The U.S. death toll from the novel coronavirus passed another grim milestone Sunday as the number of cases crossed the 225,000 mark.

The Center for Systems, Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University reported there were 225,111 COVID-19 related deaths across the country as of Sunday afternoon.

By comparison, there were 291,557 American soldiers killed in battle during World War II, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

The U.S. surpassed 200,000 dead on Sept. 22.

States across the country continue to report jumps in new coronavirus cases.

On Friday, the Covid Tracking Project recorded a record number of new cases in the country, 83,010, a day after it recorded 82,668. The seven-day average of new cases has been steadily increasing this month, going from 42,348 on Oct. 2 to 66,557 on Oct. 24, according to Covid Tracking Project data.

The seven-day average for U.S. newly reported deaths has also increased throughout the month, going from 703 on Oct. 2 to 807 on Oct. 24, the Covid Tracking Project data said.

Several Midwestern states have seen the greatest increase in cases, including Wisconsin, Ohio and Indiana, according to the health data.

What to know about Coronavirus:

  • How it started and how to protect yourself: Coronavirus explained
  • What to do if you have symptoms: Coronavirus symptoms
  • Tracking the spread in the US and Worldwide: Coronavirus map
  • Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Health/cases-increase-us-coronavirus-deaths-surpass-225000/story?id=73821817

    The 27th named storm of the 2020 hurricane season formed Sunday, matching the number of named tropical storms and hurricanes in 2005, and at midweek, Zeta is expected to cross the coast south of New Orleans and set a record for Louisiana landfalls in a single season.

    While Zeta was a tropical storm with winds of 60 mph at nightfall Sunday, the National Hurricane Center said it expected the storm to develop into a hurricane Monday and reach the northern Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday with winds at or near hurricane force, around 75 mph. The forecast track said Zeta would be a tropical storm near Grand Isle at 2 p.m. Wednesday.

    As of the NHC’s 10 p.m. forecast, Zeta is about 260 miles southeast of Cozumel, Mexico and 270 miles south-southeast of the western tip of Cuba moving to the north-northwest at 2 mph. 

    If Zeta makes landfall in Louisiana, it would be the fifth named storm to do so this year, the most since hurricane record-keeping began in 1851, said Barry Keim, Louisiana’s state climatologist. Other storms that made landfall in the state this season were hurricanes Laura and Delta and tropical storms Cristobal and Marco. 

    Louisiana is again in a National Hurricane Center “cone” of where a tropical storm might go. Brigette Lin, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service Office in Slidell, said forecasters were looking at a landfall for Zeta anywhere from southeastern Louisiana to the Florida Panhandle.






    “We’re urging people to check their supplies and follow the forecasts,” Lin said. “We’re still working on learning how intensive the storm will be; it could be a Category 1 hurricane or a strong tropical storm.”

    The year 2020 joins 2005, the year of hurricanes Katrina and Rita, for the greatest number of named storms — 27 for both. The National Hurricane Center tweeted Sunday that, in hindsight, it missed a storm 15 years ago.

    “For those counting, 2005 still holds the record for the most number of named storms in a season (28). NHC identified an “unnamed” subtropical storm in its post-season analysis that year, which is included in the total. With #Zeta, the number for 2020 currently stands at 27,” the agency tweeted.

    The hurricane season ends Nov. 30. Any December storm will also be counted in the 2020 season; any in January or later will be counted next year.

    “We’re not out of the woods yet,” Lin said. 

    Hurricane forecasters had predicted a busy season, “but nothing like this,” Keim said. 

    An average hurricane season has 12 named storms; early forecasts had looked at perhaps 19 to 20 for the season. 

    “It’s obviously been crazy this hurricane season,” Keim said.  

    Other records have been broken as well: 24 of the 27 named storms this season had their earliest formations since data-tracking began 175 years ago. Zeta, for instance, formed 35 days before the 27th storm of 2005. That storm, also named Zeta, formed Dec. 30, 2005, in the far eastern Atlantic Ocean.

    The reasons this hurricane season is so bad, Keim said, is that there are above normal temperatures at sea surface in the Atlantic, and at the same time, there is very little upper atmospheric wind shear that can tamp down the development of a hurricane. 

    Effects of Zeta, as it approaches the coast this week, will be increased chances of rain and thunderstorms in New Orleans, Baton Rouge and Lafayette, depending on where the storm’s center is, Lin said.

    “New Orleans has the most chance of also getting wind gusts,” she said.

    Rain bands will accompany Zeta, “but it’s really difficult to predict where the rain bands are,” Lin said.

    Anyone in one, though, is likely to know it, she said.

    “If you’re in the right spot under a rain band, it could be several inches of rain,” Lin said.

    Before Louisiana begins to feel the impact of Zeta, it is expected to spread wind and rain across Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula and western Cuba late Monday.

