Fox News’ Geraldo Rivera says he has “no doubt” President Trump will run again in 2024 if his post-election lawsuits fail to alter the results of his 2020 run against Joe Biden.

Rivera made the assessment after a phone conversation with the president, he said.

“He told me he was a realist, he told me he would do the right thing,” Rivera, who was offered rare post-election access to Trump, told Fox News’ Harris Faulkner on “Outnumbered Overtime.”

“Every impression he gave me, Harris, was if the process went against him and he was satisfied that every legitimate vote had been counted and every illegitimate vote had been thrown out … he would surrender.”

Follow below for updates on the 2020 legal fight. Mobile users click here

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/live-updates-trump-frustrated-but-still-strong-after-election-geraldo-says

A Massachusetts native is one of five United States Army soldiers who died in a helicopter crash Thursday in Egypt.

Chief Warrant Officer 2 Marwan S. Ghabour, a 27-year-old from Marlborough, and the other soldiers were part of peacekeeping operations with the Multinational Force and Observers mission, according to the Army.

The UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter crashed on Tirian Island in Sinai, Egypt, because of a mechanical malfunction, according to officials. The crash remains under investigation.

A U.S. Army public affairs officer tells WCVB that Ghabour was a Black Hawk pilot who was assigned to the Aviation Company of Task Force Sinai.

Ghabour, who is originally from Arlington, Massachusetts, was commissioned as a warrant officer in 2018. He arrived in Egypt in January 2020, marking his first overseas assignment.

The public affairs officers says Ghabour’s awards and decorations include the National Defense Service Ribbon, the Army Service Ribbon and the Army Aviation Badge.

Three members of the Massachusetts congressional delegation — Rep. Lori Trahan, Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Sen. Ed Markey — issued the following statement in response to Ghabour’s death:

“We are deeply saddened to hear the news of Chief Warrant Officer Marwan Sameh Ghabour’s passing. … His passing is a stark reminder of the risk each of our servicemembers take in protecting our nation and promoting peace around the globe. We offer our condolences to his family, friends and fellow servicemember in this time of pain. Our officers are here as a resource for them.”

The other soldiers who died in the crash were identified as Capt. Seth V. Vandekamp, a 31-year-old from Katy, Texas; Chief Warrant Officer 3 Dallas G. Garza, a 34-year-old from Fayetteville, North Carolina; Staff Sgt. Kyle R. McKee, a 35-year-old from Painesville, Ohio; and Sgt. Jeremy C. Sherman, a 23-year-old from Watseka, Illinois.

“It is with profound sadness that we mourn this tragic loss of life,” said Col. David S. Sentell, commander of Task Force Sinai. “Our thoughts and prayers are with the families, friends and loved ones of our fallen during this most difficult time. They should know that their nation will continue to honor their sacrifice.”

One U.S. service member was also injured in the crash, but has not been identified, according to the Navy Times.

A French and Czech service member were also killed in the crash, officials told Navy Times.

The Multinational Force and Observers is a multinational peacekeeping mission that was established in 1981 to supervise the implementation of the security provisions of the Egyptian-Israeli Treaty of Peace.

Source Article from https://www.wcvb.com/article/marlborough-massachusetts-native-among-5-army-soldiers-killed-in-egypt-helicopter-crash/34676283

President Obama and then-Vice President Joe Biden appear at a bill signing in Dec. 2016. Late in his term, Obama was using executive actions to advance much of his agenda in the face of congressional opposition. President Trump was unapologetic about taking such actions, which some Democrats think should be Biden’s approach.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

President Obama and then-Vice President Joe Biden appear at a bill signing in Dec. 2016. Late in his term, Obama was using executive actions to advance much of his agenda in the face of congressional opposition. President Trump was unapologetic about taking such actions, which some Democrats think should be Biden’s approach.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

President-elect Joe Biden won the presidency in large part because he promised to be the anti-Trump on policy, temperament, tone and just about everything else. But two men who helped run the Obama White House are urging him to follow President Trump’s example in a specific way: by unapologetically leaning on executive actions to implement key policies.

