SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Anthony Fauci said Monday he advised California officials that they “really don’t have any choice” but to impose stay-at-home orders that more than 33 million residents are now living under.

California’s stay-home rules are some of the strictest in the nation, limiting most nonessential activities, banning restaurant dining and prohibiting private gatherings. Gov. Gavin Newsom last week assigned counties to one of five geographic regions that would have to lock down if their intensive care unit capacity dropped below 15 percent.

Fauci spoke Monday with CNN on the same morning that President-elect Joe Biden named him as chief medical adviser on Covid-19 in addition to director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. He said he was consulted by California officials before they moved forward on their stay-home order and that he “absolutely” agreed with the state’s approach.

“In fact, I have been in discussion with the health authorities from the state of California who called me and asked,” Fauci said. “You know, they said, ‘We feel we need to do this, what do you think?’ And I said, ‘You know, you really don’t have any choice. When you have the challenge to the health care system, you’ve got to do something like that.'”

Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley had to lock down Sunday, while five Bay Area counties preemptively issued stay-home orders this weekend. Only about 15 percent of residents living in the Sacramento region, parts of the greater Bay Area and the northern reaches toward the Oregon border do not yet have to follow the lockdown restrictions.

California residents have generally abided by stricter rules over the course of the year, starting with the nation’s first stay-home order in the Bay Area in March through mask mandates and business restrictions that have been installed in different iterations. But the current round has sparked anger among restaurateurs in particular, many of whom invested in heat lamps and other outdoor dining equipment to survive the winter. A lawsuit against Los Angeles County’s stay-home order is winding through court there, and a judge has asked the county to return Tuesday with data supporting a ban on outdoor dining.

Newsom has framed the state’s stay-at-home order as necessary to ensure hospitals can handle an expected surge in hospitalizations in coming weeks. ICU capacity had dropped to 6.6 percent in the San Joaquin Valley — the nation’s biggest agricultural producer — and 10.3 percent in Southern California, the state reported Sunday.

California also surpassed 30,000 coronavirus cases in one day for the first time over the weekend; the state reported 30,075 new cases on Saturday. While the state has dramatically increased Covid-19 testing, the seven-day positive test rate has soared to 10.3 percent, higher than during the summer surge.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/california/story/2020/12/07/fauci-california-had-no-choice-but-to-impose-stay-home-orders-9424858

They worried that rules set by the state for rolling back business reopenings and restricting activities — the system of yellow, orange and red zones — would mean that even if the city reopened schools, they could close again soon. But the state provided an exception for schools: the shift to weekly testing.

“We wanted to make sure that we weren’t going to be opening and closing,” said Dean Fuleihan, the first deputy mayor. The city, he said, wanted “to have a testing regimen strong enough that we would meet any state standard in the orange and red zone whenever those would happen.”

Officials scrambled — remotely and from offices inside City Hall — to figure out the numbers needed to randomly test students and staff each week across hundreds of schools.

It was not enough to test every school.

“We didn’t have the capacity to do the entire system weekly,” said Kayla Arslanian, Mr. de Blasio’s deputy chief of staff, who has been focused on coronavirus testing. “We are building to get there.”

It was a question not of lab capacity but of finding enough trained staff members to collect samples. The city needed teams of two to four people to go from school to school.

Jeff Thamkittikasem, director of the mayor’s office of operations, said the city had nearly doubled the number of such teams — from 65 to 125 — and could conduct as many as 8,000 tests in schools each day, up from about 4,100 during the initial school testing program.

One thing could be safely jettisoned, officials and public health experts believed: the 3 percent positivity threshold used to close the schools in the first place.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/07/nyregion/nyc-school-reopening.html

Sen. Kelly Loeffler labeling her opponent Raphael Warnock a “radical liberal,” during Georgia’s Senate debate Sunday night.

Loeffler said that “radical liberal Raphael Warnock” had no place in Peach State politics. She called him a “radical liberal” multiple times during the debate, the first time the two squared off ahead of a runoff election in January that will help decide who controls the Senate next year.

“I cannot stand by and let Georgians not know who my opponent is, how radical his views are, and how he would fundamentally change our country,” she said. “He’s out of step with Georgia’s values.”

In her concluding statement, Loeffler said a win for Warnock brings Democrats a step closer to their agenda: “increase taxes, open borders, socialize health care.”

Follow below for more updates on the Georgia Senate runoff. Mobile users click here

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/live-updates-georgia-senate-12-7-2020

Sen. Kelly Loeffler labeling her opponent Raphael Warnock a “radical liberal,” during Georgia’s Senate debate Sunday night.

Loeffler said that “radical liberal Raphael Warnock” had no place in Peach State politics. She called him a “radical liberal” multiple times during the debate, the first time the two squared off ahead of a runoff election in January that will help decide who controls the Senate next year.

