefthand-canyon-fire-evacuations-ward/

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Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/elections/2020/10/18/trump-biden-live-updates/

If the two town halls — one with President Donald Trump and one with Democratic nominee Joe Biden — on Thursday weren’t enough for you, October 17’s Saturday Night Live cold open reprised the action. And it threw in a WrestleMania-style folding chair and a bit of Bob Ross for good measure.

The skit, called “Dueling Town Halls,” featured Mikey Day as ABC’s George Stephanopoulos and Kate McKinnon as NBC’s Savannah Guthrie, while Alec Baldwin and Jim Carrey reprised their roles as Trump and Biden, respectively.

“We now present a rebroadcast of those town halls the way most Americans watched them,” a narrator intoned before opening on Day as Stephanopoulos. “Flipping back and forth, trying to decide between a Hallmark movie and an alien autopsy.”

Day opened the skit by warning, “The vibe we’re going for tonight is ‘poorly attended college lecture,’” before an aviator-wearing Carrey appeared to make finger guns at the crowd.

After a rambling Carrey answer ended with a vaccine-related math problem and an entreaty to “please, show your work,” the skit flipped over to McKinnon as she introduced herself as “surprise badass Savannah Guthrie.”

“If you were angry at NBC for doing this town hall,” McKinnon says before teeing up questions about white supremacy and QAnon, “just let me get a few questions in and I think you’ll thank me.”

Satirizing Trump’s refusal to fully condemn QAnon at the real town hall, Baldwin rebuffed McKinnon’s questions about the conspiracy theory.

“You mean the group that thinks Democrats are a cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles, and that I’m their messiah?” Baldwin tells McKinnon. “I don’t know anything about them at all, no.”

McKinnon responded by taking a line almost verbatim from the real-life Guthrie, telling Baldwin, “You can’t just do things like that, you’re not just someone’s crazy uncle.”

From there, the skit cut back and forth between the town halls, featuring Carrey talking to God and Baldwin holds court on Judge “Amy Conan O’Brien.”

Maya Rudolph’s Kamala Harris also made a brief appearance to tell an enthusiastically nodding Black woman in the background of Baldwin’s answer on Roe v. Wade — in reality, a onetime pro-Trump congressional candidate named Mayra Joli — that “I only nod that much when a waiter asks if I’ll be having mimosas at brunch.”

When the skit turns back to Carrey, he begins singing “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” while donning a cardigan, poking fun at senior Trump adviser Mercedes Schlapp’s characterization of Biden’s town hall — which in reality was a staid, wonky affair — as “an episode of Mister Rodgers Neighborhood [sic]”. He next appears as painter Bob Ross in front of an easel featuring a nature scene.

McKinnon’s next appearance in the skit, on the other hand, featured her distracting Baldwin before leveling him with a folding chair to the face.

As the town halls wrap up, soaring music swells: “We have to restore sanity to the nation,” Carrey said. “If elected, I promise I won’t tweet once — because I don’t know how.”

Baldwin, meanwhile, abandoned his closing pitch to voters.

“All right then, just try and take me alive!” he yells as the rest of the cast rushes in to start the show.


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Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2020/10/18/21521533/snl-dueling-town-halls-trump-biden

Saturday Night Live” satirized President Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden’s dueling town halls this weekend by switching back and forth like a viewer watching them on TV.

George Stephanopoulos, played by cast member Mikey Day, said ABC was aiming for a “poorly attended college lecture” vibe with Biden’s socially distanced town hall. He said the audience was made up of people who were “half pro-Biden and half anti-Trump.”

Comedian Jim Carrey reprised his role as “former vice president and future oatmeal spokesperson” Joe Biden.

“Are you ready for softball questions from folks that are already voting for you?” Stephanopoulos asked. He then warned questioners they had to limit how many times they said they hated Trump during their questions. 

ABC SILENT AFTER BIDEN TOWN HALL ATTENDEES IDENTIFIED AS EX-OBAMA SPEECHWRITER, WIFE OF PROMINENT DEMOCRAT 

The channel then switched to NBC where “surprise bada–” Savannah Guthrie, played by cast member Kate McKinnon, assured viewers who were angry at the network for giving Trump a platform after backing out of the second debate: “Just let me get a few questions in and I think you’ll thank me,” she said with a wink.

