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Daily Archives: May 8, 2020
One of Trumps personal valets tests positive for Covid-19 – The Guardian
Posted: May 8, 2020 at 11:07 am
A member of the US military who works at the White House, reportedly as one of Donald Trumps personal valets, has tested positive for coronavirus.
We were recently notified by the White House medical unit that a member of the United States military, who works on the White House campus, has tested positive for coronavirus, the deputy White House press secretary, Hogan Gidley, said in the statement.
The president and the vice-president have since tested negative for the virus and they remain in great health.
According to a report from CNN, the valet is a member of the US navy and started exhibiting symptoms on Wednesday morning. The person tested positive on Wednesday, the White House said.
This is the second individual confirmed to have tested positive for Covid-19 while working at the White House. A staffer in vice-president Mike Pences office tested positive for the virus in March. Several people present at Mar-a-Lago, Trumps private Florida club, were also diagnosed with Covid-19 in early March.
The news of the new case at the White House comes as the US begins to reopen its economy, despite urgent warnings from health experts that the move could prove to be a death sentence for many Americans.
Trump has praised governors of states that have started to loosen restrictions on social distancing and business activity, even though he has admitted that people will suffer as a result. Will some people be affected badly? Yes, Trump said on Tuesday. But we have to get our country open, and we have to get it open soon.
Public health experts have pointed out that Covid-19 infections and deaths are mounting dangerously in much of the US.
New York has drawn attention as a global hotspot for the virus but has now flattened its rate of infections, whereas large parts of the country are still to reach their own peak. When New York is discounted, the US is still on an upward trajectory of new infections.
The White House instituted safety protocols nearly two months ago, including temperature checks. Last month it began administering rapid Covid-19 tests to all those in close proximity to the president, with staffers being tested about once a week.
Several valets cater to the president and his guests at the White House, both in the West Wing and in the White House residence.
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One of Trumps personal valets tests positive for Covid-19 - The Guardian
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ICUs Transformed To Care For COVID-19 Patients : Shots – Health News – NPR
Posted: at 11:07 am
Physical and occupational therapists carry bags of personal protective equipment on their way to the room of a COVID-19 patient in a Stamford Hospital intensive care unit in Stamford, Conn., on April 24. This "prone team" turns COVID-19 patients onto their stomachs to help them breathe. John Moore/Getty Images hide caption
Physical and occupational therapists carry bags of personal protective equipment on their way to the room of a COVID-19 patient in a Stamford Hospital intensive care unit in Stamford, Conn., on April 24. This "prone team" turns COVID-19 patients onto their stomachs to help them breathe.
Intensive care teams inside hospitals are rapidly altering the way they care for patients with COVID-19.
The changes range from new protective gear to new treatment protocols aimed at preventing deadly blood clots.
"Things are moving so fast within this pandemic, it's hard to keep up" says Dr. Angela Hewlett, an infectious diseases physician at University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha and medical director of the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit. To stay current, she says, ICUs are updating their practices "on an hourly basis."
"We are learning at light speed about the disease," says Dr. Craig Coopersmith , interim director of the critical care center at Emory University. "Things that previously might have taken us years to learn, we're learning in a week or two. Things that might have taken us a month to learn beforehand, we're learning in a day or two."
The most obvious changes involve measures to protect ICU doctors, nurses and staff from the virus.
"There is a true and real probability of infection," says Dr. Tiffany Osborn a critical care specialist at Washington University School of Medicine and Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis. "You have to think about everything you touch as if it burned."
So ICUs are adapting measures used at special biocontainment units like the one at the University of Nebraska. These units were designed to care for patients affected by bioterrorism or infected with particularly hazardous communicable diseases like SARS and Ebola.
The Nebraska biocontainment unit "received several patients early on in the pandemic who were medically evacuated from the Diamond Princess cruise ship," Hewlett says. But it didn't have enough beds for the large numbers of local patients who began arriving at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.
So the nurses, respiratory therapists and physicians from the biocontainment team have "fanned out and are now working within those COVID units to make sure that all of our principles and protocols are followed there as well," Hewlett says.
Those protocols involve measures like monitoring ICU staff when they remove their protective gear to make sure the virus isn't transmitted, and placing infected patients in negative pressure rooms, which draw air inward, when possible to prevent the virus from escaping.
One of the riskiest ICU procedures is inserting a breathing tube in a COVID-19 patient's airway, which creates a direct path for virus to escape from a patient's lungs. "If you're intubating a patient, that's a much higher risk than, say, going in and doing routine patient care," Hewlett says.
So ICU teams are being advised to add several layers of protection beyond a surgical mask.
Extra personal protective equipment may include an N95 respirator, goggles, a full face shield, a head hood, an impermeable isolation gown and double gloves.
In many ICUs, teams are also placing a clear plastic box or sheet over the patient's head and upper body before inserting the tube. And as a final safety measure, the doctor may guide the tube using a video camera rather than looking directly down a patient's airway.
"It usually takes 30 minutes or so in order to get all of that equipment together, to get all of the right people there," says Dr. Kira Newman, a senior resident physician at UW Medical Center in Seattle. "and that would be a particularly fast intubation."
But most changes in the ICU are in response to an ongoing flood of new information about how COVID-19 affects the body.
There's a growing understanding, for example, that the infection can cause dangerous blood clots to form in many severely ill patients. These clots can kill if they block arteries supplying the lungs or brain. But they also can prevent blood from reaching the kidneys or even a patient's arms and legs.
