As the world surpasses 50 million COVID-19 cases, the U.S. is poised to cross the 10 million mark. The country is grappling with outbreaks acrossing the country, including in El Paso, Texas.

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As the world surpasses 50 million COVID-19 cases, the U.S. is poised to cross the 10 million mark. The country is grappling with outbreaks acrossing the country, including in El Paso, Texas.

Cengiz Yar/Getty Images

More than 50 million COVID-19 cases have been recorded around the world as of Sunday, according to the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.

The U.S., India and Brazil are three countries with the most cases and account for nearly half of the world count. The U.S. alone is poised to hit 10 million cases as cases and hospitalizations continue to climb.

This week the U.S. hit another grim milestone as it surpassed 120,000 new confirmed cases reported each day for Thursday through Saturday. More than 237,000 Americans have died from COVID-19 since the pandemic began, and the 7-day moving average of new cases is now more than 110,000, more than double what it was a month ago.

Dr. Albert Ko, professor and department chair of epidemiology of microbial diseases at the Yale School of Public Health, told NPR last week that those numbers could double again before the end of the year.

Experts are also concerned about potential spikes as many Americans consider traveling and gathering with family and large groups for Thanksgiving and other holidays.

While he said testing can help, former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb cautioned against holiday gatherings and encouraged the use of high quality masks during an interview on Face the Nation on Sunday.

“A test can help. It’s prudent to try to get tested if you’re going to bring together a group of people,” Gottlieb said. “But if you have individuals who are vulnerable in that setting, I think you still need to be very careful if you’re going to be exposing younger people in a broader group to older individuals who are vulnerable.”

As the U.S. continues to grapple with the crisis, President-elect Joe Biden said he would announce a coronavirus taskforce that will prepare to implement the Biden-Harris plan laid out by the campaign.

Many countries in Europe are also experiencing a second wave, with France, Spain and the United Kingdom each breaking the 1 million cumulative case mark in late October. All three countries have implemented new lockdown measures as they try to combat the latest outbreaks.

Meanwhile, cases and infection rates in Asia have remained relatively low, with China taking aggressive testing measures in response to outbreaks.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/11/08/932871098/covid-19-cases-top-50-million-globally-u-s-nears-10-million

As Kamala Harris is set to become vice president early next year, she is making history as the first female, the first Black person and the first Asian American to step into the role.

Meanwhile, her husband, 56-year-old Doug Emhoff, is also making headlines as the first “second gentleman” and first Jewish person married to a vice president.

While many, especially in the Bay Area, know plenty about Oakland native Harris, they might not know as much about her husband. Here are some quick facts about Doug Emhoff:

He got his start on the East Coast. Emhoff was born in New York. His father was a shoe designer who moved his family from Brooklyn to New Jersey.

He ended up on the West Coast. His family moved to Los Angeles when he was in high school.

He has degrees from California colleges. Emhoff received his undergraduate degree from Cal State Northridge and his law degree from the University of Southern California.

He is an entertainment lawyer. Emhoff formed his own law practice after law school. His career as an attorney has spanned nearly three decades, and he was last a partner at global law firm DLA Piper.

He met Harris on a blind date. A friend set Emhoff and Harris up on a blind date when she was serving as California’s attorney general. Emhoff popped the question in 2014, and they married in an intimate ceremony in Santa Barbara five months later. Harris’ sister, Maya, presided over the ceremony.

He is divorced with two kids. Emhoff was previously married to Kerstin Emhoff. They had two children, Cole and Ella, who refer to Harris as “Momala.” Harris has spoken publicly about her friendship with Emhoff’s ex-wife and their “very modern family.”

He went all in for Harris. He took a leave of absence from his law firm in August and had become a staple on Harris’s campaign trail. His position in DLA Piper could be a conflict of interest as it has a Washington lobbying presence, according to the Washington Post. It is unclear what Emhoff will do now that Harris is the vice president-elect, but he has mentioned interest in doing pro bono work.

He’s garnered his own fan base. Emhoff’s endlessly supportive social media posts have gained admiration from onlookers and even led to Emhoff’s own hashtag: #Doughive. Last summer while Harris was on stage at MoveOn’s Big Ideas Forum in San Francisco, an animal rights activist leaped onstage and grabbed the microphone from her. Security intervened and Emhoff also got onstage, managing to wrestle the mike away from the protester. Another case in point: He melted a lot of hearts with his sweet post Saturday morning after Harris was declared the vice president-elect.

What to call his new role: No, as the vice president’s partner he won’t be the “second dude” or the “second husband” or the “second spouse.” He reportedly will be the “second gentleman.”

Kellie Hwang is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: kellie.hwang@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @KellieHwang

Source Article from https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Who-is-Doug-Emhoff-Quick-facts-to-know-about-15711624.php

“Typically, in runoffs, you’re just trying to turn out your voters again … because it’ll be a smaller universe of voters going back to vote without a presidential race going on,” said DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond, a Democrat. “And [Warnock and Ossoff] will have to build on the coalition Biden built.”

Biden carried a high share of white voters for a Democrat in Georgia, but Trump may not push white suburbanites away from the GOP as strongly during a lame-duck runoff election as he has for the past four years. State Republicans rely more than ever on rural whites now, but without Trump on the ballot, they may not be as motivated to show up.

