Many Californians spent New Year’s Eve in a safe place with immediate family. Dr. Nick Kwan, the assistant medical director of emergency services at Alhambra Hospital in Los Angeles County, spent it with a COVID-19 patient who went into code blue — cardiac or respiratory arrest — five separate times.

Code blue requires the medical staff to summon a quick and intense response to resuscitate the patient.

“It’s mentally, physically and emotionally draining,” said Kwan, who struggled to articulate the toll that a monthlong surge of COVID-19 patients is placing on his and other hospitals across Los Angeles County.

“This is a full-on Category 10. … It’s literally World War III,” he said.

“It’s not the volume of patients,” he said. “It’s the intensity and sickness of the patients. I’ve never thought some of these numbers are compatible with life, with patients coming in sicker than you can imagine.”

Across L.A. County and much of Southern California, hospitals are struggling with an influx of intensely sick COVID-19 patients and a lack of resources, including staff and vital infrastructure, such as oxygen piping.

On Friday, the state summoned the U.S. Army Corps to help six hospitals dealing with severe challenges supplying oxygen to patients who needed it.

Alhambra Hospital was not among those, but it nonetheless was stretched thin by COVID-19 and the emotional toll it placed on all involved.

“I don’t think a lot of people outside are seeing what we are seeing,” Kwan said. “It’s hard until you are in there, until your family and loved ones are in there.”

Since Thanksgiving, the 144-bed hospital that serves as a melting pot of the San Gabriel Valley, many of whose residents are first- and second-generation Latino and Asian immigrants, has seen a steady wave of patients with difficulty breathing.

Kwan said that besides Alhambra, he knows several other hospitals along the 210 Freeway corridor are full and straining under the burdens of the present surge.

The waiting room at Alhambra Hospital is now a COVID ward. Regular beds have been quickly converted to ICU beds. And ambulances wait outside with arriving patients because “physically we can’t accommodate the patient” at that time, Kwan said. “It’s across the board. The virus doesn’t care who you are. You can be sick, healthy, young, old.”

Younger patients have died, and a patient in her 90s walked out of the hospital with an oxygen tank.

“It’s so unpredictable with each case,” he added.

“On the 29th and 30th of November, we started seeing the surge, and it’s been nonstop since then,” Kwan said. “It’s easy to say it is holiday gatherings — or maybe the colder weather. … Christmas and New Year’s scares me, and I think the worst is yet to come.”

A nurse sponsored by the state recently arrived to help combat the patient load, and it was a necessary boost to morale, Kwan said. Still, staff fear the deluge of December is a harbinger of a long, deadly winter.

“For the next month, I don’t see the end. It will keep piling up, and we have got to be ready.”

It was a similar picture in Santa Clara County, where hospitals remained stretched to the limit, with 50 to 60 patients stuck in emergency rooms each day waiting for a hospital bed.

Often, the only way a patient can be moved into an ICU bed is because a COVID-19 patient has died, according to Dr. Marco Randazzo, an emergency room physician at O’Connor Hospital in San Jose and St. Louise Regional Hospital in Gilroy.

“This has been the state of the pandemic for the last several weeks, and it is showing no signs of letting up,” said Dr. Ahmad Kamal, director of health preparedness for Santa Clara County. The daily coronavirus case rate there is more than 10 times as much as it was on Oct. 30. “What we are seeing now is not normal.”

At Alhambra Hospital, the virus struck staff directly: One emergency room physician at the hospital died of COVID-19, and a nurse who contracted the virus was out for months, Kwan said.

“Everyone is exhausted. Our CEO is exhausted. Our entire medical staff is exhausted,” Kwan said.

Kwan and other staffers have had to become accustomed to being the last person a patient sees before dying, with families kept away from loved ones.

“You cry with the patients’ family. It’s just sad,” he said. “I feel like this virus attacks all our humanity.”

Behind the fatigue and strain on resources is the sheer fact that COVID-19 patients stay longer in the hospital than the average patient and require more resources.

There are ongoing concerns about whether there will be sufficient ventilators, and oxygen tanks have occasionally run low. But a major concern is simply space: “It doesn’t matter if it is Cedars, USC or Alhambra — the hospital is only so big.”