    Louisiana last had four hurricane or tropical storm landfalls in 2002, according to hurricane researchers at Colorado State University, which has a research team dedicated to tropical weather. Also, a record 10 hurricanes or tropical storms have crossed a United States coastline this year. Zeta would be the 11th, and would arrive with more than a month left in this year’s hurricane season. The previous record was nine, in 1916, according to Colorado State.



    Source Article from https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/news/article_c61d1a00-16ef-11eb-b731-d3b4de8ed4cc.html

    Vice President Mike Pence contrasted the Trump administration’s support of law enforcement to that of Joe Biden’s on Sunday, telling “Life, Liberty & Levin” that unlike his Democratic challenger, his support for the thin blue line dates back to his childhood.

    “My uncle was a police officer in Chicago for 25 years,” Pence recalled. “I mean, I remember as a little boy with my three brothers going up to Chicago and meeting – seeing him coming out of his bedroom at my grandparents’ house with that uniform on, the badge, the sidearm. We’d just look up at him in awe.”

    PENCE DEFENDS COVID-19 RESPONSE ON ‘LIFE, LIBERTY AND LEVIN’

    “All of my heroes wear uniforms,” he added, “and President Trump feels just the same way. And that’s why you see so many law enforcement organizations endorsing this president.”

    By contrast, 2020 Democratic nominee Joe Biden and Kamala Harris are “literally undermining support for law enforcement and speaking about cutting funding and re-imagining and defunding the police,” Pence warned.

    “They’re just doubling down on the policies that are contributing to violence in our cities. “

    President Trump received the endorsement of the nation’s largest police union last month, citing his strong push for law and order and his outspoken support for the men and women in blue.

    “All along the way, this president has made it clear that we’re going to stand with the men and women who stand on the thin blue line,” Pence said.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

     “With four more years of President Donald Trump, we’re going to support law enforcement, we’re going to support our African-American neighbors, and we’re going to have law and order in all of our cities for every American, of every race and creed and color.”

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/pence-hits-biden-for-undermining-law-enforcement-all-my-heroes-wear-uniforms

    Another video, which appears to have been filmed further west along 42nd Street, a group chanted, “New York hates you,” at a group holding Trump flags while marching down the street.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2020/10/25/trump-protest-ny-fight-caravan/

    Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, took a veiled shot at her party’s leadership in the Senate on Sunday when she announced that she would be voting against the confirmation of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court.

    “Prior to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death, I stated that, should a vacancy on the Supreme Court arise, the Senate should follow the precedent set four years ago and not vote on a nominee prior to the presidential election.,” Collins said in a statement.

    She added: “Because this vote is occurring prior to the election, I will vote against the nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett.”

    Collins noted in her statement that her vote against confirming Coney Barrett to the nation’s highest court is not meant as a slight against the jurist but instead is a matter of “being fair and consistent.”

    The Maine Republican’s statement appears to directly hit at Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s stance to move forward with confirming Coney Barrett with just over a week to go before the presidential election. McConnell has drawn widespread criticism from Democrats and been labelled a hypocrite based on the treatment of former President Barack Obamas Supreme Court nominee and D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals chief Judge Merrick Garland.

    FLASHBACK: MCCONNELL VOWS TO FILL A SUPREME COURT VACANCY DURING ELECTION YEAR

    Obama nominated Garland to replace the late Justice Antonin Scalia, who passed away in February 2016, but McConnell and Senate Republicans refused to hold a hearing or vote on his nomination, citing the imminent 2016 presidential election.

    McConnell has said his stance was not hypocritical — because in 2020, Republicans would control both the White House and the Senate, unlike Democrats in 2016, who controlled only the White House.

    “You have to go back to 1880s to find the last time a Senate controlled by a party different from the president filled a vacancy on the Supreme Court that was created in the middle of a presidential election year,” McConnell previously told Fox News.

    Collins in her statement, however, appears to be agreeing with McConnell’s detractors.

    “When the Senate considers nominees to the United States Supreme Court, it is particularly important that we act fairly and consistently, using the same set of rules, no matter which political party is in power,” she said. “What I have concentrated on is being fair and consistent, and I do not think it is fair nor consistent to have a Senate confirmation vote prior to the election.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Despite Collins statement, Republicans will have enough votes to confirm Coney Barrett to the bench when they meet Monday evening to decide.

    Another Republican who was one the fence, Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, announced her support for Coney Barrett Saturday during a floor speech in the Senate.

    Murkowski said she’s still opposed to the Senate taking up a Supreme Court nominee so close to Nov. 3 election, but the senator said she already lost that procedural fight and she must evaluate Barrett’s qualifications to the bench. 

    “I will be a yes,” Murkowski said Saturday in a floor speech. “I have no doubt about her intellect. I have no doubt about Judge Barrett’s judicial temperament. I have no doubt about her capability to do the job — and to do it well.”

