IT'S ALL UNDER CONTROL

ChrryBlstr

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Karmavirus strikes yet again. lolz

Peace! :)


<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Does he believe in ventilators?<a href="https://t.co/yOhDFYgEGA">https://t.co/yOhDFYgEGA</a></p>— (((it's DOCTOR, not Ms.))) (@NotOccupying) <a href="https://twitter.com/NotOccupying/status/1307009721577230336?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 18, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 

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Trump says U.S. will manufacture enough coronavirus vaccine doses for every American by April
PUBLISHED FRI, SEP 18 20203:15 PM EDTUPDATED 28 MIN AGO

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/09/18/tru...accine-doses-for-every-american-by-april.html

Trump?s forecast is at odds with the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

CDC Director Dr. Robert Redfield said earlier this week that the U.S. wouldn?t start vaccinating people until November or December at the earliest and the doses would be limited at first.

Redfield initially said a vaccine wouldn?t be widely available until the summer or early fall of next year before walking those comments back after Trump said he was mistaken.
 

WhatsHisNuts

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<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/HuUX7zRhMKQ" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 

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More than 20 states report coronavirus spikes as experts warn of fall, winter surge
BY ZACK BUDRYK - 09/28/20 07:27 AM EDT

New coronavirus cases increased over the past week by at least 10 percent, predominantly in 21 Western states, according to a CNN analysis.

Alabama, Alaska, Colorado, Idaho, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington state, Wisconsin and Wyoming have all seen increases in the virus, the analysis found, based on data from Johns Hopkins University.

In the meantime, only 11 states saw new cases fall more than 10 percent compared to the week before: Arizona, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Vermont and Virginia. The remaining 18 states saw level infection rates.

The news comes as public health experts have expressed concerns over a new fall and winter wave of the virus as colder temperatures cause Americans to spend more time indoors. A ?huge surge? is likely as the end of the year approaches, Chris Murray, director of the University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), told CNN.

Under the IMHE?s model, the country is projected to see a major spike begin in October and accelerate for the remainder of the year, he said. The U.S. could reach 3,000 daily deaths by the end of December, more than triple the current number of daily deaths.

New York saw more than 1,000 new daily cases on Saturday for the first time since June. Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) warned that the state, an early epicenter of the virus, must remain vigilant against the pandemic. "It's vital that New Yorkers continue to practice the basic behaviors that drive our ability to fight Covid-19 as we move into the fall and flu season," he said in a statement. "Wearing masks, socially distancing and washing hands make a critical difference, as does the deliberate enforcement of state guidance by local governments."
 

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U.S. Coronavirus Cases Are Still Rising in 21 States as Deaths Surpass 1 Million Worldwide
BY MATTHEW IMPELLI ON 9/29/20 AT 9:14 AM EDT

https://www.newsweek.com/us-coronav...es-deaths-surpass-1-million-worldwide-1534907

Coronavirus infections continue to spread throughout the U.S., with 21 states seeing an increase in cases as the worldwide death toll now tops 1 million.

According to a tracking map from The New York Times, among the 21 states that saw a rise in cases over the past week are Wisconsin, which reported over 15,000; South Carolina, with over 8,000; and Alabama, with more than 7,000.

The other states are North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Iowa, Montana, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Idaho, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming, Tennessee, Minnesota, Mississippi, Kentucky, Alabama and Illinois. The Times tracker shows that these states have seen a higher daily average, of at least 15 new cases per capita, over the past seven days.

The Times tracker also shows at least 22 other states have seen a steady decrease in cases. They are Texas, Indiana, North Carolina, Georgia, Louisiana, West Virginia, Delaware, Florida, Rhode Island, Virginia, Michigan, California, Ohio, Maryland, Hawaii, Washington, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, New York, New Hampshire, Maine and Vermont. Washington, D.C., has also had a steady decline in cases.

According to a Johns Hopkins University tracker, there are over 7.1 million confirmed U.S. cases of the virus, which causes the respiratory disease COVID-19. There are also at least 205,091 confirmed deaths in the nation.

The tracker also reported that the global death toll recently surpassed 1 million.

The U.S. remains the country with the most confirmed cases of the virus as well as the most confirmed deaths. But several other countries have moved closer to the U.S. in both statistics.

According to the tracker, India has over 6.1 million confirmed cases, making the country No. 2 in that category. Next is Brazil, with over 4.7 million cases, and Russia, with over 1.1 million.

