A voter wears an “I Voted” badge after placing a ballot in a drop box in Los Angeles last week. Officials say members of the Republican Party have illegally placed unauthorized drop boxes in some locations.

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A voter wears an “I Voted” badge after placing a ballot in a drop box in Los Angeles last week. Officials say members of the Republican Party have illegally placed unauthorized drop boxes in some locations.

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Updated at 10:11 p.m. ET

Unauthorized election ballot drop boxes have been found across California — in Los Angeles, Orange and Ventura counties as well as in Fresno. On Monday, California’s Secretary of State Alex Padilla and Attorney General Xavier Becerra sent out cease-and-desist letters to the state Republican Party, which appears to own at least some of these collection boxes.

In a statement to NPR on Monday night, California GOP spokesperson Hector Barajas wrote: “We are going to respond to the letter, continue our ballot harvest program and not allow the Secretary of State to suppress the vote.”

According to reporting from the Orange County Register, many of these drop boxes bear signs claiming that they are “official,” and are located at local political party offices and churches, as well as at candidates’ headquarters. In Fresno, the local ABC affiliate reported that in some instances, the boxes were simply cardboard containers without locks.

The Register also reported that the Fresno County Republican Party had on its website a list of “secure” ballot drop-off locations, including its own offices, gun shops and other businesses. None were official county drop box sites. As of Monday evening, that list appeared to have been removed from the party’s website.

LAist, which is part of member station KPCC, reported that Padilla and Becerra said at a press conference Monday that they sent cease-and-desist letters to the state GOP as well as to Republican party chapters in Los Angeles, Orange and Fresno. The unauthorized collection boxes must be removed by Thursday, the officials said.

On Monday, CBS Los Angeles reported that the California Republican Party acknowledged that it owned such boxes, without confirming how many there are or where they are located.

In a series of tweets on Monday night posted by the California Republican Party and attributed to Barajas, the state GOP defended its position at greater length, writing in part: “In California, where you can have convicted felons and individuals with a criminal history go door to door and collect ballots from voters, Democrats are now upset because organizations, individuals and groups are offering an opportunity for their friends, family and patrons to drop off their ballot with someone they know and trust… If Democrats are so concerned with ballot harvesting, they are the ones who wrote the legislation, voted for it, and Governor Jerry Brown signed it into law.”

In a tweet published Monday afternoon, Padilla addressed voters directly: “DON’T BECOME A VICTIM,” he wrote. “Unauthorized ballot drop boxes are illegal.”

Padilla also told the Register in its report that setting up an unauthorized collection is a violation of state law, with a potential prison sentence of two to four years for those convicted.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/10/12/923119170/california-officials-tell-state-gop-to-stop-distributing-ballot-drop-boxes

Controversy allegedly erupted as the chance to cast ballots on Georgia’s first day of in-person early voting Monday when thousands of people waited for hours to make their voices heard.

Liberal activist Shaun King tweeted an image of the scene: “It’s OUTRAGEOUS. People are passing out. The ambulance just came. People are hungry and thirsty. People are leaving for work. This is voter suppression.”

Cobb County Elections and Registration Director Janine Eveler told Fox News that voters should check wait times.

“Notice that other locations have much shorter lines and voters can vote at any location. We will be open at nine locations for three weeks, adding two more starting next Monday. This is not the only day to vote early. Voters can still apply for an absentee ballot by mail as well, if they do not want to wait to vote in-person. We had one voter who had a back issue and was feeling bad, so medical services were called.”

Eager voters endured waits of six hours or more in Cobb County, which was once solidly Republican but has voted for Democrats in recent elections, and joined lines that wrapped around polling places in solidly Democratic DeKalb County. They also turned out in big numbers in north Georgia’s Floyd County, where support for President Trump is strong.

With record turnout expected for this year’s presidential election and fears about exposure to the coronavirus, election officials and advocacy groups have been encouraging people to vote early, either in person or by absentee ballot.

Many answered the call on Monday, showing up in numbers that overwhelmed some locations.

THE LATEST FROM FOX NEWS ON THE 2020 PRESIDENTIAL RACE

Hundreds of people slowly moved along a line that snaked back and forth outside Cobb’s main elections office in a suburban area northwest of Atlanta. Good moods seemed to prevail, even though some people said at 1 p.m. that they’d been waiting for six hours. A brief cheer went up when a pizza deliverer handed a pie to someone in line.

At least two counties briefly had problems with the electronic poll books used to check in voters. The issue ground voting to a halt for a while at State Farm Arena, where the Atlanta Hawks NBA team plays. On-site technicians resolved the problem and the lines soon cleared at the arena, which is Georgia’s largest early voting site, with 300 voting machines.

Problems with the electronic poll books, high turnout, the consolidation of polling places and shortages of pollworkers, bedeviled Georgia’s primary in June. The dysfunction renewed questions about Georgia’s ability to conduct fair elections, two years after the state drew heavy scrutiny during a closely watched gubernatorial election in which there were long waits and other problems.

While voters must vote at their assigned polling place on Election Day, they can vote at any voting site in their county during early voting. Some people lined up before dawn Monday to be among the first to vote. Turnout also may have also been boosted because Monday is a federal holiday, so more people are off work.

Eveler told The Associated Press the county had prepared as much as much as it could, “but there’s only so much space in the rooms and parking in the parking lot.”

“We’re maxing out both of those,” she said. “People are double parking, we have gridlock pretty much in our parking lot,” she added.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/ambulance-arrives-for-georgia-voters-passing-out-in-long-lines

Hours before President Trump was set to return to the campaign trail in Florida on Monday, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, warned that holding large rallies was “asking for trouble” with cases of the coronavirus surging in many states.

Dr. Fauci, in an interview with CNN, said that Americans needed to be more cautious in the fall and winter months, and warned that rising rates of infections in a number of states suggested Americans should be “doubling down” on precautions rather than casting them aside.

“We know that that is asking for trouble when you do that,” Dr. Fauci said of Mr. Trump’s decision to begin a full schedule of campaign rallies. “We’ve seen that when you have situations of congregate settings where there are a lot of people without masks, the data speak for themselves. It happens. And now is even more so a worse time to do that, because when you look at what’s going on in the United States, it’s really very troublesome.”