    Fox News’ Marisa Schultz contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/susan-collins-says-she-is-voting-against-coney-barrett-confirmation-to-be-fair-and-consistent

    State Senator Brad Hoylman, a Manhattan Democrat, expressed concern over the incident, noting that police officers transport ballots from poll sites to the Board of Elections.

    “There must be swift consequences and protections against election interference,” he said.

    Despite the directives from the top, the city’s biggest police unions have heartily embraced Mr. Trump, whose law and order message resonates with those who feel Democrats have made the city too soft on crime. Patrick J. Lynch, the president of the Police Benevolent Association, endorsed the president in a speech before the Republican National Convention. Ed Mullins, the president of the Sergeants Benevolent Association, has appeared at the White House and regularly praises Mr. Trump in his official messages to officers.

    The demonstrators detained in Times Square on Sunday afternoon, five men and two women, were expected to be charged with disorderly conduct, the police said. Investigators were also looking for at least two people seen throwing projectiles at a pro-Trump caravan as it traveled on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway.

    The caravan, organized by Orthodox Jewish leaders, consisted of dozens of cars and trucks whose participants rode from Brooklyn to Manhattan’s Upper East Side on Sunday. Drivers honked their horns and passengers waved American flags.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/25/nyregion/trump-protesters-clash-nyc.html

    Under the amendment, which was passed in 2018, a person convicted of a felony in the state as of is eligible to vote after completing all terms of his or her sentence.

    ABC News’ Lionel Moise spoke with Tampa resident pastor Clifford Tyson, who voted in a presidential election for the first time in 42 years.

    “It felt wonderful because I had my 90-year-old father with me, also I had my 26-year-old son,” said Tyson.

    Voters overwhelmingly approved the ballot initiative in 2018. Previously, the state of Florida disenfranchised everyone who had a felony conviction.

    “Florida used to have the worst system in the country when it came to felony disenfranchisement,” said Julie Ebenstein, a senior staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union’s voting rights project. According to Ebenstein, when Amendment 4 was passed, about 1.6 million convicted felons who completed their sentences in the state were not allowed to vote.

    “Politicians in Florida, unfortunately, in 2019 passed a law that interpreted all terms of sentence to include payment of legal financial obligation,” said Ebenstein.

    Like in many other states, people in Florida are charged various fines when they are convicted of an offense. The ACLU, along with several other groups, sued to block the financial requirement, but this September, a federal appeals court ruled that former felons are required to pay all expenses before they can vote.

    But even those willing to pay their fees often find it difficult to do so due to the alleged lack of justice in the system.

    “It’s one thing to be able to say to folks, ‘Hey, you got to pay back your fines and fees in order to vote.’ It’s another thing when those folks show up and say, ‘How much do I owe?’ The state says, ‘Oh, well, we can’t really tell you because there are 67 counties and it’s really complicated,'” said Neel Sukhatme, an associate professor of law at Georgetown University and the co-founder and director of the non-partisan group Free Our Vote.

    Sukhatme said convicted felons who completed their sentences should always have accurate information on how much they owe in fines and fees — regardless of their political beliefs.

    The Free Our Vote team gathered to analyze data sets from across the state, which including information from the Clerk of Courts, Department of Corrections and voter registration records. The goal was to make Free Our Vote into a clearinghouse, where those previously convicted of felonies could get the information they needed on what specific payments they owed and where they could pay them.

    It was a life-changing moment for Tyson when he found out his balance in Hillsborough County was zero dollars. He is now trying to encourage others to carry out their civic duty and exercise their right to vote.

    “They live to vote and die trying to vote,” said Tyson of other felons who did their time. “My vote is just as important as theirs. My rights are just as important to me. I made some mistakes back in those days, I lost that right. But I paid my dues to society.”

    According to Florida Department of State spokesperson Mark Ard, the state does not separately track registered voters who had their voting rights restored under Amendment 4. The Florida Rights Restoration Coalition estimates that since it passed, 67,000 people with prior felony convictions were able to register to vote.

    Florida is being closely observed ahead of the November election, and 29 electorates are up for grabs.

    “It’s Florida, 600 votes can make the difference in national presidential elections. But I hope that those who are now registered, who passed the registration deadline, will go to the polls and cast their ballot and will join in the Democratic process in a very exciting time to be involved,” said Ebenstein.

    Moise’s full report can be heard on the ABC News “Perspective” podcast.

    Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/convicted-florida-felons-allowed-vote-1st-time-presidential/story?id=73822173

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    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-russia-putin/2020/10/24/4edb462e-13bb-11eb-ba42-ec6a580836ed_story.html

    A set of new polls show Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden with a narrow lead — or a tie — with President Donald Trump in the Southern states of Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and Texas, a potentially promising sign for Biden’s odds of winning the White House.

