With Arizona beginning early voting and sending out mail ballots this week, Mr. Trump is running out of time to improve his standing in a state that last supported a Democrat for president in 1996.

Mr. Biden is being propelled by women, younger voters and Hispanic people, a coalition of the ascendant constituencies reshaping the politics of a state that Mr. Trump carried by about three and a half points in 2016.

Mr. Biden is winning women by 18 points and trailing Mr. Trump by only two points among men. Among likely Hispanic voters, who are expected to make up about 20 percent of Arizona’s electorate, Mr. Biden is overwhelming the president, capturing 65 percent to Mr. Trump’s 27 percent.

In a sign of a brewing suburban backlash against the president, Mr. Biden’s lead in Maricopa County, the Phoenix-anchored population hub of the state, matches his statewide advantage. He’s leading by nine points in the county, which accounts for over 60 percent of the state’s population. It’s highly difficult to win Arizona without winning Maricopa, which Mr. Trump captured by three points in 2016.

The president’s standing with female voters and independents in the state has plunged since his victory four years ago, and, significantly, there appears to be far less interest in third-party candidates this year.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/05/us/elections/politics-arizona-poll.html







  • House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told CBS News on Sunday that lawmakers are “making progress” on more US stimulus, and said US airlines should hold off on job cuts.
  • Pelosi told airline executives: “don’t fire people. You know that relief is on the way.” 
  • The Democrat said airline workers face a tougher battle than employees in other industries because once they lose their job, it takes a long time for them to be recertified after losing a job.
  • Her comments came after President Trump tweeted about the economy from Walter Reed National Military Center on Saturday, pushing for the passage of a stimulus plan that has been stalled for months.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on Sunday progress is being made on the government’s next coronavirus relief package, and told executives in the US airline industry to hold off on job cuts.

“We’re making progress,” Pelosi told CBS News, adding that she hoped Republicans would “agree on what we need to do to crush the virus.”

The California Democrat said she issued a public statement to airline executives, telling them to hold off on job cuts, as an agreement for relief is imminent.

Pelosi told the airlines “don’t fire people. You know that relief is on the way.”



She pointed out that when workers in the airline industry are fired, unlike other industries, it takes months, or years, for them to be recertified for security clearance.

Read More: MORGAN STANLEY: Buy these 16 stocks to cheaply invest in next-generation technologies and reap the future profits they generate

In her statement to airlines, issued Friday, Pelosi said Congress would either pass Rep. Peter DeFazio’s stand-alone legislation assisting airlines or secure relief as part of a broader negotiated bill. She said both courses of action would extend the Payroll Support Program by another six months. 

The federal Payroll Support Program passed by Congress and signed into law in March expired Thursday.

Airlines including American and United Airlines said they would begin furloughing tens of thousands of employees as Congress failed to reach a deal last week on a COVID-19 relief bill.



Pelosi’s comments came after President Trump provided an update on his health from Walter Reed National Military Centre on Saturday. He also tweeted about the economy, calling for both chambers of Congress to pass a spending package that has been stalled for months.

“OUR GREAT USA WANTS & NEEDS STIMULUS,” he said in the tweet. “WORK TOGETHER AND GET IT DONE. Thank you!”

Read More: A Wall Street expert says a trend with a 30-year track record of wrecking expensive stocks is flashing for big tech – and warns investors to brace for a turnaround within months



Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/pelosi-us-stimulus-progress-tells-airlines-dont-fire-people-cbs-2020-10

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany revealed she tested positive for the coronavirus on Monday morning and will start the “quarantine process,” becoming the latest person in President Trump’s orbit to get the virus.

“After testing negative consistently, including every day since Thursday, I tested positive for COVID-19 on Monday morning while experiencing no symptoms,” McEnany said in a statement. “No reporters, producers, or members of the press are listed as close contacts by the White House Medical Unit.”

MEADOWS ‘OPTIMISTIC’ TRUMP COULD BE DISCHARGED FROM WALTER REED MILITARY MEDICAL CENTER AS EARLY AS MONDAY AFTERNOON

Other White House staff who have tested positive for COVID-19 at this point include senior adviser Hope Hicks and director of Oval Office operations Nick Luna. Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien also tested positive for COVID-19.

Former counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway has also tested positive and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who participated in debate prep with the president recently, did too and was admitted to the hospital over the weekend.

In her statement, McEnany defended her decision to hold a press briefing last week the same day Hicks tested positive. The White House Correspondents Association has said several journalists have also tested positive.

“I definitively had no knowledge of Hope Hicks’ diagnosis prior to holding a White House press briefing on Thursday,” McEnany said, adding that “as an essential worker, I have worked diligently to provide needed information to the American people at this time.”

McEnany added: “With my recent positive test, I will begin the quarantine process and will continue working on behalf of the American people remotely.”

TRUMP TESTS POSITIVE FOR CORONAVIRUS: HERE’S WHO ELSE IS POSITIVE, AND WHO’S NEGATIVE

McEnany’s positive COVID-19 test comes as Chief of Staff Mark Meadows has said Trump could be discharged from Walter Reed Military Medical Center, where he has been receiving treatment for the novel coronavirus since Friday, and return to the White House as early as Monday afternoon.

“Spoke to the president this morning,” Meadows said. “He continued to improve overnight and is ready to get back to a normal working schedule.”

He added that the president “will meet with his doctors and nurses this morning to make further assessments of his progress.”

Meadows added, “We are still optimistic that he will be able to return to the White House later today, with his medical professionals making that determination later today.”

Meadows, during an interview on “Fox & Friends,” said that the White House would know about the president’s potential release by “the earliest” Monday afternoon.