Morgue space, he said, is also finite — and an ongoing worry.

“When is the last time I thought we are going to run out of morgue space? I never thought this would be a concern of mine.”

Many patients coming in for routine ailments — such as family members who brought their baby to the ER on New Year’s Eve — are treated in the parking lot, sometimes even in their vehicles.

Some hospitals don’t have the infrastructure to supply all the oxygen needed by COVID-19 patients gasping for breath. Federal engineers are coming to assist.

More Coverage

Kwan said he knows the toll that the pandemic is taking: businesses closing, family and friends limiting social gatherings. He hasn’t seen his mom since February and his dad since March. His children waited until five days after Christmas to open gifts and celebrate with their father.

“I would tell people out there that this is serious. Help us fight this war,” he said. “It’s a group effort — we cannot fix this by ourselves. It’s really on public awareness and a collective effort to conquer this.”

Kamal, the physician in Santa Clara County, pleaded with the public to not give up with wearing masks, staying socially distant and canceling gatherings. There are indications in the Bay Area and elsewhere those measures have helped stem the spread.

“We know,” he said, “that our decisions and our actions drive the curve of this pandemic.”

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-01-02/coronavirus-alhambra-doctor-beset-by-intensely-sick-patients

SAN FRANCISCO – The San Francisco home of Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, was vandalized on New Year’s Day.

Responding officers found graffiti painted on her garage door and a severed pig’s head left in the driveway.

Police say the graffiti referenced $2,000 COVID relief payments and rent cancellations.

The messages were covered with garbage bags, and the pig’s head was removed.

Police are still investigating the vandalism.

Read more

National News

Source Article from https://www.clickondetroit.com/news/local/2021/01/02/nancy-pelosis-san-francisco-home-vandalized-with-graffiti-pigs-head/

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-01-02/india-grants-emergency-approval-to-astra-oxford-covid-19-vaccine



AUSTIN (KXAN) — Republican Texas Senator Ted Cruz has joined the fight to block President-elect Joe Biden’s confirmation as winner of the 2020 Presidential Election.




Cruz made the announcement via Twitter on Saturday morning, linking to a joint statement along with several other Republican senators, including Ron Johnson, of Wisconsin, Tommy Tuberville, of Alabama, and Marsha Blackburn, of Tennessee.




The move comes as Pres. Trump, his administration and supporters continue pushing still unproven claims of widespread voter fraud. Last month, electors in all states certified their votes for Joe Biden.






The senators demand that Congress immediately appoint an Electoral Commission to pursue a full investigation and an emergency 10-day audit of election numbers in disputed states.




In part, the letter reads: “… we intend to vote on January 6 to reject the electors from disputed states as not ‘regularly given’ and ‘lawfully certified’ (the statutory requisite), unless and until that emergency 10-day audit is completed.




The senators say they understand “most if not all” Democrats and even some Republicans will vote otherwise but say they believe “election integrity” should be paramount.




The continued claims of voter fraud come even as Pres. Trump’s now-former Attorney General and close ally William Barr declared the U.S. Justice Department uncovered no evidence of widespread voter fraud that would have effected the election outcome.






Additionally, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency‘s review of elections operations and results concluded the election was the “most secure in American history.”




The agency continued, saying: There is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes or was in any way compromised.”

Source Article from https://fox8.com/news/texas-sen-ted-cruz-announces-hell-oppose-certification-of-biden-victory-demands-emergency-audit/

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell called the upcoming electoral vote certification “the most consequential vote” on a call with senators this week, according to Senator Mitt Romney, who was on the call. Congress will convene on January 6 to count each state’s electoral votes and reaffirm President-elect Joe Biden’s victory. 

The tally offers Republican lawmakers who have yet to acknowledge President-elect Joe Biden’s victory one last-ditch attempt to overturn the results of the presidential election. Republican Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri announced Wednesday he intends to object to the certification. 

Asked his interpretation of McConnell’s comments, Romney told reporters Friday: “I see that as a statement that he believes it’s a — it’s a referendum on our democracy.”

The joint session of Congress is required by law to ratify presidential results, but also allows “members to object to the returns from any individual state as they are announced,” according to the Congressional Research Service (CRS). Lawmakers may object to the results — even if it’s not their home state — leaving the door open for representatives who support Mr. Trump’s unproven claims of widespread election fraud to interrupt the typically ceremonial process. 