Brazil is No. 2 in fatalities, with at least 142,058, followed by India, with at least 96,318.
 

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Trump in hospital after COVID-19 diagnosis
David KnowlesEditor,Yahoo News?October 2, 2020

President Trump was taken to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Friday hours after he announced that he had tested positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.

The White House said in a statement that Trump was being taken to the hospital in Bethesda, Md., by helicopter as a ?precautionary measure,? and the president was seen walking to Marine One. He is expected to stay there for a few days.

?President Trump remains in good spirts, has mild symptoms, and has been working throughout the day,? the White House said in its statement. ?Out of an abundance of caution ... the President will be working from the presidential offices at Walter Reed for the next few days.?

Trump is reported to be suffering from fever, chills, cough and congestion, and medical experts say that COVID-19 poses serious risks for the president, who is 74 years old.

Before departing for the hospital, Trump recorded a video message, which he posted to his Twitter account.

?I want to thank everybody for the tremendous support. I?m going to Walter Reed hospital. I think I?m doing very well, but we?re going to make sure that things work out,? Trump said in the video. ?The first lady is doing very well, so thank you very much, I appreciate it, I will never forget it. Thank you.?

Hours earlier, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said that the president ?remains fatigued but in good spirits? and had taken an experimental treatment of polyclonal antibodies made by the pharmaceutical manufacturer Regeneron as well as ulcer medication to suppress stomach acid.

Late Friday night, White House physician Sean Conley said he was ?happy to report the President is doing very well,? and that remdesivir, an antiviral drug, had been added to his regimen.

The sudden developments have shaken Washington and the world. On Thursday, Trump had traveled to a closed-door fundraiser at his golf club in Bedminster, N.J., where he interacted with roughly 100 donors though he appeared tired. After leaving the event, he announced on Twitter that his senior adviser Hope Hicks had tested positive for COVID-19. A second tweet early Friday confirmed that he and first lady Melania Trump had also tested positive.

On Friday, others who had been in close contact with the president in recent days announced that they had also tested positive for COVID-19. They included Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina and University of Notre Dame president John Jenkins and his former close aide Kellyanne Conway, all of whom had attended a crowded Rose Garden ceremony last Saturday announcing the nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court, and his campaign manager, Bill Stepien. Three journalists who cover the White House also tested positive on Friday.

Vice President Mike Pence, who earlier in the day tested negative, remains at the Naval Observatory, a senior administration official told NBC News.

White House communications director Alyssa Farah said Friday that there had not been a transfer of power from Trump to Pence. ?The president is in charge,? she told CBS News.

Trump?s son Eric offered his support of his father on Twitter as the news broke that the president, who refrained from tweeting for most of the day after announcing his positive test, was being taken to Walter Reed.

Ivanka Trump also sent her father a message on Twitter.

?You are a warrior and will beat this,? she wrote. ?I love you dad.?

Late Friday, Joe Biden?s presidential campaign pulled all of its negative ads featuring Trump from the airwaves. The former vice president, who continued to campaign on Friday, also posted a call for Americans to rise above partisan politics.

Former President Barack Obama also issued a statement Friday evening.

?Although we?re in the midst of a big political fight, and we take that very seriously, we also want to extend our best wishes to the President of the United States, [and] the First Lady,? the statement read, adding ?we?re all Americans and we?re all human beings and we want to make sure that everybody is healthy.?

Yet at approximately the same moment that Obama sent well-wishes to the Trumps, the president?s campaign fired off a fundraising email to supporters attacking his predecessor as ?Lyin? Obama? and mocking Biden as being ?asleep in his basement.?

https://news.yahoo.com/trump-taken-...-212316884.html?.tsrc=daily_mail&uh_test=1_02
 

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New U.S. Coronavirus Cases Jump Above 50,000
Ted Mann 2 hrs ago
The tally of new coronavirus cases in the U.S. rose past 50,000 to hit the highest level since mid-August, as more people close to President Trump tested positive for the virus and the president received treatment after being diagnosed with Covid-19.

More than 54,000 new U.S. cases were reported Friday, the most since Aug. 14, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Friday?s number was likely inflated in the range of 2,000 to 3,000 because of reporting delays affecting the count of new cases in Missouri, according to Johns Hopkins.

In 29 states, the average number of new cases over the past seven days was higher than the 14-day average, an indicator of a surge in new infections. Over that period in Florida and Texas, Covid-19 has killed on average more than 90 people a day.