Meanwhile, as White House staff awaits the president’s return, McEnany said Sunday that the White House would not be releasing the names or the exact number of staffers who have become infected with the novel coronavirus – backtracking on a previous comment by another spokeswoman.

PRESIDENT TRUMP RELEASES UPDATE, SAYS HE’S FEELING ‘MUCH BETTER’ AFTER HOSPITALIZATION

McEnany attributed the decision to privacy concerns. Previously,  Alyssa Farah, the White House director of strategic communications, had said that the numbers of infected staffers possibly would come out.

“There are privacy concerns,” McEnany said. “We take seriously safeguarding the information of personnel here in the White House.”

The president and first lady Melania Trump announced they tested positive for COVID-19 early Friday, just before 1:00 a.m., after it was revealed that Hicks tested positive on Thursday.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/white-house-press-secretary-kayleigh-mcenany-says-shes-tested-positive-for-coronavirus

Vice President Mike Pence and Democratic vice presidential nominee Sen. Kamala Harris will face off in their highly anticipated debate on Wednesday at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.

It will be the first and only debate between Pence and Harris before the election on Nov. 3.

PENCE, HARRIS WILL SIT FARTHER APART DURING VP DEBATE IN UTAH, PANEL SAYS

Susan Page, the USA Today Washington bureau chief, will moderate the debate.

Here’s what to know:

Where is it happening:

Pence and Harris will meet for a seated debate at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.

When to watch:

The debate will be aired from 9-10:30 p.m. ET on Wednesday, Oct. 7.

Where to watch:

Fox News Channel and FoxNews.com will carry coverage of the debate on Wednesday, Oct. 7.

Who is involved:

Vice President Mike Pence

Pence has been stepping up on the campaign trail since President Trump was sidelined Friday after testing positive for coronavirus.

A senior Trump campaign adviser told Fox News on Saturday that they expect additional events to be added to the vice president’s schedule. Following the vice presidential debate, Pence will travel to Arizona for events on Thursday.

Vice President Mike Pence waves as he leaves the stage after speaking at an event hosted by The Family Leader Foundation Thursday, Oct. 1, in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Pence and his wife, Karen, have both tested negative for coronavirus twice following the president and first lady Melania Trump’s positive results.

Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif.

Before Democratic nominee Joe Biden chose Harris as his running mate in the 2020 election, the California senator and former attorney general launched her own bid for the presidency.

BIDEN PLANS TO ATTEND NEXT DEBATE, HOPES TRUMP WILL BE ABLE TO PARTICIPATE, CAMPAIGN SAYS

But her presidential campaign faltered in late 2019 and Harris ended her White House bid in December. Biden picked Harris for his ticket in August.

Democratic vice presidential candidate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., reacts after speaking at a drive-in campaign event Friday, Oct. 2, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/John Locher)

Biden and Harris had a dust-up last year during a Democratic presidential primary debate in Miami, where Harris criticized comments by the former vice president spotlighting his ability to find common ground during the 1970s with segregationist senators with whom he disagreed, and over his opposition decades ago to federally mandated school busing.

Susan Page, USA Today Washington bureau chief

The nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates announced in early September that Page would moderate the debate.

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Page is a seasoned journalist who has covered 10 presidential campaigns and six White House administrations. She has also written a biography on about first lady Barbara Bush and is working on a book about House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/pence-harris-vice-presidential-debate-what-to-know

The scope of destruction from a blaze in California’s famed Napa Valley wine region is mounting as the state has seen a record number of acres scorched by wildfires in 2020.

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Cal Fire said the state set a grim record Sunday as 4 million acres have been burned by wildfires, an area larger than the state of Connecticut.

“The 4 million mark is unfathomable. It boggles the mind, and it takes your breath away,” Cal Fire spokesman Scott McLean said Sunday. “And that number will grow.”

NAPA VALLEY WINERIES FACE FURY OF LATEST CALIFORNIA WILDFIRE AS 2020 DAMAGES MOUNT

The top priority of the 23 major wildfires burning across the state is the Glass Fire, which ignited a week ago and has been burning in Napa and Sonoma counties.

In this Sunday, Sept. 27, 2020, file photo, an air tanker drops retardant on the Glass Fire burning in Calistoga, Calif. (AP Photo/Noah Berger, File)

As of Sunday night, Cal Fire said the fire has burned some 64,900 acres and is 26% contained. Fire officials noted that “critically low fuel moistures” and very warm and dry weather conditions are allowing for “very active fire behavior.”

“We are seeing some relief in the weather, but it’s going to be three or four days before it really makes a difference on the fire,” Cal Fire meteorologist Tom Bird said at a Sunday news briefing.

More than 30,000 people were still under evacuation orders on Sunday, down from 70,000 earlier in the week. Among those still unable to return home are the entire 5,000-plus population of Calistoga in Napa County. Hundreds of structures have been damaged or destroyed.

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRE BURNS THROUGH NAPA VALLEY WINERIES, RESORTS AS GLASS FIRE RAGES

The blaze has damaged or destroyed at least 17 wineries in Napa Valley as more than 215 in the region remain under mandatory evacuation orders or evacuation warnings, the San Francisco Chronicle reported Sunday.

Charred wine bottles rest at Castello di Amorosa, Monday, Sept. 28, 2020, in Calistoga, Calif., which was damaged in the Glass Fire. (AP Photo/Noah Berger)

“The toughest thing is that there just doesn’t seem to be an end to this,” Justin Hunnicutt Stephens of Hunnicutt Wine Co. told the newspaper.

According to the Chronicle, the wineries that have seen damage include Chateau Boswell, Hunnicutt, Hourglass, Dutch Henry, Fairwinds, Burgess Cellars and Castello di Amorosa.