    In this election cycle, political analysts consider Florida and North Carolina to be swing states — and Texas and Georgia to be possible swing states, as well. Considering that Trump won all of them in 2016 — including outstripping Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in Texas by 9 percentage points — the new polling speaks to the president’s vulnerabilities as Election Day swiftly approaches.

    The latest CBS News Battleground Tracker polls show Biden leading Trump 50 percent to 48 percent among likely voters in Florida; Biden over Trump in North Carolina 51 percent to 47 percent; and Biden tied with Trump 49-49 in Georgia.

    The results are close enough that Trump could regain his advantage ahead of November 3, but it is striking to see Biden performing so well in states that Trump easily won before, and to see a Democratic candidate putting up big numbers in a region that has skewed Republican for decades.

    In a broader average of recent polls tracked by FiveThirtyEight, as of October 25, Biden leads in Florida by 2.4 percentage points, and in North Carolina by 2.6 percentage points, but is essentially tied in Georgia, where he has a scant half-percentage point lead.

    Most worryingly for Trump, perhaps, is that Biden garners more trust from voters on the top tier issue of handling the coronavirus pandemic. According to the CBS polling, in Florida, Biden leads Trump 49 to 41 percent on the issue; in North Carolina he leads 50 to 39 percent; and in Georgia 48 to 41 percent.

    CNN’s polling expert Harry Enten has argued this is bad news for Trump, since historical polling data suggests that in elections where there’s an issue that surpasses the economy in attention, then “whoever is most trusted most on the non-economic issue is likely to win the election.” And as Vox’s Roge Karma has written, while polls show the pandemic isn’t necessarily the top issue for Trump voters, surveys have found it is a key issue for the undecided voters who could swing all three states either toward Trump or Biden.

    In Texas, things are looking up for Biden as well. A new Dallas Morning News/University of Texas at Tyler poll shows Biden edging out Trump 48 to 45 percent among likely voters.

    Mark Owens, the political scientist at UT-Tyler who directed the poll, told the Dallas Morning News that he considered Texas a “tossup” because of shifting attitudes toward Trump. The Cook Political Report has rated the race “Lean Republican.” FiveThirtyEight’s average of polls for Texas also shows a tied race, at 47.5 percentage points for Biden and 47.6 percentage points for Trump.

    The number of Texas voters concerned with how Trump has handled the coronavirus appears to be growing, Owens found. In September, 32 percent of Texans said they had no confidence in Trump to keep communities safe from the pandemic — but in the latest poll, that number surged to 44 percent.

    Most Texans preferred Trump over Biden on the economy, with 53 percent of likely voters saying they thought Trump would handle it better, and 46 percent feeling the same about Biden.

    State polling should be taken with a grain of salt

    Polling in battleground states is important — particularly given that the US’s presidential elections are determined by the electoral college, not a popular vote. And together, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and Texas account for 98 of the 270 electoral college votes a candidate needs to win the White House.

    But state polling also has significant limitations, and Biden’s standing in these states (as well as other more closely-watched swing states like Michigan and Pennsylvania) should not be seen as a surefire sign of his victory in the overall election.

    Consider that a Marquette Law School poll in Wisconsin conducted in October 2016 had Clinton up by 6 percentage points — but that Trump ultimately won the state by 0.7 points.

    As Vox’s Li Zhou has explained, there are many reasons that a number of state polls were off the mark in 2016 compared to the final election results. Some of those have been corrected for during this election cycle — for instance, in the run-up to 2016, some polls overrepresented Clinton voters because they failed to account for differences in education level, and that’s largely no longer the case: Both the CBS News and Dallas Morning News polls were weighted by education, for example.

    But there are still plenty of obstacles. Polling is always a snapshot of a specific time and group of voters, and ultimately can’t give definitive insight into the likelihood that someone sharing their preference with a pollster will actually show up at the voting booth on Election Day. It also can’t necessarily predict the patterns of late-breaking voters who decide on their candidate in the final days before election (something that played a crucial role in Trump’s victory).

    Adding to the uncertainty is that the pandemic makes predictions based on polling especially difficult, as Zhou explains:

    Specifically, the use of vote-by-mail due to the coronavirus pandemic makes predicting the composition of the electorate that much harder. It’s unclear how closely turnout will match up with prior years because of public health concerns about physical polling places and questions around the number of people who’ll use mail-in ballots instead.

    “It’s difficult to do a turnout model because you’re not sure who’s going to turn out. That’s going to be even harder in an election that has extensive vote-by-mail,” says University of New Mexico political science professor Lonna Atkeson.

    Bottom line: this Southern swing state polling is promising for Biden, but polls are not to be confused with perfect predictions of outcome.


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    Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2020/10/25/21533154/biden-trump-polls-florida-north-carolina-texas-georgia

    The Senate voted 51-48 Sunday afternoon to limit debate on the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett, setting up a vote on her confirmation for Monday evening.