And Biden benefited heavily from booming turnout among voters of color, especially Black voters, who have proven their power in Georgia. But Warnock and Ossoff will need to motivate turnout just as high, under very different circumstances, in order to swing the state again.

“Donald Trump changed the election landscape,” said Chip Lake, a Republican consultant who worked for GOP Rep. Doug Collins in the Senate special election, which saw appointed Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler and Warnock advance to January. “What we don’t know is, what happens to the electorate when he is [on his way] out of office and not on the ballot?”

Biden’s narrow Georgia lead was built on the clear, if challenging, path Stacey Abrams laid out in 2018. Abrams, who narrowly lost a run for governor but won Democratic plaudits for her message and talk-to-everybody campaign strategy, energized young voters, registered and turned out record numbers of people of color and peeled away white, college-educated voters in suburban counties, like Cobb and Gwinnett, that turned hard from Republicans in the Trump era.

Abrams, along with the voting-rights group Fair Fight she founded in 2018, also helped expand the electorate since then. Georgia has added 1 million new voters since 2016, thanks to policies allowing voter registration at motor vehicle bureaus as well as efforts by groups like Abrams’. Georgia smashed its own voting record in 2020 with 67 percent of registered voters participating, surpassing the 2008 mark of 63 percent.

In 2019, Abrams wrote that other Democrats could take advantage of the same factors as her history-making campaign, which was “fueled by record-breaking support from white voters and presidential-level turnout and support from the diverse communities of color in our state.”

“All of that foundation [Abrams built] is now what has brought this state into toss-up status for presidential races and for two Senate runoffs,” said Steve Phillips, a Democratic donor and founder of Democracy in Color, a progressive group focused on voters of color. “The blueprint she wrote in 2019 should be a roadmap for the national donor community about how to move resources over the next two months,” who are already lining up on both sides to dump millions of dollars into the race.

According to early exit polls, Biden won 29 percent of white voters, a high-water mark for a Democrat in Georgia, up from 21 percent for Hillary Clinton in 2016. And an analysis of early voting data from Collective PAC, a group focused on growing Black political power, showed that nearly 370,000 Black voters who didn’t vote in 2016 or 2018 showed up in 2020, driving Black turnout higher. Collective PAC targeted that group with 2 million phone calls in the lead up to the election.

Quentin James, founder of Collective PAC, echoed that for Georgia Democrats to win, they need to drive up Black turnout and expand the electorate while seeking support from white voters. But the problem in traditional Democratic politics, James said, “is that significant resources are spent solely on peeling off white voters, and rarely invested in both strategies equally.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/11/08/biden-turns-georgia-blue-senate-runoff-435243

Not all states have reported a winner

America celebrated the end of its 2020 presidential election cycle over the weekend after Joe Biden and Kamala Harris secured more than 270 electoral votes. However, Georgia, North Carolina and Alaska are still counting ballots. While Biden enjoys a slight lead in Georgia with 49.5% of the vote, the slim vote margin will likely lead to a recount that could take until the end of the month. President Donald Trump leads in North Carolina and Alaska, but it is impossible for him to pick up enough electoral votes to win reelection — even if Georgia flipped back to red.  

Deadly Tropical Storm Eta makes landfall on Florida Keys

A strengthening Tropical Storm Eta made landfall on Florida’s Lower Matecumbe Key, days after leaving scores dead and over 100 missing in Mexico and Central America. The National Hurricane Center in Miami declared hurricane and storm surge warnings for the Keys from Ocean Reef to the Dry Tortugas, including Florida Bay. Florida officials closed beaches, ports and COVID testing sites, shut down public transportation and urged residents to stay off the street. Last week, Eta stormed through Central America as a Category 4 hurricane, triggering deadly mudslides that destroyed entire villages. Should Eta become a hurricane again, it would be just the fourth U.S. hurricane landfall in November since 1851. 

Congress is back in session 

Congress will return to Washington on Monday, following an election recess that sent both the House and Senate back home. Over the break, both Republican and Democratic leaders have continued to call for a coronavirus stimulus package but after failing to come to a compromise bill before the election, it’s unclear the likelihood of passing a bill before Joe Biden is sworn into office at the end of January. Several lawmakers in the House and Senate will also be returning to Washington as their races remain too close to call, which includes Senate races in North Carolina and Alaska that are both expected to favor Republicans. 

No. 1 on Joe Biden’s list: COVID-19

President-elect Joe Biden announced his COVID-19 advisory task force Monday. The group of public health experts, almost all doctors, will offer guidance to Biden, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris and their coronavirus staff as they prepare to take over the presidency. “Dealing with the coronavirus pandemic is one of the most important battles our administration will face, and I will be informed by science and by experts,” Biden said in a statement. “The advisory board will help shape my approach to managing the surge in reported infections; ensuring vaccines are safe, effective, and distributed efficiently, equitably, and free; and protecting at-risk populations.” The inclusion of Rick Bright in the task force could raise some eyebrows from within the Trump administration — Bright resigned from the federal government after criticizing the Trump administration’s pandemic response. He filed a lengthy whistleblower complaint claiming his early warnings about the virus were ignored. Bright was director of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority. On Sunday, the world surpassed 50 million total cases. 

