If you are a college student who meets the criteria outlined above, Lisa Greene-Lewis, certified public accountant and TurboTax expert, says it isn’t too late to claim the stimulus money you were due from the first round of Covid relief checks.

“They can get the stimulus payment they are eligible for in the form of a Recovery Rebate Credit when they file their 2020 taxes, as long as their parents don’t claim them as a dependent,” said Greene-Lewis.

The payments included up to $1,200 per individual or $2,400 per married couple. The tax credit would either lower the amount of tax you need to pay, or increase the value of your tax refund.

The easiest way for a taxpayer to get a stimulus payment, or additional payment — if they are, in fact, due more — is to apply on their 2020 tax return, explained Steber.

“There will be a schedule and line on the tax return to reconcile what they have received so far, and the amount actually due to them based on their 2020 tax return,” continued Steber. 

The IRS says that eligible individuals can claim the Recovery Rebate Credit on their 2020 Form 1040 or 1040-SR. These forms can also be used by people who are not normally required to file tax returns but are eligible for the credit.

For those concerned about how this might complicate the filing process this year, Greene-Lewis tells filers not to worry because automated tax preparation software will factor this in for you.

“TurboTax has guidance related to stimulus payments and other impacts of Covid-19,” explained Greene-Lewis. “It will ask up front if the filer received a stimulus payment and then calculate the recovery rebate credit based on actual 2020 income.”

Whatever your circumstances, tax experts agree that filing early will be an especially good idea this year.

The IRS had offered a separate online tool for those who don’t file a tax return to apply for the first Covid stimulus, but that tool was discontinued in November, and it is not yet known whether the online tool will be provided again for a second stimulus payment.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/20/second-stimulus-check-college-kids-eligible-for-covid-relief-payments.html

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, called President Trump’s refusal to concede the 2020 election “really sad” and “embarrassing” on Sunday.

“I understand the president is casting about, trying to find some way to have a different result than the one that was delivered by the American people,” Romney told CNN’s “State of the Union.” “It’s really sad in a lot of respects and embarrassing because the president could, right now, be writing the last chapter of this administration with a victory lap with regards to the vaccine.”

TRUMP, TARGETING MCCONNELL AND TOP REPUBLICANS, URGES THEM TO ‘GET TOUGHER’ IN ELECTION FIGHT

“He could be going out championing this extraordinary success, and instead he’s leaving Washington with conspiracy theories and things so nutty and loopy that people are shaking their head wondering what in the world has gotten into this man? I think that’s unfortunate because he has more accomplishments than this last chapter suggests he is going to be known for,” Romney continued.

The president has refused to concede to President-elect Joe Biden and continues to claim without evidence that there was massive voter fraud in many of the key battleground states where Biden beat Trump, giving the former vice president a large 306-232 Electoral College victory over the GOP incumbent. Biden also beat the president by more than 7 million votes in the national popular count.

However, Romney said he would not leave the Republican Party, as Rep. Paul Mitchell, R-Mich., recently announced he would.

ROMNEY SLAMS WHITE HOUSE’S ‘INEXCUSABLE SILENCE’ ON RUSSIAN CYBERATTACKS

“The party has taken a different course than, obviously, the one that I knew as a younger person,” Romney said. “We were happy to play a leadership role on the world stage because we felt it made us safer and more prosperous, and we believed character was essential in the leaders we chose. We strayed from that. I don’t see us returning to that for a long time.”

“I represent a very small slice of the Republican Party today,” he added. “I think I’m more effective in the Republican Party, continuing to battle for the things I believe in, and, I think, ultimately the Republican Party will return to the roots that have been formed over the century. So we will get back at some point, and hopefully people will recognize we need to take a different course than the one we are on right now.”

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, asks a question to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo during a Senate Foreign Relations committee hearing on the State Department’s 2021 budget on Capitol Hill Thursday, July 30, 2020, in Washington. (Greg Nash/Pool via AP)

Trump called Romney a “RINO” in November after the senator called Trump’s efforts to reverse Biden’s victory in this month’s election an “undemocratic action.” 

Trump called in for a radio interview on 77 WABC on Sunday morning, continuing to claim that this was “the most corrupt election this country has ever had by far.”

“We’ve already found the answers. Now we have to get some support from some politicians,” Trump said.  “Other than that we have it made. I think we’ve come a long way in a very short time.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser and Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/mitt-romney-trump-election-republican-party

The city of Chicago’s top attorney resigned on Sunday, in the fallout from a botched and wrongful police raid on the home of a Black woman who was not allowed to put on clothes before being handcuffed.

Corporation counsel Mark Flessner announced the move in an email to employees, saying he was only recently involved with the legal case connected to police video of the February 2019 raid, made in error on the home of social worker Anjanette Young. Flessner did not say if he was asked to resign.

“It is clear that the raid of Anjanette Young’s home was a tragedy that we must learn from,” Flessner said in a statement. “Standing up for racial injustice and fighting for equality within our justice system are crucial matters that we must continue to work toward addressing as a community.”

Mayor Lori Lightfoot said she accepted Flessner’s resignation.

“I am committed to a full review of everything that occurred surrounding this incident, will take corrective action where appropriate, and will hold people accountable,” Lightfoot said.

Footage of the raid, first reported by WBBM-TV, has prompted uproar. Civil rights groups, city aldermen, pastors and Black state legislators have called the incident racist, gendered violence and a violation of a Black woman’s dignity.

Body camera video shows police officers breaking down Young’s door and ignoring her repeated pleas that they have the wrong home. The social worker said she did not have time to dress before officers stormed her apartment. An officer eventually put a blanket over her shoulders but because she was handcuffed it slipped off, leaving her exposed again.

Young was denied a Freedom of Information Act request for footage of the incident but later obtained it through a lawsuit. However, Lightfoot’s administration recently admitted that it did not give Young’s attorney all the body camera footage.

The city sought to block the footage from being aired on television, but was rejected in court. City lawyers also tried to have Young sanctioned for apparently violating a confidentiality agreement. They later withdrew.

The city recently released 20 files of footage of officers executing a search warrant. Young has said it has been difficult to have the videos out publicly, but she wants accountability.

A message left for Young’s attorney was not immediately returned. The Civilian Office of Police Accountability has been investigating the incident. Lightfoot has apologized publicly.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/dec/20/top-chicago-lawyer-resigns-anjanette-young-wrongful-police-raid

An arrangement of U.K. daily newspapers shows front page headlines reporting on the tight new coronavirus restrictions for London and the southeast of England, cancelling Christmas gatherings for those in the new “Tier 4” category.