He noted that many states were now seeing increases in positive tests. “It’s going in the wrong direction right now,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/12/us/elections/fauci-cautions-trump-against-holding-large-rallies-saying-it-is-asking-for-trouble.html

Fear of Trump remains high in GOP circles, and Republicans know that their fate is inexorably tied to the president’s own results. Yet at the moment, it’s not clear Trump has the juice within his party to cut a big spending deal with Democrats.

Meanwhile, there is near unanimous support for Barrett, the type of Supreme Court nominee that Senate Republicans would have confirmed for a President Rubio or a President Cruz. So some in the GOP say they should take the win in front of them and wait until after the election to pass a coronavirus relief package that would split the party — even if it could boost both Trump’s flailing re-election campaign and the GOP battle to keep the Senate.

“The reason [Barrett’s nomination is ] so exciting to Republicans is the uncertainty about what’s going to happen on Nov. 3. Here there is certainty that… we can get this across the finish line,” said Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.), who introduced Barrett at her confirmation hearing on Monday. “There’s so much uncertainty politically, not only associated with the election, and also what can we agree on” for stimulus.

Braun said that the Barrett confirmation would be a cornerstone of Trump’s legacy in his first term. Some of his colleagues are increasingly worried there won’t be a second term, and that Trump’s trajectory threatens their majority as well.

“It’s a trend and it’s going in the wrong direction,” said one Republican senator of Trump’s polling. “I think Republicans have a better chance of keeping the Senate than Donald Trump has of winning the election.”

Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) slammed Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows during a Saturday conference call to discuss the $1.8 trillion stimulus proposal they floated to Pelosi, saying it would be “the death knell for our majority if Pelosi gets this win,” according to sources on the call.

When asked Monday about her concerns with the White House’s position in the Covid relief talks, Blackburn said she instead backed a $300 billion bill crafted by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). Democrats blocked debate on that measure a month ago, rejecting it as way too little to help the slumping U.S. economy.

“I like the package that we had on the floor,” Blackburn told reporters following the first day of Barrett’s confirmation hearings. “It was the right approach.”

Blackburn, however, denied there was any serious divide with Trump or the White House.

“There is a lot that we agree on and we’re going to do just fine this week,” the Tennessee Republican said following the first day of hearings on Barrett’s nomination. Blackburn serves on the Judiciary Committee.

With calls for more help coming from Trump, business leaders and average Americans, Senate Republicans are discussing possibly holding a vote on another GOP aid bill next week, a reflection that the party needs to show it’s still trying to address the biggest crisis in the country, according to people familiar with internal party discussions. Democrats have rejected any piecemeal legislation, and Republicans have tried to shift the blame onto them for the long delay in a new coronavirus assistance package, though Pelosi first passed another bill in May.

“Once you take a look at the things Nancy Pelosi is promoting, both in terms of the price and the policy, we have a lot of concerns about that,” Senate Republican Conference Chairman John Barrasso (Wyo.) said in an interview on Monday. “But we’ve put forth what we thought was a good faith effort, and [Senate Minority Leader Chuck] Schumer and the Democrats voted no, every one of them… We’re united on that.”

Of course, after Republicans spent the day attacking Democrats for obstructing a smaller bill, Trump turned his attention to his own party on Twitter: “Republicans should be strongly focused on completing a wonderful stimulus package for the American People!”

Yet Trump has only limited influence in the legislative sphere and his sinking political fortunes are further undercutting his agenda. The president seems to pay little heed to what’s happening on Capitol Hill on a daily basis, but then will claim that a major health care or tax cut package is going to be heading to his desk soon, despite the fact that nothing of the kind is even being considered by Congress.

Trump’s current political standing seems to have hurt his ability to convince Senate Republicans to embrace more deficit spending. Some on Saturday’s conference call between Senate Republicans, Mnuchin and Meadows saw the frosty reception for the senior administration officials as a reflection of a party becoming less and less deferential to the president.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany insisted that “Senate Republicans will ultimately come along with what the president wants.” But if it’s anything close to the $1.8 trillion discussed by the Trump administration and Democrats, Braun surmised: “I can’t vote for it.”

“The only ones who will come up looking good at it are the Democrats,” said Braun, who criticized proposals to send undocumented immigrants stimulus checks and expand some Obamacare coverage.

Even the handling of Barrett’s nomination became a point of contention between Senate Republicans and Trump on Monday. Within minutes of the hearing’s start, Trump essentially demanded that his party fast-forward through the planned four days of hearings and confirm her, and then immediately pass a relief bill.

“The Republicans are giving the Democrats a great deal of time, which is not mandated, to make their self serving statements relative to our great new future Supreme Court Justice. Personally, I would pull back, approve, and go for STIMULUS for the people!!!” Trump tweeted.

The Judiciary panel’s chairman Lindsey Graham, whose South Carolina Senate seat is now vulnerable due to his alliance with Trump, quickly brushed off Trump’s comments.

“With all due respect to the president, the committee is following the traditions of the committee,” Graham (R-S.C.) said. “It’s good for the country to have this hearing.”

Marianne LeVine contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/12/amy-coney-barrett-trump-republicans-429064

Democratic nominee Joe BidenJoe BidenTrump asks campaign to schedule daily events for him until election: report White House pushes to hold next week’s canceled debate Trump hoping to strike last-minute nuclear arms deal with Putin before election: report MORE has built up a healthy lead over President TrumpDonald John TrumpDes Moines mayor says he’s worried about coronavirus spread at Trump rally Judiciary Committee Democrats pen second letter to DOJ over Barrett disclosures: ‘raises more questions that it answers’ Trump asks campaign to schedule daily events for him until election: report MORE in the critical battleground states of Wisconsin and Michigan, according to a new poll. 

The latest New York Times-Siena College survey finds Biden with a 10 point advantage over Trump in Wisconsin, where he leads 51 percent to 41 percent. Biden led by only 5 points in the same poll from September. 

In Michigan, the survey finds Biden with an 8 point advantage, 48 percent to 40 percent.

Both surveys are in line with other recent polls that have found Biden pulling away from Trump both nationally and in the key battleground states that will determine the outcome of the election.