Struggling Patriots aim to rebound on ‘MNF’

The winless New York Jets host the once-proud New England Patriots on “Monday Night Football” (8:15 p.m. ET, ESPN) in what used to be riveting AFC East rivalry. While the Jets are a defeat away from their first 0-9 start in franchise history, the post-Tom Brady era for the Patriots has hit the skids. New Patriots QB Cam Newton has struggled and his team has lost four consecutive games — New England’s worst losing streak in 18 years, which has put it on the fast track toward missing the playoffs for just the third time in two decades. The Jets, meanwhile, are having quarterback troubles of their own. Starter Sam Darnold is doubtful and Joe Flacco is expected to start. Both Darnold and Flacco could be replaced this offseason if the Jets’ winless ways continue.

Contributing: The Associated Press

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2020/11/09/tropical-storm-eta-congress-returns-covid-19-5-things-know-monday/6180359002/

With Republicans adding House seats in the 2020 election, House Minority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., told “Sunday Morning Futures” that it would only take 10 Democrats to block Nancy Pelosi from being reelected as House speaker.

McCarthy made the comments after his party flipped at least seven seats from blue to red and an eighth seat in Michigan that was most recently occupied by a Libertarian.

Pelosi has announced her bid for reelection as speaker, but McCarthy said that is not a sure thing with the slimmer Democratic majority.

“To become speaker, you have to have 218 votes on the floor,” he explained. “When she went up for that vote two years ago, there were 15 Democrats who voted against her. Ten of those Democrats will be coming back to Congress. If those 10 vote against her again, she will not be speaker of the House … because of the gains of the Republicans.”

“We are close enough now that we can control the floor with a few Democrats joining with us,” he said.

KEVIN MCCARTHY SAYS TUESDAY’S ELECTION WAS ‘NIGHT OF REPUBLICAN WOMEN’

Pelosi defended the 2020 results, saying Democrats “lost some battles, but we won the war.”

McCarthy said America is rejecting socialism by voting in Republicans across the nation and specifically electing GOP women in states like California, Florida and New York – setting a record number of women elected.

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“We won by Republican women winning,” he said. “That says something about what President Trump has been able to do – to expand this party, bring diversity, and that brings strength. The same thing that brings strength to America, diversity, is now in the Republican Party as well.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/mccarthy-pelosi-house-speaker-bid

BOSTON — The coronavirus has hit another sobering milestone: more than 50 million positive cases worldwide since the pandemic began.

Johns Hopkins University’s coronavirus tracker reported more than 50.2 million COVID-19 cases globally as of Sunday.

There have been more than 1.2 million deaths from the disease worldwide since the pandemic started.

The U.S., with about 4% of the world’s population, represents almost a fifth of all reported cases.

The country has had more than 9.8 million cases and more than 237,000 deaths from the virus since the pandemic started, according to Johns Hopkins University’s data.

Coronavirus cases and deaths also continue to soar in the U.S., as they are in many countries.

The U.S. reported more than 126,000 positive cases and more than 1,000 deaths from COVID-19 on Saturday, according to the university.

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HERE’S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE VIRUS OUTBREAK:

— How Joe Biden navigated pandemic politics to win the White House

— Nursing home COVID cases rise four-fold in surge states

— UK bans non-resident arrivals from Denmark over mink fears

— Convention centers, museums become classrooms amid pandemic

— German officials condemn thousands who demonstrated against coronavirus restrictions by jamming together in a Leipzig city square.

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— Follow AP’s coronavirus pandemic coverage at http://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

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HERE’S WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING:

ROME — The governor of an autonomous Italian Alpine province famed for its ski resorts has declared it a “red zone,” shutting down as of Monday most non-essential shops, barring cafes and restaurants from serving meals and forbidding citizens to leave their towns except for essential reasons like work.

Bolzano Province Gov. Arno Kompatscher told Sky TG24 TV Sunday evening he decided to order the crackdown as ICU beds started rapidly filling up with COVID-19 patients.

“We could add 100 ICU beds,” the governor said, but “we can only hold up to a certain point.” He noted that the province needed more doctors and nurses.

Bolzano Province joins the northern regions of Lombardy, Piedmont and Valle d’Aosta, a small Alpine region, in Italy’s “red zone.” Calabria, the southern “toe” of the Italian mainland, is also under strict “red zone” measures in view of its fragile public hospital system.

Italy on Sunday registered some 7,000 fewer new COVID-19 cases compared to the previous day’s increase, but nearly 40,000 fewer swab tests to detect the coronavirus were conducted in the last 24 hours.

With the addition of 32,616 confirmed infections on Sunday, Italy’s known total in the pandemic totals 935,104. There were 331 more deaths since Saturday, raising the nation’s confirmed toll to 41,394.

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LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Hospitalizations from the coronavirus in Arkansas continued to climb on Sunday, reaching a new one-day record high of 741, state health officials said.

The Arkansas Department of Health said 19 more people were hospitalized Sunday.

Health officials also reported 1,038 new confirmed and probable coronavirus cases, bringing the state’s total so far to nearly 122,000.

“With yet another day of over 1,000 new cases, we are likely headed for a difficult week,” Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Sunday on Twitter. “Let’s all be safe and take action to protect each other.”

The state also reported 17 new deaths, bringing the death toll so far to 2,085.

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AUSTIN, Texas — Texas on Sunday reported 5,404 new cases of the coronavirus, with almost 2,000 of those cases coming from the hard-hit El Paso area, state health officials said.

The state’s total number of cases since the pandemic began is nearing 1 million, according to the latest data from Johns Hopkins University, which puts the number of cases at more than 985,000.