    Sunday’s vote limited debate over President Trump’s court appointee to 30 hours, meaning the full Senate will be able to hold a confirmation vote Monday beginning at approximately 7:26 p.m. ET.

    LIVE UPDATES: AMY CONEY BARRETT’S NOMINATION ADVANCES TOWARD SENATE VOTE

    “Judge Amy Coney Barrett of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit is a stellar nominee in every single respect,” Senate Majority Leader McConnell said on the Senate floor following the vote. “Her intellectual brilliance is unquestioned. Her command of the law is remarkable. Her integrity is above reproach.”

    Two Republicans voted against ending debate, Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine., and Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska. Murkowski has, however, indicated that she will vote to confirm Barrett.

    Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., railed against his Republicans for swiftly moving to fill a court vacancy in the weeks before a presidential election, after refusing to do the same when there was a vacancy early in the final year of President Barack Obama’s presidency.

    “Republicans promised they’d follow their own standard if the situation was reversed,” Schumer said. “Guess not.”

    Democrats took to Twitter to voice their opposition prior to voting against moving forward with the confirmation process.

    “Judge Barrett’s nomination poses a direct threat to members of the LGBT community,” Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., pointing to an upcoming Supreme Court case dealing with adoption in the LGBT community.

    LISA MURKOWSKI ANNOUNCES SUPPORT FOR AMY CONEY BARRETT DURING RARE SATURDAY SENATE SESSION

    Previously, Supreme Court justices needed to clear a 60-vote threshold to advance to the high court, a tradition that forced nominees to win bipartisan support. But McConnell changed the standard in 2017 to allow for a simple majority, a move that allowed for the confirmation of President Trump’s previous two nominees, Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh. 

    Former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., first eliminated the 60-vote threshold in 2013 to overcome GOP stonewalling of President Obama’s nominations to the lower courts and the executive branch. Known as invoking the “nuclear option” at the time, Reid kept the higher standard in place for the Supreme Court. 

    Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., claimed that Barrett’s confirmation would jeopardize the Affordable Care Act, a talking point many Democrats made during her confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

    “Confirming Amy Coney Barrett—who actively opposes the ACA—would be devastating for millions of Americans,” Blumenthal tweeted. “Just ask my constituents who would face real harm in real ways if the Supreme Court guts the ACA.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Barrett has not indicated to anyone how she might rule if given the opportunity to sit on the court when oral arguments are presented over the future of the ACA in November. She has criticized the 2012 Supreme Court opinion that upheld the law by deeming the penalty attached to the individual mandate to be a tax. Despite this, Barrett pointed out that the current case hinges on separate issues.

    Fox News’ Chad Pergram contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/senate-vote-limit-debate-barrett-supreme-court-nomination-final-vote-monday

    White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said on Sunday that the U.S. will not get control of the coronavirus pandemic as the country reports a record high in new daily Covid-19 cases.

    “We’re not going to control the pandemic,” Meadows said during an interview on CNN. “We are going to control the fact that we get vaccines, therapeutics and other mitigations.”

    Pressed on why the U.S. can’t make efforts to control the pandemic, Meadows said: “Because it is a contagious virus just like the flu.”

    “What we need to do is make sure that we have the proper mitigation factors, whether it’s therapies or vaccines or treatments to make sure that people don’t die from this,” Meadows said.

    Meadow’s comments point to the Trump administration’s focus on a potential vaccine or therapeutic to manage Covid-19, rather than implementing national measures to help mitigate the spread of infections.

    More than 224,000 people have died since the start of the pandemic and health officials urge that protocols like mask wearing could save nearly 130,000 lives.

    Meadows also defended President Donald Trump‘s large campaign rallies during the pandemic, where attendees are not required to wear masks to reduce the spread of the virus: “We live in a free society,” he commented.

    Trump has repeatedly downplayed the seriousness of the virus, recently insisting that the country is “rounding the corner” and the virus is “going away,” even as cases surge in most states.

    Meanwhile, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden on Friday unveiled a plan to address the virus that includes effectively nationalizing mask wearing, Covid-19 testing, PPE procurement, reopening guidelines and vaccine distribution.

    With just nine days left until the election, the Biden and Trump camps traded barbs over Meadows comments. Biden accused the Trump administration of wishing the virus away.

    “This wasn’t a slip by Meadows, it was a candid acknowledgement of what President Trump’s strategy has clearly been from the beginning of this crisis: to wave the white flag of defeat and hope that by ignoring it, the virus would simply go away. It hasn’t, and it won’t,” Biden said.

    The White House accused Biden of “armchair quarterbacking” and said Meadows was pushing back on “unsustainable, impractical nationwide quarantine policies advocated by Democrats.”

