(CNN)There is nearly no place in America where Covid-19 case counts are trending in the right direction as the country heads into what health experts say will be the most challenging months of the pandemic so far.

Those states are Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/18/health/us-coronavirus-sunday/index.html

    “You have got to get your governor to open up your state, okay?” he said to huge cheers at the rally in Muskegon, Mich. “And get your schools open.” The crowd began to chant for Whitmer’s imprisonment, and Trump shook his head at one point but did not tamp them down.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/10/17/trump-whitmer-lock-her-up/

    “You have got to get your governor to open up your state, okay?” he said to huge cheers at the rally in Muskegon, Mich. “And get your schools open.” The crowd began to chant for Whitmer’s imprisonment, and Trump shook his head at one point but did not tamp them down.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/10/17/trump-whitmer-lock-her-up/

    A spokesman for Nebraska Senator Ben Sasse said the senator is “not going to waste a single minute on tweets” after President Donald Trump questioned Sasse’s value to the Republican Party in a series of tweets Saturday morning.

    Trump’s comments about Sasse came just days after a report by The Washington Examiner revealed lengthy criticisms that Sasse levied against the president during a town hall phone call with voters in his state.

    During the call, Sasse critiqued Trump’s foreign policy decisions, as well as his handling of the coronavirus pandemic, and suggested that Trump’s leadership put the future of the Republican Party in jeopardy. He also said Trump has “flirted” with white supremacists, “spends like a drunken sailor” and added that he also “kisses dictators’ butts.”

    Trump’s comments about Sasse on Saturday began when he called him the “least effective” Republican in the Senate who “doesn’t have what it takes to be great.”

    “Little Ben is a liability to the Republican Party, and an embarrassment to the Great State of Nebraska,” Trump’s tweet continued.

    About an hour later, Sasse spokesman James Wegmann posted a statement on his Twitter account about the comments that Sasse made during the call with constituents referenced in the Examiner report.

    “Ben said the same thing to Nebraskans that he has repeatedly said to the President directly in the Oval Office,” Wegmann said. “Ben is focused on defending the Republican Senate majority, and he’s not going to waste a single minute on tweets.”

    Not long after, Trump again took to Twitter and made Sasse the subject of a two-part Twitter thread. In the tweet, Trump suggested that Sasse might soon face approval rating dips that could force him into early retirement. He added at the end of the thread: “Perhaps the Republicans should find a new and more viable candidate?”

    Sasse began serving as a senator for Nebraska in 2015 and is currently running for re-election with less than three weeks remaining until Election Day. Though he said during the call with constituents that he tried to establish a working relationship with the president, he campaigned on behalf of other contenders in 2016 before Trump became the party’s official nominee and publicly criticized Trump in recent months about his administration’s handling of peaceful protesters in Washington, D.C., his use of executive orders, and his response to alleged bounties that The New York Times reported Russia placed on U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

    Sasse’s comments during the call lasted for about nine minutes after one Nebrasakan asked why Sasse frequently criticizes Trump. Sasse told his listeners that he has been concerned for years that Trump’s leadership might push the U.S. further to the left and warned about the possibility of a “blue tsunami” during the upcoming election.

    He pointed to two specific voting groups–young people and women—whom he said could shift away from the Republican Party as a result of Trump’s time in office. If that happens, “the debate is not going to be, ‘Ben Sasse, why were you so mean to Donald Trump,'” Sasse said. “It’s going to be, ‘What the heck were any of us thinking that selling a TV-obsessed, narcissistic individual to the American people was a good idea?’ It is not a good idea.”

    Newsweek reached out to Sasse’s office and the White House for further comment, but did not receive a response in time for publication.

    p:last-of-type::after, .node-type-slideshow .article-body > p:last-of-type::after {
    content: none
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    Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/gop-senator-not-going-waste-single-minute-tweets-response-trump-attacks-him-1540047

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A free speech demonstration staged by conservative activists quickly fell apart in downtown San Francisco on Saturday after several hundred counterprotesters surged the area, outnumbering and attacking those gathered, including knocking one in the mouth.

    A photographer working for The Associated Press witnessed a Trump supporter being taken away in an ambulance and an injured San Francisco police officer on the ground by San Francisco’s United Nations Plaza.

    Team Save America organized the rally to protest Twitter, which it said squelches conservative speech. Members of the group wore red “Make America Great Again” Trump campaign hats and carried pro-police “Thin Blue Line” flags and U.S. flags.

    Philip Anderson, the organizer of the event, posted photos to social media of his bloody mouth with a front tooth missing and another hanging loosely. He said anti-fascist protesters attacked him “for no reason.”

    Anderson took the stage at about 1 p.m. and was greeted by chants and plastic water bottles and glass bottles thrown over police barricades.

    The event was canceled, although both sides lingered in the area into the afternoon.

    The San Francisco Police Department said three officers suffered non life-threatening injuries when they were assaulted with pepper spray and caustic chemicals. One officer was taken to a local hospital for treatment, the department said.

    No arrests were made, the department said.

    Anderson called the counterprotesters hypocrites and said they are the reason why he’s voting for President Donald Trump.

    “I love America, I love this country and I love free speech,” he said.

    Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/san-francisco-214a90e5d88c255a8682ecf126a31b92

    Source Article from https://www.channel3000.com/thousands-defy-requests-of-medical-officials-attend-trump-rally-in-janesville/

    There was a time when Kevin Van Ausdal had not yet been called a “loser” and “a disgrace” and hustled out of Georgia. He had not yet punched a wall, or been labeled a “communist,” or a person “who’d probably cry like a baby if you put a gun in his face.” He did not yet know who was going to be the Republican nominee for Congress in his conservative district in northwestern Georgia: the well-known local neurosurgeon, or the woman he knew vaguely as a person who had openly promoted conspiracies including something about a cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles.

    Anything still seemed possible in the spring of 2020, including the notion that he, Kevin Van Ausdal, a 35-year-old political novice who wanted to “bring civility back to Washington” might have a shot at becoming a U.S. congressman.

    So one day in March, he drove his Honda to the gold-domed state capitol in Atlanta, used his IRS refund to pay the $5,220 filing fee and became the only Democrat running for a House seat in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District, which Donald Trump won by 27 points in the 2016 presidential election.

    He hired a local campaign manager named Vinny Olsziewski, who had handled school board races and a couple of congressionals.

    He came up with a slogan — “Save the American Dream” — and posted his first campaign ad, a one-minute slide show of snapshots with voters set to colonial fife-and-drum music.

    He gave one of the first public interviews he had ever given in his life, about anything, on a YouTube show called Destiny, and when the host asked, “How do you appeal to these people while still holding onto what you believe in?” Kevin answered, “It’s all about common sense and reaching across the aisle. That’s what politics is supposed to be like.”

    All of that was before August, when Republican primary voters chose the candidate with the history of promoting conspiracies, and President Trump in a tweet called her a “future Republican Star” and Kevin began learning more about Marjorie Taylor Greene, whose first major ad featured her roaring across a field in a Humvee, pulling out an AR-15 rifle and blasting targets labeled “open borders” and “socialism.”

    He read that she was wealthy, had rented a condo in the district earlier in the year to run for Congress, and that before running she had built an online following by promoting baseless, fringe right-wing conspiracies — that Bill and Hillary Clinton have been involved in murders, that President Obama is a Muslim, and more recently, about the alternate universe known as QAnon.

    “I’ve seen some mention of lizard people?” Kevin said, going through news articles to learn more about QAnon. “And JFK’s ghost? Or maybe he’s still alive? And QAnon is working with Trump to fight the deep state? I’m not sure I understand.”