“I cannot stand by and let Georgians not know who my opponent is, how radical his views are, and how he would fundamentally change our country,” she said. “He’s out of step with Georgia’s values.”

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In her concluding statement, Loeffler said a win for Warnock brings Democrats a step closer to their agenda: “increase taxes, open borders, socialize health care.”

Follow below for more updates on the Georgia Senate runoff. Mobile users click here

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/live-updates-georgia-senate-12-7-2020

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra has been selected to serve as secretary of Health and Human Services in the Biden administration, a source familiar with transition discussions confirms to NPR.

Rich Pedroncelli/AP


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California Attorney General Xavier Becerra has been selected to serve as secretary of Health and Human Services in the Biden administration, a source familiar with transition discussions confirms to NPR.

Rich Pedroncelli/AP

President-elect Joe Biden plans to nominate former congressman and California Attorney General Xavier Becerra as secretary of Health and Human Services, according to a source familiar with transition discussions who is not authorized to speak on the record.

As the top law enforcement official in California, Becerra has repeatedly gone to court to fight Trump administration policies on healthcare, the environment and immigration. Earlier this year, he led a coalition of 20 states and D.C. that asked the Supreme Court to review a circuit court decision that could invalidate the Affordable Care Act.

The New York Times was first to report Becerra’s selection to the top health post, which requires Senate confirmation.

Becerra, 62, would take the helm at the massive agency in the midst of the most challenging public health crisis in a century. The coronavirus has killed more than 280,000 Americans, and nearly fifteen million people in the country have been diagnosed with COVID-19. Meanwhile, the Trump administration has done all it can to undermine and whittle away the Affordable Care Act and repairing it through congressional action appears unlikely given narrow Democratic control of the House and the very real possibility that Republicans maintain control of the Senate pending the Georgia runoffs.

This means much of Biden’s ability to keep promises around strengthening the ACA will require administrative and executive action, and Becerra’s experience as California attorney general could prove useful. He holds a law degree from Stanford.

Becerra is the second high-profile Latino who Biden plans to nominate for a cabinet position, joining Alejandro Mayorkas, Biden’s intended nominee to lead the Department of Homeland Security.

Biden had been under pressure to name more people of color to top posts. In an interview with CNN on Sunday, New Mexico Senator-elect Ben Ray Luján, said he was happy about Mayorkas but wanted to see more.

“We also want to see more Hispanics, more Latinos and Latinas, people like our governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham, who is well qualified, Attorney General Xavier Becerra and Tom Perez, who was confirmed by the U.S. Senate twice and has done incredible work,” said Luján. “There’s strong leaders across America, and I’m certainly hopeful that we’re going to see many of them have important roles within the responsibilities we have to look after the American people.”

NPR has reached out to multiple Biden spokespeople and Becerra’s communications director but has not heard back. Transition officials have said they would publicly announce their health team early in the coming week.

Becerra’s selection also means he won’t be named to the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Vice President-elect Kamala Harris. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, is still mulling his options, as politicians in the state angle for the coveted post. Becerra was thought to be in that mix.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/biden-transition-updates/2020/12/06/943714981/biden-picks-california-attorney-general-xavier-becerra-for-top-health-post

Republican Senator Kelly Loeffler declined to defend her ally Georgia Governor Brian Kemp from President Donald Trump‘s attacks on Sunday night during a debate against her Democratic challenger Rev. Raphael Warnock—prior to their runoff election in Georgia on January 5.

Trump has repeatedly attacked Kemp in recent weeks for allegedly not doing enough to help him overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. On Saturday, the president suggested that Georgia Republican Congressman Doug Collins should run against the governor in 2022 as he continued to scold officials in the Peach State.

“Senator President Trump has attacked your closest political ally Governor Kemp as hapless … Was the president wrong to say that about the governor and are you concerned his comments can alienate some Republicans ahead of the runoffs?” moderator Russ Spencer asked Loeffler.

Senator Kelly Loeffler debate her Democratic challenger Raphael Warnock in Georgia on December 5, 2020.
Screenshot

“The president has the right to pursue every legal recourse to make sure that this was a free and fair election in Georgia,” she responded, before pivoting to accusing Democrats of pushing for socialism.

The moderator tried again: “Was the president wrong when we called the governors those remarks?”

“I appreciate the president’s support of me and I appreciate the governor’s support of me,” Loeffler said. “They both understand what’s at stake in this election. That’s why they’re encouraging Georgians to get out and vote for David Perdue and myself.”

Lisa Rayam, the debate’s second moderator, jumped in to press the senator on Trump and Kemp’s feud, but Loeffler declined to answer directly for the third time. “Can you tell us where your loyalties lie? Is it with Governor Kemp or Trump?” Rayam asked.

