Coronavirus cases rising in 41 states as Republicans scale back convention
Coronavirus outbreak
Record new cases in California, Florida, Texas and Arizona
Georgia governor suspends local mask mandates More
Subterms
138 Shares199 Views
in US PoliticsCoronavirus outbreak
Record new cases in California, Florida, Texas and Arizona
Georgia governor suspends local mask mandates More
125 Shares119 Views
in US PoliticsOklahoma
Kevin Stitt, 48, isolating home after feeling ‘a little achey’
Republican pursued bold reopening plan and rarely wore mask More
188 Shares159 Views
in US PoliticsDonald Trump
Analysis: The administration’s barrage of attacks on the public health expert comes as little surprise, observers say More
250 Shares129 Views
in US PoliticsOpinion
US politics
Trump may be no good at leading America – but he’s really, really good at lying
Richard Wolffe
US credibility has been contorted to protect the feelings of one man-child. No wonder he finds Anthony Fauci so offensive More
125 Shares169 Views
in US PoliticsState is latest to roll back reopening efforts
Officials release Trump’s clemency order for Roger Stone
Fauci sidelined as White House steps up briefing campaign
Texas: 30-year-old dies after attending ‘coronavirus party’
Sign up to our First Thing newsletter
LIVE
Updated
Play Video
1:59
Donald Trump: ‘I have a very good relationship with Anthony Fauci’ – video
Key events
Show
5.29pm EDT17:29
‘Shame on you!’: protester interrupts Florida governor
5.18pm EDT17:18
Fact check on Trump’s false ‘mortality rate’ comments
4.55pm EDT16:55
Judge blocks Georgia’s anti-abortion law
4.32pm EDT16:32
Today so far
4.03pm EDT16:03
California shuts down indoor operations of many recently reopened businesses
3.43pm EDT15:43
Roger Stone’s clemency order by Trump released
3.06pm EDT15:06
Trump falsely claims he’s getting ‘rave reviews’ for Stone commutation
Live feed
Show
5.29pm EDT17:29
‘Shame on you!’: protester interrupts Florida governor
As Florida governor Ron DeSantis started his update on the worsening Covid crisis in his state just now, a protester in a mask interrupted, shouting: “You are misleading the public. You are blaming the protesters. You guys have no plan, and you are doing nothing. Shame on you!” Watch here:
WFLA NEWS
(@WFLA)
‘SHAME ON YOU!’A protester just interrupted Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Florida coronavirus update, yelling that he’s doing nothing and is lying as coronavirus cases surge. https://t.co/yLokMuiUrp pic.twitter.com/tMYRSuQhhm
July 13, 2020
The protest comes one day after Florida broke the national record for the largest single-day increase in positive coronavirus cases in any state since the beginning of the pandemic, adding more than 15,000 cases as its daily average death toll continued to also rise.
DeSantis has said that even with the rising rates and growing safety concerns, he still wants schools to reopen as scheduled next month. The governor also recently downplayed the help his state was receiving from the state of New York for supplies, even though records show his aides thanking New York officials.
5.18pm EDT17:18
Fact check on Trump’s false ‘mortality rate’ comments
As the Covid-19 crisis dramatically worsens across the US, Trump has continued to share the falsehood that the US has “one of the lowest mortality rates anywhere”:
Robert Mackey
(@RobertMackey)
Someone in the White House press corps needs to directly ask Trump why he keeps saying the US mortality rate for Covid-19, which is among the 10 highest in the world, is the lowest, and why he keeps saying the 1918 pandemic was in 1917. https://t.co/fAxpZUXXbo
July 13, 2020
In fact, there are at least 14 countries that have lower death rates than the US, according to CNN, when looking at the 20 countries most affected by the virus. Experts told the network the fatality rate of around 4.5% in the US was the sixth highest in the world – a death toll more than twice as high as Brazil, with the second-highest toll.
Updated
at 5.32pm EDT
4.55pm EDT16:55
Judge blocks Georgia’s anti-abortion law
A federal judge has permanently blocked a controversial Georgia law passed in 2019, which sought to ban abortions once there was a “detectable human heartbeat”, which can happen as early as six weeks into a pregnancy.
The law would have also granted personhood to a fetus, giving it the same legal rights as people after they’re born. US judge Steve Jones ruled against the state today, refusing to leave any parts of the law intact. The ruling permanently blocks the state from enforcing the law, which he had temporarily blocked in October and never went into effect.