    He plunged deeper, reading about a world in which a cryptic online figure called Q is fighting to take down a network of Democrats, Hollywood actors and global elites who engage in child-trafficking and drink a life-extending chemical harvested from the blood of their victims. He read about an FBI memo warning that QAnon followers could pose a domestic terrorism threat, and the reality sank in that the only thing standing between Marjorie Taylor Greene and the halls of Congress was him. Kevin.

    “I’m the one,” he said. “I’m it.”

    * * *

    That was how the campaign began. Thirty-one days later it was over, and within those 31 days is a chronicle of how one candidate representing the most extreme version of American politics is heading to Congress with no opposition, and the other is, in his words, “broken.”

    It is an outcome that was in some ways years in the making, as all but the most committed Democrats in northwestern Georgia had long become Republican, or abandoned hope of winning the mostly White, mostly rural district of gun shops and churches, leaving the Democratic Party so weak that in 2018, the nominee for Congress was a man who had run a nudist retreat.

    But as Greene gave a victory speech railing against the “hate-America left” and calling House Speaker Nancy Pelosi a “b—-,” Kevin sensed an opening. He would counter her extremism with moderation. He would talk about jobs and health care. He would double down on civility. As he told Vinny soon after hiring him as campaign manager, “People say I’m a nice guy, and I am. I think that’s the best approach.”

    That was his plan, and meanwhile, in the days after Greene, who declined to comment for this story, became the Republican candidate, interest in the race grew far beyond the borders of Georgia as more and more people began realizing that the alternative to Greene was a guy named Kevin Van Ausdal.

    “Vote for Kevin! He’s a regular dude!!” one person posted on Kevin’s campaign Facebook page.

    “We need earnest people in Washington to solve real problems — not conspiracy nuts!” someone else wrote.

    “America needs you Kevin!!” another person wrote.

    As more people began following the campaign, Vinny realized he was going to need help, so he hired a deputy campaign manager named Ruth Demeter. He brought in a national consultant named Michael McGraw, whose firm specialized in long-shot bids, and now the new team was on a video call laying out a revised strategy to present to Kevin.

    “Okay, first, an update on the current state of the race. Last night Marjorie went on a posting spree,” Michael said. “George Soros is behind a conspiracy to destroy America. The media is the enemy. You name it. She is not toning anything down. Any questions on that?”

    He noted that out of roughly 413,000 registered voters in the 14th District, Greene’s winning vote total was less than 44,000, and that “we’re not seeing her promoted by Republican Party networks we’re used to.” He mentioned a political operative to whom Greene had paid hundreds of thousands of dollars, someone who has described himself as a “hard-charging and controversial conservative consultant.” He said Greene had expressed support for the 17-year-old charged with killing two people during protests in Kenosha, Wis., calling the case the “first stage” of a new “Civil War.” And he said that while Greene was now distancing herself from QAnon, she had the support of QAnon social media groups as well as an array of local gun groups including one called the Georgia III % Martyrs.

    There was a pause.

    “Any questions on that?” Michael said, then explained what voters needed from Kevin:

    “They want Kevin to fight. What they are looking for is a forceful response saying, ‘This is wrong. This is very wrong. This is horrifying. And we are not going to sit by and just let this happen.’ ”

    They decided Kevin would have to address Greene directly in a strong video statement that would signal that the campaign was no longer a homespun fife-and-drum outfit but a major operation to defeat a candidate whose views they would call out as “extremist.”

    “We need to be sure Kevin is comfortable with where we’re going,” Vinny said. “Ruth?”

    “We’ve got to do it,” Ruth said.

    “Okay,” said Vinny, and later that afternoon, they video-called Kevin, who listened as Michael explained: “We have to dramatically step up our language. I know this is not the place you’d like to be, but it’s the place we’re in now.”

    Kevin nodded.

    Then Michael laid out in strong terms how he saw Greene framing the election, however preposterous his interpretation might seem: “Marjorie Greene is fighting for the soul of America and she will do anything it takes to save America, up to and including walking up to her Democratic opponent and shooting him in the head.”

    Kevin didn’t say anything.

    Michael continued: “That would be justified because she is saving America.”

    Kevin was still quiet.

    “This is so far away from the race you wanted to run, and I’m honestly kind of sorry about that, Kevin,” Michael said. “So, take your time with that.”

    But there was no time. Ruth was already talking about getting a new camera for Kevin to record the video statement. Someone else was considering the backdrop — Kevin’s kitchen? A park? Michael was going on about the “horrifying hellhole” they were all entering.

    “This is the most toxic campaign most of us will ever see,” he said.

    “If anyone needs a mental health day, please let me know,” Vinny said.

    Kevin cleared his throat.

    “How’re you doing, Kevin?” Michael said.

    * * *

    No one on the team was thrilled with where all this was heading. Vinny was used to working on campaigns that focused on issues, not name-calling. Michael felt that “far too many campaigns aren’t talking about governing but just telling you who to be mad at.” Ruth was a Canadian American who felt ill watching videos of Greene’s speeches, and even more ill seeing her neighbors in the audience applauding.

    But they all agreed that ignoring Greene was not an option, so they began drafting the statement and emailing versions to Kevin, who kept suggesting revisions that made it softer, thinking he had made it harsher.

    “He needs to be ready,” Vinny told Ruth on one of their daily video calls.

    “I don’t know what it’s going to take to get him to use the kind of language we need him to use,” Ruth told Vinny. “It’s a very big shift for him.”

    “How’s it going?” she said to Kevin on Day 21 of the campaign, trying to sound upbeat as they began to rehearse the draft statement.

    Kevin said he had been trying to stay relaxed. He had a cold.

    “Okay, I know you’re not feeling well, but the good news is, sometimes when you need to push through a barrier, the best time to do that is when you’re sick, because your defenses are down,” Ruth said. “We’re not going to take you anywhere horrible.”

    “We’re good,” Kevin said.

    “Okay, I want you to breathe deeply,” Ruth began. “A lot of your tonality will have to go down. There will be times when you’re speaking about what Marjorie has done and you’ll be angry. You’ll need to be angry.”

    More often in his life, Kevin could not afford to be angry. His voice tended to swing up, a tone he found helpful in defusing conflicts in his job at a financial services company, which had enabled his first real stability as an adult. He’d only recently bought the tan split-level where he lived with his wife and 1-year-old daughter. Now it had a “Save the American Dream” sign in the flower bed by the mailbox, one of the stories of his rise into the middle class he’d imagined telling voters about when he first started running.

    Another story was about the time he learned to install plumbing so that he and his wife could have running water in their trailer. Another was about finishing his college degree, working at an amusement park and selling his plasma for extra money to pay bills.

    He was going to talk about growing up in a town outside Gary, Ind., where his mother was a municipal clerk and he’d worked as a page in the state legislature, feeling inspired by the marble and soaring rotunda and noticing how people would call a representative’s office for help solving some problem, which was how he got his idea of what politics could be, all of which was beginning to feel like long ago.

    “So,” Ruth continued. “Talk to me about the things about Marjorie that are dangerous and embarrassing and appear to disregard the 14th District.”

    “Okay, well, it’s really just the fearmongering?” Kevin said. There was the upswing, but Ruth let him go on. “It’s defining us. I don’t think I ever told you this, but I said to a preacher early on, you know, Jesus wants us to come together and love each other regardless of our beliefs. So when we’re fanning the flames of fear and violence — ”

    “Okay,” Ruth interjected. “I love ‘fanning the flames of fear.’ But Kevin, I’m going to tell you something right now that’s really hard. This statement is about reaching people in the middle, and a lot of them are Republicans. For them, the language about love and peace is bad, or just not in their wheelhouse. … It’s got to be, ‘This has got to stop. I’m calling this out.’ ”

    “Okay,” Kevin said.

    “Try that ‘Enough is enough’ line,” Ruth said.

    “Enough is enough — wait,” Kevin said, then tried again. “Enough is enough.”

    “Oh, I love that,” Ruth said.