“Lisa, my loyalties are with Georgia. I have lived the American Dream, I want to make sure every Georgian can do that,” she said.

On Saturday morning, Trump called Kemp and urged him to push lawmakers in Georgia to overturn President-elect Joe Biden‘s victory and hold an audit of mail-in ballot signatures, but Kemp declined. In a tweet, Kemp confirmed the phone call and said he already publicly supported a signature audit, while noting that he doesn’t have the power to demand it.

The president, unhappy with Kemp’s response, accused the governor of being “afraid of Stacey Abrams” at a rally in Georgia that evening.

A recent Morning Consult poll shows that Trump’s aggressive attacks on Kemp over the past few weeks have taken a toll. Since the election, Kemp’s approval rating dropped from 86 percent to 77 percent among Georgia Republican voters, and from 52 percent to 46 percent among overall voters.

Newsweek reached out to Kemp for comment.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/kelly-loeffler-declines-defend-her-ally-georgia-governor-brian-kemp-trumps-attacks-1552721

President Donald Trump announced on Twitter Sunday afternoon that his personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, has tested positive for the coronavirus.

Giuliani “has tested positive for the China Virus,” Trump tweeted, using the racist term he habitually uses for the coronavirus. “Get better soon Rudy, we will carry on!!!”

Giuliani’s positive test comes roughly two weeks after his son tested positive. It’s unclear how and when Giuliani contracted the virus.

Giuliani has been traveling constantly across the country in recent weeks, leading Trump’s failing legal efforts to contest the results of the 2020 presidential election, and has been in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Arizona — all states with high virus case numbers — in the past two weeks. He has been in contact with members of Trump’s legal team in recent days, as well as witnesses incorrectly alleging voting improprieties, and Michigan lawmakers.

On Wednesday, he participated in testimony falsely claiming that votes were illegally cast in Michigan in an indoor, largely maskless session before Michigan’s House Oversight Committee. Depending on when Giuliani was infected, those in attendance may be at risk of exposure.

The president did not say on Sunday whether Giuliani is symptomatic, or if he plans to isolate to avoid infecting others with Covid-19. At 76 years old, and identifying as male, he is in a group considered to be at greater risk for complications and more negative outcomes of the disease.

Giuliani is the latest of many figures and staffers in the president’s orbit to contract the coronavirus, including Trump himself, much of the president’s family, his chief of staff, multiple senior advisers, and the White House press secretary. All together, more than a dozen people in the president’s personal orbit have tested positive since October.

Some of this spread has been attributed to the fact that Trump’s inner circle has routinely declined to wear masks and abide by social distancing protocols. For instance, the president has held a number of large, maskless indoor events — including a party celebrating Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett. That party was labeled a “super spreader” event by top federal infectious disease expert and national coronavirus task force member Dr. Anthony Fauci.

Giuliani has participated in a number of these sorts of high-risk events, from the hearing on Wednesday to a rally the former mayor held for Trump ahead of the election. Like many on the president’s team, Giuliani has not shown strong support for precautions like mask wearing; in October, Giuliani criticized President-elect Joe Biden for his mask-wearing habit, and said that his use of them was meant to induce fear.

“It isn’t science to be wearing that mask, Joe, when you are giving a speech and people are 30-40 feet away from you,” Giuliani said during an interview with Fox News. “The only thing you can infect is the teleprompter that’s near you. So, I see through you. That’s a political statement to scare people, wearing that mask. You do not need that mask when you are standing at a podium.”

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2020/12/6/22157425/rudy-giuliani-coronavirus-positive-covid-19-trump

When the US presidential election was finally called for Joe Biden on 7 November, the CNN commentator Van Jones made a tearful speech live on air that captured in two minutes the frayed emotions of a contest that had dragged on for days. A regular on CNN over the past decade, Jones trained as a lawyer at Yale and has spent more than 25 years fighting for criminal justice reform. A special adviser for green jobs in the early days of the Obama administration, he crossed party lines to work with the Trump administration in 2018, helping to draft the First Step Act and drawing criticism from fellow progressives in the process. Jones, who is 52 and was born in Tennessee, lives in Los Angeles and has two sons with his ex-wife Jana Carter.

Tell me about the lead-up to that CNN speech and the state of your nerves.
We were all just exhausted. We had been doing 17-hour days, for five days. We knew that it was going to be a long, slow count, but that doesn’t mean that your body and heart and soul can endure it with perfect equipoise. When it was finally called, my phone started blowing up with text messages from Muslim friends, friends from immigrant communities. One guy said, “I’m not crying, you’re crying,” just as a little a joke about how emotional everybody was. And it just hit me what a burden we’ve all been carrying, especially people who are in harm’s way of the president’s rhetoric. When they switched over to our panel, and Anderson [Cooper] asked me how I was doing, I couldn’t see my notes – you see me looking down trying to read them but my eyes are full of tears. So I just started free associating. I just had to speak from the heart.