She said she had a lot of questions to get to but she’d like to start by “tearing” him “a new one.”

Trump, reprised by Alec Baldwin, told Guthrie he “more or less” condemns white supremacy and said his conversation with her was a preview of unpleasant Thanksgiving dinners that would be held across the country. “So crazy uncles, stand back and stand by,” he saluted to the camera.

The channel then continued switching between the town halls, arriving at one point with Biden telling rambling stories like the time he met the real Mickey Mouse at the 1939 World’s Fair, and then with Trump bragging about his health post-coronavirus and his one “beautiful” remaining lung.

CRITICS PAN NBC TOWN HALL, SAVANNAH GUTHRIE FOR ‘DEBATING’ TRUMP, ABC FOR GIVING ‘SOFTBALLS’ TO BIDEN

Maya Rudolph as Kamala Harris briefly crashed Trump’s town hall to take offense to the masked woman seated behind the president who went viral for constantly nodding along with his answers.

If that woman wasn’t planted by the Trump campaign, “I am deeply concerned” for her, Harris/Rudolph said. She noted that she nods that much only when a waiter asks if she’s having mimosas with brunch.

Biden also channeled two late icons of public television — Mister Rogers and “The Joy of Painting” host Bob Ross — as the audience tried to stay awake, while Guthrie whacked Trump with a chair as the NBC town hall devolved into a WrestleMania event.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

In conclusion, Carrey’s Biden promised if elected he would have only one scandal as president that would involve mistaking German Chancellor Angela Merkel for his wife from behind and tell her she had a “rockin’ caboose.”  He also promised not to tweet, “because I don’t know how.”

Trump taunted voters: “Just try to take me alive!”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/saturday-night-live-goes-after-dueling-trump-biden-twon-halls

People wait in line to vote early at the State Farm Arena on Monday, in Atlanta.

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People wait in line to vote early at the State Farm Arena on Monday, in Atlanta.

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Early voting turnout continues to shatter records, as sky-high voter enthusiasm meets the realities of the United States’ creaky machinery of democracy amid a pandemic. That means long lines in some places, administrative errors with some mail ballots, but a system that is working overall according to experts.

“Despite some of those concerns, things are going at this point, reasonably well,” said former Deputy Postmaster General Ronald Stroman, speaking specifically about the expansion of voting by mail.

More than 26 million people have voted as of Saturday, according to the U.S. Elections Project, a turnout tracking database run by University of Florida political scientist Michael McDonald. That’s more than six times the number of votes cast by the same point in 2016.

While there are still more than two weeks to go before Election Day, here are some takeaways from the votes that have already been cast.

Democrats are coming in force

Polling data has indicated for months that Democrats intended vote earlier at much higher rates than Republicans, who were reacting to President Trump’s near-constant false claims that voting by mail would lead to widespread fraud.

We’re now getting evidence from actual voting behavior confirming those polls.

Democrats have cast about 53% of the early votes, according to predictive analysis by the data firm TargetSmart which uses voter data beyond party registration to project turnout trends, compared to 36% by Republicans.

The early voters also tend to trend older. Voters 50 years old or older make up more than 70% of the votes cast according to the TargetSmart analysis. Hundreds of thousands more young people have voted at this point in October, compared to the 2016 election, but they still make up a lower share of the overall total than they did then.

Notably, African-American voters make up a larger share of early voters than in 2016. More than six times as many African-American voters have voted early than had at the same point in the last presidential election, according to Targetsmart’s analysis.

Poll workers assist a voter at the Spectrum Center, during the first day of early voting in Charlotte, North Carolina, on October 15, 2020.

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Poll workers assist a voter at the Spectrum Center, during the first day of early voting in Charlotte, North Carolina, on October 15, 2020.

Grant Baldwin/AFP via Getty Images

Confidence is down

President Trump’s rhetoric has also affected how confident people feel about the electoral process as Election Day approaches.

Overall, the share of registered voters who say elections in the U.S. will be administered well this year has dropped significantly over the past two years, from 81%in October of 2018 to 62%this year, according to a newly-released Pew Research poll.