Paul Ellis/AFP via Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Paul Ellis/AFP via Getty Images

An arrangement of U.K. daily newspapers shows front page headlines reporting on the tight new coronavirus restrictions for London and the southeast of England, cancelling Christmas gatherings for those in the new “Tier 4” category.

Paul Ellis/AFP via Getty Images

The United Kingdom has entered a period of intense restrictions after a mutation of the coronavirus was discovered spreading rapidly through the population of London and the southeast and east of England. Most of the country faces a strict lockdown as Christmas approaches, and several countries throughout Europe have banned travel from the U.K.

The British government put several parts of England into what’s known as “Tier 4” restrictions after the spike in infections. Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced the new restrictions on Saturday.

“Given the early evidence we have on this new variant of the virus — the potential risk it poses — it is with a very heavy heart I must tell you we cannot continue with Christmas as planned,” Johnson said. “In England, those living in Tier 4 areas should not mix with anyone outside their own household at Christmas.”

The new restrictions are broadly similar to the national restrictions that were in place in November. Residents in the affected areas can’t leave their homes except for essential trips; non-essential retail — as well as indoor gyms, movie theaters and hairdressers — have been forced to close. If people want to spend time with those outside their household, it can only be one person at a time, and it needs to be outdoors. (One difference from November’s restrictions is that communal worship can still take place.)

Although the new coronavirus variant is most prevalent in Tier 4 areas, it also exists in lower levels throughout the country, Johnson said. For now, Johnson said, people throughout the country are encouraged to “stay local.”

Outside the Tier 4 areas, up to eight people from three households will be able to meet — but on Christmas Day only, rather than over the course of five days, which was the case under previous guidelines.

Ahead of the new rules, videos surfaced on social media showing thousands of Londoners standing in packed train stations, ready to make a mad dash out of the city. Trains were “crammed,” one reporter said, and social distancing wasn’t possible.

“There were these scenes out of rail stations in London — particularly St. Pancras station — where thousands of people were fleeing London,” NPR’s Frank Langfitt told Weekend Edition. “It was clear that they’re trying to go off for family holidays, to go to other parts of the country where there are fewer restrictions.”

Transit officials have announced they will put more officers at train stations to stop unnecessary trips, and put more police on the roads to stop people from leaving locked down areas, Langfitt said.

Ireland, Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands and Belgium have all banned flights and travel from the U.K., the BBC reported. The European Union will meet Monday to discuss a coordinated response.

The new mutation could be up to 70% more transmissible than earlier variants of the virus, Susan Hopkins of Public Health England told the BBC. This variant was first identified in the middle of October from a sample taken in September, Hopkins said.

“In early December, while were trying to understand why [cases in] Kent and Medway continued to increase despite the national restrictions, we found a cluster that was growing very fast.”

Only this week did researchers realize the variant was more transmissible than other variants, Hopkins said. They alerted the government on Friday, and the new restrictions were announced the next day.

While the new variant seems to be more infectious, scientists say there is no evidence that it leads to a more severe illness, according to Vivek Murthy, who President-elect Joe Biden has announced as his nominee for U.S. Surgeon General. “There’s no reason to believe that the vaccines that have been developed will not be effective against this virus as well,” Murthy said on NBC’s Meet the Press.

Ronald Klain, Biden’s incoming chief of staff, told CBS’s Face the Nation that the president-elect would be briefed on the new variant “early next week.” The U.S. government could make changes to its own pandemic restrictions based on the advice of medical experts, Klain said.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/12/20/948560655/we-cannot-continue-with-christmas-u-k-tightens-rules-as-new-covid-variant-spread

The must-pass measure, coming in at more than $900 billion, is expected to be released late Sunday and would be brought immediately to the House floor for a vote. It includes tens of billions of dollars to pay for distributing vaccines, help schools reopen, and bail out struggling transit systems and the Postal Service.

Source Article from https://www.chicagotribune.com/coronavirus/ct-nw-second-stimulus-check-updates-20201220-dar2xz4jqraixne7thifpe5fpi-story.html

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, called President Trump’s refusal to concede the 2020 election “really sad” and “embarrassing” on Sunday.

“I understand the president is casting about, trying to find some way to have a different result than the one that was delivered by the American people,” Romney told CNN’s “State of the Union.” “It’s really sad in a lot of respects and embarrassing because the president could, right now, be writing the last chapter of this administration with a victory lap with regards to the vaccine.”

TRUMP, TARGETING MCCONNELL AND TOP REPUBLICANS, URGES THEM TO ‘GET TOUGHER’ IN ELECTION FIGHT

“He could be going out championing this extraordinary success, and instead he’s leaving Washington with conspiracy theories and things so nutty and loopy that people are shaking their head wondering what in the world has gotten into this man? I think that’s unfortunate because he has more accomplishments than this last chapter suggests he is going to be known for,” Romney continued.

The president has refused to concede to President-elect Joe Biden and continues to claim without evidence that there was massive voter fraud in many of the key battleground states where Biden beat Trump, giving the former vice president a large 306-232 Electoral College victory over the GOP incumbent. Biden also beat the president by more than 7 million votes in the national popular count.

However, Romney said he would not leave the Republican Party, as Rep. Paul Mitchell, R-Mich., recently announced he would.

ROMNEY SLAMS WHITE HOUSE’S ‘INEXCUSABLE SILENCE’ ON RUSSIAN CYBERATTACKS

“The party has taken a different course than, obviously, the one that I knew as a younger person,” Romney said. “We were happy to play a leadership role on the world stage because we felt it made us safer and more prosperous, and we believed character was essential in the leaders we chose. We strayed from that. I don’t see us returning to that for a long time.”

“I represent a very small slice of the Republican Party today,” he added. “I think I’m more effective in the Republican Party, continuing to battle for the things I believe in, and, I think, ultimately the Republican Party will return to the roots that have been formed over the century. So we will get back at some point, and hopefully people will recognize we need to take a different course than the one we are on right now.”

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, asks a question to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo during a Senate Foreign Relations committee hearing on the State Department’s 2021 budget on Capitol Hill Thursday, July 30, 2020, in Washington. (Greg Nash/Pool via AP)

Trump called Romney a “RINO” in November after the senator called Trump’s efforts to reverse Biden’s victory in this month’s election an “undemocratic action.” 