The Texas Department of State Health Services said Sunday that with 43 additional deaths reported, the state’s death toll was at 18,743.

Cases and hospitalizations have been rising in Texas, and the situation has become especially acute in El Paso, with El Paso county’s top elected official shutting down nonessential activities and medical teams being sent in to help.

Health officials said that statewide, more than 6,000 people were hospitalized Sunday with COVID-19.

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ATHENS, Greece — Health authorities announced 1,914 new cases of the new coronavirus, including a record 35 deaths, on Sunday.

The total number of confirmed cases since the start of the pandemic is 56,698, with 734 deaths.

Researchers at the chemistry department of the University of Athens said Saturday that an analysis of waste at the Athens region’s main waste treatment plant has led them to estimate that 1.5 to 2 percent of the capital region’s population of 4.2 million are active coronavirus carriers, which would mean 63,000 to 84,000 individuals.

Authorities said Sunday that of the country’s 1,063 intensive care units, 734 were occupied, 259 with coronavirus patients. The rapid filling of such places was one of the reasons the country was placed on lockdown Saturday.

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BOSTON — The U.S. has set another record for daily number of coronavirus cases.

The country reported more than 126,000 positive cases and more than 1,000 deaths from COVID-19 on Saturday, according to the most recent data from Johns Hopkins University.

It marked the fourth day in a row that new cases topped more than 100,000 as the country has broken its own record for daily cases with nearly every passing day this week.

The seven-day rolling average for daily new cases in the U.S. rose over the past two weeks from more than 64,000 on Oct. 24 to nearly 104,000 on Nov. 7, according to the university’s data.

The virus death toll is also rising in the country.

The seven-day rolling average for daily new deaths rose over the past two weeks from 801 on Oct. 24 to 930 on Nov. 7, the university said.

There have been more than 9.8 million cases and more than 237,000 deaths from the virus in the U.S. since the pandemic started.

Globally, there have been nearly 50 million positive cases and more than 1.2 million deaths from COVID-19.

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JERUSALEM — Israel has allowed most retail shops to reopen for the first time in nearly two months, in the latest phase of its exit from a second coronavirus lockdown.

Under the new rules, shops can accept up to four customers at a time, and indoor shopping malls remain closed.

Israel moved quickly last spring to contain the coronavirus, quickly sealing its borders and shutting down much of the economy. But it mismanaged the reopening of the economy, and the coronavirus quickly returned. A second lockdown was imposed in mid-September.

The country has moved more cautiously this time– gradually opening preschools and elementary schools and some offices in recent weeks. The dual lockdowns have hit small businesses especially hard.

Rina Shapira, a shopper in a Jerusalem bookshop, said the plight of businesses is heartbreaking. “Without an economy, there is also no health,” she said.

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ROME — More than 200 migrants who reached a tiny Italian island were in mandatory preventative quarantine Sunday aboard a ferry that has been pressed into service as part of the country’s measures against COVID-19 spread.

The 238 migrants are some of about 2,200 who arrived on Lampedusa island in the past week, Italian news reports said. Among them are Tunisians who arrived in small boats directly on the island from their homeland, while some of the others were spotted by an Italian border patrol vessel, which then brought them to shore.

With tourism practically flattened by the pandemic, Italy earlier this year started using empty passenger ferries that normally would ply the waters between Sicily and the mainland to instead house migrants to ensure they don’t bring infection when they are later transferred to shelters in Italy.

While earlier in the pandemic some clusters of infections were found in migrant residences, in past weeks most of the new cases in a resurgence of COVID-19 infections have been traced to transmission within Italian households, according to health experts.

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RENO, Nev. — A rural Nevada church is headed back to the U.S. Supreme Court in a second attempt to overturn the state’s 50-person cap on attendance at religious gatherings.

The high court denied Calvary Chapel Dayton Valleys’ request for an emergency injunction in July.

A new petition filed Thursday asks the justices to consider the challenge of Nevada’s COVID-19 restrictions as a test case for others brought by churches across the country arguing their religious freedoms are being violated.

Calvary Chapel argues the 50-person cap is an unconstitutional violation of religious freedoms, partly because casinos and other businesses are allowed to operate at 50% of capacity.

Other secular businesses allowed to operate at half capacity include restaurants, gyms, hair salons and bowling alleys.

A federal appeals court has scheduled oral arguments next month on the Nevada church’s appeal of a U.S. judge’s ruling in Reno upholding the state policy.

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NEW YORK — Students attending college at one of New York’s public universities in the spring will have to quarantine at home for a week first and be tested for COVID-19, at home or on campus.

The rules are part of new guidance for the spring semester issued by the State University of New York on Sunday.

Classes will start later than usual, on Feb. 1, and there will be no spring break. And with big gatherings still not allowed, graduation plans for the Class of 2021 are shaping up once again to be scaled-back or virtual ceremonies.

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NEW DELHI — India has reported 45,674 new coronavirus infections, with the capital coping with a sharp surge of nearly 7,000 cases a day this past week.

India’s tally of confirmed cases — currently the second largest in the world behind the United States — has exceeded 8.5 million. The Health Ministry on Sunday also reported 559 deaths in the past 24 hours, raising total fatalities to 126,121.

India has seen an overall steady dip in new cases after touching nearly 100,000 a day in mid-September.