    “I’m not going to act like this is a normal election,” he continued.

    “Oh, that’s really good,” Ruth said.

    Enough is enough” Kevin repeated over and over, practicing the statement his team wanted to post as soon as possible to his 1,500 Facebook followers, and meanwhile, Greene had posted a new Facebook video for her 100,000 followers.

    “We have had enough,” she began, launching a tirade against “the radical left” and “Marxist BLM” and “these thugs, these domestic terrorists, these anarchists, these insurrectionists” and the Democrats’ “globalist plans, their open-border plans, their take your guns away plans, their abortion kill babies up to birth and maybe even afterwards plans.” She urged people to enter a raffle to win the AR-15 she’d used in her campaign ad because “socialism does not belong in America” and “we need to blow it away.” And then, for the first time, she addressed Kevin.

    “I’m running against a radical Democrat. A Democrat socialist. He’s an AOC progressive — that really means communist — candidate,” Green said, referring to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), “who absolutely loves AOC and Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden, you know, king of the basement dwellers. So, help me beat this Democrat in November. Help me go on to Congress.”

    Below the video, her supporters began posting comments.

    “WWG1WGA,” one wrote, using QAnon code for “Where we go one, we go all.”

    “Gloves are off,” another wrote.

    The comments kept coming, and Kevin, trying to calm his nerves, went into a spare bedroom, shut the door, and stayed there long enough that his wife finally texted him from another part of the house to see if he was okay.

    “She is calling for a civil war!” he texted back, referring to Greene. “And I am expected to call her out tomorrow!”

    He waited for a response. He and his wife had been having marital problems for a while, and the campaign wasn’t making anything better. When she did not write back, he texted again.

    “F—–g crazy ass white supremacist terrorist support her. She is radicalizing them and I am supposed to call her out and become her enemy.”

    “Omg really,” his wife texted back.

    “I am not joking” he texted back.

    “Wtf,” she texted.

    “I am f—–g breaking down,” he texted back, not that anyone on the campaign team knew any of that was happening.

    * * *

    “Jesus Christ,” Michael said as another day began.

    He had just seen Greene’s latest Facebook post, this one showing her in sunglasses and holding an AR-15 rifle next to a photo of three of the four Democratic congresswomen known as “The Squad,” titled “Squad’s Worst Nightmare.”

    “We need strong conservative Christians to go on the offense against these socialists who want to rip our country apart,” her post read, and now, as Pelosi was calling on House Republicans to condemn Greene and Rep. Ilhan Omar was calling the post a “violent provocation,” Michael was on a video call with Kevin and the team.

    “I have Roll Call, NPR, Politico, CNN, NBC, New York Magazine, Slate, the Hill, Vox, BuzzFeed, not to mention a whole bunch of party people, calling,” Michael said.

    The time for rehearsing was over. The angry statement about Greene had to post immediately, he said.

    “I haven’t taken a shower,” Kevin said. “I was going to go to the post office and — ”

    “Kevin. Take a moment. Breathe. Center yourself,” Michael said.

    He took a moment. He breathed. And soon he was changing into the light blue shirt that the team had suggested, and rolling up the sleeves as they had suggested, and balancing his new camera and laptop on his kitchen table, centering his head in the frame of the screen.

    “Okay,” Ruth said.

    It was Day 24 of the campaign. He took a deep breath.

    “Hi. I’m Kevin Van Ausdal,” he began, reading from the script on his laptop.

    “All down tones,” Ruth reminded him. “Say it like you’re banging your hand and fist. Aus-dal. Dal is like the fist.”

    Dal,” Kevin said. “I will not stand by — ”

    “Do me a favor. Take a deep breath. Put your shoulders back,” Ruth said. “Read it angry. It’s this crazy situation. Read it mad.”

    “Hi. I’m Kevin Van Aus-dal. … Marjorie Taylor Greene does not represent us …”

    “Again. Mad,” Ruth said.

    “Marjorie Taylor Greene is not one of us …” Kevin said.

    Not one of us,” Ruth said.

    Not one of us …” Kevin said. “What’s the psychology behind this?”

    “There’s psychology but I don’t have time to explain,” Ruth said. “Okay, go for it.”

    “We are watching her use her platform to cheer violence against Democrats,” he continued, then stopped. “Be angry,” he reminded himself.

    “Be angry,” Ruth said.

    “There is a line. And Marjorie Greene is too far. Go to Kevin Van Ausdal dot com and join our fight for northwest Georgia and for the soul of our nation.” He paused. “Do I emphasize our? Or fight?”

    “The thing you have to emphasize is soul,” Ruth said.

    Soul,” said Kevin.

    “And you have to give it a little beat,” said Ruth. “So-ul.”

    “For the so-ul of our nation,” Kevin said. “Like that?”

    “Perfect,” Ruth said. “Remember. You’re angry.”

    Kevin took a deep breath and closed his eyes for a moment.

    “Hi, I’m Kevin Van Ausdal,” he began, and this time the camera was on and recording a man who appeared increasingly uncomfortable as he tried to hammer the singsong tone out of his voice and say words like “violence” and “civil war” while trying not to think about Greene’s armed supporters.

    “One more time,” Ruth said.

    Kevin cleared his throat and did it again, his eyes darting to the right as he read the statement. He did it again, and again, and after the fourth attempt they had a version they liked.

    “That was great,” Ruth said.

    “I think we can put the campaign logo in the corner,” said a new team member who had joined the call, and as they prepared to send the video into the world, Kevin turned off his computer and tried to calm down.

    It was a warm and clear night, so he went outside into his yard to meditate, but all he could think about was how close politics was coming to violence. He thought about the time in 2018 when pipe bombs were mailed to former president Barack Obama and other Democrats by a man whose van was plastered with stickers of Trump, one of which read “KILL YOUR ENEMY.” He wondered if he was becoming the enemy.

    Not that anyone on the campaign team knew any of that was happening, either.

    Two days later, as the video was sailing around the Internet, Kevin put on his only suit and headed for a rare in-person event, a drive-in service at an African American church.

    “Hi. I’m Kevin Van Ausdal,” he said through his mask into the window of a car, his tone reverting back to the Kevin of the drum-and-fife video. “I want to be your next congressman. I’m running against Marjorie Taylor Greene?”

    “Well, we’re going to need you,” said the man inside. “We don’t need those radicals.”

    “Hi, I’m Kevin …” he said through the window of the next car.

    “Kevin Van Ausdal. That’s you?” said the woman inside. “I don’t even have to tell you how important this election is. What are you planning to do?”

    “Well, we need opportunities in this country. I’m working to address health care, and green jobs …” he said, trying for a moment to be the candidate he wanted to be.

    * * *

    Day 27: “Hi, I’m Morgan. I’m your new assistant,” said the young man with the iPad who met Kevin in the parking lot of a Men’s Wearhouse. Ruth had booked him an appointment. “I’ll be following you the rest of the campaign.”

    They raised their face masks and went inside, where a clerk ushered Kevin to a table laid out with navy blue, gray and plaid outfits, which Morgan began photographing to send to Ruth for approval.

    “We’re going to make you look like a congressman,” the clerk said.

    Morgan cracked his knuckles.

    “Slip these on,” the clerk said, handing Kevin a light blue button-down and a blue blazer.

    He put on the button-down over his T-shirt, and the blazer over that, and stood in his shorts and white socks on the box in front of the mirror. He looked at himself. He smoothed the front of the shirt. He turned to the side. He was losing weight from stress.

    “Is it out of your comfort zone?” the clerk asked.

    It was, he wanted to say. All of what politics had become in America was out of his comfort zone — the lack of substance, the conspiracies, and especially the anger, which he nonetheless realized was working. Donations were skyrocketing. Hollywood actors were following him. And the team’s internal polling was showing that he had momentum — every time Greene posted some new statement, she got more followers, and every time Kevin answered, more people rallied to his campaign, a dynamic of ever-escalating outrage.