The law had faced intense backlash from the film industry, and experts warned it would have deadly consequences for women forced underground:
The governor, Brian Kemp, a Republican and a supporter of the restrictions, has vowed to appeal the ruling, though he will face an uphill battle given that the US Supreme Court last month struck down other abortion restrictions from Louisiana. Some more background from the Associated Press:
At least eight states passed so-called heartbeat bills in 2019, including Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio and Tennessee. South Carolina is still considering one. All of the new bans joined the fate of earlier heartbeat abortion bans from Arkansas, North Dakota and Iowa in being at least temporarily blocked by judges. Louisiana’s ban wouldn’t take effect unless a court upholds Mississippi’s law.
In a separate ruling Monday, a U.S. district judge in Tennessee blocked a Tennessee law that Republican Gov. Bill had signed hours earlier banning an abortion as early as six weeks into pregnancy and prohibiting abortions based on race, sex or diagnosis of Down syndrome.
Updated
at 5.33pm EDT
4.39pm EDT16:39
Hi all – Sam Levin here, taking over our live coverage for the rest of the day, writing from Los Angeles, which is returning to strict closures for a number of industries, as Covid infections, hospitalizations and deaths continue to surge here.
Business owners in LA have told me that it’s been particularly painful to restart and then shut down again, and that they have been pouring money into making their indoor operations safe, with little certainty about when they can properly reopen. Here’s more from my colleague Vivian Ho on the state of the crisis and new restrictions across California:
4.32pm EDT16:32
Today so far
That’s it from me today. My west coast colleague, Sam Levin, will take over the blog for the next few hours.
Here’s where the day stands so far:
California governor Gavin Newsom issued a statewide order that many recently reopened businesses must cease indoor operations, as the state grapples with a surge in new cases of coronavirus. The order impacts restaurants, wineries, movie theaters and museums, among other venues. Bars must also close all operations, according to the order.
The justice department released the order commuting Roger Stone’s sentence. The order showed all elements of Stone’s sentences — including his prison time, his probation and his $20,000 fine — have all been voided. The department released the order hours after Judge Amy Berman Jackson, who has presided over Stone’s case, requested clarification on whether the order affected Stone’s probation.
Trump falsely claimed he has receive “rave reviews” for commuting Stone’s sentence. In reality, both Democrats and Republicans criticized the commutation as a miscarriage of justice. Republican senator Mitt Romney described it as “unprecedented, historic corruption.”
California’s two largest public school districts are going entirely online when classes resume next month. The announcement makes the LA and San Diego districts the largest school districts in the country to announce they will not resume in-person instruction when the new academic year starts.
Trump retweeted a claim that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is “lying” about coronavirus. The tweet comes as the White House seeks to raise doubts about the credibility of Dr Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious disease expert.
A US district judge set a new delay in federal executions. US District Judge Tanya Chutkan’s injuction came hours before the first federal execution in 17 years was set to take place at a federal prison in Indiana.
Sam will have more coming up, so stay tuned.
4.18pm EDT16:18
Joe Biden released a scathing video about Trump’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, as the president downplays the country’s recent surge in new cases.
Joe Biden
(@JoeBiden)
“We’re leading the world.” pic.twitter.com/QQzaQeKAUj
July 13, 2020
The ad features some of Trump’s recent comments about the pandemic, including his claim that the US is “leading the world” in the fight against coronavirus.
As footage of Trump’s comments plays, a graphic shows the rising coronavirus death toll in the United States. More than 135,000 Americans have now died of coronavirus.
The US has confirmed 3,341,838 cases of coronavirus, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tracker, meaning the US accounts for about a quarter of all cases worldwide.
4.03pm EDT16:03
California shuts down indoor operations of many recently reopened businesses
The Guardian’s Vivian Ho reports from California:
California’s governor has ordered all counties across the state to shut down the indoor operations of several recently reopened sectors of the economy, including restaurants, bars, movie theaters and malls following a surge in new coronavirus cases.
The state has seen an average of 8,211 new cases over the past week, an uptick from the 7,876 average recorded the week before. The positivity rate has increased to 7.4%, up from 6.1% a few weeks prior.
Gavin Newsom
(@GavinNewsom)
NEW: #COVID19 cases continue to spread at alarming rates.CA is now closing indoor operations STATEWIDE for:-Restaurants-Wineries-Movie theaters, family entertainment-Zoos, museums-CardroomsBars must close ALL operations.
July 13, 2020
“It’s incumbent on all of us to recognize, soberly, that covid-19 is not going away anytime soon,” said Gavin Newsom, California’s governor.
The order will affect places of worship, fitness centers, zoos, museums, entertainment centers and personal care centers. It comes as the state’s monitoring list of counties experiencing surges has grown to include 30 counties.