Trump called in for a radio interview on 77 WABC on Sunday morning, continuing to claim that this was “the most corrupt election this country has ever had by far.”

“We’ve already found the answers. Now we have to get some support from some politicians,” Trump said.  “Other than that we have it made. I think we’ve come a long way in a very short time.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser and Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/mitt-romney-trump-election-republican-party

President TrumpDonald TrumpSenators reach deal on Fed powers, setting stage for coronavirus relief passage Close to 200 organizations allegedly hacked by Russia: cybersecurity firm Trump floated naming Sidney Powell as special counsel for election fraud investigation: reports MORE in a tweet early Sunday pressed Congress to pass another round of coronavirus relief, calling for “more money in direct payments.”

“Why isn’t Congress giving our people a Stimulus Bill?” he asked.

“It wasn’t their fault, it was the fault of China,” he added. “GET IT DONE, and give them more money in direct payments.”

The president’s tweet came shortly after Senate Minority Leader Charles SchumerChuck SchumerSenators reach deal on Fed powers, setting stage for coronavirus relief passage Coronavirus relief deal hinges on talks over Fed lending powers Ocasio-Cortez: I’m ‘not ready’ to be Speaker but Pelosi and Schumer need to go MORE (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Pat ToomeyPatrick (Pat) Joseph ToomeyGovernment used Patriot Act to gather website visitor logs in 2019 Appeals court rules NSA’s bulk phone data collection illegal Dunford withdraws from consideration to chair coronavirus oversight panel MORE (R-Pa.) agreed on language to curtail the Federal Reserve’s special lending authorities. That agreement late Saturday set the stage for passage of a $900 billion coronavirus relief bill and $1.4 trillion omnibus spending package as early as Sunday.

The coronavirus aid package will include direct stimulus checks between $600 and $700 under a commitment GOP leaders made to Sen. Josh HawleyJoshua (Josh) David HawleySenators reach deal on Fed powers, setting stage for coronavirus relief passage Coronavirus relief deal hinges on talks over Fed lending powers Senate GOP absences snag Trump nominees MORE (R-Mo.) on Friday. Sen. Bernie SandersBernie SandersSenators reach deal on Fed powers, setting stage for coronavirus relief passage Trump signs bill to keep government open amid relief talks On The Money: Congress passes bill to avert shutdown as coronavirus talks drag into weekend | Federal Reserve fight imperils relief talks MORE (I-Vt.) worked with Hawley to include the stimulus checks.

White House aides last week reportedly talked Trump out of asking for as much as $2,000 in direct payments for Americans, fearing it could disrupt negotiations on Capitol Hill. The Washington Post reported that Trump said he wanted payments of “at least” $1,200 and possibly as high as $2,000.

The relief legislation is also expected to include extensions for expiring tax provisions.

Democrats, the White House and Senate Republicans have been negotiating for more than seven months over the size and scope of a new coronavirus relief bill.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/531030-trump-pushes-congress-on-coronavirus-aid-get-it-done

(NEXSTAR/AP) – “We’re getting very close, very close,” Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said as he left the Capitol late Saturday.

Top congressional lawmakers struck a late-night agreement on the last major obstacle to a COVID-19 economic relief package costing nearly $1 trillion, clearing the way for votes as early as Sunday.

The breakthrough involved a fight over Federal Reserve emergency powers and was resolved by the Senate’s top Democrat and a senior conservative Republican.

Congressional aides confirmed the agreement late Saturday, which clears the way for an expected deal Sunday on the aid bill. The measure is finally nearing passage amid a frightening spike in cases and deaths and accumulating evidence that the economy is struggling through the pandemic.

Schumer spent much of the day going back and forth with GOP Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania. Toomey had been pressing a provision to close down Fed lending facilities. Democrats and the White House said it was too broadly worded and would have tied the hands of the incoming Biden administration.

The compromise, aides said, preserved Toomey’s goal but retained the Fed’s existing powers to restart similar facilities in the future.

The COVID-19 legislation has been held up after months of dysfunction, posturing and bad faith. But talks turned serious last week as lawmakers on both sides finally faced the deadline of acting before leaving Washington for Christmas.

The relief bill, lawmakers and aides say, would establish a temporary $300 per week supplemental jobless benefits and $600 direct stimulus payments to most Americans. It would provide a fresh round of subsidies for hard-hit businesses and money for schools, health care providers and renters facing eviction.

If finalized, wheels will be set into motion for the Internal Revenue Service to begin issuing the Economic Impact Payments.

It’s not clear when checks would clear at this point, but in August, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said payments could be issued as quickly as one week after Congressional approval.

“I can get out 50 million payments really quickly, a lot if it into people’s direct accounts.” Mnuchin said at the time, according to NewsNation reporting.

The measure is being added to a $1.4 trillion spending bill and lots of other unfinished work, including previously stalled legislation to extend tax breaks, authorize water projects, and address the problem of surprise sky-high medical bills for out-of-network procedures.

It would be virtually impossible for lawmakers to read and fully understand the measure before a House vote expected Sunday night.

Schumer said he hoped both the House and Senate would vote on the measure Sunday. That would take more cooperation than the Senate can usually muster, but a government shutdown deadline loomed at midnight Sunday and all sides were eager to leave for the holiday.

Toomey defended his provision in a Senate speech, saying the emergency powers were designed to stabilize capital markets at the height of the pandemic this spring and were expiring at the end of the month anyway. The language he had sought would block the Biden administration from restarting them.

Toomey has a stubborn streak and Democrats held firm as well, but both sides saw the need for a compromise.

The Fed’s emergency programs provided loans to small and mid-size businesses and bought state and local government bonds. Those bond purchases made it easier for those governments to borrow, at a time when their finances were under pressure from job losses and health costs stemming from the pandemic.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said last month that those programs, along with two that purchased corporate bonds, would close at the end of the year, prompting an initial objection by the Fed. Under the Dodd-Frank financial overhaul law passed after the Great Recession, the Fed can only set up emergency programs with the support of the treasury secretary.

Democrats also said that Toomey was trying to limit the Fed’s ability to boost the economy, just as Biden prepared to take office.

“This is about existing authorities that the Fed has had for a very long time, to be able to use in an emergency,” said Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. “It’s about a lending authority for helping small businesses, state government, local government in the middle of a crisis.”