Hawley is the only Republican senator to commit to challenging the electoral votes, though several conservative House members have vowed to do so. President Trump has suggested Congress should intervene, in far-flung hope they will deliver him a second term after previous efforts to challenge the election results failed.

The Missouri Republican said in a statement that he “cannot vote to certify the electoral college results on January 6 without raising the fact that some states, particularly Pennsylvania, failed to follow their own state election laws.” He added that he “cannot vote to certify without pointing out the unprecedented effort of mega corporations, including Facebook and Twitter, to interfere in this election, in support of Joe Biden.”

“At the very least, Congress should investigate allegations of voter fraud and adopt measures to secure the integrity of our elections. But Congress has so far failed to act,” Hawley said.

Objections must be signed by both a member of the House and Senate. If that is achieved, the two houses separate to debate and vote to accept or reject the objection. The House, however, is controlled by Democrats, albeit by a slimmer margin, so even if the GOP-controlled Senate were to reject a state, there’s essentially no chance that the House would. 

McConnell asked Republican senators last month not to object when the joint session convenes. Other GOP senators, including those close to Mr. Trump, have suggested such a move would be fruitless.

Although Hawley’s effort is unlikely to succeed, Romney called it “dangerous for democracy here and abroad,” as it “continues to spread the false rumor that somehow the election was stolen.”

“Look, I lost in 2012, I know what it’s like to lose,” said Romney, who ran for president in 2012. “And there were people that said there are irregularities. I have people today who say ‘hey you know what you really won’ — but I didn’t, I lost fair and square. Of course there were irregularities there always are, but spreading this kind of rumor about our election system not working is dangerous for democracy here and abroad.”

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/mitch-mcconnell-electoral-college-vote-most-consequential-mitt-romney/

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Source Article from https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2021/01/trump-georgia-runoffs-illegal-invalid-turnout.html

A health worker gets ready to take samples from people to test for COVID-19 as another registers them at a marketplace last month in New Delhi.

Manish Swarup/AP


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Manish Swarup/AP

A health worker gets ready to take samples from people to test for COVID-19 as another registers them at a marketplace last month in New Delhi.

Manish Swarup/AP

India’s drug regulators gave the country a gift on New Year’s Day: a vaccine against the coronavirus.

An Indian minister confirmed reports that an expert panel had authorized the AstraZeneca vaccine for emergency use in India on Friday, making it the first coronavirus vaccine to be authorized in India.

“Last year began with corona, but this year is beginning with a vaccine,” Information and Broadcasting Minister Prakash Javadekar told reporters Saturday.

The vaccine is awaiting a formal response from the Drugs Controller General of India, which is expected soon.

The authorization was long-awaited in India, which has the second-largest infection load in the world after the United States. India has more than 10 million reported coronavirus infections and nearly 150,000 fatalities, according to Johns Hopkins University — the third-highest after the U.S. and Brazil.

India’s announcement comes days after the United Kingdom gave the vaccine the go-ahead.

India plans to start inoculating its population of nearly 1.4 billion in January. Health care and front-line workers, including police, garbage collectors and funeral home workers, will get the vaccine in the first phase of the campaign. So will people above 50 years of age and those with pre-existing conditions that put them at high risk for serious complications from the disease.

India’s health minister says the vaccine will be provided free of cost to the 30 million health care and front-line workers who will receive it in the first phase.

The government is aiming to administer two doses of the vaccine to 300 million people by summer. Inoculation is voluntary.

The Indian government says the mass-vaccination program will be run similarly to the country’s mammoth elections. Electoral rolls, which have demographic information, will be used to identify elderly people who need the vaccine. Vaccination sites will be structured like polling booths with officers responsible for verifying identification documents and managing crowds.

On Saturday, India conducted mock vaccinations at more than 250 sites across the country. The dry run involved testing the entire process: from vaccine transportation and storage to checking how the jabs will be administered to monitoring any adverse effects. Authorities are also testing an online platform for monitoring vaccine delivery.