That decline is driven by Trump supporters, half of whom now say they don’t think elections will be administered well. More than half also say they think absentee ballots won’t be counted correctly.

Those trends worry voting experts, who say confidence in the nuts and bolts of an election’s mechanics are key to that results are accepted as legitimate.

“If significant portions of the public do not have faith that the outcomes of our elections are legitimate, then you quite literally have a divided country,” said Eddie Perez, an elections expert at the OSET Institute. “I don’t mean that rhetorically. You literally have a divided country where the question of having a peaceful transfer of power really is a concern.”

People wait in line to cast their vote during early voting at City Hall in Philadelphia on Oct. 7, 2020.

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People wait in line to cast their vote during early voting at City Hall in Philadelphia on Oct. 7, 2020.

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Long lines, tech problems in some precincts

As early voting began in states like Georgia and Texas last week, long lines quickly formed at some polling places with some voters waiting in line for many hours before casting a ballot.

Computer issues played a big role in those delays, according to officials.

In Georgia, Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said the registration database used to check people in for early voting was bogged down by such the high amount of traffic.

“If you look at the amount of information that’s just flowing, it’s like everyone jumping on I-285 in the morning, and sometimes you have to stagger out the rush hour,” he said, according to Georgia Public Broadcasting’s Stephen Fowler. “Our vendors have been working on that along with our staff to make sure we’re looking at some other optimizations and we should have that probably done by the end of this week.”

In Fort Bend County, Texas, a check-in machine glitch shut down at least four precincts there.

“I, quite frankly, think it’s a form of voter suppression,” said a voter named Renee told Houston Public Media’s Elizabeth Trovall, after waiting in line to vote for nearly four hours. “There’s no way there should be a glitch on the first day of early voting. No way… I’ve just never seen anything like this ever.”

Election officials and experts have warned all summer that some in-person voting locations would probably be plagued by longer lines this fall, as jurisdictions have had to consolidate polling places and recruit more poll workers.

Another factor: social distancing efforts can may make even relatively short lines seem much longer.

But lines have been the exception across the country overall, not the rule. And there’s also optimism that precincts that have struggled with lines will start to see them ease as early voting continues.

Gwinnett County, Ga., for instance, was reporting lengthy waits earlier this week at a number of precincts, but by Friday afternoon, the county’s online wait tracker showed no wait longer than 90 minutes.

“Many people are passionate about participating in this election,” said Perez. “And so it’s appropriate that there’s a lot of bottled up demand for people to get there right away and get their vote in. The volumes you’re seeing on the very first day of early voting will probably taper off some later in the period.”

An election worker sorts a box of mail ballots in Doral, Fla. on Oct. 15, 2020.

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An election worker sorts a box of mail ballots in Doral, Fla. on Oct. 15, 2020.

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More mail, more problems

States have rapidly scaled up their vote-by-mail efforts to serve the 40% of voters who now say they plan to vote that way.

But with an increase in usage, also comes a corresponding increase in administrative errors. Reports are cropping up seemingly daily of another batch of ballots that went out to voters with some sort of mistake.

Last week, Allegheny County, Penn. announced that the company in charge of printing and mailing ballots mistakenly sent nearly 29,000 voters the wrong ballots. Last month, similar clerical issues affected the mail ballots of thousands of voters in Ohio and New York.

“With a little under three weeks to go, it’s imperative that we ensure that our elections system is one that voters can trust,” said Allegheny County Elections manager Dave Voye on Wednesday, as WESA’s Lucy Perkins reported. “This was a failure on behalf of our contractor and impacts too many of our voters.”

The county added a search function on its website so voters can check whether they were one of those affected, and it will also send all the voters new ballots.

Stroman, the former deputy postmaster general, who is now a senior fellow at the Democracy Fund, said it’s important to remember that in all these instances, officials caught their errors with enough time to fix them. Officials also have safeguards in place to make sure no one votes twice.

“I think to this point, what we’re seeing are pretty much the normal mistakes, exacerbated by a global pandemic,” Stroman said.

President Trump has sought to use these sorts of problems as evidence that the entire system of voting by mail is flawed or fraudulent in some way.

But these sorts of issues happen every election, says Kathleen Hale, an election administration expert at Auburn University, and they aren’t the sign of anything nefarious or broken.