Biden leads by 5.5 points in the RealClearPolitics average of Wisconsin and by 7 points in the same site’s average of Michigan. 

Trump narrowly won both states in 2016, becoming the first GOP presidential candidate in decades to do so.

In both instances, Trump benefitted from winning among white voters.

The New York Times-Siena College polls find Biden leading by 8 points among white voters in Wisconsin. Biden trails by only 1 point among white voters in Michigan. 

The survey found GOP Senate candidate John James running ahead of Trump in Michigan, where he trails Sen. Gary PetersGary Charles PetersBiden leads Trump by 6 points in Michigan and Nevada, race tied in Iowa: poll Hillicon Valley: Senate panel votes to subpoena Big Tech executives | Amazon says over 19,000 workers tested positive for COVID-19 | Democrats demand DHS release report warning of election interference Democrats demand DHS release report warning of election interference MORE (D-Mich.) by only 1 point. That race could have big implications for which party controls the Senate next year.

Overall, the Times-Siena poll has found substantial movement toward Biden across the six northern battleground states of Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Iowa and Ohio. Trump carried those states by about 2.6 points in 2016, but the Times-Siena poll finds Biden ahead by 6 points across those states now.

The New York Times-Siena College poll of 614 likely voters in Michigan has 4.6-percentage-point margin of error. The survey of 789 likely voters in Wisconsin has a 4-percentage-point margin of error.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/520641-poll-biden-builds-big-leads-in-wisconsin-michigan

Updated 8:40 PM ET, Mon October 12, 2020

Latrobe, Pennsylvania (CNN)They are all nervous.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/12/politics/women-voters-pennslyvania/index.html

    Roberta McCain, the mother of late U.S. Senator John McCain, is seated prior to ceremonies honoring him in the Capitol Rotunda, Aug. 31, 2018

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    Roberta McCain, the mother of late U.S. Senator John McCain, is seated prior to ceremonies honoring him in the Capitol Rotunda, Aug. 31, 2018

    Pool/Getty Images

    When the late Sen. John McCain of Arizona was in his 60s, a story came out that described a time when he was “physically mistreated by bad men who, for a while, kept [him] in prison.” It was a reference to the five-and-a-half years he had spent in harsh captivity in Hanoi after his plane was shot down during the Vietnam War.

    In that story, he called his captors “some very bad names” and used words that were “not appropriate for polite company,” McCain recounted in the introduction to his 2005 book, Character Is Destiny: Inspiring Stories We Should All Remember. His mother noticed.

    “I never taught you to use that kind of language,” she said to him, “and I have half a mind to wash your mouth out with soap.”

    That firm, principled woman, Roberta McCain, died on Monday. She was 108. John McCain’s widow, Cindy McCain, announced her death on Twitter.

    The cause of her death was not immediately released.

    John McCain grew up in a household steeped in naval tradition. He was the son and grandson of admirals, and he attended the U.S. Naval Academy.

    But it was his mother, as much as anyone, who shaped him.

    “There’s a kind of steel that kind of runs through the McCain family. And it’s not, frankly, confined to the men,” Robert Timberg, author of John McCain: An American Odyssey, told NPR in 2008.

    “I think it’s important to look at Sen. McCain’s father and grandfather to sort of understand who he is and how he became what he is. But it would be a mistake not to look at his mother.”

    Roberta McCain, he said, had an “unsinkable personality, that kind of, you know, never say die … don’t back down personality that I think Sen. McCain has. And I think he inherited it from her, and not necessarily from his father or grandfather.”

    In his speech to the Republican National Convention in 2008, John McCain recalled that as a Navy brat his father was often at sea and the job of raising him and his two siblings fell to his mother.

    She gave them “her love of life, her deep interest in the world, her strength, and her belief we are all meant to use our opportunities to make ourselves useful to our country,” McCain said.

    “I wouldn’t be here tonight but for the strength of her character,” he said.

    The daughter of an Oklahoma oil man, Roberta McCain often single-handedly packed and moved the family when her husband got new orders every few years. She loved to travel, and would make stops at museums and national parks along the way.

    When John McCain was running for president on the Republican ticket against Barack Obama in 2008, Roberta McCain was already in her late 90s – but she would periodically join him on the campaign trail.

    “Do you want me to sit around and play bridge every day? Or discuss my last knee replacement? Or pass around pictures of my grandchildren?” CNN quoted her as saying in a 2008 interview with CBS. “Well, that isn’t my choice of a way to live.”

    She even appeared in a campaign ad, saying: “He was the sweetest, nicest child I’ve ever known. I think he’ll make a wonderful president. Well, he’s not perfect. Did I say that?”

    John McCain died of brain cancer in 2018.

    Over his 35-year career in Congress, and two bids for the presidency, he became one of the best-known politicians of his era. He is remembered for his patriotism, principled independence, and for giving respect to friends and adversaries across the political aisle.

    His mother was undoubtedly proud of his achievements.

    But, predisposed to decorum and modesty, and always holding her children to a higher standard, she thought he talked in public and appeared on TV just a little too much, according to Character is Destiny.

    Asked by a reporter if she was proud that her son had become such a prominent person, she replied: “Fools’ names and fools’ faces are often seen in public places.”

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/10/12/923067711/john-mccains-108-year-old-mother-dies

    Maya Rudolph and Beck Bennett went toe-to-toe as Sen. Kamala Harris and Vice President Mike Pence in the cold open on last week’s “Saturday Night Live.” 

    The sketch parodied a number of talked-about moments from last week’s debate, including Harris’ “I’m speaking” highlight and, of course, the fly on Pence’s head

    The issue of fracking, which was a major topic that came up during the real vice presidential debate, also made its way into the show’s script.

    “Let’s focus on the two issues that Americans do care about, swine flu and fracking,” Bennett’s Pence says

    ‘SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE’ MOCKS VP DEBATE, TRUMP’S DIAGNOSIS, HERMAN CAIN IN COLD OPEN

    Rudolph’s Harris interrupted to note that Joe Biden does not want to ban fracking and did her best to sweep under the rug the fact that she used to be against it and began pandering to voters in the battleground state of Pennsylvania.