The advice from former Obama chiefs of staff Rahm Emanuel and Denis McDonough comes as Biden prepares to enter office with an agenda potentially stalled by a closely divided Congress: a much smaller House majority than expected and a 50-50 Senate, at best.

“There is — as President Trump himself has demonstrated with the consent, quite obvious consent of Republicans in Congress – an enormous amount of leeway for the president to institute executive action on things like immigration and energy and climate policy,” said McDonough, who served as chief of staff for much of Obama’s second term.

Obama himself signed many high-profile executive orders and pushed for broad administrative rules changes on environment, education, immigration, and labor policies, among many other areas. But unlike Trump, most of Obama’s high-profile orders came once his party lost its majorities in Congress and major legislation was no longer an option.

“Trump changes that, and moves aggressively on executive orders – a multitude of them on multiple fronts,” said Emanuel, Obama’s first chief of staff. “Everything on immigration, etc., without any legislation.”

Many orders are already in the works. Speaking to MSNBC on Thursday, incoming Biden chief of staff Ron Klain promised a “sack” of executive orders Biden will sign on his first day in the Oval Office.

Many of those actions will be amount to a redoing of Obama administration policies that Trump has spent four years undoing: “Protecting the DREAMers, for example, starting on day one,” Klain said, referring to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program Trump tried to end. “Rejoining the Paris Accords for climate change starting on day one, reversing some of the environmental rollbacks we’ve seen from President Trump.”

Large swaths of Biden’s pandemic response will involve executive actions, too, including tapping the Defense Production Act to manufacture more personal protective equipment and setting up a World War II-inspired “Pandemic Testing Board” to coordinate and speed up test distribution across the country.

But the sweeping, New Deal-style agenda Biden promised was premised on the idea of winning control of the Senate, in addition to keeping the big majority that House Democrats won in 2018. That’s not the landscape Biden will face in January.

Still, McDonough, Emanuel and other Democrats are confident Biden can deliver many of the same results through the executive branch.

“There’s no reason that President-elect Biden should not use the authority that’s available to him,” said McDonough, who’s now a professor at Notre Dame’s Keough School of Global Affairs.

Neither man is arguing Biden should ignore the legislative branch where he served as a senator for decades. McDonough said, “There are certain things you just have to do with Congress.”

Biden himself talked frequently during the campaign about his experience working across the aisle and the need for bipartisan cooperation. In his post-election speeches he has repeatedly called for an end to gridlock and constant partisan warfare.

But Emanuel, who ran the White House during Obama’s window of large legislative majorities, knows perhaps more than anyone that political capital can be limited. So, he argued that Biden should pack as much as possible into executive orders. “The fewer things you have to clog up the legislative pipeline with allows you to concentrate your political capital in that legislative front,” he said.

The climate agenda

Biden has made it clear he’ll make climate change a top priority. At first glance, his much-discussed $2 trillion plan to wean the economy off fossil fuel and onto clean energy seems dead on arrival if there is a Republican Senate, but Jamal Raad, the co-founder of climate advocacy group Evergreen Action, has flagged more than 40 broad executive actions in the climate policies the Biden campaign has already laid out.

“You don’t have to speculate” on what a Biden climate agenda looks like in divided government, he argued: “His plans were littered with pretty significant executive actions on the climate crisis.”

A Biden administration can impose new energy efficiency rules on buildings, appliances and machinery, it can limit new leases for oil and natural gas drilling on federal property, and it can factor climate impacts into scores of regulatory actions across a broad range of agencies.

Raad pointed to vehicle emissions standards as one enormous area of executive influence. “The executive has incredibly authority over mileage standards for cars and trucks,” he said. “Ramping up production of electric vehicles is an incredible opportunity to lower carbon emissions.”