However, the tally in New Delhi continues to hover at around 7,000 a day after dropping to nearly 1,000 in September. The capital also reported 79 deaths in the past 24 hours, the most since June.

Delhi state Health Minister Satyendar Jain said that apart from aggressive contact tracing, targeted testing in shopping areas and other busy locations also has started. And authorities are reaching out to people through mobile testing vans.

The government has warned that the situation could worsen due to festival shopping crowds, coupled with the onset of winter and high air pollution levels.

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Alaska on Saturday reported hitting a daily record in new coronavirus cases.

The state reported 604 cases, the highest in a single day since Oct. 25, when 526 cases were tallied, the Anchorage Daily News reported.

The Department of Health and Social Services says there were no new deaths from the virus. The state has had 19,306 cases and 79 deaths since the coronavirus hit.

The Daily News reports that 95 people were currently hospitalized with the virus in Alaska as of Saturday, slightly down from Friday’s record of 97 hospitalizations. Another 10 hospital patients were suspected of having COVID-19, according to state data.

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SANTA FE, N.M. — New Mexico on Saturday for the second day in a row reported nearly 1,300 additional COVID-19 cases and 16 additional deaths.

Officials say there are 1,287 additional cases, a one-day record that was the same number reported Friday. But officials on Saturday also said that 10 of the cases reported Friday had turned out to be duplicates or not lab-confirmed. With those adjustments and the latest reported cases, the statewide case total reached 53,671 with 1,104 deaths.

State officials warned Thursday that new records would be set over the coming weeks as the rate of spread remains high.

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WICHITA, Kan. — A council member in Kansas’ largest city has tested positive for the coronavirus, forcing the mayor and other council members to quarantine for about two weeks.

Wichita announced Council Member Brandon Johnson’s positive result Saturday in a tweet. The city says Mayor Brandon Whipple, members of the City Council and some staff, including city manager Robert Layton, must temporarily stay away from city hall.

“The City continues to strongly urge all Wichita residents and City employees to practice safe social distancing whenever possible, to wear face masks when distancing isn’t possible, limit public exposure and to wash hands frequently,” the City of Wichita tweeted.

The Wichita Eagle reports that Johnson said he had a cough Thursday that worsened Friday, so he went to be tested. He received his results Saturday morning.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/virus-outbreak-india-new-delhi-united-states-bd12cba606ebcbefa7ad03a7e86790dd

Last week, while the election outcome remained undetermined, China’s Vice Foreign Minister Le Yucheng told reporters he hoped the next U.S. administration would “meet China halfway,” according to state media.

“Beijing will welcome the reality of a deeply divided US political system, including the fact that Republicans will probably retain control of the Senate,” Michael Hirson, practice head, China and Northeast Asia, at consulting firm Eurasia Group, and a team wrote in a note over the weekend.

They noted that a gridlock in Congress hampers U.S. efforts to launch ambitious policies against China’s rise, while the “messiness” of the election “are a propaganda victory for the Chinese Communist Party” to highlight the instabilities of a democracy.

“A perception that the US faces political dysfunction is just another reason for Xi not to make core concessions on key issues in the relationship, from Hong Kong and the South China Sea to China’s technology and industrial policies,” Eurasia Group said. “That points to a fragile equilibrium in bilateral ties that is more stable than under Trump but still tense and hotly competitive.”

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/11/09/us-china-trade-tensions-wont-be-going-away-under-bidens-administration.html

As Donald Trump spent Sunday morning visiting one of his golf clubs and doubling down on bogus election fraud claims, conflicting reports emerged about whether the president’s family and top advisers were advising him to admit defeat.

The disparate reports probably reflected a White House in deep turmoil, some officials digesting the scale of their defeat in the presidential election but others, especially Trump himself, cling to a false narrative that the election was somehow stolen.

Citing two sources, CNN reported that Jared Kushner, Trump’s senior adviser and son-in-law, had spoken to him about conceding. Another source told CNN Trump’s wife, Melania, told him that it was time to accept Joe Biden’s victory.

Melania Trump was then yet to make a public statement on the election but had reportedly voiced her opinion in private.

“She has offered it, as she often does,” CNN reported this source as saying.

Later on Sunday she tweeted support for her husband, saying: “The American people deserve fair elections. Every legal – not illegal – vote should be counted.”

Shortly after noon, the New York Times said a White House official disputed CNN’s reporting on Kushner. This official claimed that Kushner had advised Trump to seek “legal remedies”.

Axios also reported on Kushner’s counsel. “A second source close to Kushner confirmed he had not advised Trump to concede,” the news site said.

Axios and CNN both reported that Trump is considering holding campaign-style rallies centered around potential recount battles and ongoing lawsuits. Axios wrote on Sunday evening that: “Team Trump is ready to announce specific recount teams in key states, and it plans to hold a series of Trump rallies focused on the litigation.”

Any advice would appear to have had little impact on Trump himself, who continued to tweet false and baseless allegations of electoral fraud and had yet to call Biden to concede the race, a longstanding tradition in US politics. There was little sign that the president’s two oldest sons, Eric and Don Jr, were advising him to concede.

Both the Times and Axios described behind-the-scenes conversations.

According to the Times, White House advisers and staffers convened on Saturday at Trump campaign headquarters. After campaign officials explained that any legal strategy likely would not change election results, Kushner asked some to explain this to Trump. When they asked Kushner if he should also be part of this conversation, Kushner reportedly said he would participate in subsequent discussions.