Did you have a sense of the reaction it would cause?
Listen, when Michelle Obama and LeBron James and Madonna are retweeting you, that’s not anything you expect. You’re just trying to get through that moment. You’re just trying to speak honestly to what you’re feeling.

You talked about the outcome “making it easier to tell your kids that character… telling the truth [and] being a good person matters”. What kind of conversations did you have with your own kids after Biden won?
Well, first of all, they saw it on TV – my boys are 12 and 16 – so they were already a part of the conversation from the moment I spoke it out of my mouth. It’s very hard to raise boys. You want them to be men of good character. And when you have someone like Donald Trump, who – whatever positive things he has tried to represent in terms of American pride – lies all the time, does stuff that is just completely despicable, he’s setting a terrible example for our kids. I could not help feeling that way, despite having worked with his administration on some very important things, and having some affection for a lot of the people in that building.

You worked with the Trump administration on criminal justice reform and got a lot of flak for it. What did you learn?
What I learned is that, even when there are serious battleground issues – attacking Muslims, snatching babies away from their mothers at the border, all the horrific things – as a progressive, I can’t back down. There are still common ground issues that can bring people together. For the people at the very bottom of our society – in prison, or suffering from opioid addiction – neither political party does that much anyway. And so, if you can see a moment where you could get something done to help the people at the very bottom, I felt the responsibility to do it. I worked with the Trump administration on criminal justice reform. We got a bill passed and signed by President Trump, and I was in the Oval Office when he signed it – he handed me one of the pens. That bill has helped people behind bars. One hundred and eighty thousand people in federal prison, none of those people get a chance to vote. They had no say in whether it was going to be Hillary or Bernie or Trump. I didn’t want to abandon them for four years or eight years, just because I didn’t like the majority of the president’s agenda. As a result, I learned that you can get things done. I also have a very different view on the administration than people who just stood back. I saw Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump trying to get something very hard done against the objectives of many in their own party, and came to admire their role and the strength they showed in that fight quite a bit. And it doesn’t mean I agree with them on many other things. But on the issues that I saw them working on, I saw them doing some things that a lot of liberals and progressives didn’t want to give them credit for.

Some people felt you were playing both sides. Do you buy that criticism?
There are people who feel that if you’re a Democrat or Republican, your side is always right and the other side is always wrong. I’m not subscribing to that point of view. I try to look at the issues, the opportunities, the bills and the candidates with more or less fresh eyes. With Jared Kushner I got 99 problems but prisons ain’t one. Jared’s dad went to prison. He understands. And so I’ll fight till the last dog barks. That used to be the way it worked in American politics. It’s only been very recently that, if you say one positive thing about the other side, you are a traitor. If you work with them on one issue, even an issue I spent 25 years of my life on, you are a traitor, and anything else you say can be dismissed. That is a new phenomenon. And I just don’t subscribe to it.

What are your hopes for the next four years?
I worked for Joe Biden in the Obama White House. I know his heart, I also know his skill as a legislative champion. If anybody can bring some healing to the country and get anything done, it’s Joe Biden. He’s going to need a lot of help. And now the shoe is on the other foot. The same liberals that attacked me for reaching out to work with Trump are going to insist that Republicans do what they attack people for doing. They’re going to say: “Why don’t you reach out? Joe Biden’s not that bad. You guys are terrible.” But when the shoe was on the other foot, they were just as partisan and recalcitrant and unwilling to deal with nuance. And so we are in a situation where we go back and forth between big chunks of the American public not accepting the president. Trump, of course, led the big effort against Obama trying to delegitimise his presidency. If anybody gets us out of it, it’s Joe Biden. He is a romantic idealist in the age of cynicism and snark.

What do you make of Donald Trump’s attempts to disrupt the election?
I think what Donald Trump is doing is very dangerous, it is completely reckless and irresponsible. And unsurprising, unfortunately, and frankly ineffective. It’s kind of a clown-car pseudo-coup attempt going on. But it shows you if you had an authoritarian with more discipline, and a better team, how much damage could be done.

What impact do you think the Black Lives Matter protests this year have had on American politics and society?
In January this year, if you had asked the majority of white Americans, even well intentioned white Americans, is anti-black racism a big issue for you, is fixing the police a major issue for you, most of them would have said no. But if you look at the polling data over the course of this year, 20 to 30 million white Americans alone changed their mind. Dr King never had a summer where he picked up 20 to 30 million white Americans. That gives you a sense of the magnitude of the breakthrough. How you change it into laws and sustain it, as Dr King did? That remains to be seen. I don’t think we’ll be able to properly assess what it means for a decade or more.