Clots are a known risk for all ICU patients, Cooperman says, but the frequency and severity appears much greater with COVID-19. "So we're starting them on a higher level of medicine to prevent blood clots and if somebody actually develops blood clots, we have a plan B and a plan C and a plan D," he says.
ICU teams are also recalibrating their approach to ensuring that patients are getting enough oxygen. Early in the pandemic, the idea was to put patients on mechanical ventilator quickly to make sure their oxygen levels didn't fall too far.
But with experience, doctors have found that mechanical ventilators don't seem to work as well for COVID patients as they do for patients with other lung problems. They've also learned that that many COVID-19 patients remain lucid and relatively comfortable even when the oxygen levels in their blood are extremely low.
So many specialists are now recommending alternatives to mechanical ventilation, even for some of the sickest patients. "We're really trying now to not intubate," Osborn says.
Instead, ICU teams are relying on devices that deliver oxygen through the nasal passages, or through a mask that fits tightly over the face. And there's renewed interest in an old technique to help patients breathe. It's called proning.
"Instead of them being on their back, we're turning them on their front," Osborn says. The reason, she says is to open up a part of the lung that is collapsed when a patient is on their back.
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ICUs Transformed To Care For COVID-19 Patients : Shots - Health News - NPR
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Family devastated after father dies of COVID-19 can only comfort mother from a distance – INFORUM
Posted: at 11:07 am
We werent going to tell him he had it, but I had to, Dahl said. I said You know you have the virus, right? And he said Yes, I do. And thats when I said Im so sorry, and he said Nothing you did.
Dahls father, Kenneth Skoog, died on April 24 at Eventide Senior Living Facility in south Fargo, three days after his 66th wedding anniversary. Dahl, a nurse, said even gently touching her fathers cheek made him cry out in pain. Once, his face turned purple during an uncontrollable coughing fit.
He said he had 90 good years, and he was ready to go, Dahl said. But not like this, not like this. If he had died naturally we would have accepted it more easily. But on Good Friday, he told us that nothing compares to the suffering Jesus endured. The suffering of this virus cant even compare to what our Lord suffered.
Kenneth was on the do not resuscitate list, and the family chose comfort care rather than a higher level of care, which would have meant hospitalization and a ventilator.
Even following the comfort care protocol didn't seem to provide him with the proper amount of pain meds to help relieve his pain, Dahl said.
The Skoog family meets with their mother on May 2 at Eventide for a Happy Hour, shortly after Kenneth Skoog, 90, died from COVID-19. They talk back and forth, sometimes needing to yell over high winds, while Erlys Skoog stay on her second-floor balcony. C.S. Hagen / The Forum
He was North Dakotas number 16, Kenneths son Kevin Skoog said. My dad contracted the virus at Eventide, and he died at Eventide. Prior to Karla being by her dads side, Dad was dying alone, Mom was crying alone and us kids cant do a damn thing about it.
On Monday morning, April 20, Kevin said goodbye to his father over the telephone. The conversation was brief; a long line of children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren wanted their turn. But it was a better day for Kenneth, a Korean war veteran who had been involved in the Berlin Airlift.
Skoog family 2019. Top row left to right: Kurt Skoog, Kirby Skoog, Karla Dahl, Kevin Skoog, Kory Skoog, bottom row: Erlys Skoog and Kenneth Skoog. Special to The Forum
I could tell he was hurting, but he was able to communicate, Kevin said. I remember asking him, Well, Dad, are you in any pain? And he said it couldnt get any worse.
Kenneth suffered with the symptoms for nearly nine days before passing away around 4 a.m. April 24.
On April 15, when the Skoog family learned about Kenneths condition, there were 11 residents and two staff members who tested positive at the Fargo Eventide. As of April 30, the numbers increased to nine residents, 10 staff members who tested positive, with five inactive residents at Eventide in Fargo; three staff members at Eventide in West Fargo; 19 residents and 13 staff members who tested positive with three inactive residents at Eventide in Moorhead, according to the Eventide website.
I want to know how many people have contracted the virus at Eventide and how many have passed away because of it. My dad is one, but are there others, Kevin said.
On May 6, the states department of health reported 31 people in North Dakota have died from any cause with COVID-19.
Kenneth Skoog holds up the message delivery system he and family uses to pass information, cookies, and other items back and forth with their mother, Erlys Skoog, who lives on the second floor of an Eventide apartment. C.S. Hagen / The Forum
A week after Kenneth died, Dahl, Kevin, and other family members gathered on the sidewalk below the apartment where he once lived with his wife, Erlys Skoog, in a second-floor apartment at Eventide. Beers were had. Laughter rang out between stories of long gone days. Tears flowed.
Weve come to visit my mom behind bars, Kevin joked.
Using a plastic cylinder to toss messages, pictures, sometimes cookies and muffins, back and forth, Kevin opened up a picture of his fathers urn. A hunting scene. He wanted to make sure his mother liked the design.
"Don't break the glass," Erlys Skoog says just before her son, Kevin Skoog, tosses up a canister with a picture of her late husband's urn. Kenneth Skoog, 90, died of COVID-19 recently at Eventide. C.S. Hagen / The Forum
Heading into her ninth week of quarantine, Erlys said the isolation doesnt bother her much. She embroiders, spends time on the telephone. She doesnt use the internet, or watch much television, except for the news, but the food at Eventide is good. She plays Bingo some days and eagerly waits for her family to line up on the sidewalk beneath her second-floor apartment. Sometimes she watches as a great-grandchild draws chalk art to cheer her up.