    “You will have to be more aggressive than this! She is running on pure crazy!” a woman wrote on his Facebook page.

    “Kevin, please stop this insane woman who only wants to spread hate and division!” someone else wrote.

    “WE MUST STOP THIS CRAZY PERSON MARJORIE GREENE!!!!!!!”

    There were other comments, too, ones that the team tried to remove before Kevin could see them, but he did see them or hear about them, such as one that read “the only good Democrat is a dead Democrat” and one that read “I bet if I put a gun to his face he’d cry like a baby.”

    Now Morgan was showing him two more red ties.

    “The bright red will show up better in photos,” Morgan said.

    “Okay,” Kevin said.

    The clerk rang up the power tie, the blue suit, a blazer and five shirts, and Kevin went home, where he and his wife got into an argument. They had been arguing a lot, but this time it kept degenerating until his wife said she wanted a divorce. Kevin said she could not possibly understand the stress he was under. He asked if she could wait until after the election, but she said no, she was done, and they kept on arguing until Kevin punched a wall hard enough that he broke the paneling.

    Day 28: Kevin was on the phone with Ruth trying to process everything when there was a knock at the door. It was a sheriff’s deputy. He was there to serve Kevin a petition for divorce, which included his wife’s description of a troubled marriage brought under increasing pressure from a man falling apart, as well as an order she had obtained requiring that he leave the house immediately.

    Day 29: The team tried to figure out what to do. Kevin was in a hotel, effectively homeless. He had no money to pay for an extended hotel stay or an apartment, and federal rules prevented using campaign funds for housing.

    Day 30: Political strategy took over as the team decided that if Kevin left Georgia and moved in with his parents in Indiana, he might be disqualified, which was the only hope the party had of naming a replacement so close to Election Day, and so Michael told Kevin what he already knew: “This is beyond you.”

    “People are looking for somebody to stand against Marjorie,” he said. “I’ve seen it where moments like this become a rallying cry.”

    Then it was the next day, and Kevin was in his Honda heading west to Indiana as the campaign staff issued a statement on his behalf, titled “A Message from Kevin”:

    “I am heartbroken to announce that for family and personal reasons, I cannot continue this race for Congress. The next steps in my life are taking me away from Georgia …”

    And that was the end of 31 days.

    * * *

    TOP: Greene, background left, has an armed escort at a campaign rally at the Northwest Georgia Amphitheatre in Ringgold, Ga., on Sept. 19. BOTTOM LEFT: Brenda Fox, left, Leslie Kleist and Marti Robles listen to a speaker at a Greene rally at the Coosa Valley fairgrounds in Rome on Aug. 29. BOTTOM RIGHT: Joshua Abernathy, center, and Bill Buoni, left, listen as Greene speaks at the Coosa Valley fairgrounds. (Photos by Jessica Tezak for the Washington Post)

    A week later, Marjorie Taylor Greene was arriving in her Humvee for a pro-gun rally at a rural amphitheater not far from where Kevin once lived.

    Alongside county sheriff’s deputies, the Georgia III% Martyrs provided security: a dozen or so men and a few women equipped with AR-15s, earpieces, camouflage and bulletproof vests. One man had a battle ax dangling from his belt. They fanned out around the fenced perimeter of the park while a hundred or so Greene supporters milled around, a few wearing little patches that read “WWG1WGA” or “Q Army” and others who said they didn’t know or care about QAnon but just knew that Greene “shares our values.”

    “Marjorie was all there for us, one hundred percent,” said Ray Blankenship, who had in August started a new gun group called the Catoosa County Civil Defense League to guard against everything he believed Democrats stood for, including gun confiscation, rioting and socialism. “People will step up when it’s time,” he said.

    Onstage, a guest speaker was talking about “a time when you will be asked to shed another man’s blood because he is a threat to your very way of life.” Another talked about “the communist Democrats.” Another said that vice-presidential candidate Kamala D. Harris “wants to come to your house and take your guns away.” Another began his speech by yelling into the microphone, “FREEDOM!!!!” and out in the audience, a man wearing a hat with a “Q Army” patch was listening.

    “I think people are waking up,” said the man, Butch Lapp.

    “The silent majority is silent no more,” said his wife, Rebecca, and now the Martyrs were radioing each other for “backup,” and forming a protective huddle around Greene as she made her way to the stage with no opposition anywhere in sight.

    “I am so proud and so excited to represent northwest Georgia!” she began.

    And meanwhile, Kevin had arrived at his parents’ house outside Gary, Ind., where he was sleeping in his old bedroom in the basement, scrolling through his Facebook page as news spread that his campaign was over.

    “Nooooo!!!” someone wrote.

    “WTF?!?” someone else wrote.

    “Wow dude you just F—D your state,” another person wrote.

    “You’re a loser, a disgrace!!”

    “Coward.”

    There were other comments thanking him for his bravery, but after a while, he stopped scrolling. He stopped reading Facebook. He stopped reading Twitter. He started taking long walks around his old neighborhood, going step by step through the progression of all that had happened.

    “I wanted to be the voice of reason against fear. I wanted to draw attention to big issues in the district,” he said during a walk one afternoon, thinking back to the beginning.

    “My opponent, unfortunately, embraced QAnon beliefs. I saw her disgusting comments. I thought, ‘She is basically talking like a terrorist,’ ” Kevin said.

    “When I had to do that statement, I was scared,” he said. “I’m being told I need to make a direct attack on groups who respond to people with violence. Who glorify violence.”

    “My staff had monitored backchannels and seen where Q people were making threats, and we talked about what to do about death threats,” he said.

    “I felt out of control. I had no control. I felt unreal. I didn’t know what to do with myself in the quiet. I felt uneasy. I felt I was on the rails and floating through,” he said.

    “I was breaking down,” he said. “I was just broken.”

    But now all of that was over, and he was walking down a street in Indiana describing the person he had become in the fall of 2020.

    “I’ve not really been eating. I’ve been sleeping a lot. Avoiding news. I blocked anyone talking ill about me. One or two said they want to punch me in the face,” Kevin said.

    “I’m worried the political situation is not going to get better. I worry we may not be able to turn it around. I knew Trump was a fascist, and I knew he was going to destroy this country, but I didn’t know how much. And Marjorie’s only going to make it worse.”

    He started to go on, but he was feeling his anger rising and he stopped.

    “I’m trying to stay away from it,” Kevin said.

    He kept walking, trying to clear his mind, remembering how he felt when all of this began, when he was walking into the state capital building full of optimism about what American democracy could be.

    “It was spectacular,” he said.

    stephanie.mccrummen@washpost.com

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2020/10/17/kevin-van-ausdal-qanon-marjorie-greene-georgia/

    The Biden campaign sent out a three-page memo to supporters Saturday warning that President Trump can still win and the race is “neck and neck” in certain critical battleground states, including Arizona and North Carolina. 

    Jen O’Malley Dillon, Joe Biden’s campaign manager, cautioned supporters against complacency, pointing to uncertain polls and lessons learned from Trump’s upset win in 2016.

    “[T]he reality is that this race is far closer than some of the punditry we’re seeing on Twitter and on TV would suggest,” Dillon wrote in the memo obtained by Fox News. 

    Dillon cautioned that polling showing Biden ahead may not be accurate.

    BIDEN BLUE WAVE SENDS BEARISH SIGNAL TO STOCKS

    “[E]ven the best polling can be wrong and that variables like turnout mean that in a number of critical swing states we are fundamentally tied,” Dillon wrote. 

    The message to supporters was to press on the gas in the final stretch to drive up turnout and donations. “We need to campaign like we are trailing,” the memo said. 

    Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at the Carpenters Local Union 1912 in Phoenix, Thursday, Oct. 8, 2020, to kick off a small business bus tour. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

    “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, through whatever smears or underhanded tactics he has at his disposal,” Dillon wrote. 

    BIDEN ONCE AGAIN SHATTERS FUNDRAISING RECORD WITH SECOND STRAIGHT EYE-POPPING HAUL

    Dillon’s state-of-the-race memo outlined what’s positive in the Biden campaign in the final days of the election, including Biden’s financial advantage, nearly 3,500 staff working to organize in battleground states, and the “largest and best-resourced vote protection program in history.”

    She said while Biden’s campaign has spent more than any presidential campaign in history on advertising, the advantages could be instantly wiped away if more billionaires write checks to pro-Trump super PACs.

    This was likely a reference to casino magnate and Republican megadonor Sheldon Adelson and his wife Miriam contributing $75 million last month to a super PAC backing Trump.

    ADELSON SHELLS OUT $75 MILLION TO PUMP UP PRO-TRUMP SUPER PAC IN FINAL STRETCH

    President Donald Trump arrives to speak during an event on “Protecting America’s Seniors,” Friday, Oct. 16, 2020, in Fort Myers, Fla. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

    Over the next three weekends, the campaign needs to “double our capacity” on voter outreach in 17 battleground states and raise $234 million by Nov. 3, the memo said. If they exceed that amount, Biden can boost efforts in Texas, a traditionally red-leaning state that Democrats have been trying to flip for years. 

    The campaign also is gearing up for potential problems at polling places and contested votes, with 17 state-specific voter hotlines and “thousands of lawyers and volunteers” working on voter protection.

    “We cannot become complacent because the very searing truth is that Donald Trump can still win this race,” Dillion wrote, “and every indication we have shows that this thing is going to come down to the wire.”

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-campaign-warns-against-complacency-in-memo-donald-trump-can-still-win-this

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    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/elections/2020/10/17/trump-biden-live-updates/

    Authorities in France say they’ve detained nine people in connection with the decapitation of a history teacher in a Paris suburb on Friday. The teacher had shown caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad to his class, authorities said.

    Michel Euler/AP


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    Michel Euler/AP

    Authorities in France say they’ve detained nine people in connection with the decapitation of a history teacher in a Paris suburb on Friday. The teacher had shown caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad to his class, authorities said.

    Michel Euler/AP

    Officials in France say they’ve detained nine people in connection to the brutal beheading of a teacher who had allegedly shown caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad during a civic lessons.

    Police say the teacher was near his school in the Paris suburb of Conflans-Sainte-Honorine on Friday when an 18-year-old Chechen refugee attacked him and cut his throat. Authorities say the attacker was later shot dead by police after he didn’t respond to commands to disarm and acted threateningly.

    Citing French media, the BBC reports that the teacher began receiving death threats following a lesson on freedom of expression in which the caricatures were said to be shown. The lesson was set in the context of an ongoing trial over the 2015 killings at Charlie Hebdo, the satirical newspaper that came under attack for its caricature of the Prophet Muhammad.

    Fourteen suspects are on trial on accusations of giving logistical support to the assailants, who killed 12 people in that attack.

    Speaking at the teacher’s school on Friday night, French President Emmanuel Macron called the decapitation an “Islamist terrorist attack.”

    “One of our compatriots was murdered today because he taught … the freedom of expression, the freedom to believe or not believe,” Macron said.

    France’s anti-terrorism prosecutor, Jean-Francois Ricard, said a terror investigation has been opened, The Associated Press reported.

    Police have detained nine people since the attack, including the suspect’s parents, grandfather and teenage brother, according to the AP.

    Ricard told reporters that the suspect was living in Normandy on a 10-year residency and was not known to intelligence services. During his standoff with the police, he had been armed with a knife and air-soft gun, which fired plastic pellets.

    A text claiming responsibility for the attack, the prosecutor said, and a picture of the victim were found on the suspect’s phone, according to the AP.

    Officials and Muslim leaders throughout France expressed outrage at the slaying.

    “We are all affected, all touched by this vile assassination,” said Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer in a video message, according to the AP.

    “A civilization does not kill an innocent person, barbarism does,” Tareq Oubrou, imam of a mosque in Bordeaux, told French media, the BBC reports.

    The Guardian reports that a man claiming his daughter was in the victim’s class had posted to social media, saying that during a lesson, the teacher had shown an image of a naked man and called him “the Muslim prophet.” Depictions of the Prophet Muhammad are prohibited by the Muslim faith.

    Before showing the caricatures, the teacher had reportedly asked Muslim students to raise their hands, allowing them to leave the room if they wished. The caricatures had been published in Charlie Hebdo, the Guardian reported.

    Parents, former students and locals shared the remorse over the teacher’s death. Flowers appeared outside his school on Saturday. Several also took to social media to express grief.

    The French presidential palace said a national tribute will be held for the teacher at a later date.

    NPR’S Eleanor Beardsley contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/10/17/924907167/nine-people-detained-over-beheading-of-teacher-in-paris-suburb

    Magic Johnson will hit the campaign trail to support Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden this weekend.

    The five-time NBA champion will travel to Detroit and Lansing, Michigan, for two separate events to support Biden ahead of next month’s presidential election.

    Johnson has been vocal in his support of Biden and has regularly used his Twitter account to urge his followers to vote on November 3. Johnson has previously criticized President Donald Trump, suggesting the president was “overstepping his stage” when Trump rescinded an invite to the White House for the Golden State Warriors after their 2017 NBA Finals triumph.

    The president said he had taken the decision after Warriors star Stephen Curry had hesitated to accept the invite after explaining he did not want to celebrate the title with a trip to the White House and suggested Trump lacked leadership.

    “I don’t know why he feels the need to target certain individuals rather than others,” Curry said on September 22, 2017.

    “I have an idea of why, but, it’s just kind of beneath, I think, a leader of a country to go [down] that route. It’s not what leaders do.”

    Curry’s stance over Trump hasn’t changed over the last three years and in August the three-time NBA champion endorsed Biden in a video with his wife, Ayesha, and his daughters Ryan and Riley.

    LeBron James, arguably Trump’s most high-profile critic in the world of professional sports, has also been actively campaigning for Biden.

    “I think what’s known don’t need to be said,” he saidin August.

    “We are at a time where we need change. In order for change, it’s all about leadership. And leadership starts at the top.”

    Earlier this month, Curry also appeared in a video with the Democratic candidate and Oklahoma City Thunder star and NBA Players Association president Chris Paul, who last month that over 90 percent of NBA players were registered to vote at the November 3 elections.

    Paul and Biden visited the Carole Hoefner Center in Charlotte, North Carolina, where they spoke to a high school team and encouraged them to get involved in politics and vote as soon as they become eligible to do so.

    From there they FaceTimed Curry—a Charlotte native who contributed to renovate the Carole Hoefner Center last year—who reiterated the importance of voting.

    Curry’s head coach, Steve Kerr, has also long been critical of Trump over the last four years and last month he supported the Biden campaign by assisting a virtual phone bank to mark National Voter Registration Day in Tucson, Arizona.

    Kerr isn’t the only NBA head coach to be in Biden’s camp. Newly-appointed Philadelphia 76ers coach Doc Rivers said he was honored the Democratic candidate had quoted him during his speech in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, on October 6.

    Following the shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in August, Rivers had delivered a passionate plea for police reform, which Biden quoted earlier this month.

    “I am honored that Vice President Biden chose my words as an example for needing social change,” the former Los Angeles Clippers head coach told The Philadelphia Inquirer.

    “These are human rights issues that we are fighting for. Every American should want social justice for all regardless of race, gender or political views.”

    San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich and TNT’s NBA analyst and former NBA coach Stan Van Gundy have also both vehemently criticized Trump.