What are your hopes for 2021?
I’m a strong progressive Democrat – frankly I’m probably too far left for most Democrats on the level of policy – but my prayer for next year is that we enter the Biden era where people on both sides can have strong convictions but put the country first. Have convictions, but put people at the bottom, who need something from America, first, and not be beaten up for it and called traitors and hypocrites for it.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/dec/06/van-jones-cnn-faces-of-2020-joe-biden-romantic-idealist

Later on Sunday, Senator Kelly Loeffler was scheduled to debate her Democratic challenger, the Rev. Raphael Warnock, the pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta.

Mr. Trump traveled to Georgia for a rally on Saturday to mobilize support for Mr. Perdue and Ms. Loeffler in the January runoff. Yet the president mostly used the stage to air his grievances over the election, lashing out at Gov. Brian Kemp and Brad Raffensperger, the Georgia secretary of state.

“You know we won Georgia, just so you understand,” Mr. Trump said in his first rally as a lame duck president, adding, “They cheated and rigged our presidential election, but we’ll still win.”

Mr. Trump lost the state by just under 12,000 votes to President-elect Biden, who won the White House with 306 electoral votes and was the first Democratic presidential candidate to win Georgia since 1992.

Still, Mr. Trump has continued to contend that the outcome is not final. On Saturday, he pushed for Mr. Kemp to call for a special session of the Legislature, during which lawmakers could appoint electors who would override the popular vote and hand Mr. Trump a victory for the state.

But in his CNN appearance on Sunday, Mr. Duncan said he believed that Mr. Kemp would not bow to the president’s demand.

“Calling the General Assembly back in at this point would almost be along the lines of a solution trying to find a problem,” Mr. Duncan said. “We’re certainly not going to move the goal posts at this point in the election.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/06/us/georgia-senate-debate.html

Donald Trump’s personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, has tested positive for Covid-19, the president tweeted on Sunday.

Giuliani, 76 and a former mayor of New York City, has been leading Trump’s attempt to overturn his election defeat by Joe Biden, through lawsuits in battleground states.

Trump did not specify when Giuliani tested positive or if he was experiencing symptoms.

“Rudy Giuliani, by far the greatest mayor in the history of NYC, and who has been working tirelessly exposing the most corrupt election (by far!) in the history of the USA, has tested positive for the China Virus,” Trump tweeted, using a racist term for the coronavirus.

“Get better soon Rudy, we will carry on!!!”

Giuliani has been traveling frequently in the aftermath of the election, and often appears in public without a mask.

Last week, he appeared maskless before state lawmakers in Michigan, to challenge votes in the state. On Thursday, he spoke at the Georgia capitol building in a crowded legislative session, again without a mask.

Trump himself contracted Covid-19 in October, spending three days in hospital near Washington DC.

At least 40 people in the president’s orbit have tested positive since late September, including first lady Melania Trump, her son Barron, Donald Trump Jr, and senior aides and Republican politicians.

Vaccines are on the brink of approval for use but the pandemic has surged in recent months, as Trump has faced criticism for apparently giving up the fight for control.

Johns Hopkins University recorded 213,875 new cases in the US on Saturday. Amid figures worsened by Thanksgiving travel and gatherings whose full impact experts say is not yet apparent, there were 2,254 new deaths, making the full US death toll 280,979 from nearly 14.6m cases.

Trump has repeatedly downplayed the coronavirus and resisted public health guidance meant to prevent the spread of the illness. As Christmas approaches, the White House is hosting a string of holiday parties featuring large crowds indoors. Photos from a party on Tuesday showed people without masks engaging in the festivities.

On Sunday, a member of the White House coronavirus taskforce, Deborah Birx, was questioned about the contradictions between Trump’s actions and comments and public health guidance.

“I hear community members parroting back those situations, parroting back that masks don’t work, parroting back that we should work towards herd immunity, parroting back that gatherings don’t result in super-spreading events,” Birx told NBC’s Meet the Press.

“And I think our job is to constantly say those are myths.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/dec/06/rudy-giuliani-coronavirus-covid-donald-trump

“He took a job a few weeks ago; he’s one of their better ones,” Sterling said on NBC News’ “Meet the Press.” “I was going through the Twitter feed on it and I saw it basically had the young man’s name — it was a very unique name, so they tracked down his family and started harassing them. And it said, ‘His name, you have committed treason. May God have mercy on your soul,’ with a slowly swinging noose. And at that point, I just said, ‘I’m done.’ ”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/brian-kemp-trump-election-results/2020/12/06/4c5db908-37d4-11eb-9276-ae0ca72729be_story.html

Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco this week vowed not to enforce the state’s new coronavirus restrictions, calling Gov. Gavin Newsom’s efforts to contain the pandemic with business closures and stay-at-home orders “flat out ridiculous.”