According to Axios, a source claimed there were some uncomfortable conversations in Trump’s circle, and that the majority accepted that Biden had won.

A spokeswoman for Melania Trump did not immediately respond to the Guardian’s request for comment.

Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, has emphatically pushed for legal intervention. CNN also reported that the White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, who tested positive for Covid-19 this week, had discussed next moves with Trump’s legal team.

Regardless of Trump’s view of the outcome, there has been no communication between the White House and Biden’s camp.

Biden senior adviser Symone Sanders told CNN’s State of the Union that while “a number of Republicans from the Hill have reached out … I don’t believe anyone from the White House has”.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/nov/08/donald-trump-concede-jared-kushner-melania-trump

Although Georgia is preparing to initiate a ballot recount after Tuesday’s election, Democratic politician Stacey Abrams said the state’s upcoming audit will not impact election results.

The voting rights advocate and lawyer—who served 10 years in the Georgia House of Representatives and pursued a gubernatorial campaign in 2018—discussed election results and the recount’s anticipated outcome during an appearance on CNN’s State of the Union Sunday morning.

“Recounts in Georgia essentially mean a rescan of what’s been done very painstakingly over the last five days,” said Abrams. “And we know that, whether it’s tomorrow or next week, the result will be the same…that Joe Biden has won the state of Georgia.”

Abrams was a vocal supporter of Biden’s presidential campaign throughout the election race, and reports placed her on his short list for vice presidential candidates to join the Democratic ticket earlier this year. After the Associated Press declared Biden the winner of this year’s election on Saturday, Abrams was met with a flood of laudatory social media messages thanking her for a decade’s worth of advocacy work in Georgia.

With 99 percent of the state’s ballots accounted for, Biden held a narrow lead in the southern state on Sunday afternoon, having acquired roughly 10,000 more votes than Donald Trump. Biden’s success in Georgia came as something of a surprise, given its history as a red state, and a victory in itself for activists such as Abrams.

On Friday, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger announced the state would conduct a recount as part of its standard procedure to address races with such a small margin between candidates. However, elections officials have pushed back against the Trump campaign’s allegations of misreporting.

Some ballots cast in Georgia were already reviewed over the weekend. On Saturday, Raffensperger said election workers in Fulton County, the state’s most populous area, would rescan certain ballots collected earlier after identifying technical complications that affected its original reporting. County election workers rescanned provisional, military and Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act (UOCAVA) ballots initially received Friday, as well as a small pool of others that were received but not scanned.

“Fulton County has discovered an issue involving reporting from their work on Friday. Officials are at State Farm Arena to rescan their work,” Raffensperger said in a statement. “The Secretary of State has a monitor onsite, has sent additional investigators, and dispatched the Deputy Secretary of State as well to oversee the process to make sure to thoroughly secure the vote and protect all legal votes. Observers from both political parties are there as well.”

Richard Barron, the elections director in Fulton County, confirmed the relevant ballots were rescanned and properly tallied late Saturday night. He told local reporters that election workers scanned 342 ballots in total. Fulton County’s election webpage reflected updated results from the presidential election on Sunday, with numbers continuing to place Biden in the lead.

Newsweek reached out to Raffensperger and Barron’s offices for additional comments, but did not receive replies in time for publication.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/stacey-abrams-says-georgia-recount-will-still-say-joe-biden-won-state-1545865

Europe is also split about Mr. Trump, where the less liberal states of Central Europe, in particular Poland and Hungary, have been strong supporters of Mr. Trump’s politics, and not just grateful for American troops.

The prime minister of Slovenia, Janez Jansa, who is close to Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary, even posted an early and now much-derided tweet congratulating Mr. Trump on his re-election.

For NATO allies, there will be no need to hide decisions or to pre-agree communiqués as they did with Mr. Trump, sometimes with the connivance of American officials. Mr. Biden will not threaten to leave NATO, as Mr. Trump did, nor think of it as a club with dues. And Mr. Biden has expressed no special affinity with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia or President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey.

But Mr. Biden has a history, post Iraq, of caution in the use of the American military — he opposed the surge in Afghanistan and the intervention in Libya, for example. So while he is likely to renew the New Start nuclear arms treaty with Moscow, he may not think that reducing the number of U.S. troops in Germany is such a bad idea.

And there are suggestions from NATO diplomats that the alliance’s secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, who has been so skillful at dealing with Mr. Trump that his tenure was extended, may be replaced before too long.

There is also some anxiety in the British government about a Biden presidency, given Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s support of Brexit and close relationship to Mr. Trump.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/08/world/europe/biden-europe-macron-merkel.html

Tropical Storm Eta continues to impact South Florida with tropical storm force winds and heavy rain.

As of the 1 a.m. update, Eta has maintained maximum sustained winds of 65 mph and is moving west northwest at 14 mph.

Tropical-storm-force winds extend 175 miles beyond the center of the storm and sustained winds of that intensity have been reported along much of the southeastern Florida coast.

Eta is moving west northwest at 14 mph and has maximum sustained winds of 65 mph. Eta is located about 40 miles east of Key West.

The storm is expected to pass near or over the Florida Keys tonight or early Monday.

A Storm Surge Warning is in effect for the Florida Keys from Ocean Reef to the Dry Tortugas, including Florida Bay.

A Storm Surge Watch is in effect for the Florida coast from Golden Beach to Bonita Beach, including Biscayne Bay.