    Biden’s plan calls for reopening the economy by creating a national contact tracing corps, guaranteeing testing and personal protective equipment for all workers, providing additional financial support for small businesses, and helping public health authorities certify that businesses are compliant with best practices.

    The U.S. reported 83,757 new Covid-19 cases on Friday, surpassing a previous daily record of about 77,300 cases in mid-July, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. On Saturday, the country reported another 83,718 new cases.

    As the country enters into what could be a dangerous winter, research indicates that the U.S. could see more than 500,000 total deaths by the end of February if states continue to ease pandemic restrictions.

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/10/25/coronavirus-mark-meadows-says-were-not-going-to-control-the-pandemic-.html

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on Sunday she’ll seek another term as speaker should Democrats keep the House majority in the Nov. 3 elections.

    Asked directly by host Jake Tapper on CNN’s “State of the Union” whether she will run again, Pelosi responded: “Yes, I am. But let me also say that we have to win the Senate.”

    The California Democrat, who is 80, first served as speaker from 2007 to 2011 — becoming the first woman in history to hold the post — and was reelected to it in January 2019.

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/25/pelosi-speaker-dems-control-house-432246

    With the pandemic getting worse, not better, President Donald Trump tried to turn reality on its head during a series of rallies on Saturday in North Carolina, Ohio, and Wisconsin.

    “We’re rounding the turn. Our numbers are incredible,” Trump claimed in Lumberton, North Carolina, before blasting the media for its alleged fear-mongering.

    But the US is not rounding a turn for the better. Friday and Saturday saw new daily coronavirus infections in the US surge past 80,000 for the first time ever. And it’s not just cases — hospitalizations are up more than 33 percent over the last month, and the seven-day average of deaths is now back above 800.

    “That’s all I hear about now. Turn on television, ‘Covid, Covid, Covid Covid Covid.’ A plane goes down, 500 people dead, they don’t talk about it. ‘Covid Covid Covid Covid.’ By the way, on November 4, you won’t hear about it anymore,” Trump said. (In case it’s not clear, the plane crash he referred to was made up.)

    Trump invoked a nearly identical talking point a couple hours later in Circleville, Ohio, saying, “You know what? On November 4, you’re not gonna hear— the news, CNN, all they talk about, ‘Covid Covid Covid.’ If a plane goes down with 500 people, they don’t talk about … they’re trying to scare everybody.”

    Then, on Saturday night in Waukesha, Wisconsin, Trump argued, falsely, that the main reason cases in the US are going up is because the US does so much testing — “if we did half the testing, we’d have half the cases,” he said, as if testing causes cases — and insisted the coronavirus is “going away.” (In recent weeks, new cases have actually grown at a much faster rate than testing has expanded.)

    Trump echoed the same theme during his first rally of the day on Sunday in Londonderry, New Hampshire.

    Not only is Trump’s rhetoric irresponsible, but the fact is, he’s holding rallies that make a mockery of social distancing and mask-wearing guidelines recommended by his own government. And these rallies appear to be actively making the pandemic worse by spreading the virus.

    Perhaps the strongest evidence of this came on Friday, when Erin Mansfield, Josh Salman, and Dinah Voyles Pulver authored a piece for USA Today that examined how coronavirus cases surged in a number of places where Trump recently held rallies.

    From the article:

    The president has participated in nearly three dozen rallies since mid-August, all but two at airport hangars. A USA TODAY analysis shows COVID-19 cases grew at a faster rate than before after at least five of those rallies in the following counties: Blue Earth, Minnesota; Lackawanna, Pennsylvania; Marathon, Wisconsin; Dauphin, Pennsylvania; and Beltrami, Minnesota.

    Together, those counties saw 1,500 more new cases in the two weeks following Trump’s rallies than the two weeks before – 9,647 cases, up from 8,069.

    But to the extent that Trump actually engages with this reality, his message is that people have to learn to live with it.

    “You have to lead your life, and you have to get out,” he advised his fans on Saturday in Ohio.

    The White House has no plan — and they aren’t even trying to hide it

    Beyond the mounting human toll — more than 220,000 Americans have now died from the coronavirus — the latest spike in cases comes at a politically inopportune time for the White House, with Election Day now just nine days away.

    But at this point, the Trump administration isn’t even pretending to have a plan to slow the spread of the virus. Instead, during a CNN interview on Sunday, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows said, revealingly, that “we’re not going to control the pandemic.”

    Meanwhile, the White House is dealing with yet another cluster of cases — five people close to Vice President Mike Pence have tested positive for the virus in recent days. Pence, the chair of the White House coronavirus task force, was exposed. But instead of following Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance, which calls for exposed people to self-quarantine for 14 days, he plans to travel to pandemic rallies on Sunday and Monday.

    So not only has the White House given up on protecting the American public, but Trump administration officials have failed to protect themselves. And Trump and Pence are actively making things worse by lying to the American public about the state of the pandemic at rallies that fuel further spread.