Most importantly, a Biden Administration could use existing Clean Air Act authority to write new rules to force power plants to shift to renewable energy.

Of course, the Obama Administration tried to do that, and the Supreme Court blocked their regulation from going into effect before Trump overturned it.

The judiciary has gotten much more conservative over the past four years. But McDonough, who lived through all those court fights, still thinks it’s possible to advance a Biden agenda with executive actions.

“I think they should be careful in how they put together their plans. They should be discerning in how they structure their plans, and make sure it’s based in the authorities that are squarely in the president’s bailiwick,” he advised.

Still, even if those orders aren’t struck down by the courts, the past four years made it very clear that they could always be undone by the next president.

NPR’s Asma Khalid contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/11/14/934656049/obama-white-house-veterans-urge-biden-to-embrace-executive-action

(CNN)Bulky briefing books and budgets are unopened. Office spaces dedicated to the transition sit vacant. And planning conversations between incoming and outgoing administrations have been silenced for now.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/11/13/politics/transition-agencies-wait-biden/index.html

Democratic Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Friday pleaded for second stimulus checks, mortgage relief, rent forgiveness and other financial support for Americans amid the pandemic as coronavirus cases soared domestically.

As Congress remains deadlocked over another stimulus package, Ocasio-Cortez urged lawmakers to resolve their issues to provide much-needed financial assistance to citizens across the country amid the pandemic.

“Can we please get people stimulus checks and mortgage relief and rent forgiveness and small business support and free testing and hazard pay and healthcare for the uninsured (& underinsured) in the middle of a pandemic or is that too socialist too?” the progressive Democrat tweeted.

It has been nearly eight months since President Donald Trump signed the CARES Act. Negotiations for a second stimulus package have stalled for nearly five months, with both sides of the political aisle blaming each other for their inability to provide more relief. Democrats have blamed the GOP for refusing to provide adequate funding to address the economic fallout caused by the pandemic, while Republicans have accused Pelosi of using the coronavirus to advance her political agenda.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) looks out towards a crowd during a food distribution event on October 27, 2020 in New York City.
Michael M. Santiago/Getty

Lawmakers did not reach a deal before Election Day, but another package could still come by the end of 2020. The deadline for the next federal budget falls on December 11 and Congress must approve a spending bill by then to avoid a government shutdown. If Democrats and Republicans negotiate an agreement, lawmakers could seize on that window to pass another relief package.

While the scenario is possible, a new poll indicates that citizens have lost hope at the prospect of additional support this year. YouGov asked roughly 21,100 adults on November 9 whether they believe that Congress “will pass a bill for a second COVID-19 stimulus package.”

Only 4 percent of respondents said they saw it happening within the next two weeks and 7 percent said within the next month. Fourteen percent said “before the end of the year” and 18 percent, the largest group, said “after January 2021.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Thursday continued to dismiss Democratic calls for a comprehensive relief deal. “I gather [Pelosi] and the Democratic leader in the Senate [Chuck Schumer] are still looking at something dramatically larger. That’s not a place I think we’re willing to go,” he said. McConnell believes that another stimulus package is needed but said that it should be targeted.

This week, Democratic Congressman Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey, co-chair of the Problem Solvers Caucus, said lawmakers and citizens are “out of patience” over the months-long delay.

Newsweek reached out to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell for comment.

p:last-of-type::after, .node-type-slideshow .article-body > p:last-of-type::after {
content: none
}]]>

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/that-too-socialist-too-aoc-pleads-second-stimulus-checks-rent-forgiveness-pandemic-rages-1547421

The office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., announced that its in-person dinner for new Democratic members of Congress has been canceled after a viral tweet showing the tables being set up for the event sparked backlash amid the coronavirus pandemic. 

Pelosi deputy chief of staff Drew Hammill initially doubled down on how “safe” the event was supposed to be, tweeting, “Our office strictly follows the guidance of the Office of Attending Physician, including for this dinner. To be a further model for the nation, this event has been modified to allow Members-elect to pick up their meals to go in a socially-distanced manner.”