If she could step out of isolation, the first thing she would do would be to, Give everybody a big hug, Erlys said. I havent had a hug in a long time."
The last time Erlys saw her husband was on March 16, when retirement homes began locking down. When the couple first moved to the senior living facility last autumn, they lived together, but Kenneth was moved to the skilled nursing care unit because of dementia. Until the coronavirus hit Fargo, she saw him daily.
The irony behind the living situation is not lost on the Skoog family. If their parents had stayed together in their home in Wahpeton, Kenneth may not have contracted the coronavirus and died. If Erlys had been allowed to visit her husband after lockdown, she too might have contracted the virus.
Stories about Kenneth brought chuckles from everyone, including Erlys. When Kenneth turned 18, he didnt show up for his birthday party at home.
Everyone was there except him; he had signed up for the Air Force, Dahl said his mother told her. Grandpa drove him to Fargo where he took the train to begin his training.
He went AWOL before he joined the Air Force, Kevin joked.
Karla Dahl sits with family on May 2 at Eventide while describing her watch over her dying father Kenneth Skoog, who passed away of COVID-19. C.S. Hagen / The Forum
Honorably discharged in 1950 as a corporal from the U.S. Air Force three years later, he returned to the family farm in Christine, N.D., but didnt stay long. From there he began working for the Great North Railroad, which became the Burlington Northern Railroad. He retired in 1993, and spent his time hunting, woodworking, playing sports and enjoying beers with friends.
He was a spark plug, Kevin said. Our focus is changing. Before it was on Dad, and now its on Mom. I just feel it would be nice to let Mom go to a restaurant. But the last thing we want to do is expose her to the virus.
Erlys, maiden name Ordahl, met Kenneth in a bar named Earls in Breckenridge, Minn., in 1951. Dinner led to romance. The first and only time she can remember saying goodbye to Kenneth was when they were courting.
I thought I thought more of him than he did me. And then one night he walked me to the door, and I said goodbye, and then he put his hand on my shoulder, and he said I dont like that word goodbye, Erlys said. So I tried never to really say it ever again.
Even during her husbands final days.
Kevin Skoog talks to his mother on May 2 who is in quarantine in a second-floor apartment at Eventide. Father Kenneth Skoog, recently died of COVID-19. C.S. Hagen / The Forum
When Karla Dahl learned only one person could go into Kenneths room after he contracted COVID-19, she said she was pleased to spend her dads last days by his side. As a nurse, shes used to wearing personal protective equipment.
After every visit she would go home, place her shoes outside, spray them with Lysol, then take the hottest shower she could stand while breathing in the steam for as long as she could.
I would fill my lungs with the steam, and I sprayed everything with Lysol; I did everything I could to prevent the spread, Dahl said. I wasnt scared at any time I was in there with him. He was my dad.
Kenneth had good days and bad, and Dahl tried to use the times he was feeling better to hold the phone inches from his face so he could talk to his family.
The N-95 mask is a very secure mask, I found that out five days with my dad, Dahl said. I would hold the phone inches from his face while he was coughing.
When Kenneth died, Dahl could plainly see his suffering was over.
Kevin Skoog gets ready to catch a canister from his mother, Erlys, as she's living in quarantine at Eventide in Fargo. C.S. Hagen / The Forum
It was such a relief and comfort to see him in peace. It was good for me to see him at the end, I just wish that everyone could have, because no one got a chance to. I was the only one she said.
You know what Karla? It comforted the rest of us knowing you were with him. We were worried when nobody was there, Tammy, the wife of son Kory Skoog, said.
That was a relief to us, but then I also had a concern about Karla being there and possibly contracting the virus, Kevin said.
Dahl tested negative for COVID-19 after her father passed away.
Kenneth K. Skoog is survived by two sisters and two brothers; by his wife Erlys of 66 years; his children, Kurtis, Kirby and wife Lyn, Karla and husband Tom, and Kevin and wife Lonna, Kory and wife Tammy as well as 10 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.
Handwritten letter Erlys Skoog wrote after her husband's death from COVID-19. Special to The Forum
Erlys Skoog's letter, above, was written while she was living in quarantine at Eventide Senior Living Facility shortly after her husband of 66 years, Kenneth K. Skoog, died from COVID-19 on April 24. It reads:
"I'd like to let everyone know how serious this COVID-19 virus is. It's terrible.
"I went every day to see my husband before this virus set in. I gave him a kiss and said 'I'll see you tomorrow.' Little did I know when I left there, I'd never see him again.
"Couldn't go back and forth any more because of this virus. Spent time on phone back and forth. He couldn't understand why I didn't come see him. Told him because of this virus.
"Our first time on iPad was very emotional for both of us. First time I'd seen him in tears."
"Only one could be with him in his last days. Our dear daughter (Karla a nurse) was with him.
"He had a good day before our 66th anniversary. Karla dialed for him so he could say a few words to our kids, grandkids and great-granddaughter. I talked to him twice. Day after anniversary was not a good day, Karla dialed for him and his last words to me was (I love you). All I could understand.
"I just hope and pray everyone will listen and obey rules. Tough world right now. You wouldn't want your loved one going through what we did...
"I miss the hugs from family and friends. I miss my dear husband who was always there for me."