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    Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2020/10/25/21533030/trump-pandemic-rallies-coronavirus-misinformation

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Sunday that she will seek another term in the speakership if the Democrats maintain control of the US House of Representatives after the November election.

    “Yes I am,” Pelosi told CNN’s Jake Tapper on “State of the Union” when asked if she would run for the post again if her political party keeps its majority in the chamber.

    The 80-year-old California Democrat then added, “But let me also say we have to win the Senate.”

    Pelosi made history when she served from 2007 to 2011 as the first woman Speaker of the House.

    She was then reelected to the speakership again last year after Democrats regained their majority in the 2018 midterm elections.

    Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/10/25/pelosi-to-seek-another-house-speaker-term-if-dems-control-chamber/

    COLUMBIA — Vice President Mike Pence will speak at a rally in Greenville on Tuesday, making a rare pre-election stop for a Republican in a state that has long been considered a safe GOP stronghold.

    The “Make America Great Again Victory” rally, exactly one week out from Election Day, will be at 3:30 p.m. at Donaldson Airport and is sandwiched in between two separate stops for Pence in North Carolina, widely viewed as a crucial battleground state. The announcement came Saturday night from President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign.

    Within a few hours of the Trump campaign announcing Pence’s South Carolina rally, several members of the vice president’s staff were reported to have tested positive for coronavirus. But White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said Sunday morning on CNN that Pence would maintain his public schedule.

    “Essential personnel, whether it’s the vice president of the United States or anyone else, has to continue on,” Meadows said.

    Pence helped kick-off U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham’s reelection campaign a year and a half ago with rallies in Myrtle Beach and Greenville, and his return to the state could be an effort to help South Carolina’s Republican incumbent close the deal in a race that has become much more competitive than initially expected.

    Graham, who has represented the Palmetto State in the U.S. Senate since 2002, is facing the most threatening challenge of his political career from Democrat Jaime Harrison, who has raised a national record of more than $100 million in his bid to unseat the incumbent.

    The rally could also serve as a celebration for Graham if he is able to solidify the confirmation of Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett. A full vote in the Senate is scheduled on Monday. After Trump chose Barrett late last month, Graham quickly scheduled hearings for the nominee with the Senate Judiciary Committee that he chairs.

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    Graham’s campaign spokesman T.W. Arrighi said the senator’s attendance is dependent on whether Barrett is confirmed in time or if Senate Democrats “decide to pull some shenanigans.”

    “But he hopes to attend,” Arrighi said.

    S.C. GOP chairman Drew McKissick said the party is proud to welcome Pence back to the state and looks forward to “re-electing him and President Trump for another four years.”

    “It’s no secret the Trump Administration is friends with South Carolina,” McKissick said. “From Senator Lindsey Graham to Governor Henry McMaster, we have a solid relationship with the Trump White House.”

    The last time either a president or vice president campaigned in South Carolina so close to an election was October 2002, a non-presidential midterm year, when Republican President George W. Bush spoke in Columbia in support of Graham during his first U.S. Senate campaign against Democrat Alex Sanders.



    Source Article from https://www.postandcourier.com/politics/vp-mike-pence-to-campaign-in-greenville-on-tuesday-in-rare-pre-election-sc-rally/article_cebcf6ce-165b-11eb-a502-abfe9d3680e0.html

    WAUKESHA, Wis. — President Donald Trump assured supporters packed shoulder to shoulder at a trio of rallies Saturday that “we’re rounding the turn” on the coronavirus and mocked challenger Joe Biden for raising alarms about the pandemic, despite surging cases around the country and more positive infections at the White House.

    Trump’s remarks came hours before the White House announced that a top aide to Vice President Mike Pence had tested positive for the virus. Pence has been in close contact with the adviser, the White House said, but still planned to keep traveling and holding rallies around the country.

    The revelation of another high-ranking administration official testing positive for the virus coupled with the administration’s decision to continue business as usual punctuated a day that was marked the starkly different approaches that Trump and Biden are taking to campaigning in the age of the novel coronavirus.

    Pence’s office confirmed late Saturday that his chief of staff, Marc Short, had tested positive — the public announcement coming just as Trump was wrapping up a day of big rallies in North Carolina, Ohio and Wisconsin, three battleground states that will have enormous impact on deciding the Nov. 3 election.

    Pence is considered a “close contact” under Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines, but will continue to campaign, his spokesman said. “In consultation with the White House Medical Unit, the Vice President will maintain his schedule in accordance with the CDC guidelines for essential personnel,” Pence spokesman Devin O’Malley said. The guidelines require that essential workers exposed to someone with the coronavirus closely monitor for symptoms of COVID-19 and wear a mask whenever around other people.