A damaged vehicle and wine warehouse stand, Monday, Sept. 28, 2020, in Calistoga, Calif., at Castello di Amorosa, which was damaged in the Glass Fire. (AP Photo/Noah Berger)

The blaze also damaged Behrens, Newton, Cain, Flying Lady, Sherwin, School House, Fantesca and Spring Mountain Vineyard wineries after the blaze scorched Spring Mountain, the paper reported.

Charred wine bottles rest at Castello di Amorosa, Monday, Sept. 28, 2020, in Calistoga, Calif., which was damaged in the Glass Fire. (AP Photo/Noah Berger)

While others have emerged unscathed, vintners have said this most recent fire is forcing them to wrap up this season’s harvest as soon as possible due to fruit left on the vines being exposed to yet more wildfire smoke.

Weather improves for California, wildfire conditions worsen for central West

Sixty-six wildfires of 100 acres or greater continue to burn across the western US, but in some of the harder-hit locations across California the weather is improving.

For the first time in weeks, there are no fire weather advisories across the state.

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Cooler temperatures, more humidity and less wind are expected for the next few days. Unfortunately, conditions have worsened in the central West.

The wildfire risk has shifted east over the central parts of the West and into the Plains for Monday, Oct. 5, 2020. (Fox News)

With dry conditions and daytime highs climbing into the 80s, red flag warnings have been issued on Monday across portions of Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas and Nebraska.

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Fox News’ Adam Klotz and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxbusiness.com/lifestyle/california-wildfire-glass-fire-napa-valley-wineries-sonoma-county-damage-fire-weather

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden is expected to visit Miami’s Little Havana and Little Haiti ahead of a televised town hall Monday, as the former vice president returns to the critical swing state of Florida in the final homestretch of his election campaign.

Meanwhile, President Trump canceled a rally scheduled in Sanford, Fla., last Friday and postponed future campaign stops on a case by case basis just one month away from Election Day after announcing he tested positive for the coronavirus, the Palm Beach Post reported.

Monday will be Biden’s second trip to Florida this year, after his campaign canceled scheduled visits in March ahead of the state’s primary due to the coronavirus pandemic, and waited months until Sept. 15 to come to Tampa and Kissimmee, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported.

TRUMP AND BIDEN SUPPORTERS OUT IN FORCE ACROSS THE SWING STATE OF FLORIDA WITH ELECTION ONE MONTH AWAY

By comparison, Trump, who’s been hospitalized with COVID-19 since Friday, visited Florida three times in the past month alone: he hosted a Latinos for Trump event in Doral on Sept. 25, held a rally in Jacksonville on Sept. 24, and stopped in Jupiter on Sept. 8.

Florida awards 29 Electoral College votes – 270 are needed to win the presidency. A historically pivotal wing state, Trump won the popular vote there in 2016 by just 1.2 percentage points.

Biden and his wife, Dr. Jill Biden, will visit the Little Haiti Cultural Center around 2:45 p.m. Monday before speaking in Little Havana later in the afternoon on “building back the economy better for the Hispanic community and working families,” his campaign told WTVJ.

FLORIDA’S DESANTIS: CLOSING SCHOOLS IN SPRING MIGHT HAVE BEEN ONE OF NATION’S ‘BIGGEST PUBLIC HEALTH MISTAKES’

He’s to discuss how to bring jobs to the Black and Hispanic communities, especially within the tourism sector, which took a hit amid coronavirus-induced lockdown measures and restrictions on travel. The Biden campaign launched advertisements in South Florida last week in English, Spanish and Creole, which is spoken by some Haitian-Americans, to hone in on critical constituencies.

Biden will answer questions from undecided Florida voters in a socially distanced town hall outside the Pérez Art Museum in Miami at 8 p.m. moderated by NBC’s “Nightly News” anchor Lester Holt.

A recent poll published Saturday by the Sienna College Research Institute showed Biden leading Trump in Florida, 47% to 42%. Meanwhile, Florida International University’s Cuba Poll, the longest-running research project measuring Cuban American public opinion, shows Trump leading Biden, 59% to 25%.

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A traditionally Republican constituency, Cuban Americans largely supported the Trump administration’s approach to governing, especially his move to reverse President Obama’s normalization of relations with Cuba, reverting back to isolationist policies and the U.S. embargo.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-miami-town-hall-little-havana-haiti

The Supreme Court, which begins its new term Monday, is confronting cases related to the election, the Affordable Care Act and religious rights, among others.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP


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J. Scott Applewhite/AP

The Supreme Court, which begins its new term Monday, is confronting cases related to the election, the Affordable Care Act and religious rights, among others.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP

The U.S. Supreme Court opens a new court term Monday, while across the street at the Capitol, Republicans are seeking to jam through, before the Nov. 3 election, President Trump’s nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to the court.

Trump offered Barrett the nomination just two days after Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died. And since then, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell has been leading the GOP charge to get Barrett confirmed before Election Day.

It’s a race to the political finish line made more difficult by the fact that at least two members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Utah Republican Mike Lee and North Carolina Republican Thom Tillis, have tested positive for the coronavirus and, on Saturday, McConnell said the committee will start the hearing as scheduled on Oct. 12.

Regardless of what is happening in the Senate, the Supreme Court is carrying on in its usual stately fashion. The court is an institution built on tradition, and the traditional opening day of the term is the first Monday of October.

This time, however, there will be just eight justices, not the usual nine, and because of COVID-19, once again the justices will gather by telephone hookup to hear the lawyers make their arguments. Because they will not be together, there will be none of the usual freewheeling debate; instead, the justices will ask questions in order of seniority, with each justice limited to just a few minutes. And once again, the public will be able to listen in.