A Tropical Storm Warning is in effect for parts of Cuba, the Bahamas, the Florida coast from the Brevard/Volusia County line to Englewood, including Florida Bay and Lake Okeechobee.

A Tropical Storm Watch is in effect for parts of Cuba, the Florida coast from north of Englewood to Anna Maria Island.

To see the effects your county can expect from Tropical Storm Eta, click here.

Source Article from https://www.wpbf.com/article/tropical-storm-eta-sunday-advisory/34610331

SALT LAKE CITY — In a statewide address to the people of Utah, Governor Gary Herbert announced a new state of emergency for COVID-19 that includes a statewide mask mandate, limits on social gatherings and a hold on extracurricular activities in schools.

The address came late Sunday after an emergency alert was sent out by the state to every cell phone in Utah. The state has recorded thousands of new cases of the virus in the past week, with the death toll climbing and hospitals nearing capacity.

“The stakes are high. Lives are at risk as COVID-19 cases surge and we report record hospitalizations and new deaths day-after-day. Our hospitals are full. This threatens patients who rely on hospital care — for everything from COVID-19 to emergencies like heart attacks, strokes, surgeries, and trauma. We must work together to keep infections low until a vaccine is available,” the governor said.

Gov. Herbert announced the new public health orders, which go into effect at 1pm Monday, will include:

  • A statewide mask mandate that requires people to wear masks in public, within 6-feet of someone they do not live with. The mandate is enforceable in all business settings, with signage requirements. Businesses that fail to do so will be subject to fines.
  • Casual social gatherings will be limited to household-only until Nov. 23.
  • All extracurricular school activities — including intramural events — are on hold for the duration of the order. The only exception is college football games or high school championship games that are willing to follow testing and crowd size restrictions outlined in the public health order.
  • Students at college campuses across Utah will be required to be tested for COVID-19 weekly. FOX 13 first reported on the plan on Friday, which will include deployment of rapid tests that can deliver results in 15 minutes.
  • The Utah National Guard will be deployed to help with more contact tracing to get a handle on the spread of the virus in communities and quarantine people.

Violations of the public orders can bring fines up to $10,000 per incident, and will be enforced by health officials and law enforcement. They will expire on Nov. 23 unless extended by Gov. Herbert.

The move comes as Utah’s political leaders have faced increasing pressure to do something as COVID-19 cases surge. The governor has been heavily criticized by some public health workers, even has he has defended the state’s response as a balance of “lives and livelihoods,” between health and the economy.

“I think this is a good first step. I see this as the governor acknowledging we have to do something now,” said Dr. Eddie Stenehjem, an infectious diseases specialist at Intermountain Healthcare. “If you look at our case rates over the past 2-4 weeks and now you look at our hospitalizations going up and continuing to rise over the course of the weeks, you really have to do something. I think this is a great recognition of the fact that he’s moving forward and he’s recognizing that listen, we have to do something as a community if we want to change the path that we’re on.”

Dr. Stenehjem said “we’re full” when it comes to their intensive care units, which are relied upon to treat some COVID-19 cases. Patients have been moved over to other units to care for them.

“We are at a point where we are not going to be able to accommodate more and more patients,” he said.

The new orders carry more requirements for businesses, but do not close them. Bars will be closed at 10pm each night, per the order. There are also no additional restrictions on public schools, said Dr. Sydnee Dickson, the state schools superintendent.

“This is not a mandate about closing schools, so this is really looking at that ecosystem outside of schools,” she told FOX 13 on Sunday night. “Clubs, activities, things that happen in the community and trying to stop the spread there where it seems to be coming into the schools from extracurricular activities.”

Those extracurricular activities will be halted for the time being. Health officials have said the spread is largely being driven by people ages 14-24 who are largely compliant with health regulations on school campuses, but then go out and gather with friends or family, unmasked and un-distanced and spread the virus from there.

“We must all remain vigilant until a vaccine is widely available,” Gov. Herbert said. “But we cannot wait upon a vaccine, knowing the havoc that this pandemic has wreaked on families, schools and businesses. We must do more, and we must do it now. That is why I’ve issued these critical orders and mandates. But there is no legislation or executive order that can mandate civility, respect and basic consideration for others. This is about so much more than just mandates. This is about personal responsibility.”

Read the new public health order here:

Source Article from https://www.fox13now.com/news/coronavirus/local-coronavirus-news/herbert-announces-mask-mandate-social-gathering-limits-hold-on-extracurricular-activities

It is uncertain whether the work on spending legislation will collide with negotiations over economic relief measures, which could be attached to the spending bill or move separately. Lawmakers in both parties widely agree on the need for more spending on health-care systems, vaccines, schools and small businesses, and McConnell and Pelosi have indicated support for sending out a new round of $1,200 stimulus checks to individuals.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2020/11/08/congress-lame-duck-trump/

Biden transition team member Pete Buttigieg said Sunday that even if they win enough races to maintain control of the Senate, Republicans would be opposing the will of the American people if they stand in the way of President-elect Joe Biden‘s agenda.

In an appearance on “Fox News Sunday,” Buttigieg admitted that the federal government has – “for better or for worse” – a system of checks and balances where Senate leadership could “disagree with a majority of the American people.” He said that if a Republican Senate used their power to place a check on a Democratic White House, they would be holding back what the people want.