Toomey disputed that, saying his proposal “is emphatically not a broad overhaul of the Federal Reserve’s emergency lending authority.” His office issued a statement early Sunday calling the compromise with Schumer “an unqualified victory for taxpayers” that met Toomey’s aim of shutting down the emergency facility.

A Senate vote would follow, possibly on Monday. One more short-term funding bill would be needed to avoid the looming deadline — or a partial shutdown of nonessential agencies would start on Monday.

The emerging agreement would deliver more than $300 billion in aid to businesses as well as the extra $300-per-week for the jobless and renewal of state benefits that would otherwise expire right after Christmas. It included $600 direct payments to individuals; vaccine distribution funds; and money for renters, schools, the Postal Service and people needing food aid.

It would be the first significant legislative response to the pandemic since the landmark CARES Act passed virtually unanimously in March, delivering $1.8 trillion in aid, more generous $600 per week bonus jobless benefits and $1,200 direct payments to individuals.

The governmentwide appropriations bill would fund agencies through next September. That measure was likely to provide a last $1.4 billion installment for President Donald Trump’s U.S.-Mexico border wall as a condition of winning his signature.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://myfox8.com/news/second-stimulus-checks-breakthrough-clears-way-for-deal-with-600-payments/

Some of the nominees already announced by the president-elect will face a steep climb in their confirmation process. For instance, Neera Tanden, Biden’s pick to lead the White House Office of Management and Budget, was the target of broadsides from congressional Republicans who attacked past tweets from the chief of the liberal Center for American Progress.

Barrasso said the nominees announced so far look like a “third term of the Obama administration.”

He pointed to Biden’s tapping of former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm to run the Energy Department as an example of a nominee whose past comments on fossil fuels he took issue with, given that Wyoming is an energy-producing state.

If Republicans want a hand in holding Biden’s nominees accountable, Barrasso said, winning the two Senate run-offs in Georgia on Jan. 5 would be key.

If the GOP keeps control of the upper chamber, Barrasso is slated to take the helm of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, which would consider Granholm’s nomination.

“If you want accountability and not just a rubber stamp for a Joe Biden Cabinet, you need to have people like me as chairman of the Energy Committee,” he said, vowing later, “You bet, I’m going to ask tough questions.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/12/20/barrasso-confirmations-biden-nominees-party-449160

President Donald Trump told advisors that he is considering appointing the far right attorney and conspiracy theorist Sidney Powell as special counsel to investigate allegations of fraud in the 2020 election, multiple outlets reported.

The president floated the idea at a contentious White House meeting on Friday, according to The New York Times, which first reported the news. Multiple advisors, including some who have been sympathetic to the president’s baseless claims about the election, rejected the idea fiercely, according to the paper.

Trump also reportedly asked about the idea of imposing martial law at the meeting. He later denied doing so in a post on Twitter.

Powell, who was reported to be present at the meeting, is the attorney for former National Security Advisor Mike Flynn, who was facing charges for lying to the Federal Bureau of Investigation until receiving a pardon from the president last month.

A conservative legal personality, Powell has spun up elaborate and false theories about how Trump lost to President-elect Joe Biden, including the suggestion that voting software was developed on the orders of Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan leader who died in 2013.

Flynn was also reported to be at the meeting. The retired Army lieutenant general has taken to conservative media in recent days to urge Trump to impose martial law as part of an effort to overturn the results of November’s contest.

On Thursday, Flynn appeared on the rightwing news channel Newsmax and said that Trump could “seize” voting machines and use the military to “basically rerun an election in each of those states” 

“These people are out there talking about martial law like it’s something that we’ve never done,” Flynn said. “Martial law has been instituted 64 times.” Flynn added that he was “not calling for that.”

In a post on Twitter later on Sunday, Trump wrote: “Martial law = Fake News. Just more knowingly bad reporting!”

Senior military leaders rejected Flynn’s calls in a statement on Friday.

“There is no role for the U.S. military in determining the outcome of an American election,” Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy and Army Chief of Staff Gen. James McConville said in a statement.

In the Oval Office, Powell and Flynn both pressed Trump to do more to support their efforts to overturn the results of the election, Politico reported, citing a person familiar with the meeting.

The New York Times reported that Trump advisors forcefully pushed back on the idea of naming Powell as special counsel as well as other ideas brought up in the meeting.

Among those who rejected the ideas were Trump lawyer and former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, White House counsel Pat Cipollone and chief of staff Mark Meadows.

Cipollone told Trump that there was no constitutional authority for the ideas under discussion, according to The New York Times. According to Politico, the meeting grew tense, and involved yelling.

The White House and Powell did not return requests for comment on the meeting.

Trump has yet to concede the Nov. 3 election, despite Biden’s clear victory in both the popular vote and the legally significant electoral college.

The electoral college formally voted for Biden on Monday by a margin of 306 to 232. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who delayed publicly congratulating Biden on his win for weeks, did so on Tuesday.

While Trump has continued to contest the results of the election, last month his campaign distanced itself from the claims that Powell was putting forward. In a statement, Giuliani and Jenna Ellis, another Trump attorney, said that Powell was “practicing law on her own.”

Trump, though, has remained in contact with Powell, according to The New York Times. The paper said that Trump asked about the attorney receiving security clearances in order to pursue her potential probe.

Earlier, Trump had unsuccessfully pushed for Attorney General William Barr to appoint a special counsel to look into the election. Barr has decline to do so and said that the government has not found evidence of widespread fraud. On Monday, Trump announced that Barr was resigning effective Dec. 23.

Subscribe to CNBC Pro for the TV livestream, deep insights and analysis  on how to invest during the next presidential term.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/20/reports-trump-considered-naming-sidney-powell-to-investigate-election.html

WASHINGTON — President-elect Joe Biden’s nominee for U.S. surgeon general says it’s more realistic to think it may be mid-summer or early fall before coronavirus vaccines are available to the general population in the United States, rather than late spring.

Speaking on Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Vivek Murthy said Biden’s team is working toward having coronavirus vaccines available to lower-risk individuals by late spring but doing so requires “everything to go exactly on schedule.”

“I think it’s more realistic to assume that it may be closer to mid-summer or early fall when this vaccine makes its way to the general population,” Murthy said. “So, we want to be optimistic, but we want to be cautious as well.”