    Maya Rudolph as Sen. Kamala Harris on “Saturday Night Live.”
    (Will Heath/NBC)

    “Now if anyone should be talking about fracking, it’s my guy Joe Biden,” Rudolph’s Harris says. “Joe Biden fracks in his free time. Joe Biden will frack you so good Pennsylvania. And while I personally wanted to ban fracking, now that I know Pennsylvania loves it, I just want to say this.”

    BILL BURR’S ‘SNL’ OPENING MONOLOGUE DRAWS MIXED REACTIONS FOR HITTING CONTROVERSIAL TOPICS

    From there, Rudolph launched into an exaggerated Philly accent. 

    “Youz guys can bet on your Wawa cheesesteak hoagies and all the wooder in the Schuylkill River that Joe Biden ain’t banning fracking. Go Iggles,” she joked. 

    Despite the wink to Pennsylvania voters, the real crux of the sketch came when the show enlisted Jim Carrey once again to play Biden as he decides to teleport to the debate to “save the soul of this nation.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    From there, the sketch turned into a parody of the 1986 film “The Fly.” Carrey’s Biden arrives at the debate in fly form to mock Pence after stepping into an experimental teleporter, just like in the movie.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/saturday-night-live-cold-open-fracking-pa-voters

    Early voting kicked off in Georgia on Monday with hourslong waits at some polling locations amid what election officials said was a record high turnout.

    Kathleen Campbell, 31, was at her polling place, Atlanta’s High Museum of Art, around 8:10 a.m. ET. It took more than 2 hours to work her way to the front of the line, she said, speaking to NBC News by phone around 11 a.m. as she was about to be allowed in to cast her ballot.

    “I have voted before, always in person and I’ve never waited this long which I’m hoping is actually a good sign for this year’s election turnout,” Campbell said. “I’m feeling really optimistic at how seriously people are going to take this election.”

    “Everyone is patiently waiting to get to the polls inside and I don’t think I’ve seen one person without a mask on,” she added.

    Waits were even longer at the main polling station for Cobb County in Marietta, with some voters telling the local NBC affiliate they’d been on line for more than five hours.

    One Cobb County voter, Everlean Rutherford, tweeted out a video of a line that stretched across a mall and through a large parking lot.

    “This is going to be an election where there are unprecedented numbers of people voting. I love it. Get out and vote!” she said in an interview. Despite the lengthy lines, Rutherford said, “everyone is so nice. I’m talking to people around me. I hear other groups talking and socializing. Some people have chairs and sitting in them.”

    Hours later, she was still in line, and her mood had soured.

    “I went from ‘yay love seeing all these people early voting’ to ‘I’ve been here over four hours, hungry and ready to go’. Yeah this is voter suppression. It should never take this long to vote. Especially early voting,” she tweeted.

    Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger’s office told NBC affiliate 11 Alive on Monday that “Georgia is seeing record turnout for early voting because of excitement and enthusiasm of the upcoming election. Long lines are to be expected — voters need to be aware of all of their options, including three weeks of early voting, no-excuse absentee and in-person voting day of the election.”

    The high turnout was likely helped by Monday’s Columbus Day holiday. However, similarly long waits had marred the state’s primary in June.

    Kristen Clarke, president and CEO of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, a civil rights group, had called the primary “a catastrophe.” At the time, Raffensperger, a Republican, called for an investigation into the issues.

    Nearly 2.4 million voters turned out for the June primary, a record.

    Local election officials said there weren’t any significant issues with the state’s cumbersome voting machines Monday, but noted unusually high turnout. Democrats had been urging people to vote by mail because of the pandemic, but President Donald Trump has repeatedly railed against mail-in voting, falsely saying it’s prone to fraud.

    At Atlanta’s State Farm Arena, home of the Atlanta Hawks basketball team, officials said a “glitch” delayed the start of voting by about 40 minutes.

    “We experienced a small technical glitch in the system. Technicians were on site and worked as quickly as possible to resolve the matter. Then Atlanta Hawks, which is known for its customer service immediately went into action to assist in making the voters comfortable,” Regina Waller, a senior public information officer for Fulton County, said in a statement.

    Voters cast their ballots for the upcoming presidential elections in Atlanta on Oct. 12, 2020.Chris Aluka Berry / Reuters

    Hawks CEO Steve Koonin told reporters, “We’re getting very positive feedback” after the issue was resolved.

    Over 300 people were lined up at a Gwinnett County Election Board in Lawrenceville about a half hour before it opened.

    “I did expect a long line, but I arrived 30 minutes before open, and I’m still waiting three hours later,” one voter in line, Melissa McGuire, said in an interview. “Many, many more people than normal,” she added.

    Fulton, Cobb, DeKalb and Gwinnett counties, counties with large nonwhite populations, all reported long lines.

    Studies show that race is one of the strongest predictors of how long a person waits in line to vote.

    In 2019, researchers from the University of California, Los Angeles, Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Chicago used smartphone data to quantify the racial disparity in waiting times at polls across the country. Residents of entirely-black neighborhoods waited 29 percent longer to vote and were 74 percent more likely to spend more than 30 minutes voting.

    Similarly, nonwhite voters are seven times more likely than white voters to wait in line for more than an hour to vote, according to a 2017 study by the University of Pennsylvania’s Stephen Pettigrew, who is a senior analyst for the NBC News Decision Desk. The reason, the study concluded, is because election officials send more resources to white polling precincts.

    That can affect the electorate for years to come.

    “Waiting in a line makes you less likely to turn out in subsequent elections,” Pettigrew said earlier this year, citing his research on that issue.

    And mail voting, trusted less by voters of colors, has its own challenges: Black voters’ ballots are more likely to be rejected than ballots cast by white voters.

    Source Article from http://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2020-election/early-voting-begins-georgia-long-lines-high-turnout-n1242995

    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump is running out of time to recover from a series of self-inflicted setbacks that have rattled his base of support and triggered alarm among Republicans who fear the White House is on the verge of being lost to Democrat Joe Biden.

