• Twitter will hand over the official @POTUS account to President-elect Joe Biden when he’s sworn in on Inauguration Day, the company said on Friday.
  • The social media company plans to do the same for other Twitter handles linked to the presidency, including @FLOTUS, @VP, and @whitehouse accounts.
  • This move won’t affect President Trump too much as he’s been largely tweeting from his personal account @realDonaldTrump.
  • However, his private account could be much more highly regulated after he leaves the White House.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

President-elect Joe Biden will be handed over the official @POTUS account when he’s sworn in on Inauguration Day, Twitter said in a statement on Friday.

“Twitter is actively preparing to support the transition of White House institutional Twitter accounts on January 20th, 2021,” a Twitter spokesperson said in a statement, according to The Verge. “As we did for the presidential transition in 2017, this process is being done in close consultation with the National Archives and Records Administration.”

The social media company plans to do the same for other Twitter handles linked to the presidency, including @FLOTUS, @VP, and @whitehouse accounts.

No information will be shared between the Trump team and the incoming Biden administration during the handover, the company said.

Trump’s existing tweets on @POTUS will be archived and Twitter will reset the account to zero tweets. 

This procedure was the same in 2016 when President Barack Obama handed over the account to Trump. Obama’s @POTUS archive can be found here.

Even if Trump doesn’t concede, the transition will happen, which he still hasn’t officially done after losing the presidential election to Biden on November 7.

In the last four years, Trump has largely been using his personal account — @realDonaldTrump — for most of his tweeting. As a private citizen, he will be able to keep control of that account after the inauguration day.

However, his personal Twitter account could be much more highly regulated, and he could even face suspension or removal, according to Twitter’s policies.

This is because his tweets would no longer fall under Twitter’s “world leader” exemptions, meaning they may be deemed to be outside the company’s terms of public interest

In the last few weeks, Twitter has been issuing “misleading” and “disputed” labels on several of Trump’s tweets about the election being stolen.

There is absolutely no evidence to support Trump’s unfounded claims that Democrats “rigged” the election against him.

On Tuesday, Twitter added a new label that reads “Official sources called this election differently,” after Trump falsely claimed he won the presidential election.

Between Monday and Friday, the label has been applied to five of the President’s tweets.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/twitter-will-hand-potus-account-to-joe-biden-inauguration-day-2020-11


California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks to reporters at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, Calif., Thursday, Oct. 29, 2020. | Renée C. Byer/The Sacramento Bee via AP, Pool

11/20/2020 11:32 PM EST

Updated 11/20/2020 11:48 PM EST


OAKLAND, Calif. — One of California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s children is quarantining after a school classmate tested positive for Covid-19, the governor’s office confirmed to POLITICO late Friday.

Newsom’s child was exposed at his private school and has been in a 14-day quarantine, communications director Nathan Click said in an email. POLITICO is not naming the school or child for privacy reasons.

It marked another rough turn for the Newsom family in a week where the governor has drawn harsh criticism for attending a 12-person dinner party at The French Laundry for a Sacramento lobbyist friend. The school exposure is likely to draw attention from teachers unions, who have called on the governor to close all campuses due to a surge in coronavirus cases.

“The family has taken the potential exposure seriously and is following all state protocols,” Click said. “After being alerted by the school that a classmate tested positive for COVID-19, the potentially exposed Newsom child began a 14-day quarantine from the date of exposure in accordance with state public health guidance for schools.”

Newsom received a rapid test this week that was negative and will get a nasal swab test this weekend, according to Click. All four Newsom children have tested negative, as has first partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom.

“The Newsom child was tested twice [5 days and 7 days past their last contact with the COVID-19 positive student],” Click said. “In addition, each of the Newsom children were also tested on Day 5.”

Click said that the governor, his wife and their three other children are not required to quarantine, according to state health guidelines that require the quarantine of only the person directly exposed to an infected person.

Newsom said late last month that his four children, ages 4 to 11, had returned to in-person learning at their Sacramento private school under a “phased-in approach.” The school expanded to five days a week this month.

The governor has drawn fire because most of California’s 6 million public schoolchildren remain at home to do distance learning, as 20 of the 25 largest districts have opted to keep campuses shut, including the massive Los Angeles Unified School District. Assembly Education Chair Patrick O’Donnell (D-Long Beach) this month called the situation “state-sanctioned segregation” because more affluent suburban families have returned to class while city public schools serving lower-income residents have largely stayed home. Many students have struggled with distance learning, based on early report cards showing increases in failure.

With Covid-19 surging at an unprecedented pace and the state setting daily case records, Newsom moved 41 counties — with 94 percent of the state’s population — into the most restrictive coronavirus purple tier this week. That makes it much more difficult for schools that never opened to bring students back, and it has put a chill in reopening talks for districts that were considering opening back up. School districts and private schools that have already opened — including the Newsoms’ — can still remain open in the purple tier under the governor’s rules.

Click said that Newsom “has made the safety of students and staff a priority during the COVID-19 pandemic and has fought to ensure that every child — whether in a classroom or at home — is learning.” In a Nov. 6 letter sent to California’s mayors, Newsom noted that his most recent state budget “stabilized school funding and included a one-time investment of more than $5.3 billion in funds for local public schools to support learning and address barriers related to COVID-19.”

But O’Donnell and other leaders say Newsom must do more. The state is projected to have a $26 billion “windfall” over the next 18 months, according to the Legislative Analyst’s Office, and Democratic legislative leaders have said some of that money should be spent on ensuring safety at schools.

The Sacramento private school the Newsoms attend will move to remote learning after Thanksgiving break through the second week of December, partly due to the higher risks associated with holiday activities next week, according to an email obtained by POLITICO. In order for students to return after that, they must obtain a negative Covid-19 test, and the school is offering testing to all students and staff.

The state’s largest teachers unions and school districts have demanded comparable precautions before they agree to reopen schools.

Newsom’s family exposure came in the same week that the governor made international headlines — and faced withering criticism — for attending a birthday dinner for lobbyist Jason Kinney at the exclusive French Laundry restaurant in Napa County. The dinner became fodder for cable hosts and editorials questioning what they considered the political hypocrisy of the governor, who has repeatedly urged Californians to avoid traveling for Thanksgiving, severely limit their socializing and avoid indoor dining to slow the spread of the virus.