By midday Saturday, it was clear the virus had spread extensively through Mr. Trump?s inner circle, including many who attended a White House Rose Garden event last weekend at which Mr. Trump announced Judge Amy Coney Barrett?s Supreme Court nomination.

At least eight people who attended that event had announced they had tested positive as of midday Saturday, including former White House adviser Kellyanne Conway and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. In addition to attending the Rose Garden event, Mr. Christie helped Mr. Trump prepare for his debate last Tuesday, and has said that none of the participants in those sessions wore masks to prevent infection.

The Trump campaign confirmed Friday that Bill Stepien, the president?s campaign manager, had tested positive for the virus. A third Republican senator, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, said he had tested positive.

President Trump was receiving treatment at the Walter Reed military hospital, where he was admitted Friday following his positive coronavirus test.

White House physician Sean Conley said Saturday that he was happy with the president?s condition and that his symptoms were improving. But after Dr. Conley concluded his briefing, a person familiar with the president?s health gave a statement to reporters saying that Mr. Trump?s vitals over the past 24 hours were ?very concerning? and that the next 48 hours would be critical.

Mr. Trump will quarantine at the Bethesda, Md., hospital, based on the recommendation of his physician and medical experts, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said. He tweeted from the hospital late Friday: ?Going well, I think!?

Cases and deaths: Total confirmed infections in the U.S. rose to nearly 7.4 million, while the death toll was about 209,000, according to Johns Hopkins data. Not all of those infected became ill, and most of those who did have since recovered.

Vaccines: Senior White House officials have raised objections to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration?s proposed standards for deciding whether a Covid-19 vaccine should be given widely and don?t appear likely to sign off on the agency?s guidelines, people familiar with the matter said. Meanwhile, a special U.S. committee recommended that certain health workers and first responders should be the first to receive a vaccine when one becomes available, followed by people with health conditions that put them at higher risk of severe Covid-19 disease.

Sports: The NFL announced it would reschedule Sunday?s game between the New England Patriots and the Kansas City Chiefs after players on both teams tested positive. ESPN reported that one of the players to test positive for the virus was New England quarterback Cam Newton.

India: The country surpassed a total of 100,000 deaths from the coronavirus Saturday, becoming the third country, after the U.S. and Brazil, to do so. It reported 1,069 fatalities in the preceding 24 hours, bringing the overall total to 100,842, data from the federal health ministry showed. The total number of confirmed cases stood at about 6.5 million, including 79,476 new infections.

Even as cases and fatalities rise, India?s government has moved to resume most economic activities. The country?s gross domestic product shrank by 23.9% in the April-June quarter because of the nationwide lockdown to control the spread of the virus.

North Korea: Kim Jong Un sent ?a message of sympathy? to President Trump, according to state media Saturday, after learning that Mr. Trump and the first lady had tested positive for the coronavirus. He ?sincerely hoped? that they would recover as soon as possible, state media said.

South Korea: The country reported 75 new coronavirus cases Saturday, increasing its cumulative infection count to 24,027, out of a population of 52 million. The death toll rose to 420, after four more died.

Australia: Authorities in Victoria state recorded eight new cases Saturday and three new deaths, bringing the country?s coronavirus death toll to 893. Officials there expressed concern about crowds of people going to beaches in Melbourne, which is still under strict lockdown measures after battling a rise in cases over the past few months.

New South Wales state recorded no new cases of community transmission for an eighth straight day. In Queensland state, where there have been relatively few cases, officials were worried about traces of the coronavirus being found in wastewater in some unexpected spots, underscoring the difficulties in controlling the spread of the virus

Write to Ted Mann at ted.mann@wsj.com
 

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'A slap in the face': Families of COVID-19 victims slam president's downplaying of his diagnosis

Advocates warn the president's cavalier attitude could make the pandemic worse.
ByIvan Pereira
October 5, 2020, 11:04 PM
? 8 min read

https://abcnews.go.com/US/slap-face-families-covid-19-victims-slam-presidents/story?id=73436967

Hours before he was released from a hospital stay for his coronavirus diagnosis Monday, President Trump tweeted his thoughts on the pandemic that's killed over 210,000 Americans, saying, "Don't be afraid."

On Twitter, supporters of the president praised his strength and hailed his message, calling him "Our beloved President" and "BEST PRESIDENT EVER!"

But for scores of families who've lost loved ones to the disease, as well as first responders and other advocates, the response was far different. Many of them slammed the president's cavalier sentiment and warned that it could make the situation worse.