The Serum Institute of India, the world’s largest vaccine manufacturer by volume, had begun mass-producing the AstraZeneca vaccine even before trials commenced. Serum CEO Adar Poonawalla told NPR last summer that 50% of what his company produces will go to India.

The company has reportedly stockpiled 75 million doses of the vaccine and will have 100 million doses by the first week of January. It is aiming to produce 100 million doses a month in 2021.

Indian regulators are also evaluating Pfizer’s vaccine and another vaccine developed by the Indian company Bharat Biotech for emergency-use authorization. Eight other coronavirus vaccines, including the Russian Sputnik V vaccine and a few other Indian-made vaccines, are in different stages of development in India.

The AstraZeneca shot has distinct advantages over other vaccines that have been authorized for use by governments around the world. It is likely to be much cheaper than the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines.

And it requires only normal refrigeration, unlike the Pfizer vaccine, which needs to be kept at a temperature lower than that in the winter in Antarctica. That can be a challenge, especially in developing countries with limited access to special refrigeration equipment.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2021/01/02/952313758/india-approves-astrazeneca-covid-19-vaccine-for-emergency-use

The Senate on Friday overrode President Trump’s veto of the National Defense Authorization Act, the $740 billion defense policy bill. This veto, in the waning days of Mr. Trump’s presidency, marked the first time Congress has voted to override him. 

The final vote tally was 81 to 13, with a two-thirds vote required to overturn the veto. The bill had previously passed in the Senate 84-13 earlier this month, and the House has already voted to override Mr. Trump’s veto.

Mr. Trump tweeted after the vote that Senate Republicans had “missed a big opportunity to get rid of Section 230,” one of the portions of the bill he had objected to. Mr. Trump wanted to repeal the social media liability shield, but several members of Congress, including some Republicans, argued that the repeal of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act was not relevant to national security. 

Mr. Trump also vetoed the NDAA because of a provision on renaming bases honoring Confederate officials.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has tied a vote on repealing Section 230 to a bill which would increase direct payments to Americans from $600 to $2,000. McConnell has repeatedly expressed his opposition to increasing direct payments, which is supported by Mr. Trump and some Republicans, and so tied it to a repeal of Section 230 knowing that adding a controversial rider would prevent its passage.

Mr. Trump has vetoed nine bills during his presidency, but none have been overridden. If successful, this will be the first time one of his vetoes will be overturned. The NDAA is a critical defense bill that has passed every year for decades, so overriding the veto will not necessarily be a controversial vote for Republicans.

Congressional Republicans are mostly still in lockstep with the president, with some refusing to acknowledge President-elect Joe Biden’s victory. Several House Republicans and at least one senator, GOP Senator Josh Hawley, are expected to challenge the results of the election when Congress convenes to tally Electoral College votes on January 6.

A few Republicans have criticized their colleagues for being willing to undermine the electoral process and challenge a duly elected president.

“Let’s be clear what is happening here: We have a bunch of ambitious politicians who think there’s a quick way to tap into the president’s populist base without doing any real, long-term damage,” Republican Senator Ben Sasse wrote in a post on Facebook on Thursday. “But they’re wrong — and this issue is bigger than anyone’s personal ambitions. Adults don’t point a loaded gun at the heart of legitimate self-government.”

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/senate-overrides-trump-veto-defense-bill/

A YouTube video of Arizona Republican Party chair Kelli Ward is being used to undermine a lawsuit she filed with Texas Republican Representative Louie Gohmert and 11 other Republicans in the state to overturn the election in favor of President Donald Trump.

The lawsuit, filed on December 27, seeks to challenge the 1887 Electoral Count Act, a law that requires Vice President Mike Pence to oversee a congressional approval of the Electoral College’s final votes for president. The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District, argues that the law violates the 12th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which, they say, gives Pence the right to singlehandedly throw out any votes that were fraudulently obtained, no matter whether the majority of Congress agrees.

However, Timothy Dowling, a Texas attorney seeking to intervene in the case, has directed the court’s judge, Trump-appointee Jeremy Daniel Kernodle, to consider throwing out the case based on Ward’s December 29 YouTube video in which she calls the case “a friendly lawsuit” against Pence.

Dowling alleged that the lawsuit’s filers and Pence actually have the same goal: ensuring that Trump gets a second term.