Photos of the dinner, captured by Fox LA, showed the governor and Siebel Newsom sitting maskless alongside two top California Medical Association officials, CEO Dustin Corcoran and top lobbyist Janus Norman.

Though originally billed as an outdoor event, the photos showed diners at Kinney’s 50th birthday celebration in a room with three sides closed off, also raising questions about how Newsom defines “outdoor” dining in the pandemic — a definition that took on even more important meaning as most of the state was forced to close all indoor restaurant operations.

On Thursday, he ordered a 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew starting Saturday in the 41 purple-tier counties. Residents must avoid venturing outside unless performing essential activities. The curfew will last until 5 a.m. on Dec. 21, more than a full month. Newsom said that he aimed to control the higher spread that occurs during activities fueled by inebriation and late-night antics, and he warned of “social activities and gatherings that have a higher likelihood of leading to reduced inhibition.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/california/story/2020/11/20/one-of-newsoms-children-quarantines-after-potential-exposure-from-classmate-at-school-1337545

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-11-20/trump-campaign-suit-is-assault-on-pennsylvania-law-judge-told

WAUWATOSA — Witnesses and family members of witnesses of the shooting at Mayfair Mall Friday are talking about the tragedy they just experienced.

Eight people including one teen were shot by a suspect at Mayfair Mall Friday afternoon, and the suspect is still at large, police say. Wauwatosa Police Chief Barry Weber said during an evening press conference that seven adults were injured and one teen was injured.

MORE COVERAGE:

One man learned that his uncle had been shot and his cousin was still trapped in the mall, as police searched for suspects.

Another witness of the shooting.

“My concern for my uncle was the main thing, because I knew he got shot. But I didn’t know anything about my cousin at all. When I got here, the whole ride up here I was literally scared and nervous, I didn’t know what was going on exactly. Then I spoke to my cousin, he called back, he said, ‘I’m fine. Uncle got shot, got shot twice in the leg.'”

He said his strongest emotion was anger. “This is stupid. Why would people do this, just run into a crowd and start shooting for no reason? Doesn’t make any sense to me. I’m concerned about my cousin of course, but at the same time, I’m furious about this incident. Like why would you put people at risk, you’ve got kids, toddlers, little babies that don’t deserve this.”

Jill Wooley, a shopper who was at Mayfair Mall, recounted what happened to her.

“We’ve been exposed to the public shootings like this, so you, unfortunately, I think all of us, have thought about what would we do in that situation,” she said. “And fortunately that kicked in, and we made it to a safe place… right around the corner from where we were standing there was a stairwell, like an employee stairwell, and we just went straight down as far as we could go. I had my mom hide in the corner, and I looked around for where we could go next if we needed to.”

Bianca, who lives in Chicago and was visiting the mall for work, said that “I don’t know about the neighborhood or anything like that. I literally just know this place (the mall) and the hotel I am at.”

Chris Riley, the owner of a business at Mayfair Mall, said he heard upwards of 14 or 15 gunshots.

“Upon hearing the shots, I had my four-year-old in the store, I put her, I locked her in there. I made my way out of there. There was a crowd of people just running out. I tried to bring as many of them as I can, to bring them into my store for cover. And within the next 5 to 10 minutes there was police coming in,” he said.

Man whose daughter was in the mall during the shooting.

A man whose daughter was in the mall at the time of the shooting shared his story: “A guy apparently walked into Macy’s and just started opening fire on people, and as he walked out into the mall area, he started shooting at everybody.”

He said he heard two shots when his daughter called him. He said he hoped his daughter was safe and hoped he could get to her. “As you hear those shots – that was real,” he said.

Steven Humphrie, a parent, said he drove as fast as he could to the mall to pick up a loved one.

“The sheriff stopped me on the way down here to the store, told me that I had to come back here and wait,” he said. “The officer, right here on this corner, I could hear on his walkie-talkie saying he’s not letting me, and I heard one of them yell to him, coming from the inside, saying ‘watch out.’ Then he turns his radio off, so I don’t know what’s going on inside the mall.”

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Source Article from https://www.tmj4.com/news/local-news/witnesses-describe-mass-shooting-at-mayfair-mall

Kyle Rittenhouse, who was arrested after allegedly shooting two people during an August demonstration in Kenosha, Wisconsin, posted $2 million in bail on Friday with the help of MyPillow founder and CEO Mike Lindell.

Rittenhouse was charged with first-degree intentional homicide, attempted homicide, reckless homicide, recklessly endangering safety and illegal possession of a firearm in connection with the shootings. Rittenhouse’s attorney Lin Wood has said that Rittenhouse was acting in self-defense. In August, Wood created a foundation designed to take donations for Rittenhouse’s defense. On Friday, Wood announced Rittenhouse’s release from jail and name-checked Lindell as one of those who made a contribution.

“KYLE RITTENHOUSE IS OUT OF JAIL,” tweeted Wood on Friday. “God bless ALL who donated to help #FightBack raise required $2M cash bail. Special thanks to Actor Ricky Schroder @rickyshroder1 & Mike Lindell @realMikeLindell for putting us over the top.”

“Kyle is SAFE,” Wood continued. “Thanks to ALL who helped this boy.”

Newsweek reached out to Lindell for comment.

Rittenhouse had become a cause celebre for some conservatives after the shooting who believed the teenager to be a patriot who acted in self-defense.

MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell kept running advertisements on Tucker Carlson’s Fox News program after other companies pulled their sponsorship in June.
Stephen Maturen/Getty

Lindell, perhaps best known for his seemingly ubiquitous television advertisements, is a Republican who served as the Chairman for Trump’s re-election campaign in Minnesota. In March, Lindell appeared at a press briefing at the White House alongside Trump.

“Our president gave us so much hope, where, just a few short months ago, we had the best economy, the lowest unemployment and wages going up,” Lindell said. “It was amazing.”

Trump told a September campaign rally in Minnesota that Lindell should run for governor. Lindell was in attendance at the event.