A lot has changed since July, when the court concluded a tumultuous term, surprising observers with lopsided decisions favoring LGBT rights in one case and repudiating Trump’s claim of total immunity in two others involving grand jury and congressional subpoenas.

In other more closely divided rulings, Chief Justice John Roberts, on some notable but rare occasions, broke with fellow conservatives to cast the deciding fifth vote with the court’s liberals. His vote to strike down a Louisiana anti-abortion law infuriated some conservative politicians, but it was typical of Roberts. He wrote separately from the liberal justices, stressing that he had dissented when the court just four years earlier had struck down an identical law in Texas, but he said that 2016 decision was now binding precedent and he was obligated to uphold it.

Despite that “institutionalist streak,” with Ginsburg’s death and her replacement by the very conservative Barrett, Roberts may well have lost his leverage, observes University of Michigan law professor Nicholas Bagley.

“The chief justice is no longer going to be the center vote,” he notes. In short, the hard-line conservatives on the court can prevail without Roberts.

Obamacare on the chopping block again

Just how far right the court will move could become apparent quickly in a case to be argued a week after the election. It is the third challenge to the Affordable Care Act, which in the past was upheld by votes of 5-4 and 6-3.

This time, the Trump administration and a coalition of red states are arguing that because the Republican Congress three years ago zeroed out the monetary penalty for those not covered by insurance (the so-called mandate), the whole law is now void.

If the administration were to prevail, there would no longer be protections for those with preexisting conditions; health insurance for some 22 million people under Obamacare would likewise be gone, and so too would be many other protections that people have gotten used to.

Trump’s newest supreme court nominee, Barrett, has been highly critical of Chief Justice Roberts’ reasoning in the previous Obamacare cases.

But even Paul Clement, who argued on behalf of those challenging the law in the Supreme Court the first time, thinks this case is a stretch.

“It’s just hard for me to say that the mandate is central when it doesn’t have any teeth,” he says, noting that Congress has repeatedly refused to repeal the law in the wake of previous Supreme Court decisions and that the penalty no longer exists.

There is, he adds, “an air of surreality” around the current case. Indeed, sources say that top Justice Department officials tried and failed to talk Trump out of bringing the case.

The Obamacare case is just one of many controversies flashing red on the Supreme Court docket this term — many of them political.

Some cases are already being expedited. One involves how many seats each state gets in the House of Representatives. The Constitution requires the “whole number of persons in each state” to be included for apportionment purposes. But Trump maintains he has discretion to determine the numbers and has said he intends to exclude noncitizens without legal status from the count. A three-judge federal court prevented him from doing that. Now the case is before the Supreme Court.

Another Bush v. Gore?

In addition, there are numerous cases directly involving the upcoming election, cases that are being teed up in the wings and that could determine who is the next president.

“Lurking in the background is the possibility that this could become the most tumultuous and divisive term since the Supreme Court decided Bush v. Gore,” says Irv Gornstein, director of the Supreme Court Institute at the Georgetown University Law Center.

And that’s just the beginning. Among the other controversies is a case testing whether a House committee conducting impeachment hearings is entitled to secret grand jury transcripts — a case that dates back to the Mueller investigation but has important implications for congressional powers in the future.

Then, too, there is a case that pits the rights of religious groups against state and federal anti-discrimination laws. On one end is Catholic Social Services of Philadelphia, and on the other, the city, which contracts with a wide variety of groups that it pays to screen and certify couples for foster care.

The city cut off Catholic Social Services because the group refused, on religious grounds, to certify same-sex couples, and that violated the city’s nondiscrimination law. The lower courts upheld the city’s decision, citing the Supreme Court’s 1990 decision declaring that religious groups are not entitled to exemptions from neutral, generally applicable laws. The decision was written by conservative icon Justice Antonin Scalia. Nonetheless, four of the court’s current conservatives have expressed an interest in overturning that decision, and with the addition of Barrett, there may well be a majority.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/10/05/919704165/the-election-and-a-fresh-obamacare-challenge-loom-over-new-supreme-court-term

“There’s a reason why people question the trustworthiness of Hillary Clinton — and that’s because they’re paying attention,” Mr. Pence said in his contentious debate (at least by the standards of 2016) with Mr. Kaine.

He speaks quickly, rarely leaving a space between sentences for an opponent to jump in. “He is a very consistent, smooth, regulated debater,” said John D. Podesta, who was Mrs. Clinton’s campaign chairman in 2016. “His experience as a radio host taught him to be well prepared. He’ll be the anti-Trump in this debate. It will be the opposite of what you saw last Tuesday.”

“He’ll come in at you,” Mr. Podesta said. “He’ll come well prepared. He can go on the attack. It will be very modulated, silky.”

Ms. Harris has proved to be an intense and effective interlocutor as a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee. She raised her stock with Democrats with her aggressive questioning of, among other officials, William P. Barr, the attorney general.

In a debate, she can be withering and methodical, staring down at a lectern scribbling notes while waiting for her turn to speak, before moving in for the attack.

“Steve, I think you really should not go below the dignity of this debate or the office that we seek,” Ms. Harris said when Steve Cooley, the Los Angeles district attorney and her opponent in the 2010 race for California attorney general, accused her of failing to seek the death penalty in a murder case as the San Francisco district attorney.

“She will be prepared with certain specific, tested statements or lines,” Mr. Cooley said in an interview, recalling their meeting in 2010. He said that was on display in the Democratic debates when Ms. Harris attacked Mr. Biden for his record of opposition to busing.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/05/us/politics/pence-harris-vice-president-debate.html

POLITICO Dispatch: October 5

President Trump is in the hospital with coronavirus. We know that much. But there are lots of unknowns about his condition, and his medical team isn’t filling in the gaps.