Updated
at 4.04pm EDT
3.43pm EDT15:43
Roger Stone’s clemency order by Trump released
Joanna Walters
The attorney at the Office of the Pardon, that well known corner of the Washington labyrinth, has released the clemency order that Donald Trump signed for Roger Stone last Friday.
Stone was due to report to federal prison tomorrow. But the order voids all elements of his sentence, including the time behind bars, the $20,000 fine and the two years of probation. Earlier today, Judge Amy Berman Jackson asked for a copy of the order to clarify whether it applied to Stone’s probation.
Stone has not been pardoned, however. The president has reportedly encouraged him to appeal his conviction for lying and witness tampering in the Russia investigation. And a pardon implies that someone was guilty.
Kyle Cheney
(@kyledcheney)
JUST IN: The Office of the Pardon attorney has posted the clemency order that Trump signed for Roger STONE.It voids all elements of his sentence, including a $20,000 fine and two years of supervised release.https://t.co/Ps7OWfvJhl pic.twitter.com/lnuFN50mtv
July 13, 2020
Also, Stone released from home confinement.
Ali Dukakis
(@ajdukakis)
This also releases Stone from home confinement effective immediately, it says.
July 13, 2020
Updated
at 4.23pm EDT
3.38pm EDT15:38
Joanna Walters
Donald Trump has once again baited China over the coronavirus, which originated in the country last year.
At the press Q & A moments ago in Washington, the president said: “I think what China has done to the world with the China plague…the China virus…what they did to the world should not be forgotten.”
Early on in the pandemic, Trump came under heavy criticism for calling Covid-19 the “China virus” and then defending his choice of language, while also questioning whether the virus occurred naturally, as all his top experts believe, or was made in a lab.
After a while he was persuaded to stop using that phrase but in recent weeks he’s thrown away caution and diplomacy and begun using many derogatory and racially-biased terms for coronavirus, as well as continuing with repeated misinformation about the illness and the way the pandemic is being handled in the US.
3.11pm EDT15:11
Trump once again said schools should be reopened, in response to a question about the new announcement that LA and San Diego schools will be entirely online when classes resume next month.
“Schools should be opened,” Trump said. “You’re losing a lot of lives by keeping things closed.”
The president and some of his advisers have repeatedly argued that it is more dangerous to keep students home from school due to the possibility of neglect or abuse.
However, many school districts have expressed alarm about the possibility of coronavirus spreading in the classroom when in-person instruction resumes.
3.06pm EDT15:06
Trump falsely claims he’s getting ‘rave reviews’ for Stone commutation
Trump defended his highly controversial decision to commute the sentence of Roger Stone, the president’s former associate.
“I’m getting rave reviews for what I did for Roger Stone,” the president falsely claimed.
In reality, both Democrats and Republicans have criticized Trump’s decision to commute Stone’s sentence.
Republican senator Mitt Romney described Stone’s commutation as “unprecedented, historic corruption.”
Updated
at 3.14pm EDT
3.00pm EDT15:00
Trump: ‘I have a very good relationship with Dr Fauci’
Trump is now taking questions from reporters at his roundtable with families who have been positively impacted by police officers.
The first question was unsurprisingly about the White House’s recent criticism of Dr Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious disease expert.
“I have a very good relationship with Dr Fauci,” Trump said, describing the senior official as a “very nice person.” But the president added, “I don’t always agree with him.”
Over the weekend, the White House ciriculated an unsigned memo casting some of Fauci’s past comments on coronavirus in a negative light, leading some of Trump’s critics to accuse the president of attacking science.
2.40pm EDT14:40
LA and San Diego schools will be entirely online when classes resume
The LA and San Diego unified school districts, the two largest public school systems in California, has announced classes will be entirely online when the new school year starts next month.
Austin Beutner
(@AustinLASchools)
Update on July 13thActualización del 13 de julio pic.twitter.com/HhbvV6zYfu
July 13, 2020
“Both districts will continue planning for a return to in-person learning during the 2020-21 academic year, as soon as public health conditions allow,” the school districts said in a joint statement.
“Our leaders owe it to all of those impacted by the Covid-19 closures to increase the pace of their work. No one should use the delay in the reopening of classrooms as a reason to relax. The coronavirus has not taken a summer vacation, as many had hoped. Indeed, the virus has accelerated its attacks on our community.
“The federal government must provide schools with the resources we need to reopen in a responsible manner.”
The announcement makes the two California school districts the largest ones in the country so far to announce they will not resume in-person instruction this fall.