“He has my complete and total endorsement,” Trump said. “You should run. You’d be a hell of a governor.”

In October, Lindell said he would run for Governor of Minnesota if it voted Republican in the November elections. The Associated Press projected a Minnesota win for Democratic President-elect Joe Biden after the elections.

After Fox News host Tucker Carlson made controversial remarks about the Black Lives Matter movement in June, many of Carlson’s advertisers stopped sponsoring his program. Lindell, however, continued to run MyPillow commercials on Carlson’s show. According to the television tracking firm iSpot, 37.8 percent of the advertising shown on Carlson’s program between January 1 and June 30, 2020 were MyPillow ads.

“I feel blessed to be able to advertise on all of the major networks and national cable stations, including on Tucker Carlson Tonight,” Lindell told the Washington Post in June. “I advertise MyPillow to help people across the country. I support my business, our customers and my employees.”

Lindell has not exhibited the same attitude towards CNN. In September, Lindell appeared in an interview with Anderson Cooper regarding a COVID-19 treatment called Oleandrin. Lindell said he had been taking Oleandrin for months and that it had helped protect him from the coronavirus. Cooper alleged that Oleandrin had no merit as a therapeutic and compared Lindell to a “snake oil salesman.”

After hiring Wood as his attorney, Lindell demanded that Cooper issue an apology for the segment.

“Cooper’s interview of my client is the most outrageously unprofessional ‘hit piece’ interview I have ever viewed,” Wood wrote in a September letter to CNN Executive President and General Counsel David Vigilante.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/tucker-carlson-advertiser-mike-lindell-ceo-mypillow-helps-bail-out-kyle-rittenhouse-1549191

California announced Thursday it will impose a mandatory overnight stay-at-home order for much of the state as COVID-19 surged to unprecedented levels and hard-hit Los Angeles County careened toward even more severe lockdown measures.

While the coronavirus is surging across the state, the situation in Los Angeles County was quickly reaching crisis levels, with nearly 5,000 new coronavirus cases Thursday, the most it has seen in any one day since the pandemic began.

Moreover, California set another record: more than 13,000 cases a day three times this week — on Monday, Thursday and Friday, according to an independent county-by-county tally conducted by The Times. Before this week, there was only one day California recorded more than 13,000 cases in a single day, in early August.

Officials said they are alarmed by the rapid spread of the infection. For the two-week period that ended Thursday in Los Angeles County, average daily cases over a seven-day period have jumped by 102%, from more than 1,600 cases a day to nearly 3,300 cases a day. If the number of new daily coronavirus cases on Friday, Saturday and Sunday remains the same as Thursday’s, L.A. County could cross a red line as early as Sunday that would put the region on the cusp of a new stay-at-home order.

Whether such a new stay-at-home order would happen automatically or wait for a few days hasn’t yet been decided, L.A. County Health Officer Dr. Muntu Davis said. A new lockdown measure would be another body blow to businesses struggling to survive amid the pandemic. Davis and others said they want to keep businesses open but might not have a choice if the outbreaks cannot otherwise be slowed.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has announced a stay-at-home order prohibiting most nonessential activity between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. in counties in the strictest tier of the state’s reopening road map.

“At this point, no one should be still underestimating the spread of this virus, nor should anyone be questioning the actions we still need to slow the spread and lessen its impact on our collective health and our local economy,” Davis said. “With the surge in transmission of COVID-19 in Los Angeles County, it is safe to assume that many people are infected without even knowing it yet.”

A Times analysis has found that California is now averaging more than 10,000 new coronavirus cases a day over a seven-day period. California has not experienced a daily case count this high since the outbreak began, even during the surge in the summer that stands as the state’s deadliest time of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The new order issued by the California Department of Public Health will prohibit most nonessential activity outside the home from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. in counties in the strictest tier of the state’s reopening road map — the purple tier. The restriction goes into place on Saturday and lasts through Dec. 21, though it could be extended.

“The virus is spreading at a pace we haven’t seen since the start of this pandemic and the next several days and weeks will be critical to stop the surge. We are sounding the alarm,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a statement released Thursday afternoon. “It is crucial that we act to decrease transmission and slow hospitalizations before the death count surges. We’ve done it before and we must do it again.”

Roughly 94% of Californians — 37 million people — live in counties that are in the purple tier, which has forced many businesses there to suspend or severely restrict the number of customers allowed indoors.

“We are asking Californians to change their personal behaviors to stop the surge. We must be strong together and make tough decisions to stay socially connected but physically distanced during this critical time. Letting our guard down could put thousands of lives in danger and cripple our healthcare system,” said Dr. Erica Pan, the state’s acting public health officer.

The restrictions are different than the statewide stay-at-home order Newsom issued in mid-March, in that they focus more on curbing late-night drinking and group gatherings. Californians in the affected counties will still be allowed in the overnight hours to buy groceries, walk the dog, pick up restaurant takeout orders, visit doctors or other healthcare providers and other providers of essential services.

Dr. Mark Ghaly, the state’s health and human services secretary, said the limited stay-at-home order focuses on the late night because that is a time when people tend to congregate and let their guard down, either at gatherings in their homes or elsewhere.

Bars and restaurants are settings that can easily spread the coronavirus, through talking and even breathing. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report found that adults with positive coronavirus test results were about twice as likely to have reported dining at a restaurant than those who tested negative.

Even if people up at these hours tend to be younger — and less susceptible to the ravages of COVID-19 — they can still contract the virus and infect others without showing symptoms, Ghaly said. Eating and drinking in groups increases the odds of spread since people must remove their masks to ingest or imbibe.

“COVID can go from zero to 60. Very quickly. And it has, we’ve seen it across the nation,” Ghaly told reporters at an afternoon news conference, warning that more restrictions are possible. “Today’s actions are an important step, but not the only step. And as the rate of transmission gets stronger, I think we will too.”

While accepting an award this week from San Jose State University, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the U.S. government’s top infectious diseases expert, said that a policy of ordering bars and restaurants to close at an earlier time has helped to control the pandemic in other countries.

“When you look at what happens as you get late into the evening, people let down their guard, people maybe drink a little bit too much, people get in congregate settings,” Fauci said. A public policy decision to shorten such business hours to control the pandemic is sound, he added.