Murthy, who also served as surgeon general in the Obama administration, said Biden’s promise of 100 million vaccines during his first 100 days in office is realistic and that the Biden team has seen more cooperation from Trump administration officials.

___

THE VIRUS OUTBREAK:

European countries halt U.K. flights, fearing the new coronavirus variant.

Asia Today: Outbreak grows in Sydney’s beach suburbs; Thais line up for tests.

A surge of ‘new poor’ linked to closed restaurants and hotels are struggling amid Italy’s outbreak.

___

Follow AP’s coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

___

HERE’S WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING:

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s surgeon general is defending Trump’s not getting a coronavirus vaccine, saying there are medical reasons for it.

U.S. Surgeon General and Vice Admiral Jerome Adams, speaking on CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday, noted that Trump both contracted COVID-19 in October and was treated with monoclonal antibodies.

“And that is actually one scenario where we tell people maybe you should hold off on getting the vaccine, talk to your health provider to find out the right time,” Adams said.

Asked about Trump doing a public-service announcement for the vaccine to encourage his supporters to get it, Adams noted that both he and Vice President Mike Pence got vaccinated.

Adams, who is Black, said he understands that mistrust of the medical community and the vaccine among Blacks “comes from a real place,” the mistreatment of communities of color.

___

JERUSALEM __ Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the country is banning flights from Britain, Denmark or South Africa due to fears about the new strain of coronavirus.

“Those are the countries where the mutation is found,” he said.

He also said Sunday that anyone returning from those countries would have to go into mandatory 14-day quarantine in state-run hotels.

Netanyahu spoke a day after he was vaccinated against the coronavirus – the first Israeli to do so in what he said was an attempt to encourage the public to follow suit. Israel pushed ahead with its vaccination campaign on Sunday, beginning with other top officials and front-line health-care workers.

__

LONDON — Eurostar trains between London, Brussels and Amsterdam are being canceled from Monday, after the Belgian government announced that borders with the U.K will close at midnight Sunday.

The high-speed train operator said Sunday that trains continue to operate on the London to Paris route.

The Belgian government has said it will review the position in 24 hours. Eurostar said they’re awaiting further details from relevant governments on how travel restrictions will be enforced.

European countries including the Netherlands, Austria and Italy said Sunday they would halt flights from the U.K., hours after Britain’s government imposed tough new coronavirus restrictions on large areas of southern England to curb what officials described as a fast-moving new strain of the virus.

___

MILAN — Both the number of COVID deaths and new positives were significantly lower on Sunday, a day when typically many fewer tests are carried out.

Deaths rose by 352, down by several hundred from recent days, and bringing Italy’s known coronavirus dead to 68,799, the highest in Europe.

Another 15,104 people tested positive, down by over 1,000 from a day earlier as the number of tests dropped by nearly a quarter. Sunday marked the last day Italians were permitted to move from one region to another without a valid motive, including work and health.

The government has imposed more stringent restrictions for the Christmas holiday in a bid to prevent celebrations from setting of a new surge. Shopping streets in major cities were packed ahead of the imposition of a partial lockdown this week.

___

HONOLULU — A coronavirus outbreak at Hawaii’s largest prison continues to escalate.

The state Department of Public Safety said Saturday that an additional 55 inmates and eight employees have tested positive for the coronavirus at the Halawa Correctional Facility.

KITV-TV reports that the total number of active cases in the prison now encompasses 325 inmates and 43 staffers.

The Department of Public Safety had announced a lockdown and other measures to try to control the outbreak, which initially infected three inmates and 10 staffers last week.

The outbreak at Halawa is the third major correctional facility in the state to face coronavirus issues since the pandemic began.

___

ROME — Italy’s foreign minister announced Sunday that Italy is suspending flights from Britain “to protect Italians” from the new coronavirus variant.

Luigi Di Maio tweeted that the government was preparing a measure that would block flights. It wasn’t immediately clear when it would it would take effect.

Italian media reports indicate about two dozen flights are scheduled to arrive in Italy on Sunday, most in the northern region of Lombardy but also in Veneto and Lazio, which include Venice and Rome, respectively.

More than 327,000 Italian citizens are registered as living in Britain, with the unofficial total reaching as many as 700,000. Sunday is the last day that Italians can travel from one region to another before the Christmas holidays, due to a new partial lockdown imposed by the government to prevent a new surge in infections.

___

BANGKOK — Thousands of people lined up for coronavirus tests in a province near Bangkok on Sunday, as Thai authorities scrambled to contain an outbreak that has infected nearly 700 people.

Lines of mainly migrant workers stretched for around 100 meters in one location alone in Mahachai in Samut Sakhon province, as health officials in mobile units methodically took nasal swabs.

There were three locations in total in the area. Nearby, razor wire and police guards blocked access to one of Thailand’s largest seafood markets and its associated housing complex, the epicenter of the new cluster.

Thailand’s Disease Control Department said Sunday that they found 141 more cases linked to the market outbreak. On Saturday, the department reported 548 cases, Thailand’s biggest daily spike.

___

PRAGUE — The Czech Republic is imposing restrictions on travels from Britain following a discovery of a new, allegedly highly contagious strain of coronavirus in southern England.

The Czech Health Ministry says that given the risk linked to the new variant that was confirmed in Britain all people arriving in the country who spent at least 24 hours on British territory in last two weeks have to isolate.

The ministry says they have to stay isolated for 10 days unless they are tested negative by a PCR test five to seven days into their self-isolation.

It says it measure whose goal is to increase public safety becomes effective on Sunday.

Belgium and the Netherlands started banning flights from the U.K. in reaction to tougher measures imposed in London and surrounding areas on Saturday by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Germany, The Czech Republic’s neighbor, is considering doing the same.

___

ISLAMABAD — Pakistan’s minister for planning who also heads the national body for control of Coronavirus tested positive and went in isolation at home as authorities reported another 80 deaths and 3297 cases of COVID-19 during the last 24 hours Sunday.

Asad Umar on Saturday announced his isolation because of the virus. Umar appealed to fellow countrymen to adhere to precautionary measures of physical distancing and wearing of face masks at all the time when in public or at gatherings. But many people in this nation of 22 million rarely follow the guidelines for avoiding COVID-19.

___

BERLIN — Germany is considering limiting flights from Britain to make sure that a new, allegedly highly contagious strain of coronavirus that is sweeping across southern England does not spill over to Germany, the dpa news agency reported Sunday.