    The one-two punch of Trump’s coronavirus diagnosis and his widely panned debate performance also has Republicans worried they could lose control of the Senate. With just over three weeks until Election Day, Senate races in some reliably red states, including South Carolina and Kansas, are competitive, aided by a surge in Democratic fundraising that has put both the Republican Party and Trump’s own campaign at an unexpected financial disadvantage.

    The president will aim for a reset this week, hoping an aggressive travel schedule and Judge Amy Coney Barrett’s Supreme Court confirmation hearings will energize his most loyal supporters and shift attention away from a virus that has killed more than 214,000 Americans on his watch.

    Optimists in the president’s inner circle point to his unique ability to command attention and to his 2016 campaign, which also seemed destined for defeat before a late shift. But that comeback was aided by outside forces against an unpopular opponent. This year’s campaign, other Republicans worry, may instead resemble 1980 or 2008: a close race until, at the end, it decidedly wasn’t.

    “It’s not good for my side,” said veteran GOP pollster Whit Ayres. “Pretty obviously, in many ways down-ballot Republicans are in the boat with Donald Trump. That’s good for Republicans in deep-red states, but more problematic for those in swing states.”

    Asked for any bright spots for the Republican field, Ayres said, “I’m wracking my brain and just struggling.”

    This account of Trump’s reelection effort was compiled from interviews with nearly two dozen White House and campaign officials and Republicans close to the West Wing, many of whom were not authorized to publicly discuss private conversations. It describes how a race that has generally been stable for months has endured a series of historic jolts.

    Republicans began sensing warning signs last month.

    The death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg animated conservatives but also electrified Democrats, driving a tsunami of cash toward Biden and down-ballot Democrats. Trump’s heavily derided debate performance only exacerbated the problem, as even his own supporters found him rude as he so frequently interrupted Biden.

    Reviewing data afterward, campaign aides worried as they started to see Trump’s support begin to slip. They saw the president’s coronavirus diagnosis as only compounding the problem, particularly with seniors.

    “It’s not good,” said Alex Conant, a senior campaign adviser to Sen. Marco Rubio’s 2016 presidential campaign. “It’s been a long time since Donald Trump has had any good news, and when he does have good news, he manages to step on it.”

    The Trump campaign insists the president can win reelection, saying his return to the road will excite his base while claiming that public polling has undercounted their supporters.

    But national polls have shown Biden with a significant lead. And while the margins in the battleground states are smaller, Trump has faced stubborn deficits in most of the states that will decide the election.

    Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said Friday if that people are depressed and upset on Election Day, “I think we could lose the White House and both houses of Congress, that it could be a bloodbath of Watergate proportions.” In November 1974, the first congressional election after the Watergate scandal drove Republican President Richard Nixon from office, Democrats added significantly to their majorities in both houses. They took back the White House in 1976 and added still more seats in Congress.

    Trump’s campaign worries that it is losing support among suburban voters, women and older voters. The loss of older voters would be especially concerning in states like Florida and Arizona, where aides felt pre-debate Trump had pulled even with or slightly ahead Biden in part due to his improved standing with Latino voters.

    Advisers privately concede that Trump, who has not moderated his tone on the virus after getting sick, has little chance of victory without Florida, which will be the site of his first post-diagnosis rally on Monday. And a loss in Arizona would require Trump to hold onto Pennsylvania.

    Biden in recent weeks has pushed into states that once were considered safe for Trump, among them Iowa, Georgia and Texas, forcing the president to spend valuable time and resources to play defense. The Democrat on Monday will make a trip to Ohio for his general election campaign, another state Trump won convincingly in 2016.

    “He’s in trouble, there’s no question. By every traditional measuring stick, this looks like a Biden landslide,” said Ari Fleischer, former press secretary for President George W. Bush. “It’s hard to predict what will happen in Congress, but anytime there is a large-scale victory, it has the potential to create tides to sweep people out.”

    The fate of the Senate has increasingly weighed on Republicans, who see tough races in Maine, Colorado, Arizona and North Carolina and even worries in deep-red Kansas and South Carolina. Some Trump backers are warning that GOP Senate candidates are now at an inflection point and some, including Sens. John Cornyn of Texas and Martha McSally of Arizona, took small steps to distance themselves from the president in recent days.

    Dan Eberhart, a prominent GOP donor and Trump supporter, said there is no doubt that Trump’s handling of the pandemic is eroding support for down-ballot Republicans and could lead to a Democratic sweep of government.

    “I hope the polls have it wrong,” Eberhart said. “But Republicans … need to develop a campaign strategy committed to protecting the Senate at all costs, even if it means sacrificing the Oval Office.”

    One significant opportunity to potentially change the trajectory of the race is Barrett’s Senate confirmation hearings this week. Trump’s campaign believes the hearings could change the political narrative away from the virus and draw attention to Biden’s refusal to say whether he would expand or “pack” the Supreme Court.

    But there has been second-guessing of Trump and campaign senior staff, including Bill Stepien, the campaign manager also ill with COVID-19, for balking at appearing in a remote debate last week. The move, like Trump’s impulsive decision to blow up COVID relief talks only to later restart them, was one of several recent episodes that felt less like an effort to win and more about creating excuses for a loss.

    And after days of back and forth, only one debate remains, depriving Trump of a free 90 minutes to reach tens of millions of Americans. And that price tag matters.

    The Trump campaign has spent more than $1.5 million in the District of Columbia market — one of the most liberal in the country but home to the president’s obsessive cable-watching habits — since the end of April. That’s more than he has spent in Virginia and New Hampshire and has contributed to the erosion of Trump’s once-massive cash advantage to Biden.

    The Democrat is outspending Trump by more than 2-to-1 at a time when the president has largely retreated from advertising in battleground states that helped him win in 2016.

    While Biden’s campaign and Democrats have booked $172 million in ad time the final three weeks, Trump and the GOP have reserved $92 million, according to the political ad tracker Kantar/CMAG.

    Some Trump allies say their best bet is to hope that the results look close election night, before some of the mail-in ballots are counted, allowing Trump to declare victory and have the results thrown to the courts.

    The Trump campaign believes the president’s return to the campaign trail will shift the story from COVID and says an economic closing argument — 56% of people in a Gallup poll this week said they were better off than four years ago, despite the pandemic — will be a winner.