“Jaime is a smart guy,” Graham said. “He held his own and we’ll see what happens.”

Graham is still favored to win, but the fact that a Democrat is within striking distance of victory in South Carolina underscores how fragile the GOP’s Senate majority is.

As Graham spoke, Trump popped up on a TV screen in a slow-motion video that captured him in the rear seat of a black Suburban, on a ride to thank supporters gathered outside Walter Reed hospital.

“He’s had like five presidencies when you think about it,” Graham said. There was a “reset” after each one. He mentioned the Russia investigation, impeachment, the outbreak of the pandemic, and now Trump’s own infection. Technically, that’s four — one could easily add the recession — but the senator’s point is valid: Cataclysmic news events that might define a presidency come and go in the Trump era and it’s not always clear what will have lasting impact.

Trump’s Republican critics have long argued that he was a virus infecting their party that would eventually destroy it. Trump skeptics-turned-supporters, which could describe most Washington Republicans, made a different calculation: If the worst elements of Trump could be contained, then Republicans could keep a Democrat out of the White House, lock in a majority on the Supreme Court and protect their redoubt in the Senate. Even before Trump’s diagnosis, the cost of the deal with Trump was starting to look high. But the path to pushing through Barrett and retaining the Senate and even White House was hardly insurmountable.

That an actual virus has now infected Trump, his wife, his campaign manager, the head of the Republican National Committee, several advisers, and three senators — many of them at a celebration of Barrett’s nomination — thus throwing all three of the GOP’s 2020 goals into chaos, is a plot twist that would be rejected by any writer as just a little too on the nose.

“Trump has done more to derail the Barrett nomination than any Democrat,” said one dejected former senior White House official. “They are screwing themselves, that’s for sure.”

As grim as the exercise might be, Republicans across Washington are trying to game out the politics of the president’s illness. “I don’t know exactly how this plays,” Graham said. “I’m hoping the president recovers fully and quickly.” He noted that several world leaders have recovered from coronavirus without major interruptions and that Woodrow Wilson caught the Spanish flu (though it was after his reelection).

The thinking among Republicans about the potential scenarios they might face over the next few weeks range from this could actually help Trump to we are on the cusp of partywide catastrophe.

Graham, always an optimist, is in the former camp.

“This is a chance for him, quite frankly, to talk about the human side of this: ‘This is tough, this is hard, we’re gonna get through it,’” he said. “If he comes out of this thing a little bit humbled and focused on speeding up vaccines and trying to safely reopen the country, then I think he’ll probably be OK.”

In the videos and statements he released over the weekend, Trump already tried to recast his illness in terms akin to what Graham recommends.

“We’re going to beat this coronavirus, or whatever you want to call it, and we’re going to beat it soundly,” he said on Saturday. “If you look at the therapeutics, which I’m taking right now, some of them, and others are coming out soon that are frankly like miracles.”

Other Republicans are floating the idea that illness could unleash a wave of empathy for the president. “If he comes back to the White House and he’s seen as being fully recovered, 10 days from now or two weeks from now, he’s debating or he’s back on the road, I think it could be a positive,” said a Republican close to the president. “I think it could make him more human and he can relate to the 7 million people or so that have come down with it.”

A close cousin of the empathy argument is that defeating the virus could serve to underscore another alleged Trump trait: his virility. “I think the president’s strongest attribute has always been his strength,” said Chris Ruddy, a friend of Trump and CEO of Newsmax. Even if people disagree with him here and there on issues, “they like that he’s strong and I think we see this during Covid, he’s exhibiting strength.”

Other Republicans, used to seeing Trump slip out of hairy situations that would destroy most politicians — the “Access Hollywood” tape, impeachment — practically yawn at the turn of events. “We’ve seen that time after time,” said a White House official discussing whether this would blow over. “I don’t know if this would be any different but we’ll see.”

On the other side of the spectrum, many Republicans said the reckless way in which Trump traveled, held big rallies, and refused to consistently wear a mask or encourage his supporters to do so as catastrophic.

“Today feels like the election’s over,” said a veteran Republican strategist who, like others in the party, requested anonymity to speak candidly. “The polls have dropped all last week everywhere, it just feels like the end is near. And I don’t know what they can do to rehabilitate it until he gets better. There’s too many seniors who think he’s been irresponsible and this all started when he politicized the coronavirus. It started back in April and May, but it’s really peaking now.”

A senior Republican congressional official spoke for many by arguing that the handling of the issue over the weekend was “incredibly worrying,” but that it was too early to judge whether the issue further jeopardizes Trump’s reelection chances, the Barrett nomination or GOP control of the Senate.

“Do people show sympathy because he’s sick and is trying to battle through this?” he asked. “Or do they say, ‘You’re the president and if you had taken common sense precautions there’s no way you would have gotten sick.’ If it becomes, ‘You are reckless and this is the metaphor for how reckless he was,’ then we’re facing a tsunami. But it’s too early.”

The official added one caveat, a scenario that he believed would crush the GOP on Nov. 3.

“If the White House lied about the timeline and he went to events and was around people knowing he was Covid-positive,” he said. “I think that is the single biggest thing that would resonate with regular people in terms of how irresponsible he was — if he put other people in danger.”

He added, “That could turn this into a death spiral.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/05/republicans-dread-coronavirus-infections-426351

The medical center where President Donald Trump is being treated for the Covid-19 is a world-class facility that’s been specifically tailored to tend to the commander in chief.

Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland, is a sprawling 243-acre complex about 9 miles from the White House that includes a presidential suite, a first lady’s suite and a self-contained area where the president and a small group, including the White House physician, can live and work.