A high-ranking German government official told dpa that restrictions on flights from Britain are a “serious option.”

Belgium and the Netherlands started banning flights from the U.K. in reaction to tougher measures imposed in London and surrounding areas on Saturday by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

Johnson said a fast-moving new variant of the virus that is 70% more transmissible than existing strains appears to be driving the rapid spread of new infections in London and southern England.

The German government, which holds the EU’s rotating presidency, is in close contact with its European neighbors on developing situation, dpa reported.

___

BRUSSELS — Belgium has joined the Netherlands in banning flights from the U.K. and also banned rail connections in an attempt to make sure that a new strain of coronavirus that is sweeping across southern England does not spill over on its territory.

Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo on Sunday said he was issuing the order for 24 hours starting at midnight “out of precaution.”

“There are a great many questions about this new mutation and if it is not already on the mainland,” he said. He hoped to have more clarity as of Tuesday.

The Netherlands is banning flights from the U.K. for at least the rest of the year.

Both Belgium and the Netherlands were reacting to tougher measures imposed in London and surrounding areas on Saturday by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

___

AMSTERDAM — The Netherlands is banning flights from the U.K. for at least the rest of the year in an attempt to make sure that a new strain of coronavirus that is sweeping across southern England does not reach its shores.

The ban came into effect Sunday morning and the government said it was reacting to tougher measures imposed in London and surrounding areas on Saturday by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson. The Netherlands said it will assess “with other European Union nations the possibilities to contain the import of the virus from the United Kingdom.”

Johnson said a fast-moving new variant of the virus that is 70% more transmissible than existing strains appears to be driving the rapid spread of new infections in London and southern England.

“There’s no evidence to suggest it is more lethal or causes more severe illness,” the prime minister stressed, or that vaccines will be less effective against it.

The Dutch government is already strongly advising its citizens not to travel unless absolutely necessary.

___

JERUSALEM — Israel on Sunday began its coronavirus inoculation drive, aiming to vaccinate some 60,000 people a day in a bid to stamp out the illness that is once again surging among its population.

The country will first immunize health workers, followed by the elderly, high-risk Israelis and those over 60 years old. Israel says it has secured sufficient doses for much of the country’s 9 million people from both Pfizer and Moderna, whose vaccine U.S. authorities approved this week for emergency use.

With public opinion polls showing many Israelis are reluctant to receive shots right away, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he would set a “personal example” and insisted on being the first Israeli vaccinated. He received the shot Saturday night.

___

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea has recorded more than 1,000 new coronavirus cases for the fifth consecutive day, putting pressure on authorities to enforce the toughest distancing rules that would further hurt the economy.

The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency says it’s found 1,097 additional cases over the past 24-hour period, the highest daily tally since the pandemic began. That puts the national caseload at 49,665, including 674 deaths.

About 70% of the new cases come from the densely populated Seoul metropolitan area, which has been at the center of a viral resurgence.

The pace of the spread has already met government conditions for raising social distancing rules to their highest level. But officials have been reluctant to move forward with the measure out of worries for the economy. The new steps would be banning gatherings of more than 10 people and shutting hundreds of thousands of non-essential businesses.

___

Follow AP’s coverage at:

https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic

https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-vaccine

https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/pandemics-coronavirus-vaccine-migrant-workers-coronavirus-pandemic-bangkok-2745f164fbe7aaf0ece197ac3ea44340

WASHINGTON, D.C. – A rarely used process that Republicans including Ohio’s Jim Jordan plan to use to challenge the electoral vote count in Congress on Jan. 6 in hopes of returning President Donald Trump to the White House was last tried by former Cleveland Democratic Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones in 2005.

But Tubbs Jones, who died in 2008, had a different motive. Rather than seeking to overturn the election, she delayed the official presidential vote to highlight problems that plagued Ohio’s 2004 election, such as computer glitches, long voting waits in Cuyahoga County, and questions about procedures used to reject provisional ballots. Still, it was a controversial move that touched off a fierce debate.

Before Tubbs Jones’ protest, the constitutionally mandated session to certify the Electoral College vote had been disrupted only one other time since 1877: when a North Carolina elector who was supposed to support Richard Nixon in the 1968 presidential election instead voted for independent George Wallace.

To protest acceptance of a state’s electoral votes, one U.S. House of Representatives member backed by a U.S. Senator must object when the votes are being tallied. After debating the matter, both chambers must agree to reject the votes.

Any efforts by Jordan or others to challenge this year’s vote are unlikely to prevail, since the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives wouldn’t be inclined to overturn Democrat Joe Biden’s victory. Biden has 306 electoral votes compared with 232 for Trump, and no evidence of widespread election fraud has emerged, despite claims by Trump and his allies.

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell has tried to discourage those in his caucus from signing onto such efforts, but a cadre of Trump-supporting Republicans in the House of Representatives say they want to try challenging this year’s electoral votes in several states that backed Biden.

“I’m quite confident that if we only counted lawful votes cast by eligible American citizens, Donald Trump won the Electoral College,” Alabama Republican Rep. Mo Brooks told Fox News without indicating which U.S. Senator might assist him.

Brooks has said he plans to challenge the electoral votes of several states on the House of Representatives floor, and Champaign County’s Jordan says he plans to support those efforts. Jordan has also attended rallies in Pennsylvania to claim the election was being “stolen” from Trump, and last week signed onto a Supreme Court brief to back a lawsuit that Texas filed to throw out election results from Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin and Georgia, states that helped Biden clinch the election.

The Supreme Court rejected that case, and courts have tossed out dozens of other Trump-backed lawsuits to overturn the election results. But Trump continues to make baseless accusations of widespread fraud in the election.

In contrast, Tubbs Jones stressed her protest wasn’t meant to overturn the results of the 2004 contest won by Republican George W. Bush. Rather, it was meant to air Ohio election problems on the House of Representatives and U.S. Senate floors.

The drama played out as former GOP Rep. Bob Ney of St. Clairsville asked to certify Ohio’s electoral votes during a joint meeting of Congress presided over by then-Vice President Dick Cheney. Tubbs Jones formally lodged her protest with backing from California Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer. Boxer said she signed onto the complaint from Tubbs Jones because she wanted to “focus the light of truth on these terrible problems in the electoral system.”