“The metrics used for closures are unbelievably faulty and are not representative of true numbers and are disastrous for Riverside County,” the sheriff said in a video released Friday.

The Sheriff’s Department posted the video as state officials sounded the alarm on the dwindling number of available ICU beds across the state, announcing that regions with intensive care capacity that drop below 15% Saturday would have to impose another stay-at-home order at 11:59 p.m. Sunday.

Southern California’s capacity was at 12.5% Saturday. By the next afternoon, it was at 10.3%, according to the California Department of Public Health.

State data shows that Riverside County had 55 ICU beds available on Friday. That’s higher than in October, when the region’s available ICU beds dropped all the way to 15. But the number of patients confirmed to have the coronavirus is at the highest it’s been since the pandemic began, according to county records.

A graph from Riverside County shows COVID-19 hospitalization and ICU rates in the region from March to December 2020.

In his video, Bianco accused Newsom of trying to shift attention away from his and other officials’ “do as I say, not as I do attitude,” referring to a dinner attended by the governor and about a dozen others last month.

“The dictatorial attitude toward California residents, while dining and luxury traveling, keeping his business open and sending his kids to in-person private schools is very telling about his attitude toward California residents, his feelings about the virus, and it is extremely hypocritical,” Bianco said.

He added that the Sheriff’s Department is counting on residents to do what they can.

“As has been our position from the beginning of this pandemic, the Sheriff’s Department is asking and expecting Riverside County residents to act responsibly and do what they can to protect themselves and their family from contracting the virus,” Bianco said.

Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes made a similar statement Saturday, asserting that following health orders is “a matter of personal responsibility and not a matter of law enforcement.” He said that deputies will not be dispatched to calls about enforcing compliance to stay-at-home restrictions, or face covering and social gathering rules.

Meanwhile, the sheriffs in San Bernardino and Ventura counties said that they’re relying on voluntary compliance.

L.A. County Sheriff Alex Villanueva also said that his agency will highlight education, and that moving forward “will additionally be conducting targeted enforcement on super-spreader events.” He did not provide further details about what type of events deputies will target.

Source Article from https://ktla.com/news/local-news/riverside-county-sheriff-slams-gov-newsom-vows-not-to-enforce-lockdown-order/

A new stay-at-home order will be imposed on Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley Sunday night, as the coronavirus crisis spirals out of control with a speed that has exceeded health officials’ most dire projections.

Some 33 million Californians will be subject to the new order, representing 84% of the state’s population. The state mandated the restrictions in the Southland and Central Valley as capacity at hospitals’ intensive care units hit dangerously low levels. Five Bay Area counties will also begin lockdown restrictions in the coming days despite not yet reaching the threshold at which such action is mandated by the state.

The rules are less sweeping than California’s pioneering stay-at-home order in the spring, which is credited with slowing the first COVID-19 wave. But the new order will change daily life for many, especially in suburban Southern California counties like Orange and Ventura, which so far have enjoyed more open economies than hard-hit Los Angeles County.

Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley will implement the order Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Restaurants must halt in-person dining and can offer food only for delivery and takeout. Gatherings of people from different households will be prohibited, except for outdoor church services and political demonstrations. Affected communities will be required to close hair and nail salons, playgrounds, zoos, museums, card rooms, aquariums and wineries. Nonessential travel and use of hotels for leisure will be banned, as will overnight, short-term stays at campgrounds. All retail can remain open, but at 20% capacity.

The rules will remain in place for at least three weeks. Los Angeles has been under a modified stay-at-home order since Monday.

The restrictions, which come amid the holiday season, are facing increasing criticism. Some officials were quick to slam Gov. Gavin Newsom for going too far. But new data show that the coronavirus is spreading through communities at alarming rates.

L.A. County has broken single-day case records in four of the last five days. On Saturday, 9,218 coronavirus cases were reported, according to The Times’ independent tally. This exceeded Friday’s record of 8,562 cases, which in turn broke Thursday’s record of 7,713. The numbers mean L.A. County is seeing a more rapid uptick in coronavirus cases than what officials privately forecast last week.

The stay-at-home order — the latest in a series of attempts to slow the spread of the coronavirus and prevent local healthcare systems from becoming overwhelmed — is triggered when a region’s ICU capacity drops below 15%. On Saturday, Southern California’s ICU capacity was 12.5%, and the San Joaquin Valley’s was 8.6%, according to data released by the state.

Officials have said the measures are needed to avoid a crush of COVID-19 patients that could jeopardize hospitals’ ability to care for them and for patients with other conditions. Mortality rates can dramatically increase when ICUs are stretched beyond capacity, and officials have warned that there are limits on the number of doctors, nurses and other healthcare providers who are trained in providing intensive care. Quality of care can fall substantially if hospitals are forced to transfer critically ill patients to parts of the hospital that are not designed for such use.