Brian Walter, a New York City transit worker who lost his father to the virus, told ABC News in a statement that Trump's advice to people not to fear the coronavirus "hurts."

"It makes me worry for all the families who will still experience the loss of a loved one because our president refuses to take this pandemic seriously," he said.

Walter is a member of the survivor network and advocacy group COVID Survivors for Change, which has been documenting the toll the pandemic has left on millions of Americans. On Sunday, the group installed 20,000 empty chairs on the lawn across from the White House to symbolize the nation's COVID-19 deaths.

Chris Kocher, executive director of COVID Survivors for Change, said in a statement that he was taken aback by Trump's tweet, given that he had the best health care and treatment in the world -- a luxury that most coronavirus patients don't have.

"For the long haulers living with symptoms of COVID-19 for months on end, this virus is terrifying. Trump doesn?t care, and he still doesn?t get what families are going through," Kocher said in a statement.

Susan R. Bailey, the president of the American Medical Association, urged Americans to keep heeding warnings from doctors and health experts.

"We know vigilance is the best response to the COVID-19 pandemic because this virus doesn't feed on fear; it feeds on complacency," she said in a statement.

Liza Billings, a New York City nurse who lost her brother to the pandemic and is also member of COVID Survivors for Change, criticized Trump's take on the virus.

"I watched as medical teams fought like hell to save patients from COVID-19. All too often, this deadly and ferocious virus won," she said in a statement to ABC News.

Billings called Trump's message not to fear the virus a "slap in the face to all of those who lost a loved one to COVID-19, as well as all of us who put our lives on the line to save others."

"It?s a callous and dangerous remark that will do nothing to stop this horrifying pandemic, and may even make it worse," she said.

Among the more prominent voices speaking out was Kristin Urquiza, the Arizona woman who appeared at the Democratic National Convention and blamed Trump's rhetoric for her father's coronavirus-related death. Urquiza quote-tweeted the president's message saying, "At this point, the only thing we should be afraid of is you."

In a statement to ABC News sent later Monday evening, Urquiza said Trump is preoccupied with looking strong instead of focusing on helping the nation through the crisis.

"It?s more clear than ever before that Trump cares about no one but himself," she said.

While not referring to the president's tweet directly, former Vice President Joe Biden told a crowd in Miami that the president should listen to the scientists and medical experts about the dangers of the pandemic.

He noted that since the president was diagnosed with COVID-19 on Friday, more than 100,000 more Americans have contracted the virus.

"I hope the president?s recovery is swift and successful," Biden said, "but our nation's COVID crisis is far, far from over."

ABC News' Victoria Moll-Ramirez and Molly Nagle contributed to this report.

This report was featured in the Tuesday, Oct. 6, 2020, episode of ?Start Here,? ABC News? daily news podcast.
 

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From COVID-19 to voting: Trump is nation's single largest spreader of disinformation, studies say
Jessica Guynn
USA TODAY

https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech...rmation-facebook-twitter-election/3632194001/

Is President Trump the nation?s chief disinformation officer?

Controversial posts concerning COVID-19 on Monday in which the president tells the public "Don?t let it dominate you" and "Don?t be afraid of it" and claims he may have immunity to the deadly virus have heightened public criticism of Trump for spreading dangerous falsehoods.

?There is no doubt that Donald Trump is the largest spreader of specific and important types of misinformation today,? said Graham Brookie, director of the Atlantic Council's Digital Forensic Research Lab.

In the critical last weeks of the election, social media companies are facing a tsunami of conspiracy theories, hoaxes and fake claims on everything from COVID-19 to voting. And whether during a presidential debate, in press briefings or in posts on Facebook and Twitter, much of that misinformation is being generated and amplified by Trump, two recent studies show.

Harvard?s Berkman Klein Center analyzed 55,000 online media stories, 5 million tweets and 75,000 posts on public Facebook pages with millions of interaction and concluded that Trump and his reelection campaign, using Twitter, press briefings and television interviews, is driving peaks in attention to disinformation around mail-in voting, absentee balloting and election rigging, according to research published last week.

A separate study out of Cornell University last week found that Trump is the "single largest" transmitter of misinformation surrounding COVID-19, hawking false "miracle cures" and dubious claims about the origins of the virus.

?The president?s social media presence is the tip of an iceberg with an entire amplification ecosystem of right-wing media, influencers, and outright conspiracy theorists making up the bulk below,? Brookie said.