    In September, former Green Bay Packers and Seattle Seahawks head coach Mike Holmgren threw his weight behind the Biden-Harris campaign, explaining the November 3 election was different from any he has experienced in his lifetime.

    “I’ve never done this before—talked to anybody prior to a campaign […] This election is different,” the Super Bowl XXXI winning coach said. “It’s really different than any other election in my lifetime.

    While Trump faces plenty of adversaries in the world of professional sports, he can count on notable supporters himself. Several NFL owners have long been in the president’s camp and are far from alone.

    Two-time Pro Bowler Herschel Walker has repeatedly backed Trump and renewed his support at the Republican National Convention in August, where he defended the president’s stance on players kneeling during the national anthem.

    “Just because someone loves and respects the flag, our national anthem, and our country doesn’t mean they don’t care about social justice,” he said.

    “I care about all of those things, and so does Donald Trump. He shows how much he cares about social justice and the Black community through his actions. And his actions speak louder than any stickers or slogans on a jersey.”

    Walker wasn’t the only former NFL player to appear at the Republican Convention, where he was joined by Jack Brewer, who accused the media of falsely portraying Trump as a racist.

    “I know what racism looks like, I’ve seen it firsthand,” he said. “America, it has no resemblance to President Trump. I’m fed up with the way he’s portrayed in the media, who refuse to acknowledge what he’s actually done for the Black community. It’s confusing the minds of our innocent children.”

    Former New York Yankees and Mets slugger Darryl Strawberry was also among the attendees at the convention in August. Strawberry, who in 2017 praised Trump for being “very gracious and caring about people” in an interview with Sports Illustrated, is one of several former MLB players to be behind Trump.

    Meanwhile, former Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling last year claimed his conservative political views and the fact he is a Trump supporter had cost him a place in the MLB Hall of Fame.

    Last year, New York Yankees great Mariano Rivera also supported the president, claiming he was “doing his best for the United States of America”, while Washington Nationals catchers Kurt Suzuki wore a Make America Great Again when the team visited the White House to celebrate their 2019 World Series triumph.

    Two-time World Series champion Aubrey Huff has also been an outspoken Trump supporter and in November last year he posted a picture on Twitter of him holding a shooting target with holes, suggesting he was teaching his boys how to use a gun in the “unlikely event” Bernie Sanders defeated Trump in the presidential elections.

    p:last-of-type::after, .node-type-slideshow .article-body > p:last-of-type::after {
    content: none
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    Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/sports-stars-supporting-joe-biden-donald-trump-1540001

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/10/17/amy-coney-barrett-civil-hearings-were-contrast-brett-kavanaugh/3677741001/

    Voters at Christian City Welcome Center in Union City, Georgia, during the state’s June primary. For some residents, it was a five-hour wait.

    Dustin Chambers/Reuters


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    Dustin Chambers/Reuters

    Voters at Christian City Welcome Center in Union City, Georgia, during the state’s June primary. For some residents, it was a five-hour wait.

    Dustin Chambers/Reuters

    Kathy spotted the long line of voters as she pulled into the Christian City Welcome Center about 3:30 p.m., ready to cast her ballot in the June 9 primary election.

    Hundreds of people were waiting in the heat and rain outside the lush, tree-lined complex in Union City, an Atlanta suburb with 22,400 residents, nearly 88% of them Black. She briefly considered not casting a ballot at all, but decided to stay.

    By the time she got inside more than five hours later, the polls had officially closed and the electronic scanners were shut down. Poll workers told her she’d have to cast a provisional ballot, but they promised that her vote would be counted.

    “I’m now angry again, I’m frustrated again, and now I have an added emotion, which is anxiety,” said Kathy, a human services worker, recalling her emotions at the time. She asked that her full name not be used because she fears repercussions from speaking out. “I’m wondering if my ballot is going to count.”

    By the time the last voter finally got inside the welcome center to cast a ballot, it was the next day, June 10.

    The clogged polling locations in metro Atlanta reflect an underlying pattern: the number of places to vote has shrunk statewide, with little recourse. Although the reduction in polling places has taken place across racial lines, it has primarily caused long lines in nonwhite neighborhoods where voter registration has surged and more residents cast ballots in person on Election Day. The pruning of polling places started long before the pandemic, which has discouraged people from voting in person.

    In Georgia, considered a battleground state for control of the White House and U.S. Senate, the difficulty of voting in Black communities like Union City could possibly tip the results on Nov. 3. With massive turnout expected, lines could be even longer than they were for the primary, despite a rise in mail-in voting and Georgians already turning out by the hundreds of thousands to cast ballots early.

    Since the U.S. Supreme Court’s Shelby v. Holder decision in 2013 eliminated key federal oversight of election decisions in states with histories of discrimination, Georgia’s voter rolls have grown by nearly 2 million people, yet polling locations have been cut statewide by nearly 10%, according to an analysis of state and local records by Georgia Public Broadcasting and ProPublica. Much of the growth has been fueled by younger, nonwhite voters, especially in nine metro Atlanta counties, where four out of five new voters were nonwhite, according to the Georgia secretary of state’s office.

    The metro Atlanta area has been hit particularly hard. The nine counties — Fulton, Gwinnett, Forsyth, DeKalb, Cobb, Hall, Cherokee, Henry and Clayton — have nearly half of the state’s active voters but only 38% of the polling places, according to the analysis.

    As a result, the average number of voters packed into each polling location in those counties grew by nearly 40%, from about 2,600 in 2012 to more than 3,600 per polling place as of Oct. 9, the analysis shows. In addition, a last-minute push that opened more than 90 polling places just weeks before the November election has left many voters uncertain about where to vote or how long they might wait to cast a ballot.

    Packing The Polls

    Voter registrations in nine counties in the metro Atlanta area have jumped sharply but the number of polling places hasn’t kept pace. As a result, those counties have many more voters assigned to each polling place than the state average.

    The growth in registered voters has outstripped the number of available polling places in both predominantly white and Black neighborhoods. But the lines to vote have been longer in Black areas, because Black voters are more likely than whites to cast their ballots in person on Election Day and are more reluctant to vote by mail, according to U.S. census data and recent studies. Georgia Public Broadcasting/ProPublica found that about two-thirds of the polling places that had to stay open late for the June primary to accommodate waiting voters were in majority-Black neighborhoods, even though they made up only about one-third of the state’s polling places. An analysis by Stanford University political science professor Jonathan Rodden of the data collected by Georgia Public Broadcasting/ProPublica found that the average wait time after 7 p.m. across Georgia was 51 minutes in polling places that were 90% or more nonwhite, but only 6 minutes in polling places that were 90% white.

    Georgia law sets a cap of 2,000 voters for a polling place that has experienced significant voter delays, but that limit is rarely if ever enforced. Our analysis found that, in both majority Black and majority white neighborhoods, about nine of every 10 precincts are assigned to polling places with more than 2,000 people.

    A June 2020 analysis by the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School found that the average number of voters assigned to a polling place has grown in the past five years in Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi and South Carolina — all states with substantial Black populations that before Shelby needed federal approval to close polling places under the Voting Rights Act. And though dozens of states have regulations on the size of voting precincts and polling places or the number of voting machines, the analysis found that many jurisdictions do not abide by them.

    Georgia’s state leadership and elections officials have largely ignored complaints about poll consolidations even as they tout record growth in voter registration. As secretary of state from 2010 to 2018, when most of Georgia’s poll closures occurred, Brian Kemp, now the governor, took a laissez-faire attitude toward county-run election practices, save for a 2015 document that spelled out methods officials could use to shutter polling places to show “how the change can benefit voters and the public interest.”

    Kemp’s office declined to comment Thursday on the letter or why poll closures went unchallenged by state officials. His spokesperson referred back to his previous statements that he did not encourage officials to close polling places but merely offered guidance on how to follow the law.