The area, which unlike the rest of the facility is controlled by the White House, has its own intensive care unit, kitchen, dining room and several sitting rooms, including at least one secure room that can be used as a conference room or office. There’s also a space that’s been set aside for the White House chief of staff to use while the president is there.

The VIP treatment ward at Walter Reed Army Medical Hospital, referred to there as Ward 71, in 2007.Tim Dillon / USA TODAY Network

When the president is not there, top military brass, Cabinet members and other dignitaries, including foreign leaders, are treated in the executive medicine area.

The White House physician’s office said on Friday that Trump is expected to be in the hospital for “a few days.”

He is far from the first president to be examined and treated at the Department of Defense facility that has roots dating back over a century.

Walter Reed General Hospital opened on May 1, 1909. Named for an Army major who helped discover that yellow fever was transmitted by mosquitoes, the hospital tended to numerous presidents and injured soldiers in Washington, D.C.

After a 2007 scandal about inadequate treatment of wounded soldiers there, the Army hospital was merged with the other go-to medical facility for presidents and politicians, the Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, to form the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in 2011.

Also called the President’s Hospital, Walter Reed’s website describes it as “the world’s largest joint military medical center,” with more than 2.4 million square feet of clinical space.

Then-Vice President Richard Nixon was treated for a staph infection at Walter Reed in 1960, and former President Dwight Eisenhower died there in 1969 after being hospitalized for nine months with heart issues. His last words were, “I want to go; God take me.”

President Lyndon Johnson chats with former President Dwight D. Eisenhower at Walter Reed Army Hospital on June 11, 1968.AP file

Former first lady Mamie Eisenhower died at Walter Reed a decade later.

The hospital grounds also included some macabre presidential memorabilia in its National Museum of Health and Medicine. The museum, which traced the history of medicine over the centuries, displayed the bullet that killed Abraham Lincoln and fragments of Lincoln’s skull. It also housed a piece of President James Garfield’s vertebrae. After the hospital’s Washington, D.C., site shut down, the museum moved to Silver Spring, Maryland.

The site of the Naval Medical Center in Bethesda was selected by President Franklin Roosevelt, an amateur architect who even drew a sketch of how he thought the hospital should look.

Roosevelt laid the cornerstone for the facility’s tower in 1940, and the 16th floor was initially set aside for the president.

James Forrestal, the first secretary of defense, was treated there for psychiatric issues after resigning in 1949 — and killed himself by jumping out of the 16th-floor window.

President Lyndon Johnson invited cameras into his hospital roomafter he underwent a gallbladder operation in 1965. After conspiracy theories emerged that he’d undergone a different procedure, he proudly showed off his scar to reporters.

In the middle of the Watergate scandal that cost him his presidency, Nixon was treated at the hospital for viral pneumonia in July 1973. The White House made public Nixon’s temperature and X-rays, the type of information that the Trump White House refused to disclose to reporters on Saturday.

President Ronald Reagan underwent cancer surgery at the Bethesda hospital in 1985. When he was discharged, rows of cheering sailors and a military band greeted him outside.

Doctors at the hospital also operated on first lady Betty Ford in 1974 — but she was considered the true lifesaver. Ford’s transparency about her breast cancer diagnosis and mastectomy came at a time when both were considered taboo subjects.

The publicity is credited with bringing the disease into the open, and Ford’s promotion of screening and treatment options are believed to have inspired countless women to seek breast examinations and saved lives.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/walter-reed-medical-center-inside-storied-hospital-where-trump-being-n1241987

Kanye West is a compassionate competitor.

The 43-year-old rapper took time on Saturday to send well wishes to President Donald Trump and his wife, first lady Melania Trump, following their positive coronavirus diagnosis.

HOLLYWOOD REACTS TO DONALD’S, MELANIA TRUMP’S POSITIVE CORONAVIRUS TESTS: ‘KARMA 2020’

Trump, 74, and Melania, 50, announced they contracted the potentially deadly respiratory virus on Friday, Oct. 2 – three days after the first presidential debate.

“There’s a crying need for civility across the board. We need to and will come together in the name of Jesus,” West wrote in a tweet one day after the president’s bombshell statement. “I’m praying for President Trump’s and Melania’s full recovery, just as I would for Joe and Jill Biden if they were stricken, as well as everyone else with COVID-19.”

West first announced he was running for president on Independence Day this year.

ALYSSA MILANO REACTS TO TRUMP TESTING POSITIVE FOR CORONAVIRUS: ‘I WOULDN’T WISH THIS VIRUS ON MY WORST ENEMY’

“We must now realize the promise of America by trusting God, unifying our vision and building our future. I am running for president of the United States,” he tweeted to kick off his campaign.

In an interview with Forbes in July, the Grammy-winning rapper said he is running as an independent under a new political party that he had created, which is known as the Birthday Party.

“Because when we win, it’s everybody’s birthday,” he told the outlet.

West’s running mate is Michelle Tidball, a Christian preacher from Wyoming.

MICHAEL RAPAPORT ROASTS PRESIDENT TRUMP AFTER HE CONTRACTS CORONAVIRUS: ‘BLEACH IT OUT’

West and Tidball will appear on the ballots in 12 states, including Kentucky, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Utah, Idaho, Tennessee, Vermont, Mississippi, and notable swing states Colorado, Iowa and Minnesota.

Trump last shared an update on his condition on Saturday.

“Going welI, I think,” he wrote in a brief tweet. “Thank you to all. LOVE!!!”