That ecosystem went into overdrive on Monday when, before returning to the White House three days after being hospitalized and receiving aggressive medical treatment including therapies not widely available to most patients experiencing mild symptoms, the president told the public not to fear the deadly pandemic that has killed more than 210,000 Americans.

In social media posts on Facebook and Twitter, Trump advised his followers to not let COVID ?dominate your life.?

"We have developed, under the Trump Administration, some really great drugs & knowledge,? he wrote, saying he felt better than he did "20 years ago."

On Monday Trump also tweeted a video that claimed vaccines were coming "momentarily."

The posts on Facebook and Twitter remain up and are not labeled. The Facebook post has been liked by 1 million people and the tweet has been retweeted hundreds of thousands of times on Twitter.

Twitter said the president's tweet did not violate its rules on COVID-19 misinformation because it did not contain a clear call to action that could cause real-world harm. The company said it would continue to address misleading claims that directly contradict the guidance of health officials.

Facebook did not respond to requests for comment. It has said it does not permit posts about COVID-19 that could directly cause physical harm and would redirect users to an information center about the virus.

Neither social media company has been entirely hands off with the president. Twitter has labeled Trump's tweets and in August, Facebook and Twitter removed a video clip shared by Trump that showed him saying during a Fox News interview that children are ?almost immune" from COVID-19.

Facebook did not respond to requests for comment. It has said it does not permit posts about COVID-19 that could directly cause physical harm and would redirect users to an information center about the virus.

?President Trump?s social media posts today telling the public not to fear COVID-19 is public health misinformation and should be labeled with accurate information,? Brookie said. ?It is shameful that much of his political future depends on him covering the mismanagement of COVID-19 with misinformation that downplays the danger that has led to over 200,000 Americans dead.?

Social media companies whose platforms were used to amplify falsehoods, conspiracy theories and inflammatory rhetoric in 2016 have been preparing for November?s presidential election for years.

There?s been an alarming rise in domestic meddling from groups such as extremist conspiracy movement QAnon, which are pumping out falsehoods. Foreign actors are stirring up trouble as they did four years ago. And remarks from Trump are threatening to undermine confidence in the election and in public safety during the pandemic.

"Are you kidding me?" Bob Wachter, chair of the UCSF Department of Medicine, responded to the president on Twitter. "After 210,000 deaths in the U.S. & 1 million deaths worldwide? This either shows a breathtakingly callous, inhumane & counterproductive attitude, or he has altered mental status ? in which case the 25th Amendment should be invoked."

But journalist Casey Newton, author of the online newsletter Platformer, says "Trump is a problem platforms can't solve."

"To me it seems clear that platforms play some role in contributing to all of these problems ? and in some cases, a very large one," he wrote Monday. "But to lay it all at the feet of a Facebook, or a YouTube, or a Twitter, seems too convenient. These platforms are part of a larger information sphere."
 

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Trump orders aides to halt talks on COVID-19 relief
Morgan Chalfant,Mike Lillis and Scott Wong 1 hr ago

President Trump said Tuesday that he has instructed his top aides to stop negotiating with Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) on future coronavirus stimulus legislation until after the November election.

Trump, who is himself currently being treated for COVID-19, accused Pelosi in a series of tweets of "not negotiating in good faith" and seeking "bailouts" for states he says are poorly run by Democratic officials.

"I have instructed my representatives to stop negotiating until after the election when, immediately after I win, we will pass a major Stimulus Bill that focuses on hardworking Americans and Small Business," Trump tweeted.

The message marks a sharp reversal for the president, who just three days earlier had urged leaders of both parties to come together to finalize an agreement that can hit his desk before the Nov. 3 elections.

"OUR GREAT USA WANTS & NEEDS STIMULUS. WORK TOGETHER AND GET IT DONE," Trump tweeted on Saturday afternoon, a day after he checked into the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

Pelosi quickly condemned Trump's move Tuesday, accusing the president of neglecting his office by refusing to provide help to those struggling under the health and economic weight of the pandemic.

"Today, once again, President Trump showed his true colors: putting himself first at the expense of the country, with the full complicity of the GOP Members of Congress," she said in a statement.

The Democratic leader added that the White House "is in complete disarray."

In derailing the talks, Trump seems to be betting that his best shot at reelection is not in getting new emergency funding out the door before Nov. 3, but instead dangling the promise of more aid for after voters go to the polls - particularly if he wins.