However, Hammill later followed, “Members-elect are now picking up their boxed meals and departing the Capitol. There is no group dinner. Members-elect are in DC already for orientation.”

The controversy began when NBC News correspondent Leigh Ann Caldwell reported Friday that Democratic and Republican leaders in the House were planning dinners for new members. She shared an image of several tables being set up in the Capitol. 

CHICAGO MAYOR DEFENDS APPEARING AT LARGE BIDEN CELEBRATION DAYS BEFORE ISSUING THANKSGIVING LOCKDOWN

“.@SpeakerPelosi told me it’s safe. ‘It’s very spaced,’ she said and there is enhanced ventilation and the Capitol physician signed off,” Caldwell tweeted. 

As states across the country continued to evaluate lockdown orders to prevent further spread of the virus, Pelosi’s event and assurance that her dinner would be “safe” sparked heavy criticism on social media. 

“Imagine telling families not to hold Thanksgiving (we shouldn’t) and then doing this. Come. On,” New York magazine reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones tweeted. 

“Terrible and embarrassing for all involved,” comedian Billy Eichner reacted.

“This should be canceled and frankly I’m shocked anybody thought having an indoor social meal right now was a good idea to begin with,” Vox journalist Aaron Rupar wrote.

“Covid rules are for the little people,” radio host Buck Sexton said. 

“Cancel your precious dinner, you maniacs. My god,” MSNBC host Chris Hayes demanded. 

CALIF. GOV. GAVIN NEWSOM ATTENDED PARTY LAST WEEK AS STATE PREPARES FOR THANKSGIVING LIMITATIONS: REPORT

“Can a dumb decision be reversed by Twitter dunks alone? We’re about to find out,” Huffington Post reporter Ryan Reilly pondered. 

“This is happening while Americans are told it will be against the law for them to have Thanksgiving with their families. Yet again, the political class is openly & publicly showing it doesn’t think the rules apply to them, thus helping destroy the trust needed to beat this virus,” Washington Examiner reporter Jerry Dunleavy wrote.

“Please cancel these in-person dinners, @SpeakerPelosi & @kevinomccarthy to keep everyone safe from #covid19 – yourselves, your new members, servers, the Capitol police and all of their families and contacts. And, to show public health leadership,” Chelsea Clinton weighed in. 

While President Trump and Republican lawmakers have long been criticized for appearing to not take the pandemic seriously by not practicing mask-wearing and social distancing at multiple large events, it’s been Democratic officials who have been slammed for urging others to be cautious but appear to scoff at their own advice. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Earlier this year, Pelosi was caught maskless on a security camera at a hair salon in San Francisco, breaking state and city ordinances in the process. 

Pelosi remained defiant, however, insisting she was “set up” by the salon owner. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/pelosi-backlash-planning-fancy-dinner-democrats

President Donald Trump has installed Rudy Giuliani to lead the legal efforts he has mounted to resuscitate his failed bid for a second term in office, a move that comes after a series of court defeats Friday, two sources told ABC News.

A spokesperson for Giuliani confirmed his expanded role for the president.

The decision, first reported by The New York Times, also came following court filings from the law firm that had been handling some of the Trump campaign’s legal efforts. Lawyers from K Street firm Porter Wright Morris & Arthur have asked to withdraw from the federal lawsuit the Trump campaign filed in Pennsylvania to challenge the election results there.

Biden holds a lead of more than 59,500 votes in Pennsylvania. On Friday, the Trump campaign suffered adverse rulings in six cases in the state — rulings that determined that 8,921 votes the Trump legal team had contested would not be tossed out.

Giuliani has since Election Day been a public face of the president’s legal campaign. He has headlined a series of press conferences to claim, without support, that the mishandling of the election and fraud cost Trump the race, despite purported evidence that has been exposed as weak in court.

The Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment from ABC News.

One of the firms that had been handling the actual day-to-day work on the legal filings announced Friday it would seek to withdraw.

“Ronald L. Hicks, Jr., Carolyn B. McGee, and Porter Wright Morris & Arthur LLP (collectively “Porter Wright”) hereby move to withdraw their appearance as counsel for Plaintiffs,” the filing says, noting that Linda A. Kerns, a Philadelphia-based attorney, would stay on the case.

The announcement comes as progressive groups have announced protests in front of law firm offices in Washington to protest the president’s legal challenge to the election.

“Plaintiffs and Porter Wright have reached a mutual agreement that Plaintiffs will be best served if Porter Wright withdraws, and current co-counsel and such other counsel as Plaintiffs may choose to engage represent Plaintiffs in this case.”

Porter Wright filed the initial complaint in federal court earlier this week.

“These law firms have been under tremendous pressure as it became clear these claims were baseless, and that they were part of a broader campaign to delegitimize the election,” Wendy Weiser, from the Brennan Center for Justice, a bipartisan law and public policy institute, told ABC News. “This was not an appropriate use of the court system.”

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/president-trump-taps-rudy-giuliani-election-legal-fight/story?id=74204120

In addition to urging individuals arriving from other states or countries to self-quarantine for 14 days after arrival, the states’ travel advisories recommend individuals limit their interactions to their immediate household. The advisories define essential travel as travel for work and study, critical infrastructure support, economic services and supply chains, health, immediate medical care and safety and security.  

Source Article from https://www.ktvb.com/article/news/health/coronavirus/regional-travel-restrictions-idaho-washington-oregon-california/277-2d0cdf28-6fa3-4aa0-a5b2-9bd05d8057d3

Al-Qaida’s second-in-command was killed in Iran in August by Israeli operatives acting at the behest of the United States, the New York Times has reported, citing intelligence officials.

Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah, who went by the nom de guerre Abu Muhammad al-Masri, was gunned down by two men on a motorcycle in Tehran, the NYT reported. He was accused of helping to mastermind the 1998 bombings of two US embassies in Africa.

Masri was seen as a likely successor to Ayman al-Zawahri, believed to be al-Qaida’s current leader.

It was unclear what, if any, role the United States had in the killing of the Egyptian-born militant on 7 August, the anniversary of the embassy attacks, the NYT said, adding that US authorities had been tracking Masri and other al-Qaida operatives in Iran for years.

Iran denied the report. Iran’s foreign ministry said in a statement that there were no al Qaeda “terrorists” on Iranian soil.

“From time to time, Washington and Tel Aviv try to tie Iran to such groups by lying and leaking false information to the media in order to avoid responsibility for the criminal activities of this group and other terrorist groups in the region,” the ministry said.

A US official, speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity, declined to confirm any of the details in the NYT story or say whether there was any US involvement. The White House national security council did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Masri was killed along with his daughter, the widow of Osama bin Laden’s son Hamza bin Laden, the Times reported.

The al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden, who orchestrated the 9/11 attacks on the United States, was killed in a US raid in Pakistan in 2011.

Masri had been in Iran’s “custody” since 2003 but had been living freely in an upscale suburb of Tehran since 2015, the NYT cited unnamed US intelligence officials as saying.

US counterterrorism officials believed Iran, also a US enemy, may have let him live there to conduct operations against US targets, the NYT said.

It was not immediately known what, if any, impact Masri’s death has had on al-Qaida’s activities. Even as it has lost senior leaders in the nearly two decades since the attacks on New York and Washington, it has maintained active affiliates from the Middle East to Afghanistan and West Africa.

With Reuters

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/nov/14/israeli-agents-in-iran-kill-al-qaidas-top-lieutenant-report

Kelly, a retired four-star Marine Corps general, served as Trump’s chief of staff from July 2017 to early Jan. 2019. Trump lost patience with his strict management style and Kelly grew exasperated trying to put guardrails around the president.