    “If we believe public media polls, then we would be talking about Hillary Clinton’s reelection right now,” said Tim Murtaugh, the campaign’s communications director. “The choice in this campaign boils down to this: Who do you trust to restore the economy to greatness, the president who has done it once already and is already doing it again or Joe Biden and his 47-year record in Washington?”

    Still, Trump is flailing for a final message, turning a spate of recent interviews into tirades about the 2016 election and pushing his attorney general to investigate his political opponents. Newt Gingrich, who believes Trump will win again, warned the president to stop fighting the last war.

    “He hasn’t quite adjusted to the fact that Biden is not Hillary and he has not adjusted that he has been around for five years and not being a fresh face,” the Republican former House speaker said. “The things that worked against Hillary haven’t worked against Biden.”

    While the state of the race looks promising, Democrats know that three weeks add up to an eternity in the age of Trump.

    “There is an opportunity for a massive Democratic win, but this is still close in some of these states,” said Claire McCaskill, a Democratic former senator from Missouri. “The fundamentals of the race have not changed. But the reason I am optimistic is that the president’s instincts have never been more wrong.”

    ___

    This story has been corrected to show that Monday will not be Joe Biden’s first general election campaign visit to Ohio. Biden visited the state on Sept. 30.

    ___

    Associated Press writers Bill Barrow in Phoenix and Lisa Mascaro, Aamer Madhani and Brian Slodysko in Washington contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/election-2020-virus-outbreak-joe-biden-donald-trump-campaigns-904620e3b58a8abf75227848c8762396

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2020/10/12/covid-news-states-set-case-records-nyc-protest-leader-arrested/5966027002/

    Under relentless Navy reassignment moves, her youngest son, Joe, had attended 17 schools by the time he finished the ninth grade. During World War II Mrs. McCain, living in Hawaii, rarely saw her husband, a submarine commander whose dangers on monthslong patrols in the Pacific were the stuff of wartime legends and family nightmares.

    With husbands gone, wives took on all the tasks, Senator McCain wrote:

    “Our mothers run our households, pay the bills and manage most of our upbringing. For long stretches at a time they are required to be both mother and father. They move us from base to base. They see to our religious, educational and emotional needs. They arbitrate our quarrels, discipline us and keep us safe.”

    After World War II, when her husband became the Navy’s information chief and congressional liaison, the McCains kept a home on Capitol Hill. Senators, representatives and Pentagon brass were frequent visitors at their home, which later became the Capitol Hill Club.

    “My mother’s charm proved as effective with politicians as it did with naval officers,” Senator McCain recalled in his memoir.

    Her husband was promoted to rear admiral in 1958. Her father-in-law, John S. McCain Sr., was also an admiral, who commanded Western Pacific Naval air and carrier task forces in World War II.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/12/us/roberta-mccain-dead.html

    Around the same time that the W.H.O. was hatching plans for its mega-trial, U.S. government officials were discussing how they could best invest in — and speed up — vaccine trials. Some researchers, including Dr. Fauci, advocated a design much like the W.H.O.’s.

    But Moncef Slaoui, the chief adviser of Operation Warp Speed, the multiagency effort to hasten the development of coronavirus vaccines and treatments, said in a statement that such a trial would have been impractical. “If OWS had tested all vaccines under one master protocol, the operation would have had to wait months before starting and recruit 200,000 volunteers at the same time.”

    In the end, the government opted for what it described as a “harmonized approach.” It would allow vaccine makers to run their own trials, but only if they used protocols that followed certain guidelines and let the National Institutes of Health test all of their volunteers in the same way. In exchange for following these rules, the companies would get to tap into to the N.I.H.’s large network of clinical testing sites, and receive major financial support for their trials. Through this program, the government has promised $10 billion to vaccine makers to date.

    So far, AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson and Moderna have begun trials in the network. Novavax and Sanofi are expected to start their own Phase 3 studies in the next couple of months. But Pfizer, one of the front-runners, never joined the network, opting to run trials completely on its own.

    If Pfizer’s results turn out well, many experts expect the company to ask the Food and Drug Administration for an emergency authorization of its vaccine, potentially for just one group of high-risk people. The company might then swiftly move to apply for a license, making it widely available.

    The authorization of a vaccine will depend on how much protection the vaccine provides in the Phase 3 trial — what scientists refer to as its efficacy. In June, the F.D.A. set 50 percent efficacy as the target for a coronavirus vaccine.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/12/health/covid-vaccines.html

    Amy Coney Barrett, Donald Trump’s nominee for the US supreme court, went to my all-girls Catholic high school. We wore the same black-and-white plaid skirts and saddle oxfords and roamed the same halls, although nearly a decade apart. As students at St Mary’s Dominican High School, along with an education rooted in the Catholic faith, we were encouraged to be strong, independent women, future leaders of the world. I would be proud to see a fellow alum serve on our highest court if that person’s presence didn’t threaten to irrevocably harm the lives of millions of Americans.

    We didn’t have a mascot at Dominican, only an emblem: Veritas. In Latin, truth. But the truth is not monolithic – it is informed by our belief systems. How we define the truth matters, especially for someone serving on the supreme court.

    Barrett’s anti-abortion views have come to bear in public stances. In 2015, she signed a letter to Catholic bishops affirming the value of “life from conception” alongside prominent anti-choice figures such as Marjorie Dannenfeiser, president of anti-choice fundraising organization the Susan B Anthony List. As a law professor at Notre Dame, Barrett was a member of the anti-abortion group University Faculty for Life, and in 2006, she signed a paid ad in a South Bend newspaper that called for “an end to the barbaric legacy of Roe v Wade. In 2013, she delivered two talks to anti-abortion student groups at Notre Dame. Barrett has also been critical of the Affordable Care Act guarantee that requires employers to provide birth control to their employees.

    Like the late Justice Scalia, for whom she clerked, Barrett is a self-described textualist and originalist; she interprets the US constitution based on its plain language and an attempted understanding of the intent and mindset of the original drafters. Barrett has also written that, in her view, it is appropriate and legitimate for judges to overturn precedents when they conflict with their personal interpretation of the constitution. Obedience to the exact original meaning of the constitution without current context is problematic. These laws were made by white, cisgender men who enslaved other human beings and never intended to include a vast sum of Americans – like women and people of color – in their quest for equal rights.