“I raise this objection neither to put the nation in the turmoil of a proposed overturned election nor to provide cannon fodder or partisan demagoguery for my fellow members of Congress,” Tubbs Jones said. “I raise this objection because I am convinced that we as a body must conduct a formal and legitimate debate about election irregularities.”

Cheney ordered both chambers to recess for two hours of debate in the form of a series of dueling speeches, each no longer than five minutes.

Ohio Democrats including Sen. Sherrod Brown – who was then a member of the U.S. House of Representatives – used their time to highlight problems that occurred during the 2004 election.

“Ohio voters should never again be forced to wait 3, 5, sometimes even 10 hours to cast a vote,” said Brown, a former Ohio Secretary of State. “Ohioans should never again, as too many people did this November, lose their right to vote. But it is not just about Ohio; it is not just about who won and who did not. It is about our system of democracy. Mr. Speaker, I am saddened that no Republicans in this body are joining us today in acknowledging problems in Ohio and in working with us to fix those problems because, Mr. Speaker, defending the right to vote should be a concern for Republicans and Democrats alike.”

The state’s Republicans minimized problems with the election and criticized Tubbs Jones’ effort. Sen. Rob Portman – who was also in the House at that time – called it “a cynical political ploy to try to somehow delegitimize the Presidency of the United States.” (After this year’s election, Portman supported Trump’s right to file legal challenges, but after last week’s Electoral College vote, he acknowledged Biden as the president-elect.)

“No election is ever perfect. they never are,” said Portman at the time of the Tubbs Jones challenge, noting that Bush won Ohio by more than 118,000 votes in 2004. “But there is absolutely no credible basis to question the outcome of the election. That is what is going on here today.”

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine – who was then a Republican U.S. Senator, called Democrats’ charges about the election in Ohio “wild, incoherent and completely unsubstantiated.” (Like Portman this year, he said Trump had a right to file challenges, but he acknowledged Biden as the winner earlier than Portman did.) The other Ohioan in the U.S. Senate at the time, Republican George Voinovich, said Democrats were “desperate to create uncertainty and a partisan issue where none exists.”

That year’s unsuccessful Democratic presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry, missed the debate because he was touring the Middle East. Unlike Trump, who has mounted numerous legal challenges to this year’s election results which have been rejected in court, Kerry told supporters in an email that his lawyers “found no evidence that would change the outcome of the election.” He also said he hoped Congress would address ways to remedy voting problems.

Current House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who then led the House Democratic minority, said the members of Congress who brought the challenge were “speaking up for their aggrieved constituents, many of whom may have been disenfranchised in this process.” She called it “their only opportunity to have this debate while the country is listening.”

Election officials in Ohio acknowledged that some voters faced long lines or were accidentally dropped from voter rolls, and that some counties had electronic voting machine glitches. But they insisted the problems were minor, typical of any election, and did not affect the final result. A spokesman for then-Secretary of State Ken Blackwell, a Republican, disputed claims that Ohio Democrats made during the debate, including those that the state rejected a disproportionate number of provisional ballots.

“The fact of the matter is that Ohio election officials performed admirably on Nov. 2,” Blackwell spokesman Carlo Loparo said at the time.

Despite Democrats’ support for Tubbs Jones’ cause, few colleagues voted with her in the end to invalidate the Ohio electoral results. Boxer was the only senator to support the resolution, and it failed in the House 267-31, with 132 members not voting. Former Cleveland Democratic Rep. Dennis Kucinich was the only Ohioan to join Tubbs Jones with a “yes” vote. The joint session then resumed, and Congress, without further disruption, certified the rest of the results. The outcome: Bush won 286 electoral votes to Kerry’s 251.

The following month, Jones joined Boxer and then-New York Democratic Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton in introducing the Count Every Vote Act, which proposed wide-ranging electoral reform. It would have made the distribution of misleading election information a federal crime, declared Election Day a national holiday and required a paper ballot back-up for every electronic vote to be used to assist recounts. The Republican-controlled Congress didn’t act on their bill.

Read more:

Ohio’s Jim Jordan to participate in Jan. 6 congressional effort to question presidential election results

Years of work fighting for Northeast Ohio earn Marcia Fudge a seat at Biden’s Cabinet table

Marcia Fudge makes her public debut as a member of Joe Biden’s team

What Rep. Marcia Fudge hopes to accomplish as Housing and Urban Development Secretary: Q & A

Biden transition office officially announces Rep. Marcia Fudge will be HUD nominee

President-elect Joe Biden picks Rep. Marcia Fudge to be Housing and Urban Development secretary, report says

Rep. Jim Clyburn predicts Ohio’s Rep. Marcia Fudge will end up in Biden’s cabinet

U.S. House passes bill to decriminalize marijuana over opposition from all Ohio Republicans

Columbus Democratic Rep. Joyce Beatty selected to chair the Congressional Black Caucus

Sen. Sherrod Brown predicts smooth confirmation for Rep. Marcia Fudge if she’s picked as Biden’s Agriculture Secretary

U.S. Senate approves federal judgeship for Cuyahoga County’s Judge J. Philip Calabrese

Source Article from https://www.cleveland.com/open/2020/12/ohios-stephanie-tubbs-jones-lodged-the-nations-last-electoral-vote-protest-in-congress.html

Senior lawmakers reached a compromise over the Federal Reserve’s emergency lending powers late Saturday night, overcoming a major hurdle that prevented Congress from completing a $900 billion coronavirus relief package earlier in the week, according to multiple sources.

A last-minute roadblock emerged on Friday as Democrats accused Republicans, namely Pennsylvania’s Sen. Pat Toomey, of attempting to encumber the incoming Biden administration by cutting off the Federal Reserve’s emergency lending abilities created by the CARES Act meant to protect the already battered economy.

“Now that Democrats have agreed to a version of Sen. Toomey’s important language, we can begin closing out the rest of the package to deliver much-needed relief to families, workers, and businesses,” a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told NBC News.

Compromise language is being finalized and any open items are expected to be worked out overnight, according to two aides.

A spokesperson for Toomey called the agreement an “unqualified victory for taxpayers.”

“Senate Republicans achieved all four of our objectives regarding the CARES Act Federal Reserve lending programs,” Toomey spokesperson Steve Kelly said.

“This agreement rescinds more than $429 billion in unused CARES Act funds; definitively ends the CARES Act lending facilities by Dec. 31, 2020, stops these facilities from being restarted, and forbids them from being duplicated without congressional approval. This agreement will preserve Fed independence and prevent Democrats from hijacking these programs for political and social policy purposes,” Kelly added.