ALL EYES ON CRUCIAL GEORGIA SENATE RACES, WITH POWER IN DC AT STAKE

“At the end of the day the thing we have going for us is the American people are with us,” Buttigieg said, claiming that the Senate would be run by “minority rule” if Republicans block Democrat initiatives such as tax hikes and a public health care option.” He said it’s up to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

“Mitch McConnell’s going to have a decision to make. Is his purpose in Washington to defy the American people who, along with the president and the House of Representatives, will believe in expanding and not taking away health care,” Buttigieg said, “whether he wants to help move this country forward and influence progress or whether he wants to stop progress.”

In terms of the immediate future, Buttigieg touted Biden’s desire to hit the ground running in tackling the coronavirus pandemic. Biden is expected to announce his task force on Monday. Whether or not Biden takes any additional action before Inauguration Day remains to be seen.

HOW THE REPUBLICANS MAY HAVE SAVED THEIR SENATE MAJORITY

“Well, he’ll decide on the best course of action,” Buttigieg said. He added that Biden will also “have to make a decision” regarding whether or not to get involved in negotiations with Congress over coronavirus relief legislation that has stalled for months.

“I think we all hope that that logjam in Washington comes to an end,” Buttigieg said.

The former South Bend, Ind., mayor was ultimately optimistic about a Biden administration, claiming that despite political differences, Biden shares common goals with people on both sides of the aisle.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

“What Joe Biden wants for the country is what most Americans believe is right for the country,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/buttigieg-republican-senate-against-will-of-the-people-opposing-biden-agenda

A strengthening Tropical storm Eta sliced across Cuba on Sunday and was aimed at the tip of Florida, where officials braced for a storm that could hit at hurricane force after leaving scores dead and over 100 missing in Mexico and Central America.

The US National Hurricane Center in Miami declared hurricane and storm surge warnings for the keys from Ocean Reef to the Dry Tortugas, including Florida Bay, with the storm expected to reach that area by Sunday night or early Monday.

Florida officials closed beaches, ports and Covid testing sites, shut down public transportation and urged residents to stay off the street. Several shelters also opened in Miami and the Florida Keys for residents in mobile homes and low lying areas.

Broward county also shut down in-person schooling Monday and Miami seemed poised to do the same.

Eta had maximum sustained winds of 65 mph on Sunday afternoon and it was centered north of Cuba, about 115 miles (185 kilometers) southeast of Marathon, Florida, and about 140 miles (225 kilometers) south-southeast of Miami. It was moving north-west at 14 mph (22 kph).

The storm swelled rivers and flooded coastal zones in Cuba, where 25,000 had been evacuated. But there were no reports of deaths.

Eta hit Cuba even as searchers in Guatemala were still digging for people believed buried by a massive, rain-fueled landslide. Authorities on Sunday raised the known death toll there to 27 from 15 and said more than 100 were missing in Guatemala, many of them in the landslide in San Cristobal Verapaz.

Some 60,000 people had been evacuated in Guatemala.

At least 20 people also were reported dead in southern Mexico and local officials in Honduras reported 21, though the national disaster agency had confirmed only eight.

Pope Francis on Sunday spoke about the population of Central America, hit “by a violent hurricane, which has caused many victims and huge damage, worsened as well by the already difficult situation due to the pandemic”. Speaking to faithful gathered in St Peter’s Square, Francis prayed that “the Lord welcome the deceased, comfort their families and sustain all those so tried, as well as all those who are doing their best to help them”.

In Florida, governor Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency Saturday for eight counties at the end of the state as Eta approached, urging residents to stock up on supplies.

Miami-Dade county declared a state of emergency Friday night and also warned a flood watch would be in effect through Tuesday night.

Further south in the keys, officials were monitoring the storm closely, but had no plans yet to evacuate tourists or residents. They urged residents to secure their boats and encouraged visitors to consider altering plans until Eta had passed.

Eta initially hit Nicaragua as a Category 4 hurricane, and authorities from Panama to Mexico were still surveying the damages following days of torrential rains during the week.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/nov/08/tropical-storm-eta-florida-hurricane-weather

This interview has been condensed and lightly edited for clarity.

Q. What’s your expectation of Joe Biden’s Democratic Party? How do you expect him to fall on the moderate vs. progressive divisions we see in the House?

A. I think that he means what he says when he says, “I ran a Democrat, but I’m going to serve as an American president.” And what that means, I believe, is that every single day, and on every issue, he’s going to be working to get as many people around the table and singing from the same sheet music as you can. And sometimes that will be everyone in the Democratic caucus. Sometimes it will be some people in the Democratic caucus and some Republicans. I think that’s going to change by the issue, but he’s a person that really believes our actual job in Washington, D.C., is to work with each other, compromise to get the best deal we can and then get the thing done. And I believe that too.

What went wrong for House Democrats when they were supposed to pick up seats?

I’m giving you an honest account of what I’m hearing from my own constituents, which is that they are extremely frustrated by the message of defunding the police and banning fracking. And I, as a Democrat, am just as frustrated. Because those things aren’t just unpopular, they’re completely unrealistic, and they aren’t going to happen. And they amount to false promises by the people that call for them.

If someone in your family makes their living in some way connected to natural gas, whether on the pipeline itself, or you know, even in a restaurant that serves natural gas workers, this isn’t something to joke around about or be casual about in your language.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/08/us/politics/conor-lamb-democrats-biden.html