The announcement comes as Trump and some of his top advisers push schools to reopen next month, even though the president’s administration has sent mixed signals about how schools can safely welcome students back.
Updated
at 2.51pm EDT
2.22pm EDT14:22
Trump holds roundtable on families positively affected by police
Trump is now holding a roundtable “with several Americans whose lives were helped, and in some cases saved, by law enforcement,” as the White House described it.
The president opened the roundtable by complaining about how police officers were being “very unfairly treated” in the wake of the polie killing of George Floyd.
The roundtable comes as the country experiences a national reckoning over racism and police brutality in response to the killing of Floyd and many other black Americans in police custody, including Breonna Taylor.
Updated
at 3.26pm EDT
2.10pm EDT14:10
Attorney general William Barr ignored a question about Roger Stone’s commutation, a week after Barr described the former Trump associate’s sentence as “fair.”
Weijia Jiang
(@weijia)
NEW—Last week Attorney General Bill Barr described Roger Stone’s sentence as “fair”. Just now he had no comment on the President’s decision to commute Stone: pic.twitter.com/YFGPaD3xKm
July 13, 2020
Senior justice department officials previously intervened in the Stone case to push for a more lenient sentence for the president’s former associate, causing some of the prosecutors involved in the case to withdraw.
Last week, the justice department declined to side with Stone after he argued the start of his prison sentence should be delayed because of the coronavirus pandemic. Trump commuted Stone’s sentence a day later.
2.01pm EDT14:01
Press secretary Kayleigh McEnany has just concluded her briefing at the White House, during which she was repeatedly pressed on how the administration is responding to the recent surge in new cases of coronavirus.
McEnany defended the administration’s response to the pandemic by noting that the rate of coronavirus deaths has not risen as sharply as the rate of new cases in recent weeks.
However, public health experts have warned that the death toll often lags behind new cases as an indicator for the spread of the virus.
There is also evidence that the death toll is starting to rise. The seven-day average of daily coronavirus deaths now stands at 719, up from 471 a week ago.
1.50pm EDT13:50
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany was pressed on Trump’s debunked claim that expanded coronavirus testing has caused the increased number of cases in the US.
A reporter noted the positivity rate of coronavirus tests has also climbed in many parts of the country, which cannot be explained by expanded testing.
McEnany replied by saying the administration has acknowledged there would be “embers” of the crisis that states had to grapple with, but she once again emphasized that more testing reveals more positive cases.
But it is difficult to view the recent surges in new cases as “embers” considering many states are seeing record levels of new infections. Florida reported more than 15,000 new cases in one day over the weekend.
1.45pm EDT13:45
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany defended Trump’s highly controversial decision to commute the sentence of his former associate, Roger Stone.
The Hill
(@thehill)
Press Sec. Kayleigh McEnany: “There really are two standards of justice in this country.” pic.twitter.com/ASbT6g2NCx
July 13, 2020
McEnany described Stone’s commutation as a “very important moment for justice in this country,” criticizing the Russia investigation that led to his conviction as “completely bogus.”
The press secretary complained that there are “really two standards of justice” in the country, arguing former officials like former deputy FBI director Andrew McCabe should have faced similar charges. More
150 Shares199 Views
in ElectionsPlay Video
1:59
Donald Trump has rebuffed reports that the White House is briefing against Anthony Fauci, the federal government’s top public health expert. ‘I have a very good relationship with Dr Fauci,’ he said. The president’s press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany, denied that officials had shared ‘opposition research’ with reporters. Over the weekend, Trump aides told news outlets that Fauci, who has become the public face of the government’s response, had made a series of ‘mistakes’ in his predictions
Trump aides seek to discredit Fauci over coronavirus crisis as cases surge
Topics
Donald Trump
Coronavirus outbreak
US politics More
150 Shares199 Views
in US PoliticsCoronavirus outbreak
Trump administration at war with Fauci as aides claim he has made series of ‘mistakes’ in his predictions
US politics – live coverage
Play Video
1:59
Donald Trump: ‘I have a very good relationship with Anthony Fauci’ – video
The Trump administration is increasingly at war with Anthony Fauci, the federal government’s top public health expert, over the handling of the coronavirus crisis, as the US continues to report around 60,000 new cases a day.
In what appeared to be a concerted effort to discredit the infectious diseases expert, Trump aides told news outlets over the weekend Fauci, who has become the public face of the government’s response, had made a series of “mistakes” in his predictions.