Newsom was noticeably absent from Thursday’s news conference, a departure from his usual practice of making major announcements about the state’s COVID-19 response.

The governor announced the curfew as he faces scrutiny over his own behavior and cases increase. Newsom apologized this week for attending a Nov. 6 dinner party at the French Laundry, where he joined people from other households and several lobbyists at the upscale Napa Valley restaurant to celebrate the 50th birthday of a close friend.

He said on Monday that the party was held “outdoors,” a description that was contradicted when pictures of the event surfaced the next day.

Reaction from the restaurant industry was mixed Thursday, with some critical but others supportive.

Everardo Santiago, owner of the Inglewood-based El Oaxaco Taqueria y Antojitos Oaxaqueños, said Newsom’s decision could hurt him but he endorses it nonetheless.

“If we can all cooperate in this moment and do things the way they should be done, it will be easier,” Santiago said.

Republicans were far more critical.

Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones said he will refuse to enforce the new order.

“The Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office will not be determining — including entering any home or business — compliance with, or enforcing compliance of, any health or emergency orders related to curfews, staying at home, Thanksgiving or other social gatherings inside or outside the home, maximum occupancy, or mask mandates,” Jones said in a statement.

Assemblyman James Gallagher (R-Yuba City), who filed a legal action challenging one of Newsom’s earlier coronavirus orders as unconstitutional, said the new action will “further decimate struggling businesses.”

“The governor likes to tout that his actions are scientifically driven, but evidence simply does not support such drastic action limiting people’s freedom,” Gallagher said in a statement. “This virus does not suddenly come out at night, and there is little evidence that shifting businesses’ operating hours has any impact.”

Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia, a Democrat and strong political ally of Newsom, praised the action announced on Thursday, saying it will “save lives and provide relief to our hospitals and our healthcare system.”

Garcia is considered to be among those Newsom may appoint to fill the U.S. Senate vacancy that will be created when Sen. Kamala Harris is sworn in as vice president.

Officials fear the spike in new infections also may drastically increase hospitalizations.

Most of those who test positive eventually will recover, and many do so without needing to be admitted for professional medical care. However, Ghaly added, authorities expect that roughly 12% of those testing positive will end up in hospitals in two to three weeks.

COVID-19 hospitalizations have risen by 63.6% over the last 14 days — hitting 4,523, he said Thursday. The number of patients in intensive care, 1,155, is 40.5% higher than two weeks ago.

Officials in Los Angeles County sounded that alarm Wednesday, saying that, unless things change, the demand for local hospital and intensive care beds could soon outstrip supply.

On Friday, L.A. County began ordering restaurants and nonessential stores to close their doors to the public at 10 p.m., although takeout and delivery services can continue after that time. The county also placed a cap on the number of people allowed at outdoor gatherings — a maximum of 15 people from no more than three households.

If the county reaches 4,000 average cases daily over a five-day period, officials would stop outdoor dining at restaurants, returning eateries to offering only delivery and takeout service for the first time since May.

If new cases worsen still further, hitting 4,500 average cases daily over a five-day period, the county would impose a new stay-at-home order that would generally only allow essential workers and people securing essential services to leave their homes, and implement a 10 p.m.-to-6 a.m. curfew that only exempts essential workers.

Willon and Luna reported from Sacramento, Lin from San Francisco and Money from Los Angeles. Times staff writers Sean Greene, Alejandra Reyes-Velarde and Andy Roberson contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-11-20/california-imposes-night-curfew-as-l-a-careens-toward-new-lockdown-measures

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp certified the state’s presidential election results Friday in favor of President-elect Joe Biden — but called for another audit of the votes.

Kemp told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution it was “completely unacceptable” that stashes of thousands of uncounted ballots were found in several counties during the manual hand recount after the initial results.

After the hand recount, President Trump gained 888 votes, shrinking Biden’s lead slightly to 12,670 votes.

Kemp, who has faced ire from Trump and other Republicans over the process and his decision to certify the results, said he understood Trump’s frustration.

GEORGIA CERTIFIES JOE BIDEN VICTORY IN 2020 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 

“He’s a fighter,” Kemp said. “But at the end of the day, I’ve got to follow the laws of the constitution of this state and that’s exactly what I’m doing.”

The governor told the Journal-Constitution he’s legally bound by state law to certify the results given by Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger following the recount.

Now that the results are certified, the Trump 2020 Campaign will have until Tuesday to request another recount, he said, because the vote is within a half-percent. The recount would be paid for by the state. 

“I would just say I’m formalizing the certification, he said. “Now that Secretary Raffensperger certified, it triggers the ability of the Trump campaign to ask for the recount. If something were to happen, I’m still part of that process. So my take on all this is: I’m following the law and the rules.”

GEORGIA’S FLOYD COUNTY FIRES ELECTION DIRECTOR AFTER FINDING UNCOUNTED BALLOTS 

Kemp said he’s also been frustrated by the problems during the process.

“But because I’ve been part of the process, I’ve had to be more guarded,” he told the newspaper. “I’m having to make sure I’m staying on firm legal footing for the official duties of the governor.”

Kemp also asked Raffensperger to do a sample audit to compare voters’ signatures on mail-in ballots but the secretary of state has said that’s impossible at this point because the ballots are separated from the outer security envelope during the counting process, according to CBS News.

Both officials have suggested adding a voter ID requirement for mail-in ballots in the future.

“I’d be open to working with both bodies in the House and Senate, and the lieutenant governor and the speaker, as well on that,” Kemp told the Journal-Constitution. “Georgians deserve a process where the integrity of the vote is not a question – and certainly it is on a lot of people’s minds. That’s part of the issue of what’s going on right now.”

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Asked about what he’d tell Trump supporters frustrated with his actions, he said, “First of all, I’d tell them I am following the law. That’s what I told them I’d do when I took my oath. I’m frustrated with the outcome, but we’ve got to focus on the firewall in the U.S. Senate and voting Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler back to Washington to stop the drastic measures Democrats have embraced over the years.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/georgia-gov-brian-kemp-certifies-election-results-calls-for-another-hand-recount

Top House Democrats want answers about the status of the presidential transition.