Congressional leaders settled on a framework midweek that was expected to include a $300 federal unemployment bonus, a new round of direct payments, small business funding and money to distribute Covid-19 vaccines.

The House had already advised votes as early as 1 p.m. Sunday.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/20/republican-democrats-reach-compromise-over-covid-19-stimulus-package.html

President Trump floated appointing Sidney Powell, the attorney his legal team disavowed after she promoted conspiracy theories about the election, as special counsel to investigate voter fraud, according to two advisers to Mr. Trump. Her name was suggested during a meeting in the White House.

The news of Powell’s possible appointment was first reported by The New York Times

A senior campaign official told CBS News they personally like Powell’s “hardcore nationalism,” but said that is a minority opinion within the campaign. The person added that “establishment types” within the campaign are increasingly wary of Powell’s influence on the president and his agenda.

One adviser to Mr. Trump called Powell “a disastrous mistake.” 

Mr. Trump tweeted on November 14 that Powell was part of his “truly great team” filing legal challenges to challenge the election results. Trump campaign attorney Rudy Giuliani also identified her as a member of the legal team, and she appeared with him at a press conference to discuss the campaign’s unsubstantiated claims of widespread voter fraud.

Attorney Sidney Powell speaks during a news conference with Rudy Giuliani.

The Washington Post


Powell promoted a number of baseless conspiracy theories about the election, including that the deceased Hugo Chávez, among others, had rigged the election against Mr. Trump by programming voting machines to switch votes for the president to President-elect Joe Biden. Powell’s claims were viewed as far fetched even by typical allies of the president. Fox News host Tucker Carlson said she refused to provide him with any evidence of her claims about vote switching.

“When we kept pressing, she got angry and told us to stop contacting her,” Carlson said. “When we checked with others around the Trump campaign, people in positions of authority, they also told us Powell had never given them any evidence to prove anything she claimed at the press conference.”

Mr. Trump’s legal team sent a memo Saturday to dozens of staffers instructing them to preserve all documents related to Dominion Voting Systems — a voting software company used in 28 states specifically mentioned by Powell and Mr. Trump on numerous occasions — and Powell in anticipation of potential ligation by the company against the pro-Trump attorney. 

On November 23, Trump senior legal adviser Jenna Ellis said Powell was not a member of the Trump legal team, despite the earlier claims.

Powell issued a press release after Ellis’ announcement that she “understands” the press release, but she would “continue to represent #WeThePeople who had their votes for Trump and other Republicans stolen by massive fraud through Dominion and Smartmatic, and we will be filing suit soon.” She added the hashtag “#KrakenOnSteriods.” 

Powell has since filed lawsuits in several states challenging the election results. A federal judge on December 8 dismissed a lawsuit Powell filed in Georgia alleging widespread voter fraud and absentee ballot-related errors. Judges in Wisconsin and Arizona dismissed similar lawsuits brought by Powell a day later. 

“Not only have Plaintiffs failed to provide the Court with factual support for their extraordinary claims, but they have wholly failed to establish that they have standing for the Court to consider them. Allegations that find favor in the public sphere of gossip and innuendo cannot be a substitute for earnest pleadings and procedure in federal court,” U.S. District Judge Diane Humetewa wrote in her decision. “They most certainly cannot be the basis for upending Arizona’s 2020 General Election.”

Powell and several associates have appealed their dismissed cases to the Supreme Court. They have also attempted to consolidate their challenges to the election results in Wisconsin, Georgia, Michigan and Arizona into one lawsuit, even though they failed to correctly file paperwork for the Wisconsin and Arizona appeals, and therefore did not get them docketed by the court.

The Supreme Court previously declined to hear a case challenging the results of the election brought by the state of Texas.

Caroline Linton and Kathryn Watson contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-floated-appointing-special-counsel-who-promoted-conspiracy-theories/

Amid the pandemic, the Christmas season is looking different this year, especially in Nevada City.

Businesses in the Gold Country town rely on the annual Victorian Christmas event to make most of their profit for the year. Usually, the streets of downtown are bustling with thousands of visitors, vendors and musicians all month long. But this year, it is much quieter.

The Nevada City Chamber of Commerce reimagined the event amid the pandemic and regional stay-at-home order, canceling the street fair and instead putting an emphasis on curbside pickup, online shopping and virtual or self-guided tours.

“It’s kind of erratic. We have good days, very quiet days,” said Jick Icasiano.

Icasiano owns the gift shop Gold Mountain on Broad Street. And for some stores, like Mary Mary gift shop, they are seeing more quiet days.

“We have fewer people coming to town, fewer shoppers. Of course the inns are closed so they can’t spend the night. There’s nowhere to eat. There’s no bar open. So it’s a big deterrent to all business,” said owner Lee Gaede.

Gaede is down $10,000 this year compared to last year. She said December is when she normally makes 70% of her annual profit.

“Christmas is our only season,” she said. “I’m lucky, I can stay open at 20% capacity. But if everybody is in lockdown and is supposed to stay home, what good does that do?”

Next door, business is picking up at The Truffle Shop. Owner Rudy Udarbe said that is because he already had mail-in service set up.

“Everybody’s coming back and remembering that I’m here, so business has really picked up quite a bit,” he said.

But Udarbe added that one spike in business will not necessarily make up for everything already lost during the pandemic. That is why shop owners are grateful for people who are consistently supporting local businesses.

“Keep doing it!” said Icasiano. “We need the local and the out-of-towners, both.”

On Saturday, Jeff Slater and Miki Martin traveled from Sacramento to do their Christmas shopping in Nevada City.

“We have passion for the local business people, especially for this year,” Martin said.

Slater agreed.

“We really want to support local stores and so we don’t go to the malls, we come here,” he said. “We’ve been the last three weekends hitting the Foothills and today is Nevada City’s turn.”

People who live in Nevada City are also trying to do their part with everyday shopping needs. The Lea family visited the farmer’s market for ingredients for their next meal.

“Everything we could do this year to buy locally we did,” said Travis Lea.

With an annual community event essentially canceled this year, Nevada City businesses are relying on their community to survive.

Source Article from https://www.kcra.com/article/christmas-is-our-only-season-nevada-city-businesses-impact-without-traditional-victorian-christmas/35021583