“A significant portion of the process is conducted by human beings,” Hale said. “And they’re not perfect.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/10/18/924182086/early-voting-analysis-historic-turnout-drives-long-lines-administrative-errors

A bitterly divided country deadlocked in a 269-269 Electoral College tie turns to the House of Representatives to select the next president.

The unusual constitutional scenario is considered so far-fetched — it hasn’t happened since 1824 — that it was written into the plot of the fifth season of HBO comedy series “Veep” and its send-up of the political class.

“I don’t want to end up in the Supreme Court and I don’t want to go back to Congress either, even though we have an advantage,” Trump said of the election at a Sept. 26 Pennsylvania rally.

Pelosi fired back in a letter to House Democrats two days later, encouraging members to support candidates in “key districts” across the country.

“If Trump can’t win at the ballot box, he wants the House to deliver him the presidency,” she wrote. “It’s sad we have to plan this way, but it’s what we must do to ensure the election is not stolen.”

Republicans hold advantage in the House

Under the Constitution’s 12th Amendment, the House would select the next president and the Senate would pick the vice president if no candidate has a majority of Electoral College votes.

By law, states have until Dec. 8 to certify their results or have the state legislature appoint electors to the Electoral College, which is set to convene on Dec. 14. Congress is set to formally count electors’ votes and declare a winner on Jan. 6.

In the scenario of a tie, each state would only have a single vote in the House of Representatives. The party with more House seats would determine the presidential vote.

Republicans control 26 state delegations, while Democrats hold 23. Pennsylvania is split between both parties, and Republicans also have a chance to break even with Democrats in Michigan and Minnesota if they capture one additional seat in each state.

That math is on the minds of Democratic leaders, donors and strategists in the final weeks of the election. With most Democratic candidates in Trump-leaning districts flush with cash and leading Republican challengers in public and private polling, the party is working to expand the map and give the party a broader path to securing their House majority.

That includes investments in suburban contests in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Florida, but also in newly competitive races in rural Montana and Alaska, which each have a single seat in Congress and were carried by Trump by 15% to 20% in 2016.

Democrats control the delegations of several competitive presidential battleground states — such as Arizona, Iowa, Minnesota and Nevada — by a single seat, while Republicans have a single-seat advantage in Florida.

Pelosi ‘prepared’ for every election scenario

Pelosi decided to acknowledge the scenario of the House deciding a contested election in a public letter to colleagues after Trump repeatedly mentioned the possibility and amid his refusal to commit to a peaceful transfer of power.

“I had been working on this for a while. I’ve been working on almost every scheme he might have to steal the election. And kind of sub rosa — since he went public, then so did I,” she said in a late-September MSNBC appearance of Trump’s comments about the House determining the outcome of the election.

In addition to signaling Democrats’ preparations for any election outcome, Pelosi’s comments also served as a reminder to Democrats and donors not to lose sight of competitive House races amid the presidential contest.

“It’s helpful to remind donors and other groups that the presidential race gets a ton of attention, the Senate gets a ton of attention, and we have to take all of the steps available to us to make sure we aren’t missing these opportunities,” Caitlin Legacki, the communications director for the Democratic House Majority PAC, told ABC News, referring to securing more seats in the House.

Kyle Kondik, the managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball, a political newsletter published by the University of Virginia Center for Politics, said it would be “unlikely” the presidential race would end in an Electoral College tie, noting Biden’s consistent lead over Trump for several months in national and battleground state polls, but sketched out several possible scenarios based on the results of the 2016 election.

One would involve Biden winning every state carried by 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, flipping Michigan and Pennsylvania and carrying the electoral vote from Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District. (Nebraska and Maine, unlike other states, award Electoral College votes by congressional district in addition to allocating electoral votes to the state’s popular vote winner.)

But a world where Democrats are in position to retake House seats in Alaska and Montana and win control of their delegations, he added, is “a world in which Biden is over 270 electoral votes” — making the balance of the House moot in determining the next president.

Derek Muller, a law professor at the University of Iowa who wrote about the issue ahead of the 2016 election, called the possibility of the House determining the next president “very unlikely” in an era of two major political parties.