On Thursday, House Oversight Chair Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) and Appropriations Committee Chair Nita M. Lowey (D-NY), along with two other senior Democrats, Gerald Connolly (D-VA) and Mike Quigley (D-IL), demanded that General Services Administration (GSA) Administrator Emily Murphy brief them by Monday on the delay in declaring President-elect Joe Biden as the winner of the 2020 election.

The GSA must officially “ascertain” Biden as the next president in order for the transition to begin in earnest, a step that would release funds to the incoming president and allow his team access to federal agencies and briefings to prepare for the transfer of power.

In the past, most GSA administrators have made their judgments based on media projections, but Murphy has not done so yet, despite Biden being declared the winner by all major US media outlets and Trump’s legal challenges largely failing in court.

“Your actions in blocking transition activities required under the law are having grave effects, including undermining the orderly transfer of power, impairing the incoming Administration’s ability to respond to the coronavirus pandemic, hampering its ability to address our nation’s dire economic crisis, and endangering our national security,” the representatives wrote in a letter to Murphy on Thursday.

The White House has denied pressuring Murphy to withhold the ascertainment. But House Democrats said in their letter that if that was indeed true, then Murphy should “follow the law and make the ascertainment designation without any further delay.” The briefing, they added, would help them decide whether Murphy or other leaders at the GSA would be required to testify before Congress.

The GSA did not return Vox’s request for comment.

This push from House Democrats is the latest point of pressure on the GSA to initiate the transition. Former national security officials have spoken out about how the delay in the transition — particularly the fact that President-elect Biden is not receiving intelligence briefings — could undermine America’s security.

Former public health officials and medical experts have also urged the GSA to begin the transition, warning that a continued delay could undermine the next administration’s Covid-19 response and preparations for vaccine distribution, which could endanger American lives.

Following most presidential elections — with the exception of the contested 2000 election between George W. Bush and Al Gore — GSA administrators have quickly ascertained the incoming president after news outlets called the race and the losing candidate conceded.

In 2016, for instance, Trump was ascertained the day after the election, despite his lead being much smaller than Biden’s is in 2020. Trump hasn’t admitted defeat and is pursuing legal challenges, but nothing in the ascertainment process precludes the GSA from declaring Biden the likely winner and starting the transition process while Trump continues to battle it out in court.

But while Democrats in Congress have demanded that the formal transition start, Republicans have been a little more wishy-washy. Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN), who is retiring this year, said in a statement Friday that “if there is any chance whatsoever that Joe Biden will be the next president, and it looks like he has a very good chance, the Trump administration should provide the Biden team with all transition materials, resources and meetings necessary to ensure a smooth transition so that both sides are ready on day one.”

Sen. Jim Lankford (R-OK), who said last week that he saw “nothing wrong” with Biden getting intelligence briefings, said this week that Biden should continue to get the briefings he got as the candidate, but not the high-level President’s Daily Brief. He said he spoke to the GSA, but that there was “no way” the GSA could ascertain because the “GSA is not the electors.”

But, again, the fact that the electors have not formally voted has not held up presidential transitions before, including in 2016.

Biden’s transition team, meanwhile, has tried to forge ahead with preparations to take office in January even without the cooperation of the Trump administration. This week, Biden held meetings with state leaders on how to better coordinate the federal and state response to Covid-19. He also received a national security briefing from former officials — though that’s not quite the same thing as a threat briefing from US intelligence agencies.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2020/11/20/21579275/house-democrats-emily-murphy-gsa-presidential-transition

The coronavirus continues to spread through California at a record rate, prompting the state to reimpose restrictions not seen since the early days of the pandemic in a bid to beat back the accelerating surge.

The virus is spreading faster than ever in California, and officials are already warning about the risk of running out of hospital beds in a matter of weeks.

There are now so many people infected with the coronavirus that, in a number of ways, the past week has been the worst of any during the pandemic. It potentially foreshadows a heartbreaking death toll as Christmas approaches, with a certain percentage of people infected today dying about a month later.

California is now recording its worst numbers of daily coronavirus infections. For the seven-day period that ended Thursday, an average of 10,529 people were reported to become infected daily — a number that has more than doubled in just the last two weeks and is even worse than the peak in the summer, which had been California’s deadliest COVID-19 season. COVID-19 hospitalizations are up more than 60% statewide over the last two weeks.

Los Angeles County has also recorded the highest average daily number of cases so far in the pandemic, with an average of 3,613 people reporting new infections daily over the five-day period that ended Friday. That number has nearly doubled in just two weeks — a sign of how the virus is spreading faster than ever before.

The county recorded 4,158 cases Friday, according to an independent tally by The Times, a pace that places the region of risk at needing to order further restrictions on business operations.

On Thursday, the county reported its largest number of cases in a single day in the history of the pandemic: 4,943.

Hospitalizations continue to climb in the county, rising 65% in the last two weeks. The coronavirus test positivity rate has jumped considerably, from 3.9% at the start of November to 7.1% on Wednesday.

“There’s just a lot more people that are infected,” said Barbara Ferrer, the L.A. County director of public health. “The data looks really bad right now. We’ve had three terrible days in terms of case rates and increases in hospitalizations. And if this does continue , we will in fact be” potentially approaching a point where either outdoor restaurant dining areas are ordered shut or a new stay-at-home order is issued.

Ferrer said she expected to give three days’ notice before a new health order would go into effect.

Daily COVID-19 deaths have also increased in the county. For the seven-day period ended Thursday, an average of 21 people died every day from COVID-19, the worst such tally since Oct. 1, and a 50% increase compared with the number earlier in the week.

“This is a serious concern for all of us,” Ferrer said. “This level of acceleration threatens our healthcare system [and] that threatens care for every single person in this county — for people who have a heart attack, for people who need emergency surgery.”

It’s hard to know whether the county has seen a peak in terms of daily cases or is still on its way to even higher numbers.

But should daily coronavirus case rates worsen and pass a red line established by the county, officials could implement a new stay-at-home order that would generally require people to stay at home as much as possible.

“If we can’t get this back under control, that is, unfortunately, where we’re headed: Trying to limit as much as possible interactions with people not in our households,” Ferrer said.