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Family devastated after father dies of COVID-19 can only comfort mother from a distance - INFORUM
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How the House is slipping away from Republicans – CNN
Posted: at 11:06 am
"I will say that you're going to be speaker of the House because of this impeachment hoax. I really believe it," Trump told House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy in February. "And I'm going to work hard on it. I'm going to try and get out to those Trump areas that we won by a lot. And you know, in '18 we didn't win."
On paper, it made sense. There are 30 House districts currently held by Democrats that Trump carried in 2016. Win just 20 of those 30 and lose none of their own seats and Republicans are back in control! (Republicans need to net 18 seats to retake the majority.)
"Right now, of the 30 Democrats in Trump-won districts, ten lack GOP challengers with more than $250,000 in the bank. And it's going to be nearly impossible to catch up amid a global pandemic."
And not only that! There is now, according to Wasserman, a real chance that Democrats willpick upseats in the House this fall. He writes:
"For the first time this cycle, neither party is a clear favorite to gain House seats this fall. Anything from no net change to a small single-digit gain for either side is possible. That's good news for Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Democrats."
The change in the political landscape is due to a variety of factors -- from Joe Biden's emergence as the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee to House Democrats' massive fundraising edge over their GOP counterparts.
But there is no question a shift has occurred, and it's very much in Democrats' favor.
The Point: There now exists a realistic possibility that Democrats not only win the White House but also consolidate control in the House and Senate in November. Which would be a very big deal.
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Colorado Republican Chair Ken Buck in the hot seat after revelations over election results – The Denver Post
Posted: at 11:06 am
Colorado Republican Chairman Ken Buck is facing criticism from within his own party after revelations that he pressured another party official to submit incorrect election results and then spent party money to defend the move.
At least two party executives say they were surprised to learn Buck whos also a U.S. representative defended his position on the state Senate District 10 primary ballot in district court and then appealed that ruling to the Colorado Supreme Court, running up possibly tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees.
Kris Cook, chair of the Denver Republican Party, found out about it Wednesday only to hear hours later that Buck canceled a committee meeting that had been scheduled for Friday.
Were touching on something here thats not quite clean, and its not quite the image I have of what the party ought to be, Cook said, later adding:I think its worth questioning whether him in that role is going to have a negative effect on the rest of this cycle.
On an April 17 conference call, Buck pressured Eli Bremer, a GOP chairman for state Senate District 10, to follow the direction of the central and executive committees and certify that a Senate candidate had won a place on the ballot. The candidate, however, did not receive 30% in an assembly vote as required by the state.Filing that paperwork would have been illegal, Bremer told Buck on the call, but the chair persisted.
Ultimately, a Bremer ally filed a friendly lawsuit in Denver District Court, where a judge ruled that the move would indeed have been illegal. The GOP appealed the matter to the Colorado Supreme Court, which declined Tuesday to hear the case, cementing the decision.
The state Republican Party wont appeal the issue further, representatives said.
Its unclear whether authorities are looking into the legality of Bucks direction to Bremer on the call, which The Denver Post obtained a recording of this week.
A representative of Colorado Attorney General Phil Weisers office declined to comment, instead nodding in the direction of El Paso County District Attorney Dan May, since Senate District 10 is in El Paso County. Lee Richards, a spokesperson for May, said in a text that nothing has been filed with the district attorney regarding the matter. She did not respond when asked whether the office is investigating.
Wayne Williams, a Republican former Colorado Secretary of State who argued the court case against the GOP, said he could see how the disagreement might arise over the reporting of the assembly results. Until this point there had been no substantial legal precedent on the issue.
I think they legitimately believed they had the ability to do that, but they were wrong and multiple courts have said so, Williams said.
Its unclear whether the U.S. House Committee on Ethics will take up the issue. A representative declined to comment Thursday.
Amid the controversy, Buck canceled a state GOP committee meeting planned for Friday. Party spokesperson Joe Jackson told The Post that there was no pending business, therefore Chairman Buck decided not to waste everyones time with a meeting.
The cancellation email said the partys team was humming along, the Denver GOPs Cook said a characterization she did not agree with: I find that a little head-in-the-sand and a little bit misleading.
She is unhappy that she was kept in the dark about the partys legal scuffles with Bremer despite the fact that she is a member of the executive committee, which is essentially the state partys governing board.In addition to the legal costs racked up by the party, Bremer is demanding payment for his attorney fees, which he estimates will total $15,000, in addition to an apology from Buck.
Weve not been apprised of any of the legal shenanigans on this or that weve been exposed to paying Elis legal fees, Cook said.
Kaye Ferry, a committee member from Eagle County, also was disconcerted to find out about the legal battle in the news. She isnt calling for Bucks resignation but said the situation is a distraction during a time when the focus should be on re-electing President Donald Trump and Sen. Cory Gardner.
You are in the middle of an uproar and theres a target on your back, she said of Buck, which means there is a target on our back.
Indeed, the situation drew comment from state Democrats on Thursday.
Im pretty blown away by this, Morgan Carroll, chair of the Colorado Democratic Party, said in a statement. The idea that a chair of a political party a chair who is a sitting congressman, at that would attempt to coerce a local party leader to knowingly falsify an election result is disturbing and undemocratic.
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‘We’re going to fill it’: Republicans ready for any Supreme Court vacancy – POLITICO
Posted: at 11:06 am
Catastrophic earthquakes. Solar flares that bring down the entire power grid. The global rise of white supremacy. What could come after coronavirus?
If you thought the Kavanaugh hearing was contentious this would probably be that on steroids, said Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas). Nevertheless, if the president makes a nomination then its our responsibility to take it up.