    O’Malley added that Pence and his wife, Karen Pence, both tested negative for the virus on Saturday “and remain in good health.” Pence, who held campaign events in Florida on Saturday, is set to campaign in North Carolina on Sunday.

    The revelation bookended a day in which Biden and Trump demonstrated remarkably different attitudes about what they saw as safe behavior in the homestretch of a campaign that, as with all aspects of American life, has been upended by the pandemic.

    “We don’t want to become superspreaders,” Biden told supporters at a “drive-in” rally Saturday in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, picking up a term that has been used to describe the Rose Garden event in late September in which Trump announced his latest Supreme Court nominee. More than two dozen people linked to the White House have contracted COVID-19 since that gathering, as have campaign aides. Trump spent more than three days hospitalized at Walter Reed Military Medical Center after becoming stricken.

    Biden pressed his case that Trump was showing dangerous indifference to the surging virus on a day he looked to boost his candidacy with the star power of rock legend Jon Bon Jovi, who performed before Biden took the stage at a second drive-in rally in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania.

    Meanwhile, in Lumberton, North Carolina, his tongue firmly in cheek, Trump called Biden “an inspiring guy” for raising alarm about the pandemic. The president said that he watched Biden’s Bucks County rally as he flew to North Carolina and sarcastically observed that it appeared attendees, who were in their cars, weren’t properly socially distancing.

    Trump at his rallies repeatedly criticized the news media for focusing on the virus, which has killed about 224,000 people in the United States and more than 1 million across the globe.

    “It’s always cases, cases, cases. They don’t talk about deaths,” Trump complained to a crowd of several thousand at an outdoor rally in Circleville Ohio, where few wore masks even as they stood and sat shoulder to shoulder. “They’re trying to scare everybody,” he said.

    Trump emerged from his own illness with even greater certitude that the nation has gone too far with efforts to stem the virus, and has spoken out repeatedly that children should be in school and healthy Americans should get back to normal life with limited restrictions.

    Pence has generally been more measured in public commentary about the virus. Still, he has echoed Trump’s impatience at times and sought to contrast Trump’s push to reopen the economy with Biden’s caution, including during a campaign stop in Lakeland, Florida. just hours before the White House confirmed his top adviser had tested positive.

    “When Joe Biden is talking about shutting down our economy, we are opening up America again,” Pence said.

    Saskia Popescu, an infectious disease expert at George Mason University, called Pence’s decision to continue campaign travel “grossly negligent” and suggested that campaigning was a stretch of the CDC’s guidance for essential worker.

    “It’s just an insult to everybody who has been working in public health and public health response,” she said. “I also find it really harmful and disrespectful to the people going to the rally” and the people on Pence’s own staff who will accompany him.

    In North Carolina on Saturday, Trump questioned the value of testing, taking a stance in opposition to public health experts across the globe.

    “You know why we have cases?” Trump asked. “‘Cause we test so much. And in many ways, it’s good. And in many ways, it’s foolish. In many ways, OK? In many ways it’s very foolish.”

    The rise in coronavirus cases is an ominous sign the disease still has a firm grip on the nation that has more confirmed virus-related deaths and infections than any other in the world. Many states say hospitals are running out of space in areas where the pandemic seemed remote only months ago. And in addition to the spike in cases, in many parts of the country, the percentage of people who are testing positive for COVID-19 is up as well.

    Trump went further, pushing a conspiracy theory that hospitals are over-classifying coronavirus deaths because “doctors get more money and hospitals get more money” — even though there is no evidence of that and experts say the count is likely under-reported.

    The U.S. and its reporting systems, “are really not doing it right,” he claimed. “They have things a little bit backwards.”

    As he dug in on his defense on the panic, Trump also criticized Biden for saying that the country was headed for a “dark winter” because of the pandemic — the scenario of a surge in infections that health experts have warned about for months.

    “I thought Sleepy Joe was very dark,” he told his biggest crowd of the day at a night-time rally in Waukesha, Wisconsin. “How dark was that? How horrible was that?” he asked.

    A record of more than 83,000 infections were reported on Friday alone.

    Biden in his stop in Luzerne reminded supporters that Trump had suggested the COVID-19 mortality rate was lower outside predominantly Democratic states.

    “Where does this guy come from?” Biden said.

    The president has repeatedly accused Biden and other Democrats of pushing measures that are worse than the coronavirus itself by advocating for social distancing and limits on gatherings that Trump says wreak havoc on the economy.

    Biden, in an interview with Pod Save America aired Saturday, said his first priority was to “get control of the virus” because the economy can’t move forward without stemming the disease.

    “As I said before, I will shut down the virus, not the economy,” Biden said in Bucks County. “We can walk and chew gum at the same time, and build back better than before.”

    Source Article from https://www.startribune.com/trump-to-vote-in-fla-hold-3-rallies-biden-focuses-on-pa/572852192/