“I still hope that we don’t have to go to ‘Safer-at-Home’ and that we are able to in the next few days start turning this around,” Ferrer said.

The pandemic conditions are especially worrying now because once coronavirus case rates go up, “it can kind of feed upon itself,” Ferrer said. “Once there are more people that are infected in your community, if everyone doesn’t buckle down and take extra precautions, you now have more people that are capable of spreading [the virus].”

Ferrer again urged the public not to travel for the Thanksgiving holiday, echoing recommendations by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued Thursday — whether it be a cross-country flight or a drive to the other side of town.

If people decide to travel anyway — such as college students returning home for the next month or two — Ferrer said they should quarantine in a room alone for 14 days; as much as possible not share a bathroom, or clean it every time if they do share one; and have people in the home wear masks at all times when indoors.

If students aren’t able to quarantine for 14 days at their destination, Ferrer suggested they not take part in the Thanksgiving festivities, to reduce the chance of infecting the rest of the household.

“We still urge college students to please not return just for the Thanksgiving holiday,” Ferrer said. “There may be some people that are returning and planning to stay here — they’re not going back to their schools — in which case they have plenty of time to do that 14-day self-quarantine.”

The quarantine is particularly important if people in the home are elderly or have underlying medical conditions that put them at risk for severe illness and death from COVID-19, such as high blood pressure, diabetes, obesity, and kidney or lung disease.

A combination of factors are believed to be fueling the rise in disease, including that people are increasingly gathering, and visiting other people’s homes, while failing to wear face masks and that there has been a greater number of outbreaks at worksites in the last couple of weeks.

Because there are now so many more people contagious with the virus in the community — reflected in the rising test positivity rate, “it’s a lot easier for people to infect other people,” Ferrer said. “Given how high our case rate is … you have a much greater chance of running into a person who’s infected.”

San Francisco is poised to enter the most restrictive, purple, tier on Sunday, forcing indoor restaurant dining rooms and gyms to close, as is already the case in 93% of California.

Statewide, for the first time, California has reported more than 13,000 cases a day three times this week — on Monday, Thursday and Friday, according to The Times’ independent tally.

California broke its latest single-day record on Monday, when 13,412 cases were reported; on Thursday, 13,377 cases were tallied, and 13,113 on Friday. (An earlier version of this story reported a higher tally on Thursday, which was since adjusted downward.)

California has now recorded five consecutive days with at least 10,000 newly confirmed coronavirus cases a day, a stretch unlike any in the pandemic.

And those skyrocketing case counts aren’t mere numbers on a spreadsheet. Authorities anticipate that roughly 12% of those who test positive will end up in hospitals two to three weeks later. COVID-19 hospitalizations have risen by 63.6% over the last 14 days, hitting 4,523, according to Dr. Mark Ghaly, the state’s health and human services secretary. The number of patients in intensive care — 1,155 — is 40.5% higher than two weeks ago.

Given the current number of daily cases, “that means in two and a half weeks, 1,200 individuals could be hospitalized with COVID,” Ghaly said during a briefing Thursday, and “you can see how that number adds up.”

“It could mean a serious challenge [for] our entire healthcare delivery system, and not just the beds and the buildings, but the staff,” he said.

As cases and hospitalizations rise, officials have said they expect the number of fatalities to climb also. California reported 108 COVID-19 deaths Wednesday — the first triple-digit figure since Oct. 21 — and 93 more on Thursday, according to data compiled by The Times.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has announced a stay-at-home order prohibiting most nonessential activity between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. in counties in the strictest tier of the state’s reopening road map.

California has averaged 60 daily deaths over the last week, pushing the state’s overall toll above 18,500.

With the virus becoming more widespread statewide, “activities that you normally do are higher-risk today than they were a month ago,” Ghaly said.

“We’ve seen reports of people saying, ‘Well, I haven’t changed my behavior. I was doing the same thing a month ago,’” he said. “Well, today, because [of] the background transmission rate, the level of COVID in our communities is higher [and] even our everyday activities become higher-risk. And we must be resolved to put up our protective guards even more than we usually do.”

In the face of mushrooming case counts and steadily swelling hospitalizations, officials and experts emphasize that residents should double down on measures that can protect them from infection — including wearing masks in public, practicing good hand hygiene, staying home when sick and keeping physical distance from, as well as avoiding gatherings with, those they don’t live with.

Though officials have repeatedly preached that personal responsibility is vital in the battle against COVID-19, the state this week also unveiled a host of new restrictions aimed at turning back the tide of new infections.

California announced Thursday it would impose a mandatory overnight stay-at-home order that will prohibit all gatherings with members of other households and all nonessential activities conducted outside of the home from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. in counties that are in the most restrictive category of the state’s reopening plan.

The limited stay-at-home order still permits people to leave home in the late-night hours to go for a walk with members of their own household, walk the dog, pick up takeout food, or go grocery shopping.

“Oftentimes when people are gathering outside after 10 o’clock, it’s because they’re in a situation where they’re socializing with others, probably not with people in their household,” Ferrer said. “What we’re trying to really reduce right now is the socializing and the gathering with people not in your household.”

The order goes into effect Saturday and lasts through Dec. 21, though it could be extended.

“We hope today’s actions, our collective coming together, our resolve to keep our protective behaviors up, will help us stem the tide and bring these surging numbers down very, very soon,” Ghaly said.

Though the hope is to avoid even more dramatic action in the future, Ghaly acknowledged that “all tools are on the table.”

“COVID can go from 0 to 60 very quickly,” he said. “And it has.”

Restaurants and nonessential stores must close at 10 p.m. and outdoor gatherings are capped at 15 people, as COVID-19 spreads at a rapid rate.

Ahead of the state’s move, officials in Los Angeles County announced additional local efforts aimed at curbing the coronavirus.

On Friday, the county began ordering restaurants and nonessential stores to close to the public from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. — though they can continue to offer takeout and delivery service during those hours — and capped the number of people allowed at outdoor gatherings at 15, from no more than three households.

The number of patrons at outdoor restaurants, breweries and wineries is capped at 50% of maximum outdoor capacity.