    When one person’s truth, defined by the way they see the world, impacts the lives and liberties of generations of diverse Americans, it has tremendous power.

    When I was in high school, I often wore a small gold pin in the shape of baby feet on my shirt collar. My Catholic upbringing taught me that the lives of the unborn needed protecting. I then attended the Catholic University of America, the only American university chartered by a pope. I was devout and sincere in my faith. But as the Catholic community on campus became more conservative and charismatic, more self-righteous in beliefs about “the right way,” I started to have more questions. As I became exposed to increasing world views, I began to understand the limits of my faith of origin and its proclamations.

    Over time, I recognized that my belief in the “rightness” of my faith had made me think that someone else’s health and reproductive freedom should be legislated. Further, I saw how the Church’s patriarchal culture –even more rigid in charismatic communities – harmed the lives of girls and women when we were discouraged from any agency around our own bodies, sexuality and life choices. I saw how, in the absence of talk of abortion, people who claim to be “pro-life” often do not care about the lives of the most vulnerable Americans, including children born into poverty and struggle.

    With Barrett’s nomination, I worry about the lives and futures of my fellow Americans. I worry about the lives of over 20 million Americans who depend on the Affordable Care Act for healthcare when Barrett criticized the supreme court decision upholding Congress’ authority to enforce it. I worry about the lives of women and all those with uteruses when Barrett has referred to abortion as “always immoral” and stated that judges may overturn precedents according to their interpretation of the constitution.

    I worry about the lives of LGBTQ+ families when Barrett defended supreme court dissenters on the landmark marriage equality case Obergefell v Hodges. I worry about the lives of Black, Native, Asian and Latinx Americans when Barrett has pointed out what she perceives as flaws in Brown v The Board of Education: the landmark case that desegregated schools. I worry about the lives of transgender youth and adults when, in lectures, Barrett stated she did not know if transgender bathrooms were necessary given the text of Title IX and when she misgendered transwomen, calling them “physiological males.”

    Much has been written about Barrett and her husband’s involvement as members of a charismatic “covenanted” community called People of Praise. As many Catholic individuals and organizations have noted, charismatic Catholic communities are very specific, divergent from mainstream Catholicism and more ideologically and culturally conservative. People of Praise is a hierarchical organization where members make a life-long commitment, or covenant, and donate at least five percent of their income to the group. One main tenet is that husbands are head of their wives and the authority of the family. Members are assigned a same-sex advisor, “head” for men and “woman leader” for single women (For decades “women advisors” were called “handmaids” but this was changed because of connotations from Margaret Atwood’s novel and the subsequent television series The Handmaid’s Tale). According to The New York Times, current and former members reported that these advisors “give direction on important decisions, including whom to date or marry, where to live, whether to take a job or buy a home, and how to raise children.” In reporting from The New York Times, Democracy Now and The National Catholic Reporter, former members describe the group as suffocating, authoritarian and abusive.

    A worldview in which an authoritarian structure rules is one that erases individual autonomy. A worldview in which women play subservient roles, needing to consult others before making decisions, renders them without agency. This worldview is extremely dangerous when scaled to constitutional decisions on national policy, the domain of the supreme court.

    I respect the role of religion and spirituality in our personal lives. And I do not take issue with someone of any faith serving on the supreme court or even describing themselves as devout. I do, however, have a problem when evidence exists, in words and actions, that their faith paired with their legal theory might compel them to make decisions that would negatively impact the lives, agency and wellbeing of generations of Americans.

    Two years ago, my high school presented Amy Coney Barrett with the Alumna of the Year Award. I’ve read she was a respected teacher and is a polite person. I don’t doubt this. What I doubt is her ability to separate out the “rightness” of her faith from decisions about the future of healthcare, reproductive freedom, and civil rights for millions of Americans. What I fear is that her leadership on the supreme court would erode rather than protect liberty and justice for all.

    Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/oct/12/amy-coney-barrett-bad-choice-women

    Unlike in 2012, self-identified Republicans now outnumber Democrats in Times/Siena polls of Wisconsin, Michigan and even Pennsylvania, where the Democratic registration advantage remains significant but has dwindled in recent months.

    Instead, Mr. Biden leads with an overwhelming advantage among independent voters, who back him by 20 percentage points in both states.

    And though Mr. Biden’s gains among white voters are broad, spanning both those with and without a college degree, he fares far better than Mr. Obama did among white college graduates, while faring worse among those without a four-year degree. As a result, Mr. Biden still trails narrowly in the precincts that flipped from Mr. Obama to Mr. Trump, while holding an overwhelming advantage in the smaller number of predominantly suburban precincts that backed Mitt Romney in 2012 and then supported Mrs. Clinton in 2016.

    In Michigan, Senator Gary Peters, a Democrat, faces a surprisingly strong challenge from John James, a graduate of West Point who is considered one of the Republicans’ top recruits of the cycle. Mr. Peters leads by just one percentage point, 43 percent to 42 percent, among likely voters, a significant narrowing of the race since a Times/Siena survey in June that found Mr. Peters leading, 41-31.

    The relatively high number of undecided voters reflects the relatively low profile of the two candidates. Around 20 percent of voters do not have an opinion on either of them. Mr. James’s favorability ratings have increased to 45 percent favorable versus 35 percent unfavorable, up from 36 percent favorable and 29 percent unfavorable in the June survey. Part of Mr. Peters’s weakness is that he has thus far failed to match Mr. Biden’s tallies among nonwhite voters, who disproportionately remain undecided. It remains to be seen whether Mr. James, who is Black, will ultimately make significant inroads among these voters.

    A closely fought race in Michigan complicates the Democratic path to flipping control of the Senate, which has looked increasingly plausible as several Senate Republican incumbents have fared worse than the president in surveys. Yet here it is the incumbent Democrat faring worse than Mr. Biden, and a Republican win in Michigan would force Democrats to pick up a win in a state that Mr. Trump won comfortably in 2016, like Iowa or Montana, to win Senate control.