A YouTube video of Arizona Republican Party chairman Kelli Ward is being used to undercut an election lawsuit she’s listed as a plaintiff to. In this February 22, 2018 photo, Ward attends the 2018 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland.
Alex Wong/Getty

“We can’t and couldn’t allow fraudulently certified electors to be sent to Washington DC and be counted in a presidential election,” Ward said in the video, which is addressed to members of the Arizona Republican Party.

“The 12th Amendment states that the Vice President and solely the vice president has the duty to count, legally, and legitimately cast electoral votes,” Ward said. “He could decide to look at both slates that have been sent in from the seven contested states. He could say, ‘None of those electoral votes count.’ It’s all on the shoulders of Vice President Mike Pence and we have this lawsuit to assist him in being able to do his job and to do it.”

In a brief filed Thursday, reported on by The Hill, Dowling wrote, “Ms. Ward’s video is a party admission of what is obvious: There is no real case or controversy here. All plaintiffs and the lone defendant wish to achieve the same result: have Donald Trump remain as the President of the United States after January 20, 2021.”

“This lawsuit is a phony dispute,” Dowling continued, “and this court should decline plaintiffs’ invitation to swim in these political waters where it does not have proper subject matter jurisdiction over this bogus alleged controversy.”

Pence himself has asked for the case to be thrown out on technical grounds stating, “plaintiffs have sued the wrong defendant.”

The congressional approval, which occurs on January 6, is usually a formality that officially certifies the election’s winner before the inauguration. However, this year, some congressional Republicans have promised to use the 1887 law to challenge the Electoral College’s final tally.

The Electoral Count Act would require the Senate and the House to each hold a two-hour debate before voting on whether to approve electoral vote counts of states with disputed outcomes. Presumably, these disputed states would be seven blue states where Trump, his campaign lawyers and Republican politicians have filed lawsuits alleging widespread election fraud.

As of January 1, all but one of nearly 60 lawsuits alleging such voter fraud have been dismissed or withdrawn from courts due to lack of evidence. President-elect Joe Biden won the November election by over 7 million votes and 74 electoral votes.

It’s unlikely that the Republican challenge to the election’s outcome will overturn it, as a successful challenge would require majorities in both congressional chambers to vote in favor.

Newsweek contacted the Arizona Republican Party for comment.

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/arizona-gop-chairs-online-remarks-could-hasten-demise-election-lawsuit-against-pence-1558462

ATLANTA — President Trump took to Twitter Friday evening to make the unfounded assertion that Georgia’s two Senate races are “illegal and invalid,” an argument that could complicate his efforts to convince his supporters to turn out for Republican candidates in the two runoff races that will determine which party controls the Senate.

The president is set to hold a rally in Dalton, Ga., on Monday, the day before Election Day, and Georgia Republicans are hoping he will focus his comments on how crucial it is for Republicans to vote in large numbers for Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, the state’s two incumbent Republican senators.

But Mr. Trump has continued to make the false claim that Georgia’s election system was rigged against him in the Nov. 3 general election. Some Republican leaders are afraid that his supporters will take the president’s argument seriously, and decide that voting in a “corrupt” system is not worth their time, a development that could hand the election to the Democrats.

Some strategists and political science experts in the state have said Mr. Trump’s assault on Georgia’s voting system may be at least partly responsible for the relatively light Republican turnout in the conservative strongholds of northwest Georgia, where Dalton is, in the early voting period that ended Thursday.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/01/us/politics/trump-georgia-senate.html

A federal judge on Friday dismissed a bid by Rep. Louie GohmertLouis (Louie) Buller GohmertPence asks judge to toss GOP lawmaker’s bid to overturn election results Wall Street Journal editorial board knocks Trump’s ’embarrassing Electoral College hustle’ Here are the Republicans planning to challenge the Electoral College results MORE (Texas) and other Republicans that sought to endow Vice President Pence with the legal authority to effectively overturn President-elect Joe BidenJoe BidenBidens honor frontline workers in NYE address: ‘We owe them, we owe them, we owe them’ Trump hotel in DC raises room rates for Biden inauguration Video shows long lines on last day of early voting in Georgia MORE’s electoral win.