“At this point, no one should still be underestimating the spread of this virus, nor should anyone be questioning the actions we still need to slow the spread and lessen its impact on our collective health and our local economy,” the county health officer, Dr. Muntu Davis, said during a briefing.

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Davis said the coronavirus conditions should be a clarion call for residents and businesses to redouble their infection prevention efforts.

“If people were really all following the things that needed to be done, we … probably wouldn’t be in this place where we have this number of cases or have to take these actions,” he said Thursday. “So, really, everybody has to do their part and forget the idea that this is a hoax. It’s not.”

Warning bells are also going off in Santa Clara County, where officials said they are on pace to potentially exceed their hospital capacity in three weeks.

Officials there urged residents not to view testing as a means to gather with those outside their household or engage in other unsafe activities.

“A negative result does not mean someone has a pass to put themselves and others at risk,” Dr. Marty Fenstersheib, the county’s COVID-19 testing officer, said in a statement. “People who test negative can still be carriers of the virus but be in an early stage of infection. It’s critically important that you not travel during this time of heightened COVID-19 risk.”

Times staff writers Phil Willon and Taryn Luna contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-11-20/california-coronavirus-cases-hit-record-high-amid-new-restrictions

WAUWATOSA — Witnesses and family members of witnesses of the shooting at Mayfair Mall Friday are talking about the tragedy they just experienced.

Eight people including one teen were shot by a suspect at Mayfair Mall Friday afternoon, and the suspect is still at large, police say. Wauwatosa Police Chief Barry Weber said during an evening press conference that seven adults were injured and one teen was injured.

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One man learned that his uncle had been shot and his cousin was still trapped in the mall, as police searched for suspects.

Another witness of the shooting.

“My concern for my uncle was the main thing, because I knew he got shot. But I didn’t know anything about my cousin at all. When I got here, the whole ride up here I was literally scared and nervous, I didn’t know what was going on exactly. Then I spoke to my cousin, he called back, he said, ‘I’m fine. Uncle got shot, got shot twice in the leg.'”

He said his strongest emotion was anger. “This is stupid. Why would people do this, just run into a crowd and start shooting for no reason? Doesn’t make any sense to me. I’m concerned about my cousin of course, but at the same time, I’m furious about this incident. Like why would you put people at risk, you’ve got kids, toddlers, little babies that don’t deserve this.”

Jill Wooley, a shopper who was at Mayfair Mall, recounted what happened to her.

“We’ve been exposed to the public shootings like this, so you, unfortunately, I think all of us, have thought about what would we do in that situation,” she said. “And fortunately that kicked in, and we made it to a safe place… right around the corner from where we were standing there was a stairwell, like an employee stairwell, and we just went straight down as far as we could go. I had my mom hide in the corner, and I looked around for where we could go next if we needed to.”

Bianca, who lives in Chicago and was visiting the mall for work, said that “I don’t know about the neighborhood or anything like that. I literally just know this place (the mall) and the hotel I am at.”

Chris Riley, the owner of a business at Mayfair Mall, said he heard upwards of 14 or 15 gunshots.

“Upon hearing the shots, I had my four-year-old in the store, I put her, I locked her in there. I made my way out of there. There was a crowd of people just running out. I tried to bring as many of them as I can, to bring them into my store for cover. And within the next 5 to 10 minutes there was police coming in,” he said.

Man whose daughter was in the mall during the shooting.

A man whose daughter was in the mall at the time of the shooting shared his story: “A guy apparently walked into Macy’s and just started opening fire on people, and as he walked out into the mall area, he started shooting at everybody.”

He said he heard two shots when his daughter called him. He said he hoped his daughter was safe and hoped he could get to her. “As you hear those shots – that was real,” he said.

Steven Humphrie, a parent, said he drove as fast as he could to the mall to pick up a loved one.

“The sheriff stopped me on the way down here to the store, told me that I had to come back here and wait,” he said. “The officer, right here on this corner, I could hear on his walkie-talkie saying he’s not letting me, and I heard one of them yell to him, coming from the inside, saying ‘watch out.’ Then he turns his radio off, so I don’t know what’s going on inside the mall.”

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Source Article from https://www.tmj4.com/news/local-news/witnesses-describe-mass-shooting-at-mayfair-mall


The results reported right after the presidential election are reliable, but they are not official. The official results will arrive in the coming weeks, after a process called certification.

The details vary from state to state, but the point is for officials — sometimes called canvassers — to examine the raw numbers reported by precincts and verify that they are accurate and complete.

This starts at the county or municipal level, and then a state official or board must review the local certifications and certify the statewide totals. In presidential races, if states certify their results by the so-called safe harbor deadline — this year, it’s Dec. 8 — those results are largely insulated from further challenges.

States set their own deadlines, but they don’t always meet them: In Mississippi, for example, some counties certified their results late because staff members were out sick with the coronavirus. A missed state deadline isn’t necessarily a big deal. It’s the Dec. 8 deadline that really matters.

In some states, every county may have certified its results already, but it won’t be listed as complete until the state canvassers sign off.

Below is a list of certification deadlines for the key battleground states that President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. won. The Trump campaign’s strategy has been to try — so far unsuccessfully — to delay the certification processes in these states.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/20/us/politics/2020-election-certification-tracker.html


California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks to reporters at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, Calif., Thursday, Oct. 29, 2020. | Renée C. Byer/The Sacramento Bee via AP, Pool

11/20/2020 11:32 PM EST

Updated 11/20/2020 11:48 PM EST


OAKLAND, Calif. — One of California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s children is quarantining after a school classmate tested positive for Covid-19, the governor’s office confirmed to POLITICO late Friday.

Newsom’s child was exposed at his private school and has been in a 14-day quarantine, communications director Nathan Click said in an email. POLITICO is not naming the school or child for privacy reasons.

It marked another rough turn for the Newsom family in a week where the governor has drawn harsh criticism for attending a 12-person dinner party at The French Laundry for a Sacramento lobbyist friend. The school exposure is likely to draw attention from teachers unions, who have called on the governor to close all campuses due to a surge in coronavirus cases.