Fauci’s unvarnished manner and willingness to be blunt in a way that may question or contradict statements by the president have fed reports he has been barred from major media appearances, though he has testified in Congress and continued to speak to the press. Fauci said last week he had not briefed Trump in months.
The US contributed heavily to 230,000 new cases of Covid-19 being reported to the World Health Organization on Sunday. Trump has formally started the process of withdrawing the US from the WHO. Joe Biden, Trump’s opponent for the presidency in November, has said he will reverse that decision, which will take effect in July 2021.
States in the American south in particular appear to be suffering from lifting lockdowns too early. The WHO director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, warned on Monday that those witnessing resurgences of the virus were not following proven methods to reduce risk.
“Let me blunt,” he said. “Too many countries are headed in the wrong direction. The virus remains public enemy number one, but the actions of many governments and people do not reflect this.”
The Trump administration’s unseemly effort against Fauci came as doctors warned that hospitals in several large cities across the US south are close to being overrun.
Florida reported 12,264 new cases on Monday, its second-highest total after 15,299 on Sunday. Just over four months after the first coronavirus death in the US, and as many countries have seemingly managed a decline in cases, the US is still in the grip of the virus. As of Monday morning, Johns Hopkins University reported more than 3.3m cases and 135,219 deaths.
Donald Trump wore a mask in public for the first time over the weekend, a long-delayed concession to the importance of face coverings in preventing the spread of Covid-19. But the government’s predominant focus appeared to be on discrediting the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, a 79-year-old public figure who has served under six presidents.
“Several White House officials are concerned about the number of times Dr Fauci has been wrong on things,” an anonymous Trump aide said in a statement released to news outlets.
CNN reported being given bullet points listing statements made by Fauci early in the pandemic, a list which it said “resembled opposition research on a political opponent”.
On Monday Trump himself picked up the offensive, retweeting a post from a former TV dating show host which criticized the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
“Everyone is lying,” said the post from Chuck Woolery, who hosted the show Love Connection in the 1980s and 90s. “The CDC, media, Democrats, our doctors, not all but most, that we are told to trust.”
Adam Schiff, an influential Democratic congressman, described the president’s behaviour as “atrocious”, telling CNN it was “so characteristic of Donald Trump. He can’t stand the fact that the American people trust Dr Fauci and they don’t trust Donald Trump – and so he has to tear him down.”
At a briefing on Monday afternoon, Trump’s press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany, denied the White House was sending out opposition research on Fauci, adding that the bullet points had been provided as “a direct answer to a direct question” from the Washington Post.
Despite the US recording more daily cases than in the early days of the pandemic, deaths are yet to hit the highs of April, when Covid-19 ravaged New York City and areas in other eastern seaboard states.
On Sunday, New York City health officials recorded no coronavirus deaths for the first time since the first death on 11 March, though Mayor Bill de Blasio said there had been an increase in infections among 20- to 29-year olds.
Experts nonetheless say deaths are likely to rise in the coming weeks. Florida alone has now recorded 269,811 coronavirus cases, and the state reported 514 fatalities over the past week, an average of 73 a day. Three weeks ago, Florida was averaging 30 deaths a day.
Texas has also set records for cases in recent days, and on Monday the chief executive of Houston’s public health system warned hospitals were struggling to cope.
“The situation, the best I can describe it is dire and it’s getting worse, it seems like, every day,” Esmail Porsa told MSNBC.
Houston was taken to court by the Texas Republican party over its refusal to allow the party’s convention to go ahead with in-person events. The city won a minor battle on Monday when the state supreme court ruled it was able to cancel the convention.
After Trump wore a mask on Saturday, Adm Brett Giroir, a member of the White House coronavirus taskforce, said mask-wearing in public, which has met with resistance in some Republican-dominated states, was “absolutely essential”.
Giroir, assistant secretary at the health and human services department, told ABC: “If we don’t have that, we will not get control of the virus.”
Topics
Coronavirus outbreak
Infectious diseases
Donald Trump
Trump administration
US politics
news
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Share via Email
Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest
Share on WhatsApp
Share on Messenger
Reuse this content More
150 Shares139 Views
in US PoliticsBetsy DeVos
Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley says: ‘I wouldn’t trust you to care for a house plant, let alone my child’
US politics – live coverage More
This portal is not a newspaper as it is updated without periodicity. It cannot be considered an editorial product pursuant to law n. 62 of 7.03.2001. The author of the portal is not responsible for the content of comments to posts, the content of the linked sites. Some texts or images included in this portal are taken from the internet and, therefore, considered to be in the public domain; if their publication is violated, the copyright will be promptly communicated via e-mail. They will be immediately removed.