While no one says they expect a Supreme Court vacancy, GOP senators also acknowledge its plausible that Trump could find himself with a third nominee. And one thing is clear: Most Republicans have no qualms about approving a Supreme Court pick from a president in their own party, even if it is an election year.
In 2016, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said voters should decide in the election which president should choose the next Supreme Court justice because the Senate and White House were controlled by different parties. And in the Trump era, hes repeatedly asserted that he would fill a vacancy in 2020.
McConnell and his allies argue the situation is different because Republicans control both the White House and the Senate. They say that makes the situation far different than when Obama was president and McConnell refused to even hold a hearing for Merrick Garland.
Democrats acknowledge they could get run over in the next eight months. Supreme Court nominees can now be confirmed by a bare majority after McConnell changed the rules in 2017 to overcome a Democratic filibuster of Neil Gorsuch, Antonin Scalias successor.
Theyre not troubled by inconsistencies, said Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.). It would be completely inconsistent with everything that was said [in 2016]. But we knew when they were saying it they didnt mean it. We knew that was a situational answer.
The remaining months of Trumps first term could also be the last chance the GOP has to put its stamp on the courts for years to come. McConnell could lose his majority or Trump could be ousted by former Vice President Joe Biden which means Republicans would take no chances and move quickly to fill an empty seat on the high court.
Sen. John Thune. | Andrew Harnik/AP Photo
My guess is yes. Thats ultimately a decision the leader makes. But I think youve heard him speak to the subject before. He believes if there was a vacancy, hed fill it, said Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, the GOP whip. Confirmation hearings in the age of COIVD-19 would be very interesting but Im sure no less contentious than the last one.
Republican senators are not publicly pushing for a vacancy nor are they advertising their plans to fill any that presents itself. However, the last two vacancies occurred in election years. And Trump already has a list of potential Supreme Court picks.
In a brief interview, Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) declined to say there was a cut-off to when a new vacancy might be considered. His predecessor, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), declined to hold a hearing for Garland.
Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) said a Supreme Court opening represents the ultimate hypothetical but one Republicans would be prepared to respond to whenever it occurs.
Theres no cut off, said Blunt, the No. 4 GOP leader.
In addition to Ginsburgs health, senators are also keeping tabs on whether any other justices will retire. Four justices are 70 or older: Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito.
When Anthony Kennedy retired in 2018 and sparked the confirmation fight over Justice Brett Kavanaugh, he made his announcement in late June after the spring term concluded. That allowed the Senate GOP to confirm Kavanaugh before midterms that threatened their majority.
Sen. Josh Hawley. | Alex Wong/Getty Images
Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), a former Supreme Court clerk, said he had heard no inside chatter about an impending vacancy. But he said that given the age of the courts current members, you have to be prepared.
I would be very surprised if we didnt move forward with hearings and try to fill the seat. Im sure it would be very controversial, principally because of the balance of the court, Hawley said. If its replacing someone like Justice Ginsburg, that would be a big shift, that would be a big deal.
In that hypothetical scenario, the GOP would need the support of 50 of its 53-member majority to fill a vacancy. Vice President Mike Pence can cast a tie-breaking vote.
Still, at least one Republican senator believes the approaching election should weigh on any decision to fill an empty seat.
Youre coming pretty close, though, to the presidential election, said Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), the only Republican to oppose Kavanaugh. That is something that you factor into these discussions about how we move forward.
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Iowas Republican Governor Sacrifices Citizens to Trump – The Nation
Posted: at 11:06 am
President Donald Trump with Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds during a campaign rally in Des Moines, Iowa. (Tom Brenner / Getty Images)
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Winterset, IowaThis weekend, Iowa began reopening 77 of its 99 counties, despite having some of the fastest-growing outbreaks of Covid-19 in the United States. According to The New York Times, the Sioux City metro area has the highest number of new confirmed cases per 1,000 residents in the country, largely due to the areas meatpacking plants. Sioux City is in Woodbury County, which has 1,323 of Iowas 10,404 confirmed cases of Covid-19 as of this writing and wasnt allowed to begin reopening.Ad Policy
Next door, however, is Ida County: a quieter place with about 7 percent of Woodbury Countys population and no confirmed cases of Covid-19. In fact, none of the five counties bordering Woodbury County have even 100 confirmed cases, but Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds has just provided incentive for the people of Woodbury County, and other counties with high infection rates, to travel to these more rural counties, by allowing the opening of their restaurants, fitness centers, malls, and other establishments as long as they operate at half capacity and follow some social distancing guidelines. And with Iowas geography, that situation isnt uncommon. Polk County is home to another of the countrys fastest-growing outbreaks, with 1,875 confirmed cases, and it was also forced to remain closed. But its not hard to imagine some of its residents heading south to Warren County or north to Story County, both of which were allowed to open, with only 67 cases between them. Given the frequency of asymptomatic cases, its also not hard to imagine some of those visitors accidentally bringing the virus with them.
At her daily coronavirus press briefing on Monday, Reynolds claimed that her response to the pandemic isnt politicalthough evidence would suggest it isnt rooted in science, either. Reynolds ignored a report from the University of Iowa College of Public Health warning that Iowa hasnt yet hit its peak and that ending mitigation efforts too soon would likely result in a second wave of cases. National models also projected an increase in deaths as states begin reopening. Early in April, the Iowa Board of Medicine and Iowa Medical Society both sent letters to Reynolds asking her to issue a shelter-in-place order. Instead, Reynolds relied on a rubric dividing the state into six regions and scoring each region on a 12-point scale. Scores ranged from zero to three in four categories: percentage of population older than 65, percentage of identified cases requiring hospitalization, infection rate per 100,000 population in the past 14 days, and the number of outbreaks at long-term-care facilities. A region would have to score a 10 or higher for a stay-at-home order to be implemented.