In his ruling, Texas-based U.S. District Judge Jeremy Kernodle, a Trump appointee, said the GOP plaintiffs lacked standing. The judge found that Gohmert suffered no legally recognizable injury.

The other plaintiffs, a group of Arizona Republicans who self-identify as an alternate “slate” of pro-Trump electors, could not link their supposed injury to Pence, he reasoned.

“Because neither Congressman Gohmert nor the nominee-electors have standing here, the court is without subject matter jurisdiction to address” their lawsuit, Kernodle wrote in his ruling. “The court therefore dismisses the case without prejudice.”

In an appearance on conservative media outlet Newsmax Friday evening, Gohmert said that his legal team is planning to appeal the decision to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, condemning the district court’s ruling that he lacks a legal right to sue in the case.

“I believe in using the court system for the same reason they were created … to resolve disputes,” Gohmert said.

“I still believe in that system,” he said, adding that he hoped once lawmakers were presented with evidence on allegations of voter fraud, “people will come to the right conclusion.”

“If not, it will mean the end of our republic,” he asserted.

Attorneys for Gohmert and his co-plaintiffs, which included Kelli Ward, the chairwoman of the Arizona GOP, did not respond to a request for further comment.

The suit’s dismissal had been expected: The consensus among election law experts was that the judge would toss the case without reaching the core substantive claims alleged by the Republican plaintiffs.

The far-fetched legal effort sought to permit Pence to sidestep federal election law when he presides over a joint session of Congress on Wednesday. Rather than carry out his statutory duty to finalize Biden’s win, Pence would be free to effectively grant himself and President TrumpDonald TrumpTrump hotel in DC raises room rates for Biden inauguration GOP lawmaker criticizes Trump, colleagues for ‘trying to discredit’ the election Video shows long lines on last day of early voting in Georgia MORE a second term.

The vice president’s role in presiding over the Jan. 6 meeting is usually a ceremonial one governed by an 1887 federal law known as the Electoral Count Act. But the Republican lawsuit asked the judge to invalidate the law, arguing that it places an unconstitutional constraint on the vice president’s authority to choose among competing claims of victory when state-level election results are disputed.

The lawsuit was an outgrowth of GOP efforts in several key battleground states to overturn Biden’s win based on the unsubstantiated theory that his victory was tainted by widespread fraud. Republicans in several key swing states have disputed Biden’s win and offered alternate “slates” of pro-Trump electors to be counted Wednesday, but experts say these efforts carry no legal weight.

Pence, for his part, told the court Thursday that he was not a proper defendant to the suit. As vice president, he said, his legal interests are not “sufficiently adverse to plaintiffs” to clear the constitutional requirement that there be a “case or controversy” before a court weighs in.

“The Vice President—the only defendant in this case—is ironically the very person whose power they seek to promote,” wrote a Department of Justice attorney representing Pence. “A suit to establish that the Vice President has discretion over the count, filed against the Vice President, is a walking legal contradiction.”

—Celine Castronuovo contributed. Updated at 10:34 p.m.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/532344-judge-dismisses-gohmerts-election-suit-against-pence

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-01-01/romney-assails-u-s-failure-to-plan-for-covid-vaccine-roll-out

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Source Article from https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2021/01/minneapolis-police-bodycam-shooting-stop-dolal-idd.html

On Friday, Trump called the Republican-controlled Senate “pathetic” for failing to deliver on the $2,000 stimulus checks and other demands he wanted to pair with it after the Senate voted to override his veto of the $741 billion defense policy bill.

“Now they want to give people ravaged by the China Virus $600, rather than the $2000 which they so desperately need,” Trump tweeted, referring to Senate Republicans. ”Not fair, or smart!”

Indeed, Democratic challengers Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff have been jumping all over the president’s demand to boost the pandemic relief payments by $1,400. It’s a major closing argument for them — especially on the heels of Senate Republicans blocking a stand-alone bill to increase the value of the checks.

“If David Perdue were serious about supporting $2,000 checks for the people, he would be putting maximum pressure on Mitch McConnell to pass that legislation right now,” Ossoff told reporters Thursday after an early morning New Year’s Eve campaign rally.