“Those scenarios come closest when it looks like a third party swoops in and captures some set of electoral votes that sort of deprives the winner of a majority,” he said, pointing to the results of the 1824 presidential election – when a race between four candidates led to a deadlock, and eventually, the House selecting John Quincy Adams as president.

“It remains a possibility, but I think a very remote one,” Mueller said.

David Mandel, who served as showrunner and executive producer of “Veep,” isn’t losing sleep over the odds, either.

“Nothing shocks me, but of all the many, many things that come to fruition on Planet Earth that may hit first, this is the least of them,” Mandel, a Democrat who has helped raise money for the party, told ABC News.

Electoral College complications

Short of an Electoral College tie, election experts have pointed to several other improbable scenarios that could throw the White House race into chaos into January, when Congress certifies results.

While 32 states and the District of Columbia require presidential electors to pledge their votes to the winner of the popular vote in their states, “faithless” electors could refuse to vote for the candidate who wins the popular vote.

Another concern is the possibility of disputed results in certain contested states with divided governments — such as Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, which have Democratic governors and GOP-held legislatures.

If the leaders of divided states can’t agree on the results of the election, they could each send their own slate of electors to Washington, leaving it up to party leaders to determine which group to recognize from a given state.

“There’s a difference between Congress having to make the decision about which votes to count, which would give a candidate 270 or more, and then its decision if nobody gets to 270,” said Muller, who downplayed the likelihood of that possibility.

It’s only happened once since the 1800s: In 1960, Hawaii sent two groups of electors to Washington, and Congress eventually recognized the Democratic electors. But Hawaii’s electoral votes wouldn’t have changed the outcome of the race between then-Sen. John F. Kennedy and Vice President Richard Nixon.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/house-decide-president/story?id=73640149

House Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiLatest Mnuchin-Pelosi call produces ‘encouraging news on testing’ for stimulus package McConnell details 0 billion COVID-19 bill set for Wednesday vote Graham: Congress should go ‘big and smart’ on COVID-19 package MORE‘s (D-Calif.) deputy chief of staff Drew Hammill said Saturday that there has been some “encouraging news on testing” following the speaker’s call with Treasury Secretary Steven MnuchinSteven Terner MnuchinLatest Mnuchin-Pelosi call produces ‘encouraging news on testing’ for stimulus package McConnell details 0 billion COVID-19 bill set for Wednesday vote Pelosi defends not speaking to Trump for an entire year MORE to discuss the details on a possible fifth coronavirus relief package. 

The call is the latest development in the back-and-forth stimulus negotiations that have appeared to grind to a halt as the White House has thus far been unable to hammer out a deal with congressional leadership. 

The news comes as President TrumpDonald John TrumpLatest Mnuchin-Pelosi call produces ‘encouraging news on testing’ for stimulus package China warns it will detain American nationals following DOJ prosecution of Chinese scholars: report Musician John Fogerty issues cease and desist over Trump use of ‘Fortunate Son’ MORE and his administration are pushing to pass a stimulus bill just weeks before the Nov. 3 election. Earlier this month, Trump encouraged Congress to “go big or go home” on a coronavirus stimulus package after he had called off negotiations altogether in a tweet. 

However, Senator Majority Leader Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellLatest Mnuchin-Pelosi call produces ‘encouraging news on testing’ for stimulus package Washington flooded with Women’s March protesters ahead of Barrett confirmation vote McConnell details 0 billion COVID-19 bill set for Wednesday vote MORE (R-Ky.) and other top Republicans have balked at stimulus offers over $1 trillion. 

Hamill tweeted the news late Saturday evening, saying that the conversation between Pelosi and Mnuchin lasted about an hour. 

“While there was some encouraging news on testing, there remains work to do to ensure there is a comprehensive testing plan that includes contact tracing and additional measures to address the virus’ disproportionate impact on communities of color,” he wrote. 

Hammill added that after the discussion, there are also still “an array of additional differences as we go provision by provision that must be addressed in a comprehensive manner in the next 48 hours.” 

“Decisions must be made by the White House in order to demonstrate that the Administration is serious about reaching a bipartisan agreement that provides for Americans with the greatest needs during the pandemic,” he added in follow-up tweets. 

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) announced Saturday afternoon that the Senate will vote on a $500 billion GOP coronavirus relief bill on Wednesday. 