Reynolds has been a perfect Trumpian model throughout the pandemic, never issuing a stay-at-home order, temporarily banning abortions by declaring them nonessential surgeries, and even parroting Trumps line that sunlight could be what we need right now. And as she follows Trumps calls to begin reopening the country, Iowa Workforce Development is using the move as a way to strip people of their unemployment benefitseven as Republicans at the federal level seek protections for the employers who will force these people to go back to work. On Monday, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation updated its prediction of how many Iowans will die of Covid-19 by August 4, increasing the total by about 1,000. But testing is still limited in the state, and its unclear if Iowans will ever know the true impact of Reynoldss decision. On a tip from Cedar Rapids native Ashton Kutcher, she signed a $26 million contract with a Utah-based health software company whose tests, according to new reporting by The Salt Lake Tribune, show a positive result for Covid-19 less than half as often as those of other companies.
Republicans have posited a false dichotomy during the pandemic: Save lives or save the economy. It shouldnt have to be said, but mass death is bad for economies. In a survey of economists from the Initiative on Global Markets, the vast majority agreed: Abandoning severe lockdowns at a time when the likelihood of a resurgence in infections remains high will lead to greater total economic damage than sustaining the lockdowns to eliminate the resurgence risk. Sending people in the most financially precarious situations back to work in unsafe conditions isnt just cruel and dangerous. It also threatens to erase any gains workers have made toward a functioning social safety net over the past two months. But when workers realize how much really depends on their labor, they become more powerful. They can make demands, and theyve started to do so. The choice isnt between public health and the economy; its between keeping workers safe and keeping capitalists rich, and Reynolds and Trump, among other GOP leaders, have made it very clear which side theyre on.
Thankfully, activists in Iowa arent staying silent. Iowa Student Action recently won a tuition freeze worth $6.5 million for Iowa students, and Iowa State student Alexa Rodriguez reflected on the victory with a perspective that can be applied to so many victories workers and students have won in the past month: These institutions have always had the power to protect the working class, students, and people of color who have been harmed at disproportionately high rates not only by the pandemic but by the structure of our education, health care, and economic systems as well. They have actively chosen not to help. Reynolds and the GOP are trying to make people feel powerless so they can continue exploiting them, but victories like Iowa Student Actions prove it doesnt have to be that way.
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Republican lawmakers come up with their own version of ‘Restore Illinois’ – WAND
Posted: at 11:06 am
DECATUR, Ill. (WAND) - Instead of Gov. JB Pritzker's five-phase-plan, "Restore Illinois", Reps. Blaine Wilhour and Darren Bailey developed their own idea.
It's called the "Back to Business" plan, and it's cut down to three phases.
Under Pritzker's phase three, barbershops, salons and retail stores would be back in business. At last check, Illinois is under the governor's second phase, 'flattening'.
Wilhour told WAND News the lawmakers' goal is to open the central Illinois region faster and get people back to work.
Under the "Back to Business" plan. churches, parks and day cares would be open under phase one. It would start May 10, but all of what's allowed wouldn't work at 100% capacity.
"Our plan can go into effect basically immediately," Wilhour said.
In phase two, bars, theaters, summer camps and gaming facilities would be open. Toward the beginning of June, every business and public place would be open at 75% capacity or more, thus reaching phase three. This would be phase four in the governor's plan.
"We designed it to set a bar for these businesses," Wilhour said. "If the business can obtain that bar, they should be allowed to work."
Bailey told WAND News the three-phase-plan was reviewed by multiple Illinois health department directors. He said the plan will be sent the Illinois Department of Public Health for approval.
It should be known wearing masks and being socially distant would still be recommended through all three phases. Compared to Pritkzer's plan, this gives Illinoisans more freedom in the later phases. Bailey said people who are vulnerable to COVID-19 would be protected.
However, their three-phase-plan has not been approved. Illinois is still under the rules of Pritzker.
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Influential Republican super PAC makes its return to boost Trump – Center for Responsive Politics
Posted: at 11:06 am
(NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP via Getty Images)
After lying low for several election cycles, influential Republican super PAC American Crossroads is jumping into the 2020 presidential election to back President Donald Trump.
American Crossroads recently reported spending nearly $367,000 to support Trump in a 13-state text messaging campaign. The group placed its biggest bet of more than $89,000 in Florida, where presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden is polling slightly ahead of Trump.
The super PACs early investment indicates that Trumps reelection bid may find support from outside groups that didnt back his 2016 run. American Crossroads spent $91 million to support Mitt Romney and oppose President Barack Obama in 2012. But it spent just $135,000 to oppose Hillary Clinton in 2016 and spent nothing to support Trump.
Masterminded by former White House strategist Karl Rove, American Crossroads shares its staff and offices with One Nation, a dark money nonprofit that supports Senate Republicans. One Nation spent more than $2.4 million on digital ads since June 2018 when Google and Facebook started disclosing online advertising data, according to OpenSecrets analysis of digital ad data.
Senate Leadership Fund, the super PAC affiliated with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), is also part of the hub of conservative groups. Trump headlined a big-dollar fundraiser for the Senate Leadership Fund in November 2019. The super PAC has $52 million in the bank as party-tied groups prepare for expensive congressional election battles in November.