    The inaction has left Black voters in Georgia facing barriers reminiscent of Jim Crow laws, said Adrienne Jones, a political science professor at Morehouse College in Atlanta who has studied the impact of the landmark Shelby decision on Black voters.

    Voter suppression “is happening with these voter impediments that are being imposed,” Jones said.

    “You’re closing down polling places so people have a more difficult time getting there. You’re making vote-by-mail difficult or confusing. Now we’re in court arguing about which ballots are going to be accepted, and it means that people have less trust in our state.”

    In August, on the 55th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act, the Democratic Party of Georgia, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and three Georgia voters sued the state and more than a dozen counties in federal court, alleging that some of the state’s most populous areas have disenfranchised voters for more than a decade with long lines caused by inadequate staff, training, equipment and voting locations.

    The suit, which was dismissed after the judge ruled the parties had no standing to file, warned of upheaval during the Nov. 3 election.

    “As bad as the situation would be in normal circumstances, the burden is made far worse by the global pandemic,” the lawsuit stated. “Absent judicial intervention, Georgia is set for more of the same (and likely far worse than it has ever seen) in November.”

    Republican Brad Raffensperger, who took over as secretary of state in January 2019, has called for more resources and polling places, but he has been unable to push these changes through the GOP-controlled legislature.

    Raffensperger’s office blames Democrats and county elections officials for opposing his efforts to improve access. “As Secretary of State, Brad Raffensperger pushed legislation that would force counties to expand polling locations and directly address these issues,” Deputy Secretary of State Jordan Fuchs said in an email.

    “Unfortunately, every single Democratic Senator and Representative voted against this proposal saying that it would cause ‘confusion.’ Georgia voters deserve to know who is actually holding back progress and it isn’t the Secretary of State’s Office.”

    Democrats and voting rights groups said they opposed the Raffensperger-backed bill because they believed it weakened state election supervision and made it harder for people to vote. The proposal shifted even more responsibility for elections from the state to counties, “without the necessary training, funding or support,” Lauren Groh-Wargo, chief executive of Fair Fight, a voting rights group founded by former gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, said at the time.

    A History Of Discrimination

    Georgia’s history of voting violations stretches back more than a century, with poll taxes, literacy and citizenship tests, and intimidation that disenfranchised many Black citizens.

    Under the Voting Rights Act of 1965, Georgia and eight other states with histories of discrimination were required to seek federal approval before making changes such as eliminating polling places in Black neighborhoods or shifting polling locations at the last minute. Dozens of counties and townships in six more states also had to seek pre-clearance.

    Then in 2013, in a case brought by Shelby County, Alabama, the U.S. Supreme Court threw out the method for determining which jurisdictions had to seek prior approval, saying it was unconstitutional because it was outdated. The court suggested that Congress could pass new guidelines, but lawmakers have been unable to reach agreement, leaving the pre-clearance requirement unenforceable.

    Jones, the Morehouse professor, said the recent changes would clearly have required federal approval if not for the Shelby decision.

    “All of these kinds of exercises … would have had to be considered by the Department of Justice — or would not have been suggested because it would have been clear that the Department of Justice would have dinged them,” she said. “And part of that has to do with the importance of Black voters, particularly in the Democratic Party.”

    Exacerbating Shelby’s impact in Georgia was an explosion in voter registrations. Thanks in part to the state’s “motor voter” law that updates records whenever a voter interacts with the Department of Driver Services, the state’s voter rolls have swelled by a third since the 2012 presidential election. In two metro Atlanta counties, Gwinnett and Henry, the voting population shifted from majority white to majority nonwhite, contributing to Georgia’s transition from red state to purple.

    Hundreds of people wait in line for early voting on Oct. 12, 2020, in Marietta, Ga. Eager voters have waited six hours or more in the former Republican stronghold of Cobb County, and lines have wrapped around buildings in solidly Democratic DeKalb County.

    Ron Harris/Associated Press


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    Ron Harris/Associated Press

    Hundreds of people wait in line for early voting on Oct. 12, 2020, in Marietta, Ga. Eager voters have waited six hours or more in the former Republican stronghold of Cobb County, and lines have wrapped around buildings in solidly Democratic DeKalb County.

    Ron Harris/Associated Press

    As the number of voters was swelling, county officials across the state began a steady stream of closures of polling locations.

    By June 2020, Georgia voters had 331 fewer polling places than in November 2012, a 13% reduction. Because of added pressure from the coronavirus pandemic, metro Atlanta alone had lost 82 voting locations by the time June’s primary rolled around. Nearly half of the state’s 159 counties had closed at least one polling place since 2012.

    Fulton County, which includes Atlanta, and DeKalb County realigned dozens of precincts after some municipalities were annexed or newly established. Other counties cited changes in voter behavior, or tight budgets, but the Georgia Public Broadcasting/ProPublica analysis found only nominal savings.

    In Union City, about 20 minutes southwest of Atlanta in Fulton County, the number of active voters has grown about 60% since 2012.

    Three polls were open for the June primary, with 9,000 voters assigned to the Christian City Welcome Center. Two additional polling places are being set up for the Nov. 3 election, including one that will reduce the burden on the Welcome Center. Three others, however, will still have more than 5,000 voters each.

    In a September county elections board meeting, Fulton officials said the goal had been to add more polling places in 2020 to accommodate population growth. The coronavirus pandemic resulted in closures or relocations, but most sites have been reopened.

    Urban Congestion At The Polls

    The influx of voters meant that already overburdened polling places got even busier.

    Statewide, the number of voters served by the average polling place rose 47%, from 2,046 voters in 2012 to 3,003 as of Oct. 9, according to the analysis. Some rural counties have as many as 22,000 voters assigned to a single polling place.

    Forsyth County, one of the fastest-growing counties in the nation, has grown its voter rolls by nearly 60% — or 60,000 voters — in the last eight years. Forsyth, a mostly white county about 45 minutes’ drive north of Atlanta, now averages about 8,000 voters per polling place. Officials cut nine of its 25 polling places in 2013 and another after the 2016 election, but added back five locations in 2019. No additional sites are expected to be opened for the November election.

    Fulton County added nearly a quarter-million voters while consolidating voting locations. When the coronavirus struck, the last-minute unavailability of two polling places forced the assignment of 16,000 people to vote in June at Park Tavern, a restaurant/event space that reported 350 voters in line before the first vote was cast.

    Six of Gwinnett County’s seven most congested polling places serve predominantly nonwhite neighborhoods. In Lawrenceville, home to one of the largest Black populations in the county, a judge ordered polls at the Gwinnett County Department of Water Resources to stay open late during the primary for the nearly 7,000 voters assigned there. It was one of 16 polling locations with missing voting machines on the morning of the primary election.

    Angela Maddox, a health care worker, cast her ballot there for the Aug. 11 primary runoff, when only local rather than statewide races were on the ballot. She said she was grateful that equipment was in place and low turnout meant no lines. The reports of voters waiting six hours or more in the primary were “disgusting,” she said.

    “I know it’s a big problem and it seems to continuously happen in Black communities,” she said. “That’s where you tend to see a lot of the machines breaking down, or fewer machines, or any and everything to not count our vote, which is not fair.”

    Angela Maddox after voting in a primary runoff in August.

    Stephen Fowler/Georgia Public Broadcasting


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    Stephen Fowler/Georgia Public Broadcasting

    Angela Maddox after voting in a primary runoff in August.

    Stephen Fowler/Georgia Public Broadcasting

    Gwinnett County officials obtained federal approval in 2010 — before the Shelby decision — to reduce the number of polls from 163 to 156, citing cost savings and operational efficiency. Since then, the county has kept the same number of polling places while adding more than 175,000 active voters. The average polling place handled 3,649 voters in the June primary and is set for 3,719 for November.