The president singled out one area of the talks where both sides have remained far apart for weeks: help for state and local governments. Pelosi is seeking more than $430 billion for those localities, while Republicans have rejected that figure as far too high, wary that Democrats simply want to rescue blue states facing budget crunches as the result of policy decisions made before the pandemic arrived.


"Nancy Pelosi is asking for $2.4 Trillion Dollars to bailout poorly run, high crime, Democrat States, money that is in no way related to COVID-19," Trump tweeted. "We made a very generous offer of $1.6 Trillion Dollars and, as usual, she is not negotiating in good faith."

The strategy is a risky one. Millions of Americans remain out of work; thousands of businesses are on the brink of collapse; and American consumers have been wary of returning to restaurants, theaters and public transit, even in regions where they've reopened.

Earlier Tuesday, Jerome Powell, head of the Federal Reserve, warned that the long-term effects on the economy could be devastating if Congress fails to act quickly with more emergency relief - comments not overlooked by Pelosi, who has leaned heavily on Powell's grim forecasts as leverage throughout the talks. And stocks immediately plunged after Trump announced he would call off the negotiations until after the election, which is now four weeks away.

Trump's tweets came shortly after the president hosted a call with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and top congressional Republicans - Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (Calif.) - about the status of the talks.

McConnell and McCarthy have both been cold to the idea of adopting another massive round of stimulus. And the fact that it was their message, not Mnuchin's, that resonated with the president is some indication of the level of Republican distrust in the Treasury secretary, who has come under fire from the GOP in earlier negotiations for giving away too much to Pelosi.

Trump's actions appeared to come as a surprise to Pelosi and the Democrats. Mnuchin has been speaking daily with Pelosi, and just minutes before Trump's tweets, Pelosi told rank-and-file Democrats on a private conference call that she and Mnuchin continued to make progress and that she was waiting to hear back from the White House on state and local funding and other Democratic priorities.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) told Democrats on the same call that the House could be called back to Washington as early as next week to vote if such a deal materialized. And Pelosi and Mnuchin had another phone call scheduled for Tuesday afternoon before Trump issued his directive.

"I'm incredulous," moderate Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.) told The Hill after Trump's tweet. "Given President Trump's own COVID diagnosis and his earlier comments in support of a bill with 'much higher numbers' it is confounding and unconscionable that he would suddenly order a cessation of negotiations over a much-needed COVID-19 relief bill."

"American families and America's small businesses are hurting and cannot afford even more delays - especially when a deal is within reach," Phillips said.

Trump is currently trailing Democratic nominee Joe Biden in national and swing-state polling. The president's handling of the coronavirus pandemic has been a central issue in the election.

Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows have been negotiating with Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) since late July on a fifth bipartisan coronavirus relief package but have been unsuccessful in reaching an agreement.

The president has remained largely on the sidelines in the negotiations, allowing Meadows and Mnuchin to take the lead on the discussions.

Trump and Pelosi have a particularly chilly relationship and have not had a meaningful conversation for an entire year. In lieu of a deal in August, Trump signed a handful of executive orders aimed at halting federal evictions, extending expanded unemployment benefits and deferring the payroll tax.

Trump returned to the White House on Monday evening after 72 hours of treatment for the coronavirus at Walter Reed. Trump, who was diagnosed with the virus on Thursday, has sought to project an image of strength by showing that he has returned to work amid his illness.

The president has also urged Americans not to fear the virus or allow it to "dominate" their lives, remarks that have been met with scrutiny from health experts who argue that Trump has dangerously minimized the threat from COVID-19.
 

WhatsHisNuts

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Trump orders aides to halt talks on COVID-19 relief
Morgan Chalfant,Mike Lillis and Scott Wong 1 hr ago

President Trump said Tuesday that he has instructed his top aides to stop negotiating with Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) on future coronavirus stimulus legislation until after the November election.

Trump, who is himself currently being treated for COVID-19, accused Pelosi in a series of tweets of "not negotiating in good faith" and seeking "bailouts" for states he says are poorly run by Democratic officials.

I think he is trying to lose this election. If not, this is the dumbest fucking move he could make this side of endorsing Biden.

If I were Biden, I'd lock my ass in the basement and let this moron continue to self destruct. :mj07:
 

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I think he is trying to lose this election. If not, this is the dumbest fucking move he could make this side of endorsing Biden.

If I were Biden, I'd lock my ass in the basement and let this moron continue to self destruct. :mj07:

Who's gonna stock your grocery shelves?:shrug:
 
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