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More than 7.3 million Americans have contracted the novel coronavirus as of Sunday morning, according to the Johns Hopkins COVID-19 Dashboard.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/kanye-west-donald-trump-first-lady-positive-coronavirus

“There’s a reason why people question the trustworthiness of Hillary Clinton — and that’s because they’re paying attention,” Mr. Pence said in his contentious debate (at least by the standards of 2016) with Mr. Kaine.

He speaks quickly, rarely leaving a space between sentences for an opponent to jump in. “He is a very consistent, smooth, regulated debater,” said John D. Podesta, who was Mrs. Clinton’s campaign chairman in 2016. “His experience as a radio host taught him to be well prepared. He’ll be the anti-Trump in this debate. It will be the opposite of what you saw last Tuesday.”

“He’ll come in at you,” Mr. Podesta said. “He’ll come well prepared. He can go on the attack. It will be very modulated, silky.”

Ms. Harris has proved to be an intense and effective interlocutor as a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee. She raised her stock with Democrats with her aggressive questioning of, among other officials, William P. Barr, the attorney general.

In a debate, she can be withering and methodical, staring down at a lectern scribbling notes while waiting for her turn to speak, before moving in for the attack.

“Steve, I think you really should not go below the dignity of this debate or the office that we seek,” Ms. Harris said when Steve Cooley, the Los Angeles district attorney and her opponent in the 2010 race for California attorney general, accused her of failing to seek the death penalty in a murder case as the San Francisco district attorney.

“She will be prepared with certain specific, tested statements or lines,” Mr. Cooley said in an interview, recalling their meeting in 2010. He said that was on display in the Democratic debates when Ms. Harris attacked Mr. Biden for his record of opposition to busing.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/05/pence-harris-vice-president-debate.html

Noah Reed, a 30-year-old content creator in New York, posted pictures with his fiance, Derek Ivie, a 35-year-old librarian. For Reed, the tweet symbolized more than just jumping on a trend.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2020/10/05/proudboys-twitter-lgbtq-takei/

Senator Tom Cotton, an Arkansas Republican, suggested that GOP colleagues who have tested positive with COVID-19 would potentially break quarantine if their votes were needed to confirm President Donald Trump‘s Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett.

Three Republican Senators—Mike Lee of Utah, Ron Johnson of Tennessee, and Thom Tillis of North Carolina—have tested positive for the novel coronavirus after a ceremony at the White House last Saturday announcing Barrett’s nomination. President Donald Trump has also tested positive and is staying at Walter Reed National Military Medical Hospital as he undergoes treatment.

During an interview with Fox Business on Sunday, Cotton dismissed concerns that the infected senators—who have entered quarantine—could impact the confirmation process for Barrett, which he asserted would happen in October before the November 3 election.

“First off, I think every senator who has currently tested positive or is in isolation will be back to work under normal conditions,” Cotton told host Maria Bartiromo.

However, Cotton said that even if they were not done with their quarantine, the three Republicans could be brought to the Senate to cast a vote. “But if that’s not the case, Maria, there is a long and venerable tradition of ill or medically infirm senators being wheeled in to cast critical votes on the Senate floor,” he said.

Newsweek reached out to press representatives for Lee, Johnson and Tillis for comment, but they did not respond by the time of publication.

Although medically infirm senators have historically come to the Senate floor to cast crucial votes, attending while sick with a contagious virus would be quite extraordinary. It would also be counter to the guidance of the federal government. Considering the average age among senators is north of 62 years old—with several senators in their 70s, 80s or 90s—the lawmakers are a significantly higher risk population for serious complications or death from COVID-19.

However, barring further complications or hospitalizations, the infected senators would likely be done with their quarantine within the next two weeks. Although Senate Judiciary Committee proceedings on Barrett’s nomination are scheduled to move forward on October 12, per Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s Saturday statement, floor proceedings are postponed until October 19. As a result, it appears unlikely that it would be necessary for one of the infected senators to break quarantine to cast a vote.

Barrett’s nomination has been staunchly opposed by Democrats, who have accused Republicans of hypocrisy for moving forward with the confirmation process. In 2016, ahead of the presidential election, McConnell and Republicans blocked former President Barack Obama‘s nomination of Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court.

They argued, at the time, that such a nomination should be made by the next president—even though the election was still about eight months away. Now, in 2020, they have moved forward rapidly to fill the vacancy left by the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, despite the presidential election being less than two months away at the time of her passing.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/tom-cotton-suggests-gop-senators-covid-19-would-break-quarantine-confirm-scotus-nominee-1536280

BETHESDA, Md. (AP) — Infected and contagious, President Donald Trump briefly ventured out in a motorcade on Sunday to salute cheering supporters, a move that disregarded precautions meant to contain the deadly virus that has forced his hospitalization and killed more than 209,000 Americans.

Hours earlier, Trump’s medical team reported that his blood oxygen level dropped suddenly twice in recent days and that they gave him a steroid typically only recommended for the very sick. Still, the doctors said Trump’s health is improving and that he could be discharged as early as Monday.

With one month until Election Day, Trump was eager to project strength despite his illness. The still-infectious president surprised supporters who had gathered outside Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, driving by in a black SUV with the windows rolled up. Secret Service agents inside the vehicle could be seen in masks and other protective gear.

The move capped a weekend of contradictions that fueled confusion about Trump’s health, which has imperiled the leadership of the U.S. government and upended the final stages of the presidential campaign. While Trump’s physician offered a rosy prognosis on his condition, his briefings lacked basic information, including the findings of lung scans, or were quickly muddled by more serious assessments of the president’s health by other officials.

In a short video released by the White House on Sunday, Trump insisted he understood the gravity of the moment. But his actions moments later, by leaving the hospital and sitting inside the SUV with others, suggested otherwise.