    Public opinion polls have been remarkably stable this year, through the pandemic, the economic crisis and social unrest. The surveys of Wisconsin and Michigan were conducted during another tumultuous week in the campaign, and they offered little indication that any of the news had worked to the president’s favor.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/12/upshot/polls-wisconsin-michigan-election.html

    A New York City Council candidate was arrested in connection to the assault of a Jewish journalist, prompting dozens of protesters to gather outside the journalist’s house Sunday for inciting what they’re calling an unconstitutional “political arrest.” 

    Harold “Heshy” Tischler was taken into custody by the New York City Police Department Warrant Squad on Sunday night. He was charged with inciting to riot and unlawful imprisonment in connection with an assault of a journalist that took place on Oct. 7 in Brooklyn.

    Videos showed dozens of protesters, who appeared to be members of the Orthodox Jewish community, gather outside Jewish Insider national politics reporter Jacob Kornbluh’s home after Tischler was taken unto custody. NYPD also responded to the scene, as protesters shouted from the ground up to people standing on the building’s balconies. 

    ORTHODOX JEWS, ROMAN CATHOLICS SUE NYC OVER CUOMO’S CORONAVIRUS RESTRICTIONS 

    The arrest comes after Kornbluh claimed on Twitter last Wednesday that he was “brutally assaulted, hit in the head, and kicked” by hundreds of community members during a protest in Borough Park in Brooklyn. He said the crowd assaulted him while calling him a “Nazi” and “Hitler.” Kornbluh also said Tischler recognized him and ordered the crowd to chase him down the street.

    Tischler, a supporter of President Trump running for a spot on the New York City Council, has been organizing protests in response to new restrictions limiting religious gatherings in large Orthodox Jewish communities in Queens and Brooklyn. 

    In a video message posted before his arrest, Tischler said he received a call from the NYPD’s 66th Precinct informing him he should turn himself in Monday or he would be taken into custody.

    “I will be turning myself in – I’m not sure yet – I’m thinking maybe let them come get me, but they’re asking me not to cause any issues in Borough Park and Flatbush,” Tischler said. “I did not commit this crime of violence and no one was arrested that night, so I will of course be pleading not guilty”

    He added that Kornbluh is a “very terrible, bad man” and had “harassed” him the night before the alleged assault, yet the district attorney’s office is not filing charges against Kornbluh at this time.

    ORTHODOX JEWISH PROTESTERS BLAST CUOMO, DE BLASIO OVER NEW CORONAVIRUS RESTRICTIONS

    While the alleged incident was rebuked by politicians like U.S. Rep Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., Tischler claimed the crowd only cornered Kornbluh and criticized Nadler for claiming the Borough Park protest devolved into riots, while also arguing violent demonstrations in Portland were a “myth.” Nadler, Kornbluh and Tischler are all Jewish.

    Harold Tischler gathers with members of the Orthodox Jewish community who support President Trump during a protest over new coronavirus restrictions.  (Stephen Lovekin/Shutterstock)

    Tischler also criticized New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, who he says did not “care that many Journalists were attacked by mobs who were rioting and looting+ burning police cars at the George Floyd riots,” but instead wants “consequences” after the Borough Park incident. 

    Last week, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo issued an executive order limiting the size of religious gathering in coronavirus hotspots in some upstate New York counties as well as Brooklyn and Queens. 

    The restrictions limit houses of worship to up to 25% capacity or a maximum of 10 people in “red zone” clusters, 33% capacity with a maximum of 25 people in orange zones and up to 50% in yellow zones.

    On Friday, U.S. District Judge Kiyo Matsumoto refused to block the executive order after an emergency hearing in a lawsuit brought by rabbis and synagogues who said the restrictions were unconstitutional. They had sought to have enforcement delayed until at least after Jewish holy days this weekend. The federal judge said the state had an interest in protecting public safety.

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    Meanwhile, city agents handed out more than $150,000 in fines from 62 summonses in red, orange and yellow coronavirus zones since Friday. That included five summonses issued to noncompliant religious organizations as part of crackdown measures carried out during recent COVID-19 outbreaks in Brooklyn and Queens.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/nyc-jewish-journalist-council-candidate-rioting-arrest-coronavirus-orthodox

    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg says his thinking has “evolved” on how to balance free speech and the harms of Holocaust denial.

    Drew Angerer/Getty Images


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    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg says his thinking has “evolved” on how to balance free speech and the harms of Holocaust denial.

    Drew Angerer/Getty Images

    Facebook is banning all content that “denies or distorts the Holocaust,” in a policy reversal that comes after increased pressure from critics.

    Just two years ago, founder and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said in an interview that even though he finds such posts “deeply offensive,” he did not believe Facebook should take them down. Zuckerberg has said on numerous occasions that Facebook shouldn’t be forced to be the arbiter of truth on its platform, but rather allow a wide range of speech.

    In a Facebook post on Monday, Zuckerberg said his thinking has “evolved” because of data showing an increase in anti-Semitic violence. The company said it was also in response to an “alarming” level of ignorance among young people.

    “I’ve struggled with the tension between standing for free expression and the harm caused by minimizing or denying the horror of the Holocaust,” he wrote. “Drawing the right lines between what is and isn’t acceptable speech isn’t straightforward, but with the current state of the world, I believe this is the right balance.”

    In addition to removing Holocaust-denying posts, Facebook will begin directing users who search for terms associated with the Holocaust or its denial to “credible information” off the platform later this year, Monika Bickert, head of content policy, said in a blog post. She said it would take “some time” to train Facebook’s enforcement systems to enact the change.

    Facebook has been under increased pressure to act more aggressively on hate speech, misinformation and other harmful content. The company has recently strengthened its rules to prohibit anti-Semitic stereotypes, and banned accounts related to militia groups and QAnon, a baseless conspiracy theory movement.

    This summer, a group of Holocaust survivors, organized by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, launched a social media campaign urging Zuckerberg to remove Holocaust denial from Facebook.

    On Monday, the group tweeted: “Survivors spoke! Facebook listened.”

    Editor’s note: Facebook is among NPR’s financial supporters.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/10/12/923002012/facebook-bans-holocaust-denial-reversing-earlier-policy