The Senate bill is less than a third of the size of the $1.8 trillion offer from the White House and is much less than the $2.2 trillion package passed by congressional Democrats earlier this month.  

McConnell, speaking in Kentucky this week, expressed doubt that a package between $1.8 trillion and $2.2 trillion package could be achieved, adding that it would need support from Senate Republicans even if Pelosi was able to reach a deal with the Trump administration. 

“I don’t think so. That’s where the administration is willing to go. My members think half a trillion dollars, highly targeted, is the best way to go,” McConnell said. 

However, McConnell added that the Senate would “consider” a deal reached between the White House and Democrats.

“If Speaker Pelosi ever lets the House reach a bipartisan agreement with the Administration, the Senate would of course consider it. But Americans need help now,” he said.

The Senate bill detailed by McConnell Saturday includes a federal unemployment benefit and another round of small-business assistance under the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP). 

In a pre-recorded interview on “Full Court Press with Greta Van Susteren,” to air Sunday, Sen. Lindsey GrahamLindsey Olin GrahamLatest Mnuchin-Pelosi call produces ‘encouraging news on testing’ for stimulus package Graham: Congress should go ‘big and smart’ on COVID-19 package Oracle CEO donated 0K to Graham Super PAC days before TikTok deal went through: report MORE (R-S.C.) said that Congress should go “big and smart” on the next coronavirus relief package. 

The senator added that while he thinks more money is needed, he does not agree with the policy components of the House proposal. 

“The $2.2 trillion coming out of the House has a mandate for ballot harvesting. What’s that got to do COVID?” Graham said. “And the $1,200 payment, which I support, doesn’t require a Social Security number to get it, so a lot of the money would go to illegal immigrants.”

“There are some Republicans who don’t want to spend anymore,” Graham added. “I think we need more money, but we don’t need policy provisions like the House has.” 

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/house/521569-latest-mnuchin-pelosi-call-produces-encouraging-news-on-testing-for-stimulus

“Lindsey, just man up and say, ‘I changed my mind,’” Harrison exclaimed in an interview after a “drive-in” rally with some 250 cars.

“I think people are waking up to the fact that this guy cares more about being popular in D.C. than he does in terms of addressing [voters’] needs,” Harrison said, knocking Graham for appearing “on Sean Hannity every other night.”

Graham faces headwinds this year that were unforeseen even a few months ago. He recently resorted to plugging his campaign website during appearances on Fox News, leading to his $28 million fundraising haul in the third quarter, a record for a GOP Senate candidate if only a fraction of Harrison’s total. While Harrison draws larger crowds and appears to have momentum, Graham is projecting confidence and framing the election as a choice. Polls show a margin-of-error race.

“[Trump] can be a handful; he can get in the way of his own success,” Graham said in a brief interview. “But as we get closer to voting day, there’s a comparison going on of where the country will go under his leadership versus that of the Democratic Party. And I think it’s getting better for us by the day.”

“This is not a personality contest,” Graham added, referring to Trump. “This is about the future of your country.”

But Trump’s sagging poll numbers are creating problems for Graham. Harrison’s campaign is blanketing the airwaves and the web with ads portraying the incumbent as untrustworthy and two-faced, pointing to his transformation into a Trump cheerleader.

“[Voters] tend to have a very low regard for hypocrites,” House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) said in an interview before Harrison’s rally, as audio of Graham slamming Trump in 2016 blared in the background.

“And they look at these candidates, and when they can see authenticity, they tend to buy into it. That’s what Jaime has done,” added Clyburn, who calls Harrison his protégé.

Graham on Friday declined to say whether Trump is helping or hurting him, even as he embraces the president.

All things being equal, the candidate with an “R” next to his or her name wins statewide in South Carolina, based on the makeup of the electorate. So Graham is seeking a fourth term by shedding his bipartisan cred and portraying himself as a conventional Republican.

In reality, all things are not equal in this election, and the 65-year-old Graham is anything but a traditional Republican.

He sailed to reelection in 2014 after beating back the tea party, insulating himself from detractors on the right who called out his moderation on immigration and gun control, among other issues. He was once a go-to Republican for Democrats who wanted to cut a deal, and in 2014 he stuck with his long-held beliefs and maintained his truth-telling reputation despite a primary challenge from the right.