“The family has taken the potential exposure seriously and is following all state protocols,” Click said. “After being alerted by the school that a classmate tested positive for COVID-19, the potentially exposed Newsom child began a 14-day quarantine from the date of exposure in accordance with state public health guidance for schools.”

Newsom received a rapid test this week that was negative and will get a nasal swab test this weekend, according to Click. All four Newsom children have tested negative, as has first partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom.

“The Newsom child was tested twice [5 days and 7 days past their last contact with the COVID-19 positive student],” Click said. “In addition, each of the Newsom children were also tested on Day 5.”

Click said that the governor, his wife and their three other children are not required to quarantine, according to state health guidelines that require the quarantine of only the person directly exposed to an infected person.

Newsom said late last month that his four children, ages 4 to 11, had returned to in-person learning at their Sacramento private school under a “phased-in approach.” The school expanded to five days a week this month.

The governor has drawn fire because most of California’s 6 million public schoolchildren remain at home to do distance learning, as 20 of the 25 largest districts have opted to keep campuses shut, including the massive Los Angeles Unified School District. Assembly Education Chair Patrick O’Donnell (D-Long Beach) this month called the situation “state-sanctioned segregation” because more affluent suburban families have returned to class while city public schools serving lower-income residents have largely stayed home. Many students have struggled with distance learning, based on early report cards showing increases in failure.

With Covid-19 surging at an unprecedented pace and the state setting daily case records, Newsom moved 41 counties — with 94 percent of the state’s population — into the most restrictive coronavirus purple tier this week. That makes it much more difficult for schools that never opened to bring students back, and it has put a chill in reopening talks for districts that were considering opening back up. School districts and private schools that have already opened — including the Newsoms’ — can still remain open in the purple tier under the governor’s rules.

Click said that Newsom “has made the safety of students and staff a priority during the COVID-19 pandemic and has fought to ensure that every child — whether in a classroom or at home — is learning.” In a Nov. 6 letter sent to California’s mayors, Newsom noted that his most recent state budget “stabilized school funding and included a one-time investment of more than $5.3 billion in funds for local public schools to support learning and address barriers related to COVID-19.”

But O’Donnell and other leaders say Newsom must do more. The state is projected to have a $26 billion “windfall” over the next 18 months, according to the Legislative Analyst’s Office, and Democratic legislative leaders have said some of that money should be spent on ensuring safety at schools.

The Sacramento private school the Newsoms attend will move to remote learning after Thanksgiving break through the second week of December, partly due to the higher risks associated with holiday activities next week, according to an email obtained by POLITICO. In order for students to return after that, they must obtain a negative Covid-19 test, and the school is offering testing to all students and staff.

The state’s largest teachers unions and school districts have demanded comparable precautions before they agree to reopen schools.

Newsom’s family exposure came in the same week that the governor made international headlines — and faced withering criticism — for attending a birthday dinner for lobbyist Jason Kinney at the exclusive French Laundry restaurant in Napa County. The dinner became fodder for cable hosts and editorials questioning what they considered the political hypocrisy of the governor, who has repeatedly urged Californians to avoid traveling for Thanksgiving, severely limit their socializing and avoid indoor dining to slow the spread of the virus.

Photos of the dinner, captured by Fox LA, showed the governor and Siebel Newsom sitting maskless alongside two top California Medical Association officials, CEO Dustin Corcoran and top lobbyist Janus Norman.

Though originally billed as an outdoor event, the photos showed diners at Kinney’s 50th birthday celebration in a room with three sides closed off, also raising questions about how Newsom defines “outdoor” dining in the pandemic — a definition that took on even more important meaning as most of the state was forced to close all indoor restaurant operations.

On Thursday, he ordered a 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew starting Saturday in the 41 purple-tier counties. Residents must avoid venturing outside unless performing essential activities. The curfew will last until 5 a.m. on Dec. 21, more than a full month. Newsom said that he aimed to control the higher spread that occurs during activities fueled by inebriation and late-night antics, and he warned of “social activities and gatherings that have a higher likelihood of leading to reduced inhibition.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/california/story/2020/11/20/one-of-newsoms-children-quarantines-after-potential-exposure-from-classmate-at-school-1337545

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-11-20/donald-trump-jr-infected-by-coronavirus-and-in-isolation

The Georgia secretary of state certified the state’s 2020 presidential election results Friday, officially declaring President-elect Joe Biden the winner of the state’s 16 electoral votes.

As reported by Fox News on Thursday, the results were determined after the state conducted an audit – involving a fully manual tally – of nearly 5 million votes cast by residents.

Georgia’s results on Friday showed Biden with a 0.25% lead over Trump, which is equal to about 12,670 votes.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp will now have to certify the state’s slate of 16 presidential electors by 5 p.m. on Saturday.

But the Trump campaign has two days to request a recount because the margins are so close.

During the 2016 election cycle, Trump defeated Democratic challenger Hillary Clinton by a margin of about 5% in Georgia.

The last time the state voted for a Democratic candidate in the presidential election was 1992, when former President Bill Clinton won.

PENCE TO CAMPAIGN FRIDAY IN GEORGIA RUNOFFS, BUT NO WORD ON A TRUMP TRIP  

The secretary of state’s office prematurely announced the certification while it was still unfinished earlier on Friday. Forty minutes afterward, a corrected news release was sent out saying that the results would be released later. The momentary slip was yet another moment of drama in a race that has been fraught with accusations.

Biden has 306 electoral votes to Trump’s 232, though the president has yet to concede the race and has repeated unfounded claims about voter fraud.

Trump’s campaign launched several lawsuits challenging the voting systems and processes in a number of key battleground states, including Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

Meanwhile, Georgia’s two Senate seats will be decided in runoffs held on Jan. 5, 2021 – as Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, the Republican incumbents, defend their seats against Democratic challengers the Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, respectively.

These two races will determine whether the GOP maintains its majority in the chamber.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/georgia-certifies-joe-biden-victory-2020-election

Source Article from https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/local/2020/11/20/multiple-people-shot-mayfair-mall-wauwatosa-wisconsin/6363298002/

Source Article from https://www.freep.com/story/news/politics/elections/2020/11/20/trump-meeting-gop-leaders-covid-19-election-results/6357607002/