Campaigning an hour south of Atlanta on Friday, Warnock echoed Trump’s criticisms of GOP leaders, calling it “shameful.”

“We should have passed relief months ago. This is what happens when the politics becomes about the politicians,” Warnock said. “This is a lot of maneuvering between politicians. And they live a kind of privilege that allows them to do that.”

Democrats believe their best shot at securing more coronavirus aid money with Biden in the White House is contingent upon the party controlling the Senate, as GOP leaders have yet to commit to another round of funds. Ossoff and Warnock have been laser-focused on coronavirus relief measures, and Trump’s plea — coupled with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s resistance to the idea — has put Loeffler and Perdue in a tough spot.

Senate Democrats kept the chamber in session through New Year’s Day as they delayed an effort to override Trump’s veto of the annual defense bill, giving them a platform just days before the runoff to highlight the issue — as well as McConnell’s opposition to inflating the checks.

“[Americans] will know that Leader McConnell and the Republican majority have prevented them from getting the checks, plain and simple,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said Friday.

Some Republicans are worried that these attacks are breaking through. A GOP operative who was granted anonymity to candidly assess the matter said some in the GOP “haven’t noticed that every single ad the Democrats are running is about Republicans opposing direct checks.”

Loeffler and Perdue said earlier this week they supported the $2,000 payment increase, after Trump pushed for it and Democrats used it as a wedge isue in the two races. They also blamed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for refusing Republicans’ offers on coronavirus relief measures in the run-up to the presidential election.

Other Republicans don’t think the issue is harming the campaigns, especially since Trump is not attacking Loeffler and Perdue directly. In contrast, Trump on Friday called on South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem to mount a primary challenge against Sen. John Thune, the No. 2 Senate Republican. And with 3 million votes already cast in the state’s early voting period, there’s little that can be done in this late stage to persuade voters, Republicans say, instead focusing on get out the vote events in the closing days. Loeffler spoke with Trump earlier Friday to reiterate support for the checks, according to a person familiar with the discussion.

Some Republicans argue the issue just won’t resonate at this point, with millions of early votes cast and more than $500 million spent defining the race. Liam Donovan, a Republican strategist who has been tracking the relief legislation, said the checks would be a “trendy culprit” for blame if Republicans go down on Tuesday, but doubted it actually had much impact this late in the game.

“Whatever the downside risk, the idea that this race would be a slam dunk for the GOP if they bit the half-trillion dollar bullet and passed bigger checks is highly dubious,” Donovan said. “Democrats have done an impressive job getting out their vote. Republicans now have to do the same, and that won’t be driven by the size of the stimulus.”

Despite joining calls from the president and Democrats to increase the amount of direct payments, neither Loeffler nor Perdue have called for a standalone vote on the measures, as Senate Democrats have been seeking back in Washington. Instead, the senators are pairing their support with Trump’s unrelated demands for voter fraud investigations and the repeal of a legal shield for social media companies.

“I’m with the president all the way on all three of those,” Perdue said at a campaign event earlier this week. Even if the measure were to have come up for a last-minute vote, however, he would not be able to support it because he is in quarantine after coming into close contact with someone who tested positive for Covid-19.

Loeffler, in an interview Thursday, said she supports the checks, but did not say it should receive a standalone vote in the chamber. She repeated McConnell’s objections to the legislation as giving money to higher earners who didn’t need it.

“Of course I support these checks,” Loeffler said. “And [Pelosi] recently increased the income levels though, for example. What we don’t need to do is to be bailing out her blue state millionaires.”

Republicans believed they blunted Ossoff and Warnock’s criticisms over their Covid-19 measures after Trump signed the $900 billion coronavirus relief measure on Sunday, which was featured in Perdue’s and Loeffler’s campaign ads before it even received his signature. The campaigns were relieved when Trump ultimately signed the bill after initially suggesting he might veto it because he thought the value of the stimulus checks, $600, was too low.

Privately, some Republicans say they want Trump to cut it out, believing his broadsides will hurt Loeffler and Perdue as the party clings to the Senate majority. But they aren’t saying so publicly.