Kelly said that starting transition intelligence briefings early is key because it’s a gradual process.

“The transition, in the national security realm in particular and the homeland security realm, is just so important that every day that the transition is delayed really kind of handicaps” the new team, he said.

A number of prominent Senate Republicans including Sens. James Lankford (Okla.), Marco Rubio (Fla.) and Roy Blunt (Mo.) have also called for Biden to start getting briefings.

“I think it’s crazy not to” start the transition, Kelly said. “I know Mr. Trump better than most people do. I know that he’ll never accept defeat and, in fact, he doesn’t have to accept defeat here. He just has to do what’s best for the country and in the country’s interest.”

Kelly, who served as Trump’s homeland security secretary before he became chief of staff, said that incoming senior Biden White House staffers should also be allowed to interact with federal agencies to get trained on important issues that they will start dealing with on Jan. 20. So far, the administrator of the General Services Administration, Emily Murphy, has not determined that Biden is officially the president-elect, which has blocked agencies and the Biden transition team from interacting.

“If you’re the incoming chief of staff, maybe you want to spend some time with the FBI, you want to spend some time at NSA, whatever, to get you up on the ball so that if and when you do take over, you’re fully briefed up and you’re comfortable understanding the short, medium and long-term threats,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/11/13/kelly-criticizes-trump-over-delay-of-biden-transition-436465

Pfizer announced promising data this week suggesting its vaccine is more than 90 percent effective, and has said it will apply to FDA later this month. Moderna, which is working closely with the National Institutes of Health, is preparing to announce its own efficacy data in a matter of days. An emergency-use application could soon follow, Slaoui said.

Gen. Gustave Perna, Operation Warp Speed’s chief operating officer, said that the government would begin vaccination within 24 hours after a shot secures emergency authorization.

But while manufacturers have developed coronavirus vaccines in record speed, and dozens more are still in the pipeline, Slaoui’s projections mean it will likely take months just for first-priority groups such as health care workers and the elderly to get a shot.

Both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are given as two doses, effectively cutting in half the government’s initial order of 100 million doses from each of the those manufacturers.

But Slaoui added that there could be more authorized vaccines in the spring, boosting chances for more people to get vaccinated. Four vaccines, including the Pfizer and Moderna shots, are now in late-stage U.S. trials, and at least one other company plans to start such a study this month.

“We may be able to immunize a larger number of Americans on an ongoing basis, per month,” Slaoui said after name-checking other promising candidates from AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson.

The government has not yet released a comprehensive plan to distribute any coronavirus vaccines, including how it will handle logistics for shots that need to be shipped in below-freezing temperatures and outreach to skeptical communities.

Because of the real-world challenges of vaccine distribution and supply, federal health officials including CDC Director Robert Redfield project that broad access will not be a possibility until summer 2021.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/11/13/trump-covid-vaccine-december-436481

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/11/13/coronavirus-more-than-100-secret-service-officers-infected-isolating/6278424002/

Sign up for the Guardian’s First Thing newsletter

A major law firm withdrew overnight from a Trump campaign case in Pennsylvania seeking to have mail-in ballots thrown out, in the latest blow to the president’s efforts to challenge the 2020 election result in court.

The Ohio-based Porter Wright Morris & Arthur firm, which brought a suit on Monday alleging that the use of mail-in ballots had created “an illegal two-tiered voting system” in the state, abruptly withdrew from that case in a memo to the court.

“Plaintiffs and Porter Wright have reached a mutual agreement that plaintiffs will be best served if Porter Wright withdraws,” the memo said. The lead lawyer in the case, the Pittsburgh-based Ronald L Hicks Jr, did not immediately reply to a request for comment. The news was first reported by the New York Times.