Health officials in some rural sections of California said conditions in hospitals are increasingly bleak. In San Benito County, the only hospital is “completely full,” Dr. David Ghilarducci, the county’s public health officer, said in a statement. “This is an alarming situation that could get much worse.”

Remote counties are dependent on neighboring areas for care, officials said, meaning that if one or two hospitals become overwhelmed, a domino effect could occur.

“Our mountain communities rely on the region for ICU-level care for COVID and other serious medical conditions, transferring our sickest to hospitals in the San Joaquin Valley,” said Dr. Eric Sergienko, health officer for Mariposa County and acting health officer for Tuolumne County. “These hospitals are stretched to capacity.”

In L.A. County, COVID-19 hospitalizations increased to 2,855 on Friday from 2,769 on Thursday; for comparison, there were about 750 in mid-October. The number will probably continue to rise, as 49,000 people tested positive over the past week, and about 10% of them are expected to require hospital care, Barbara Ferrer, the county health director, said Saturday.

“That translates to close to 5,000 patients, and if even 20% of these patients need care in the ICU, they will require 1,000 staffed ICU beds,” Ferrer said.

Conditions are worsening in suburban Southern California counties, but some are in better shape than Los Angeles County. Some officials in those counties said the state should have tailored a plan that considers local differences.

Officials of Ventura County noted that the Southern California region is home to more than half the state’s population and are urging Newsom “to consider smaller, more targeted regions.”

San Luis Obispo County issued a similar statement, saying its ICU capacity is higher than that of most other counties in the Southern California region.

“We are disappointed to be categorized in the Southern California region and continue to ask state officials to reconsider our regional assignment to better represent the local ICU capacity,” said Dr. Penny Borenstein, San Luis Obispo County’s health officer.

Orange County Supervisor Lisa Bartlett said she supports a regional approach so that counties can assist one another if their hospitals fill up, but the state’s categories are simply too broad.

“Grouping 11 counties in Southern California into one region, particularly with one county that represents over 25% of the state’s population, is problematic,” she said, referring to Los Angeles, the state’s most populous county.

Bartlett noted that Orange County’s ICU capacity is more than 20%, compared with the regional availability of 12.5%. By being forced to shut down or reduce operations, she said, some business sectors, like restaurants and theme parks, are being “unfairly punished” by the new rules.

“Based on our current ICU bed capacity, I think Orange County is in fairly good shape, but that could also change very quickly,” Bartlett said. “Our ICU bed capacity literally dropped 15% in one week. So we have to watch things very carefully.”

Keegan Hicks, owner of the Harbor Grill in Dana Point, took a break from seating customers Saturday night, when the popular restaurant was completely booked.

“We understand why these measures are being taken. We have nothing but concern and solidarity for front-line hospital workers,” Hicks said. “But we believe that outdoor dining — as long as the restaurant is taking the proper protocols — is not responsible for the spread of the coronavirus.”

He said the restaurant reopened in May, and there have been no known coronavirus cases stemming from his customers or his 60 employees.

“We believe complete industry shutdown is outrageous. We will comply, but we hope that our local legislator — and at the state level — will work on a variance for outdoor dining, as long as outdoor dining is being done responsibly by customers and restaurants,” he added.

When Los Angeles County suspended outdoor dining Monday, the move sparked a backlash. A video went viral of an L.A. restaurant owner talking about the devastation the rules were having on her eatery while pointing to a nearby movie shoot, where caterers were serving food to people under outdoor tents.

“I am losing everything.” she said. “Everything I own is being taken away from me.”

Times staff writer Thomas Curwen contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-12-06/california-new-stay-at-home-order

An initial vaccine could be just days away, officials are predicting, with an FDA advisory panel slated to meet this week to review a vaccine produced by Pfizer. But with massive inoculation months away and coronavirus cases and deaths soaring, Slaoui said precautions are still needed. A million new cases were diagnosed in the United States in the first five days of December.

“We have a vaccine. There is light at the end of the tunnel,” he said. “But we will not all have the vaccine in our arms before May or June. So, we need to be very cautious and vigilant.”

Biden, who frequently emphasized mask-wearing during the presidential campaign, announced Thursday that he’ll ask Americans to wear a mask for the first 100 days after his inauguration to help blunt the spread of the virus.

Anthony Fauci, the top government infectious disease expert, said Friday that he’d spoken to Biden about the plan and called it “a good idea.”

On Friday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ratcheted up its mask-wearing guidance. The public health agency for the first time is recommending the people wear masks at all times when they’re not at home.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/12/06/bidens-mask-plan-trumps-vaccine-chief-443231

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-12-06/biggest-obstacle-to-brexit-trade-deal-is-level-playing-field

Donald Trump’s attacks on Republican officials in Georgia and insistence his defeat by Joe Biden must be overturned are disgusting, the Republican lieutenant governor of the southern state said on Sunday.