The difference between the Graham of 2014 and the Graham 2020 isn’t hard to make out. On Friday he rallied alongside Nancy Mace, who challenged him from the right in 2014 and is now running against first-term Rep. Joe Cunningham (D-S.C.). Mace and Graham were bitter rivals, just as Graham and Trump were during the 2016 presidential campaign.

“She is now my teammate,” Graham said in a brief interview. “This just tells you it’s not about Nancy and myself … We’ve set aside our differences to focus on what we have in common.”

Indeed, the Graham-Mace partnership is mutually beneficial. Republicans are in trouble here, and they’re casting aside their old grudges and litmus tests.

“It’s important … that we do show unity to everybody,” Mace said in a brief interview after rallying with Graham.

Graham insists he hasn’t changed, that “I am my own man” despite his willingness to work with Trump. He made it a point to tell reporters after the rally on Friday that he voted for liberal justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor, that he believes that climate is changing, and that he wants undocumented immigrants to have a pathway to citizenship.

“[Harrison] is getting money from every liberal in the country who hates my guts. Now what’s going on here?” Graham exclaimed. “I’m the guy that’s been sitting down with Democrats for over a decade to try and fix a complicated problem like immigration, to my own detriment. What’s changed is the radical nature of the Democratic Party.”

But Graham’s bipartisan past isn’t helpful to him in 2020 — it’s why he didn’t mention any of it to the rally-goers wearing Trump shirts and holding Graham campaign signs. Instead, he zeroed in on Democrats’ vague threats of retribution against Republicans for pushing through Barrett. He warned voters that Democrats, if they control the levers of power in Washington, will cede control to the “radical left” by packing the Supreme Court, getting rid of the Electoral College, nuking the legislative filibuster, allowing illegal immigration to run rampant, and raising taxes.

“This is an election that people need to be fired up about,” said Greg Powell, a retired veteran and GOP voter who attended Graham’s rally on Friday. When asked about the outside money flooding into the state, Powell quipped: “On the bright side, I guess it’s good for the economy.”

Darren Sweet, a Graham voter, lamented that there was “no middle ground left” in the country, and said he appreciated that Graham has worked with Democrats in the past.

In the final days of the campaign, Graham is barnstorming the state to promote his efforts to confirm Barrett. “The only problem I could possibly have, I think, is if people get complacent and they don’t vote,” he said.

Harrison, 44, is an associate chairman of the Democratic National Committee and previously served as the chairman of the state Democratic Party. His party ID is his single biggest liability, Republicans here say.

“As the campaign has worn on now, the Graham campaign has begun to make people very aware of the issue positions [Harrison] represents, his party represents,” said state Republican Party Chairman Drew McKissick. “And it moves him further and further away from regular South Carolinians.”

Harrison has made the race competitive not only because of the boatloads of money he’s raised, but because his campaign has driven a massive voter turnout effort in every corner of the state — one that targets not only Democrats, but also disaffected Republicans.

Harrison’s advertisements — you can’t miss them when you turn on the TV — are growing more creative as his campaign continues to draw in record amounts of cash. A recent Harrison ad tried to draw conservative voters to Bill Bledsoe, the Constitution Party candidate who has since endorsed Graham but remains on the ballot.

The ad highlights Bledsoe’s support for Trump and his opposition to gun control laws, aiming to peel conservatives away from Graham.

Graham and Trump have always been an odd pairing, in particular after their bitter rivalry during the 2016 campaign. Graham has said he wanted to set aside his differences with Trump in order to help him become a better president and help his home state. But some Democrats see it as almost natural that they would have an affinity for one another.

“One of the reasons that Lindsey and Trump get along so well is they just say what’s on their mind,” said Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.). “There’s not a lot of filter.”

Harrison, a lawyer and former staffer in Clyburn’s House office, grew the most animated when he talked about Graham’s reversal over filling a Supreme Court seat in an election year. It was a betrayal, the Democrat said.

“When you lie to your constituents,” Harrison said, “that is the greatest travesty that a public servant can ever do.”

Burgess Everett contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/18/lindsey-graham-senate-harrison-runs-for-his-life-430028