“This is insanity,” Dr. James P. Phillips, an attending physician at Walter Reed who is a critic of Trump and his handling of the pandemic. “Every single person in the vehicle during that completely unnecessary presidential ‘drive-by’ just now has to be quarantined for 14 days. They might get sick. They may die.”

“For political theater,” the doctor added. “Commanded by Trump to put their lives at risk for theater.”

White House spokesman Judd Deere said Trump’s trip outside the hospital “was cleared by the medical team as safe to do.” He added that precautions were taken, including using personal protective equipment, to protect Trump as well as White House officials and Secret Service agents.

Joe Biden’s campaign, meanwhile, said the Democratic presidential nominee again tested negative for coronavirus Sunday. The results come five days after Biden spent more than 90 minutes on the debate stage with Trump. Biden, who has taken a far more cautious approach to in-person events, had two negative tests on Friday.

For his part, Trump still faces questions about his health.

His doctors sidestepped questions on Sunday about exactly when Trump’s blood oxygen dropped — an episode they neglected to mention in multiple statements the day before — or whether lung scans showed any damage.

It was the second straight day of obfuscation from a White House already suffering from a credibility crisis. And it raised more doubts about whether the doctors treating the president were sharing accurate, timely information with the American public about the severity of his condition.

Pressed about conflicting information he and the White House released on Saturday, Navy Cmdr. Dr. Sean Conley acknowledged that he had tried to present a sunnier description of the president’s condition.

“I was trying to reflect the upbeat attitude that the team, the president, that his course of illness has had. Didn’t want to give any information that might steer the course of illness in another direction,” Conley said. “And in doing so, you know, it came off that we were trying to hide something, which wasn’t necessarily true. The fact of the matter is that he’s doing really well.”

Medical experts said Conley’s revelations were hard to square with his positive assessment and talk of a discharge.

“There’s a little bit of a disconnect,” said Dr. Steven Shapiro, chief medical and scientific officer at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

According to CDC guidelines, “In general, transport and movement of a patient with suspected or confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection outside of their room should be limited to medically essential purposes.”

Even before Trump’s motorcade outing on Sunday, some Secret Service agents have expressed concern about the lackadaisical attitude toward masks and social distancing inside the White House, but there isn’t much they can do, according to agents and officials who spoke to The Associated Press. This close to the election, thousands of agents are engaged on protective duty so they can be subbed out quickly should someone test positive.

The disclosures about Trump’s oxygen levels and steroid treatment suggested the president is enduring more than a mild case of COVID-19.

Blood oxygen saturation is a key health marker for COVID-19 patients. A normal reading is between 95 and 100. Conley said the president had a “high fever” and a blood oxygen level below 94% on Friday and during “another episode” on Saturday.

He was evasive about the timing of Trump oxygen drops. (“It was over the course of the day, yeah, yesterday morning,” he said) and asked whether Trump’s level had dropped below 90%, into concerning territory. (“We don’t have any recordings here on that.”) But he revealed that Trump was given a dose of the steroid dexamethasone in response.

At the time of the briefing, Trump’s blood oxygen level was 98% — within normal rage, Trump’s medical team said.

Signs of pneumonia or other lung damage could be detected in scans before a patient feels short of breath, but the president’s doctors declined to say what those scans have revealed.

“There’s some expected findings, but nothing of any major clinical concern,” Conley said. He declined to outline those “expected findings.”

Asked about Conley’s lack of transparency, White House aide Alyssa Farah suggested the doctors were speaking as much to the president as to the American public, “when you’re treating a patient, you want to project confidence, you want to lift their spirits, and that was the intent.”

In all, nearly 7.4 million people have been infected in the United States, and few have access to the kind of around-the-clock attention and experimental treatments as Trump.

Trump’s treatment with the steroid dexamethasone is in addition to the single dose he was given Friday of an experimental drug from Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. that supplies antibodies to help the immune system fight the virus. Trump on Friday also began a five-day course of remdesivir, a Gilead Sciences drug currently used for moderately and severely ill patients. The drugs work in different ways — the antibodies help the immune system rid the body of virus, and remdesivir curbs the virus’ ability to multiply.

Garibaldi, a specialist in pulmonary critical care, said the president was not showing any side effects of the drugs “that we can tell.”

The National Institutes of Health COVID-19 treatment guidelines recommend against using dexamethasone in patients who do not require oxygen. It has only been proven to help in more serious cases. Among the concerns with earlier use is that steroids tamp down certain immune cells, hindering the body’s own ability to fight off infection.

Trump is 74 years old and clinically obese, putting him at higher risk of serious complications.

First lady Melania Trump has remained at the White House as she recovers from her own bout with the virus.

Several White House officials this weekend expressed frustration with the level of transparency and public disclosure since the president announced his diagnosis early Friday.

They were particularly upset by the whiplash between Conley’s upbeat assessment Saturday and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows’ more concerned outlook. They privately acknowledge that the administration has little credibility on COVID-19 and that they have unnecessarily squandered what remains of it with the lack of clear, accurate updates on Trump’s condition.

Many in the White House are also shaken and scared — nervous that they have been exposed to the virus and confronting the reality that what seemed like a bubble of safety has become a COVID-19 hot spot. It took until late Sunday for the White House to send a generic note to staffers suggesting they not come to the building if they do not feel well.

———

Peoples reported from New York. Miller reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Lauran Neergaard, Jonathan Lemire and Aamer Madhani in Washington, and Bill Barrow in Wilmington, Del., and Marilynn Marchione in Milwaukee contributed to this report.



Source Article from https://www.kmov.com/news/trump-greets-supporters-following-new-details-of-his-illness/article_cca74093-5841-52d4-aa5f-330d5acc3c7d.html