“It’s not American,” Geoff Duncan told CNN’s State of the Union. “It’s not what democracy is all about. But it’s reality right now.”

The president staged a rally in Valdosta, Georgia on Saturday night. He began his speech, which lasted more than 90 minutes, by falsely claiming he won the state, which in fact he lost by around 12,000 votes in a result certified by Republican secretary of state Brad Raffensperger more than two weeks ago.

“They cheated and they rigged our presidential election, but we will still win it,” Trump falsely insisted. “And they’re going to try and rig this [Senate] election too.”

Two Georgia Republicans face 5 January runoffs which will decide control of the Senate. On Sunday evening, Kelly Loeffler will debate Rev Raphael Warnock, her Democratic challenger. Amid controversy over stock trades made by both Republicans during the Covid-19 pandemic, David Perdue has declined to debate his challenger, Jon Ossoff.

In Valdosta, the president invited Perdue and Loeffler on to the stage. Neither reiterated his baseless claims about election fraud, Perdue coming closest by saying: “We’re going to fight and win those seats and make sure you get a fair and square deal in Georgia.”

As Perdue spoke, the crowd chanted: “Fight for Trump!”

Some suggest Trump’s assault on the presidential election could depress Republican turnout.

“I think the the rally last night was kind of a two-part message,” Duncan told CNN. “The first part was very encouraging to listen to the president champion the conservative strategies of Senators Loeffler and Perdue, and the importance of them being re-elected.

“The second message was concerning to me. I worry that … fanning the flames around misinformation puts us in a negative position with regards to the 5 January runoff. The mountains of misinformation are not helping the process. They’re only hurting it.”

CNN’s Jake Tapper asked Duncan: “At a certain point, does this disgust you?”

“Oh, absolutely it disgusts me,” Duncan said.

In Valdosta, Trump read from a prepared list of nonsensical evidence he said highlighted his victory. This included arguing that by winning Ohio and Florida he had in fact won the entire election, and also that winning an uncontested Republican primary was proof he beat Biden in November.

Trump lost the electoral college 306-232 and trails in the popular vote by more than 7m. His campaign has launched legal challenges in various states. The majority have been rejected or dropped. The campaign filed a new lawsuit in Georgia on Friday.

Trump vented fury at Republican governor Brian Kemp, a one-time ally who he called from the White House on Saturday to demand the Georgia result be overturned.

“Your governor could stop it very easily if he knew what the hell he was doing,” Trump told supporters, adding: “For whatever reason your secretary of state and your governor are afraid of Stacey Abrams.”

Abrams, a staunch voting rights advocate who Kemp beat for governor in 2018, helped drive turnout and secure the state for Biden, the first Democrat to win it since 1992.

On Sunday, Duncan was asked if Kemp would do as Trump asks, and call a special session of the state general assembly to appoint its own electors for Trump, a demand one critic called “shockingly undemocratic”.

“I absolutely believe that to be the case that the governor is not going to call us into a special session,” Duncan said.

In an angry intervention earlier this week, Georgia elections official Gabriel Sterling said of Trump’s attacks on Kemp, Raffensperger and other Republicans: “Someone’s gonna get hurt, someone’s gonna get shot. Someone’s gonna get killed. And it’s not right. It has all gone too far.”

Duncan said “we’ve all all of us … got increased security around us and our families [but] we’re going to continue to do our jobs. Governor Kemp, Brad Raffensperger and myself, all three voted and campaigned for the president, but unfortunately he didn’t win the state of Georgia.”

Duncan sidestepped a question about the wisdom of holding a rally where many attendees did not wear masks, as coronavirus cases surge. But he did call Biden’s request that Americans to wear masks for 100 days “absolutely a great step in the right direction”.

On Saturday, the Washington Post found only 27 of 249 congressional Republicans were willing to acknowledge Biden’s victory. Duncan did so.

“On 20 January Joe Biden’s going to be sworn in as the 46th president and the constitution is still in place,” Duncan said. “This is still America … as the lieutenant governor and as a Georgian I’m proud that we’re able to look up after three recounts and be able to see that this election was fair.”

Raffensperger told ABC’s This Week: “We don’t see anything that would overturn the will of the people here in Georgia.”

It was “sad, but true”, he added, that Trump had lost.

“I wish he would have won. I’m a conservative Republican and I’m disappointed but those are the results.”

In Valdosta, Trump did seem at points to recognise the end is near. With reference to policy on Iran and China, he described “what we would have done in the next four years”. He also said that if he thought he had lost the election, he would be “a very gracious loser”.

“I’d go to Florida,” he said. “I’d take it easy.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/dec/06/trump-republicans-governor-geoff-duncan-republican