A lot has happened between American Crossroads declining to support Trump in the 2016 presidential race and the super PAC throwing its support behind him in the 2020 election. American Crossroads support of Trumps reelection comes three years after Trumps White House hiring of Mike Dubke, the co-founder of Crossroads Media LLC and Black Rock Group, American Crossroads and Senate Leadership Funds longtime vendors. Dubke served as Trumps communications director for 103 days in 2017 before making a full spin in the revolving door and returning to Black Rock, which continues to work for both super PACs in the 2020 election.
America First Action is the only super PAC that has Trumps stamp of approval to support his reelection campaign. The Trump campaign has disavowed many other super PACs that raise and spend political cash in his name. Political campaigns and outside groups are supposed to be independent of one another, but they often exploit loopholes to legally coordinate their efforts.
For its recent text messaging blitz, American Crossroads used Advantage Direct Communications, a firm specializing in voter contact and data services. The firms operation, which also includes Advantage Inc., had been a longtime vendor of the Republican National Committee and state Republican Party committees.
Trumps official super PAC, America First Action, also paid Advantage for polling expenses in 2018. The RNC paid Advantage for party-coordinated expenses promoting Trump in 2016 and another $639,000 for data services, phone services and voter registration during the 2020 election cycle. Trumps 2016 campaign paid Advantage Inc. for telemarketing services but neither the campaign nor its joint fundraising committees have reported any transactions with Advantage during the 2020 election cycle.
Voters who apply to use Advantages app through some state Republican party websites are informed that a Trump Victory Team Member will be in touch about the application.
Advantages app is used to facilitate so-called targeted multi-touch voter journeys by collecting data while targeting potential voters with calls, texts, emails and digital ads helping them to update their voter registration then urging them to support a specific candidate.
As traditional door-knocking efforts grind to a halt in light of COVID-19 lockdowns, Advantage revamped its menu of options for voter contact services tailored to capitalize on the coronavirus pandemic. A memo disseminated by Advantage says its team is testing best practices for peer-to-peer texts and phone banking to ensure there is no pandemic backlash, concluding that aggressive political messages and coronavirus themes are working.
American Crossroads did not make independent expenditures in the 2018 midterm cycle, but it continued to pay staff that also work for the Senate Leadership Fund and One Nation. The super PAC has only taken in a handful of contributions this cycle totaling $186,000 and reported having roughly $527,000 in the bank through March.
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Adam Schiff Says Trump’s Cult of the President Has Infected the Republican Party – Mother Jones
Posted: at 11:06 am
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How the hell did we get here? Thats what Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) wants to know. The congressman and colleagues have introducedlegislation to set up a commission to investigate and identify how the Trump administration failed in its response to the coronavirus. (Based on our timeline of the first 100 days of Trumps response, theyll have plenty to look into.)
Schiff recently joinedMother JonesEditor-in-Chief and the Commonwealth Club to talk hiring Twitter trolls into top intelligence positions, and chat about his alternative to universal basic income. Real time oversight is vitally important, he says. Even if its hard to do meaningful oversight when youre dealing with bodies that dont particularly want to share the answers. But Schiff believes his experience from the impeachment trial has prepared him for it.
You can watch the full interview here, or read an edited transcript below.
Congressmen, at the end of the impeachment trial, you posed a rhetorical question to the Senate: You may be wondering how much damage the president can do over the next few months before the election. Then you said, A lot, a lot of damage. What were you imagining then and how does that square with whats happening now?
I dont think anyone anticipated that we would very soon lose more lives than we did during the Vietnam War, and its due to the incompetence and maladministration of this president. We grossly underestimated the damage that he could do.
The impeachment proceedings and then-trial centered around the accusation that Trump essentially extorted the president of Ukraine and then covered it up. How is that mentality playing out here?
Those that have been willing to say nice things about him have seen the Trump campaign take those statements and put them into campaign ads. We cant have any confidence that this president or his administration are making those decisions on the basis of science, on the basis of need, on the basis of whats in the best interest of the American people, but as we said during the trial, the one thing you can always count on Donald Trump for is, he will do whats right for Donald Trump, not whats right for the country.
You said its hard to tell if something is of corrupt intent or just incompetence. How are you untangling that right now?
This has been the story of the Trump presidency. You can say, Thats really not in the presidents interest to do politically, but he does it nonetheless because he thinks its good for him personally. He thinks its good for him politicallyits part of the myopia of this extraordinary narcissism we see.
Its certainly not in the national interest for Donald Trump to be out there postulating that maybe people should inject bleach as a way of killing the virus or pushing out untested treatments. The entire prism is not whats best for the country with this president, [its] whats best for him.
Is that in part because his aides and children are unable, or unwilling, to tell him the truth? Or are they living in a bubble of their own creation as well?
One of the points we made during the trial is that youre not going to change the presidents character. He is who he is. In terms of his family, Jared Kushner was asked about this grim milestone we are crossing where more people are dying of the virus and have died of the virus than died during Vietnam, and his answer was, Weve made really good decisions. Were doing a really good job. [That] was equally revealing in terms of this whole familys blind spot.
The most that we can do in Congress is try to mitigate and limit the damage, do vigorous oversight, and insist on accountability. We need to do that in real time.
Do you feel confident that you are getting forthright briefings from the intelligence community?
Well, it grieves me to say that the answer is no, that there has been a tremendous politicization of the intelligence community under Trump.