“The president’s continued broadside against Senate Republicans while the majority hangs in the balance is one the most unhelpful things he has done during his presidency,” said a GOP strategist.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/01/trump-republican-attacks-georgia-453381

New York City dropped the ball again on New Year’s Eve, but perhaps not as much as its mayor, Bill de Blasio did.

Critics are laying into the Big Apple’s leader for dancing on national television while the rest of the city was told to stay inside and socially distance during the coronavirus pandemic.

Against the backdrop of a mostly empty Times Square, de Blasio and his wife, Chirlane McCray, danced on stage together at the famous landmark. Typically, it is packed with people doing the same on New Year’s Eve.

“The View” co-host Meghan McCain tweeted: “You’ve always been basically the worst political in modern history – but shutting down the NYC but having your own private party in Times Square is really *chefs kiss* the most tone deaf thing I may have ever seen a Mayor do. Everyone hates you DeBlasio.”

ANDY COHEN BLASTS NYC MAYOR BILL DE BLASIO DURING NEW YEAR’S EVE COVERAGE: ‘GET IT TOGETHER’

Television personality Andy Cohen, who was co-hosting a New Year’s Eve program on CNN with Anderson Cooper, ripped into de Blasio on television.

Cooper drank a shot, then started gagging, apparently disgusted by the taste.

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“That’s how I felt when I saw Mayor De Blasio dancing just now,” Cohen said. “I just don’t need to see that at the beginning of 2021.”

Cohen then became visibly angry, extending his arms and yelling: “Do something with this city! Honestly, get it together!”

A rep for de Blasio said the incident is, “not the first time I’ve heard a drunk person complain about someone’s dance moves.”

Fox News’ Nate Day contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/de-blasio-dancing-times-square

Daily cases averaged more than 178,000 and daily deaths 2,280 over the past week despite holiday data disruptions, according to the COVID Tracking Project. More than 125,000 people are hospitalized with the disease.

Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) on Friday said that the federal government must step up its vaccination planning and administration efforts. The effort to date “is woefully behind,” he said, calling on the Trump administration to add vaccination sites at schools across the country. So far the federal government is leaning on retail pharmacies and hospitals to administer the bulk of Covid-19 shots.

“That comprehensive vaccination plans have not been developed at the federal level and sent to the states as models is as incomprehensible as it is inexcusable,” Romney said.

As of Dec. 30, states had received 12.4 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna Covid-19 vaccine. But only 2.8 million people have gotten the first of a series of two shots of either vaccine, according to CDC data.

While the data is likely lagging behind actual numbers of vaccinations, federal officials have acknowledged the country failed to accomplish the Trump administration’s year-end goal of getting 20 million shots into arms.

Former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, who sits on the board of Pfizer, has repeatedly called on the government to rapidly deploy all available doses of Covid-19 vaccines instead of holding back half to ensure second doses are available for those who received an initial dose.

Earlier this week, a new Covid-19 variant first detected in the United Kingdom that appears more transmissible — but not more deadly — was discovered in California, Colorado and Florida.

“I think we need a sense of urgency about this,” Gottlieb told CNBC’s Closing Bell Thursday. “And the new variant I think adds to that risk. Because if we don’t get control of this epidemic wave more quickly — and the vaccine is a tool to do that — it creates more opportunity for this new variant to start spreading more widely.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/01/us-coronavirus-cases-20-million-453275

While clinical trials tested the efficacy of second doses delivered three or four weeks after the first, British officials said they would allow a gap of up to 12 weeks. Such delays have not been rigorously tested in trials. The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, for instance, was shown to be 95 percent effective at preventing Covid-19 when administered as two doses, three weeks apart.

Straying from this regimen “is like going into the Wild West,” said Dr. Phyllis Tien, an infectious disease physician at the University of California, San Francisco. “It needs to be data driven if they’re going to make a change.”

Widening the gap between vaccine doses could risk blunting the benefits of the second shot, which is intended to boost the body’s defenses against the coronavirus, increasing the strength and durability of the immune response. In the interim, the protective effects of the first shot could also wane faster than anticipated.

“We don’t really know what happens when you only have one dose after, like, a month,” said Natalie Dean, a biostatistician at the University of Florida. “It’s just not the way it was tested.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/01/world/dr-fauci-advises-against-the-british-approach-of-delaying-a-second-dose-of-vaccine.html