Separately, lawyers for the Trump campaign withdrew a lawsuit in Arizona, conceding that the case would not move enough votes to change the election result in the state. “Since the close of yesterday’s hearing, the tabulation of votes statewide has rendered unnecessary a judicial ruling as to the presidential electors,” Trump lawyer Kory Langhofer told an Arizona state court, in news first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

And in Michigan, a judge refused to halt the certification of Detroit-area election results. It was the third time a judge has declined to intervene in the Michigan count.

Unlike most lawsuits brought by the Trump campaign, which targeted small pools of votes whose exclusion would not change the election result, the Porter Wright suit in Pennsylvania challenged nearly 2.65m votes that were cast by mail, the majority by Democrats.

It accused the secretary of the commonwealth, Kathy Boockvar, of “arbitrary and illegal actions” and sought an emergency order prohibiting the certification of the Pennsylvania election result.

With that lawsuit stalled, certification in Pennsylvania – and the formal election of Joe Biden as president – drew a step closer. By law the state’s result must be certified by 23 November.

The news came as a coalition of US federal and state officials said they had no evidence that votes were compromised or altered in last week’s presidential election, rejecting unsubstantiated claims of widespread fraud advanced by Trump and many of his supporters.

The statement from cybersecurity experts trumpeted the 3 November election as the most secure in American history.


One week on: how Trump handled losing the US election – video report

The Trump campaign has been using lawsuits trying to prevent or delay states in which Trump lost from certifying their election results, an essential step to translating state popular-vote results into a national electoral college result.

Biden has opened up a lead of 5.3m popular votes and counting, and he is on track to win the electoral college 306-232.

Dozens of lawsuits brought by the Trump campaign in six states to challenge the election result have gained little traction. The campaign has won minor court victories, such as requiring Pennsylvania to set aside ballots received after election day in case they are later ruled invalid.

But that pool of ballots and others targeted in Trump lawsuits is not large enough to overcome Biden’s lead in Pennsylvania, where he is up almost 60,000 votes and counting, and in other states.

Porter Wright is representing the Trump campaign and the Republican party in other Pennsylvania lawsuits, including one seeking to throw out mail-in ballots for which missing voter identification information was not provided by 9 November. The disposition of that lawsuit, which Hicks was also leading, is unclear.

Porter Wright and a second large law firm, the Ohio-based Jones Day, representing Republicans in 2020 election lawsuits have come under pressure for acting as perceived accomplices in Trump’s effort to cancel the election result.

The legal news site law.com called it a “public relations nightmare” for the firms. At least one lawyer at Porter Wright resigned over the firm’s decision to carry Trump’s lawsuits forward, the NYT reported.

The Lincoln Project anti-Trump Republican group has attacked the firms on Twitter, asking, “do you believe your law firms should be attempting to overturn the will of the American people?” The group was suspended from Twitter for publishing the names and office contact information of the lawyers.

While legal actions by the Trump campaign are proceeding in multiple states, more than a dozen cases have been thrown out of court, and there is not a single case in which substantial evidence of election fraud has emerged.

Instead, Trump lawyers have had to admit to judges that they have no evidence of fraud – in sharp contrast with the message the president is spreading on Twitter.

In a case in Maricopa county, Arizona, accusing poll workers of misconduct – the case that was withdrawn on Friday afternoon – Trump lawyer Langhofer told a judge that the plaintiffs were “not alleging fraud” or “that anyone is stealing the election” but raising concerns about “good faith errors”.

In a case in Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, the lawyer Jonathan Goldstein, who has his own law firm, was attempting to have 592 mail-in ballots thrown out because of “irregularities” with the ballots’ outer envelopes.

A judge pressed Goldstein on whether he was alleging voter fraud.

“I am asking you a specific question, and I am looking for a specific answer,” the judge said. “Are you claiming that there is any fraud in connection with these 592 disputed ballots?”

“To my knowledge at present, no,” Goldstein said.

“Are you claiming that there is any undue or improper influence upon the elector with respect to these 592 ballots?” asked the judge.