It has really reached its pinnacle with the appointment of Rick Grenell as the top intel official in the country, someone who has virtually no intelligence experiencehe was essentially a Twitter troll. He did what you do to get a high appointment in the Trump administration: You go on Fox, on social media, and make the most incendiary attacks on the presidents opponents and say the most exaggerated claims on behalf of the president.
I think it came as a surprise to most people that inspectors general who were supposed to be this firewall against intergovernmental corruption, or malfeasance of other sorts, could be so easily dismissed by the very people that they are reporting on. Is that something that happened before and what could Congress do to fortify those rules and laws?
The inspector generals system, which has been really integral to rooting out waste, fraud, and abuse in government and has a great success record, is a post Watergate reform. But like so many of the post Watergate reforms, theyve been obliterated by this president.
In the intelligence bill that were drafting now, we are going to have a provision that provides you cannot fire an inspector general except for good cause. Were going to also have requirements that if you do fire an inspector general, Congress needs to be informed of what they were working on when they were fired. The existing law says that when you fire an inspector general you have to give 30 days notice. Well the president did an end run around that so that they couldnt fulfill that last 30 days. Now that 30 days might have given the opportunity for the inspector general to make sure that investigations that were ongoing were not closed, swept under the rug, or made to disappear.
We are going to be putting in statute protections for the inspector generals going forward, things that we didnt think were going to be necessary, because we thought presidents would never do what this president is doingour own post Watergate reforms. Things that will be necessary when this president has gone to make sure that our democratic norms and institutions are codified, or protections are codified, so that they can never be assaulted the way that this president has.
Have you found any bipartisan support for such line of thinking thus far?
Given the slave like devotion of particular House Republicans, Kevin McCarthy doesnt cross the street without asking Donald Trump. That kind of sycophantic, slavish devotion to the president isnt going to admit of independent reforms.
What kind of accountability can Congress muster now under these circumstances? The oversight committeewhat can it do and not do in the immediate future?
There are two kinds of oversight going on in Congress that are going to be very important in real time. Real time oversight is vitally important. Theres a whole host of other issues thoughits very difficult at a distance to do meaningful oversight when youre dealing with bodies that dont particularly want to share the answers. Much of what we will need to know in the intel committee will be classified and therefore we cannot do it at a distance. We certainly dont have the secure video capability among all of our members around the country right now to be able to conduct such a hearing.
In the meantime, we are doing the kind of oversight that we can by requesting, requiring information by teleconference, by using the budget where necessary to compel answers. For example, an oversight committee looking at the problem with protective gear. They did a bipartisan briefing where administration officials acknowledged that there were shortages of protective gear and tests and that there are shortages in reagents and swabs. Its less visible to the public, which is a problem, because a very important point of the oversight is getting good information out to the country.
When you talked to my colleague David Corn during the impeachment hearings, you were shocked that it was quite obvious that when you started making your arguments to the Senate, that they hadnt watched the house hearing, and not just hadnt watched the full of them, but seemed to have it all kind of mediated through Fox. Do you feel that thats going on with this crisis?
House Republicans have become such a cult of the president that theyre not even capable of acknowledging the facts staring them in the face. We had to operate from the premise, which turned out to be all too accurate, that the senators were really not watching the hearings in the House. They were getting the topline from Fox, which was completely misleading.
Have you seen any conciliatory movement within the California delegation when it comes to the pandemic? Kevin McCarthy, Devin Nunesdo the two of them, and you, and Barbara Lee and Maxine Waters ever come to any agreement about what needs to proceed in terms of representing the state of California?
I will say its been one of the biggest disappointments Ive had of the Trump administration, and that is, I had a much higher view of my Republican colleagues of their commitment to their own ideals, of their commitment to the constitution. They dont represent the Republican party anymore. They represent a cult of personality of the president. And so, I do think when the president is gone, I have to hope that they will return to being Republican once again.
COVIDs taken every inequity in our society and magnified it and increased it. What of any old fights may have a chance of being viewed in a new way by both members of Congress and more conservative constituents?
One thing I will say about what we ought to do right nowI was struck at the approach that European countries were taking, but also Asian countries. Where the government was guaranteeing payroll for businesses, large and small.
That seemed to me much more equitable, much more efficient. You didnt need a separate program for small business and one for large industry. You didnt need to overwhelm unemployment compensation. You didnt need to have so many people unemployed. And when this virus does pass, then who have to now go and find employment because people got to retain the jobs they had, even if they couldnt perform the work right now. That kind of a payroll guarantee is the best approach.
Do you think its via payroll or is it a UBI, a universal basic income, kind of start it up now, lets become Alaska?
Those are two good models for us to explore. Ive been particularly attracted to the payroll model because it has the effect of preserving employment. Theyre not also mutually exclusive. The stimulus checks are a form of universal basic income if you made them monthly. But I particularly think that the payroll guarantee is the right approach. America has made a choice to have millions and millions of its people now going to unemployment rolls.
Do you think election protection will be a part of the next stimulus bill?
Absolutely. I think we have to insist that in the next legislation that we take up, we protect the health of the American people, we protect the health of our economy, and we protect the health of our democracy. The American people have a right not only to be able to vote, but to know where their elected officials stand on the franchise, whether they are willfully trying to obstruct peoples ability to vote in this country.
So if the Republicans are determined to disenfranchise people, it ought to be abundantly clear what theyre doing so that they can be held accountable at the polls.
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