    Who’s To Blame?

    Since the Shelby decision, the Georgia State Election Board, chaired by Raffensperger, has been the primary body for investigating and potentially sanctioning counties found to have violated election laws and procedures.

    But the election board has rarely investigated the sort of violations that the U.S. Department of Justice once stepped in to review under the Voting Rights Act.

    Since 2010, when Kemp began his eight-year stint as secretary of state, the board has heard hundreds of cases, citing individuals for such violations as wearing political gear to the polls, and rebuking counties for mishandling voter registrations or absentee ballots. But it has taken no action to examine the poll closures that have been approved post-Shelby and has allowed a backlog of dozens of complaints to accumulate. In 2015, Kemp’s office sent the letter to county elections officials that included advice on closing polling places.

    In September, with Georgia in the national spotlight over its handling of elections, the board cleared a backlog of nearly 100 outstanding cases dating back to 2014, and referred several to the attorney general’s office for further review. Among those was Fulton County’s alleged mishandling of the June primary. The attorney general’s office is still investigating.

    In early October, the secretary of state’s office told four counties that had long lines, absentee ballot problems and late opening or closing polls in the primary — Fulton, DeKalb and Gwinnett in the metro Atlanta area and Chatham County in southeast Georgia — to avoid a repeat by providing weekly updates on poll worker training, polling places and line management plans.

    Besides the board’s actions, the Georgia Senate considered a proposal filed in February and endorsed by Raffensperger. It would have required county elections supervisors to add more equipment or poll workers, or split up any precincts with more than 2,000 voters, if there was a wait longer than an hour measured at three different points on Election Day.

    More than 1,500 of Georgia’s 2,655 precincts have at least 2,000 voters — many of them in urban Democratic counties — and Raffensperger said at the time that voters should never have to wait more than 30 minutes.

    But the bill, SB 463, was opposed by Democratic lawmakers and voting rights groups, who argued that any revamping in an election year would cause confusion and create more ways to keep people from casting their ballot.

    “Do you have any concerns about trying to change the rules of the game in the middle of an election cycle when we have so much litigation that is currently pending with respect to the state’s handling of previous elections?” state Sen. Jen Jordan, a Democrat from Atlanta, asked during the floor debate.

    The bill originated in the state Senate, which approved it. The proposal then went to a state House of Representatives committee, where Republicans substituted a version that didn’t address the polling place issue and barred the secretary of state and county elections officials from sending absentee ballot applications to voters. Their redesign never reached a floor vote, eliminating any prospect of legislative changes in the 2020 session, which ended in June.

    That same month, after the primary election, Raffensperger held a press conference in Fulton County outside Park Tavern, which had processed more voters than 96% of the state’s polling places. Flanked by posters highlighting recent election woes, he urged local officials to add poll workers and voting locations while improving technical support and training.

    ‘We know that we need a more diverse pool of voting locations to spread the load of voters that we are anticipating,’ Raffensperger said.

    Nikema Williams, chair of Georgia’s Democratic Party, said that while state officials took little or no action to stop widespread voting problems in non-white communities, local elections officials are also responsible, since they ultimately decide whether to close or open more voting sites.

    “We added counties as a defendant in the [August] lawsuit because we want to make sure that we’re getting this right,” she said. “And at the end of the day, what matters to us is that voters are not negatively impacted at any level of the electoral process.”

    Although the judge chided Democratic officials for offering vague remedies and failing to provide sufficient evidence that long lines are likely in November, Phi Nguyen, litigation director for Asian Americans Advancing Justice Atlanta, said there is plenty of evidence in plain sight.

    Nguyen’s organization has challenged a number of Georgia election laws in court, including the “exact match” policy that blocks voter registrations that do not exactly match a state or federal database. AAAJA also filed a lawsuit that forced Gwinnett County to change its process for rejecting absentee ballots.

    She said the metro Atlanta counties’ election administrators have not kept up with the wave of newer, more diverse voters, increasing the chances of disenfranchisement.

    Nguyen was a poll monitor at the Infinite Energy Center arena for the primary and did not leave until the final votes were cast, well after polls closed at 7 p.m.

    “Georgia made national news because of the breakdown in our election systems,” she said. “Long lines are certainly an issue and they happen more often in under-resourced places, which tend to be where communities of color live.”

    Changes Before Election Day

    Some counties in the metro Atlanta area have tried to increase polling locations before the November election.

    Just weeks before Nov. 3, Fulton County approved 91 new polling places, focusing on areas where the lines were longest for the June primary. Fourteen polling places — including two of the four polling places in Union City — will still have more than 5,000 voters assigned, but that’s a sharp drop from the 60 sites that had more than 5,000 voters assigned for the primary election, said Fulton County Elections Director Rick Barron.

    “If you have fewer people assigned to a polling location, you have fewer people that are going to go to that location,” he said. “We had some polling places in June where we had 9,000-17,000 voters assigned to these locations, so what this does is it spreads everyone out amongst many more locations.”

    The more than 16,000 primary voters who were assigned to Park Tavern are now split among five polling places, ranging from fewer than 1,500 voters to nearly 5,500. Park Tavern will remain a polling site, with about 4,300 voters.

    But widespread rejiggering of polling locations just weeks before a presidential election comes with its own risks. A 2018 study of North Carolina voters from Stanford University found that relocating polling places decreases turnout, especially for younger voters.

    For now, Fulton County officials are hoping for an 80% early voting rate to minimize voter confusion and other problems on Election Day, when the nation’s eyes will once again be on Georgia. And they have doubled the election budget to $34 million, purchasing two mobile voting buses as polling sites to alleviate early lines and launching a massive outreach campaign to change voter behavior.

    There are more than 30 early voting locations, including a mega-voting site at Atlanta’s professional basketball arena equipped with 60 check-in computers and 300 voting machines. On the first day of in-person early voting Monday, Oct. 12, officials recorded the second-highest single-day total in recent years. Statewide, a record 128,000 Georgians braved long lines that first day.

    Still, Kathy in Union City is worried that her vote won’t be counted.

    “When you look at the systemic issues that plague us as a society, oftentimes we’re screaming but we’re not being heard,” she said. “Historically, we have seen that services and resources for Black communities have always been very inadequate, and this is just an extension of that. … How could there be such a huge disparity?”

    This article is part of Electionland, ProPublica’s collaborative reporting project covering problems that prevent eligible voters from casting their ballots during the 2020 elections.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/10/17/924527679/why-do-nonwhite-georgia-voters-have-to-wait-in-line-for-hours-too-few-polling-pl

    “We need to pay more attention to this. We seem to forget that we’re making progress, we’re doing better, and then we kind of let go and we go back again,” Dr. Carlos del Rio, a professor at the Emory University School of Medicine who specializes in infectious diseases, told CNBC on Friday.

    Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, has warned for weeks that the daily number of new cases has remained “unacceptably high” heading into the end of the year. However, it’s not too late to “vigorously apply” recommended public health measures, such as wearing a mask and maintaining a physical distance from others, Fauci told Johns Hopkins University on Thursday.

    When the U.S. descended from its first peak in April, the number of new coronavirus cases “got stuck” around 20,000 per day, Fauci said. Ideally, the U.S. would’ve reported less than 10,000 cases every day, he said.

    Then cases resurged. The number of daily new Covid-19 cases swelled to a high of nearly 70,000 cases a day before subsiding once again. However, new cases have since hovered between 40,000 to 50,000 cases a day.

    “You can’t enter into the cool months of the fall and the cold months of the winter with a high community infection baseline,” Fauci said. He added that the positivity rate, or the percentage of tests that are positive, is “going in the wrong direction” in more than 30 states.

    — CNBC’s Will Feuer and Nate Rattner contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/10/17/us-reports-highest-number-of-new-coronavirus-case-since-late-july.html