Goldstein replied: “To my knowledge at present, no.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/nov/13/trump-law-firm-withdraws-pennsylvania-election-case

Trump and his Republican allies have mounted a series of legal challenges to ballots in six battleground states to reverse Biden’s apparently insurmountable lead, as the president falsely claims that he won the race.

On Friday, Trump’s efforts were dealt serious blows when his campaign dropped a challenge of ballots in Arizona, saw a judge refuse to delay the certification of ballots in Detroit and learned that Pennsylvania will not order a recount of ballots.

Biden is the projected victor in all three states, which have a combined 47 Electoral College votes.

Although Trump won Georgia by more than 5 percentage points in 2016, polling averages had indicated that Biden had a chance to win the Peach State going into Election Day.

Since 1972, the state has primarily backed Republican candidates, breaking only for southern Democrat Bill Clinton in 1992 and Georgia native Jimmy Carter in 1976 and 1980.

But growing demographic changes have contributed to Georgia’s shift into a battleground state.

Both U.S. Senate seats from Georgia are going to runoff elections in January. In those contests, incumbent Republican Sen. David Perdue will face Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff, and Sen. Kelly Loeffler, the other Republican, will face Raphael Warnock, a Democrat.

Those races will determine whether Republicans, who currently hold both seats, will remain the majority party in the Senate or whether the Democrats will be able to secure a 50-50 tie in the Senate.

Under a tie, Democrats will have majority control over the Senate because Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, currently a Democratic senator from California, would have a tie-breaking vote.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/11/13/georgia-election-results-2020.html

The governors of California, Oregon and Washington issued a joint coronavirus travel advisory on Friday urging people arriving to their states to self-quarantine for 14 days and asking residents to avoid all non-essential out-of-state trips.

The Pacific Northwest states said essential travel includes people who are traveling for “work and study, critical infrastructure support, economic services and supply chains, health, immediate medical care and safety and security,” according to a statement.

The Democratic governors also recommended that travelers limit their interactions with only people in their households.

“California just surpassed a sobering threshold – one million COVID-19 cases – with no signs of the virus slowing down,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a statement. “Increased cases are adding pressure on our hospital systems and threatening the lives of seniors, essential workers and vulnerable Californians. Travel increases the risk of spreading COVID-19, and we must all collectively increase our efforts at this time to keep the virus at bay and save lives.”

The travel advisory is voluntary, according to Newsom’s office, which sent out a statement saying the best enforcement is “encouraging others to be respectable and be responsible by taking action. Asking people to do the right thing is the most powerful enforcement tool we have.”

Friday’s travel warning comes as families across the country modify their holiday plans and university students plan their return trips home amid a surge of Covid-19 cases in nearly every corner of the U.S.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo told reporters on a call late last week that the state would ramp up enforcement at its airports during the holiday season to ensure arriving travelers follow quarantine and testing requirements.

Cuomo said he plans to send in more National Guard to help enforce the state’s travel advisory, adding that he spoke with New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio about increasing the New York City Police Department’s presence as well.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns that traveling can increase someone’s chance of spreading and becoming infected with the coronavirus. The safest option is to stay home, the CDC’s guidance says.

When it comes to traveling by air, people should be aware that the risk isn’t limited to sitting on the plane alone, said Keri Althoff, an associate professor in the department of epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, during a media call Thursday.

Althoff cautioned that standing in line, especially if travelers are less than 6 feet away from other people, could increase their risk. People should also avoid touching their masks and faces because airports are full of high-touch areas, such as bathrooms.

“It’s not just what’s going on in the airplane, but it’s the whole experience,” Althoff said. “And so doing everything you can to reduce your exposures if you do choose to travel or, given the quick acceleration in cases in the country right now, choosing to stay home may be the best option.”

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/11/13/california-oregon-and-washington-issue-covid-travel-advisory-urging-14-day-quarantine-.html