The Commentariat -- April 12, 2020
Afternoon Update:
Joe Biden, in a New York Times op-ed, describes his plan to safely "reopen America." Mrs. McC: Biden's methodical plan differs greatly from Trump's, which is "when I say so. we'll just do it." That's not the title of Trump's plan; that's the whole plan.
Simon Tisdall of the Guardian: "Donald Trump's response to the coronavirus pandemic ... has been fiercely criticised at home as woefully inadequate to the point of irresponsibility. Yet also thanks largely to Trump, a parallel disaster is unfolding across the world: the ruination of America's reputation as a safe, trustworthy, competent international leader and partner.... 'The Trump administration's self-centred, haphazard, and tone-deaf response [to Covid-19] will end up costing Americans trillions of dollars and thousands of otherwise preventable deaths,' wrote Stephen Walt, professor of international relations at Harvard. 'But that's not the only damage the United States will suffer. Far from "making America great again", this epic policy failure will further tarnish [its] reputation as a country that knows how to do things effectively.' This adverse shift could be permanent, Walt warned."
Jacob Knutson of Axios: "Dr. Anthony Fauci said on CNN's 'State of the Union' Sunday that 'no one is going to deny' that more lives could have been saved during the coronavirus crisis if the Trump administration had implemented social distancing guidelines prior to March.... 'We make a recommendation. Often the recommendation is taken. Sometimes it's not. But it is what it is. We are where we are right now.'"
Rishika Dugyala of Politico: “FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn has acknowledged the need to ramp up testing, but on Sunday his tone was cautious: Having an inaccurate test is worse than not having a test at all. Going forward, Hahn said on ABC's 'This Week,' 'further ramping up testing, both diagnostic as well as the antibody tests, will really be necessary as we move beyond May into the summer months and then into the fall.' The doctor added that the United States has done more than 2 million tests, but stated: 'We need to do more. No question about that.'" Mrs. McC: Notice that this is not a "plan" but an "aspiration" or a "plea" to the Dear Leader.
Justine Coleman of the Hill: "The bishop who delivered the Good Friday Easter blessing at the White House has in the past come under fire for anti-LGBTQ comments. Bishop Harry Jackson conducted the Easter blessing at the White House on Friday and was introduced by President Trump as a 'highly respected gentleman.' But Jackson has been in the national spotlight for anti-LGBTQ rhetoric throughout the past decade. In 2011, he spoke with the Sons of Liberty Radio and called the push for marriage equality 'a Satanic plot.'"
Rebecca Klar of the Hill: "Pope Francis advocated for a universal basic income amid the coronavirus pandemic in an Easter letter to leaders of social movements and organizations around the world. 'This may be the time to consider a universal basic wage which would acknowledge and dignify the noble, essential tasks you carry out,' he wrote. 'It would ensure and concretely achieve the ideal, at once so human and so Christian, of no worker without rights.' In his message the pope acknowledged that the pandemic and subsequen economic shutdowns have hit 'twice as hard' for those without any legal guarantee of protection."
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Mrs. McC: I got a late start this morning & added several links between about 8:30 & 9:30 am ET. If you stopped by earlier, you might want to skim the page for additions.
The New York Times' live updates for coronavirus developments in the U.S. Saturday are here. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~
~~~ Washington Post live updates for Saturday are here. "The United States' covid-19 death tally is now the highest in the world, eclipsing Italy's toll on Saturday, despite experts calling the U.S. figure 'an underestimation.' The U.S. toll is now 19,424, with nearly half a million confirmed cases, surpassing Italy's total of 18,849. Italy has 147,577 infected with the virus. Despite the country's large elderly population, experts had previously forecast that Italy's staggering toll was not an outlier so much as a preview of what other countries could expect. The steady taraclimb of cases has slowed, and the Mediterranean country is now preparing to reopen." (Also linked yesterday.)
Today in Trumpian Incompetence
Eric Lipton, et al., of the New York Times: "Throughout January, as Mr. Trump repeatedly played down the seriousness of the virus and focused on other issues, an array of figures inside his government -- from top White House advisers to experts deep in the cabinet departments and intelligence agencies -- identified the threat, sounded alarms and made clear the need for aggressive action. The president, though, was slow to absorb the scale of the risk and to act accordingly, focusing instead on controlling the message, protecting gains in the economy and batting away warnings from senior officials. It was a problem, he said, that had come out of nowhere and could not have been foreseen.... Dozens of interviews with current and former officials and a review of emails and other records revealed many previously unreported details and a fuller picture of the roots and extent of his halting response as the deadly virus spread[.]" ~~~
~~~ Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: This is a long & damning piece that clearly demonstrates how a "team of incompetents" a/k/a "all the best people" led by a volatile narcissist is a tremendous threat to U.S. security -- as if you didn't know. ~~~
~~~ Michael Shear of the New York Times: Here are five key takeaways from the report linked above. "Intelligence agencies and the N.S.C. produced early warnings.... In recent days, Mr. Trump has denied that he saw [a January 29] memo [by Peter Navarro warning that half-a-million Americans could die] at the time. But The Times report reveals that aides raised it with him at the time and that he was unhappy that Mr. Navarro had put his ideas in writing.... An official at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention went public with dire warnings too soon, sending stocks tumbling and angering Mr. Trump, who pushed aside his health and human services secretary and put Vice President Mike Pence in charge of the response. [Mrs. McC: That "too soon" merits air quotes.]... Officials repeatedly expressed concern about the lack of aggressive action to deal with the virus.... The president was surrounded by divided factions in March even as it became clearer that avoiding more aggressive steps to stop the spread of the virus was not tenable."~~~
~~~ Eric Lipton of the NYT: "As the coronavirus emerged and headed toward the United States, a extraordinary conversation was hatched among an elite group of infectious disease doctors and medical experts in the federal government and academic institutions around the nation. Red Dawn -- a nod to the 1984 film ... -- was the nickname for the email chain they built.... Here are key exchanges from the emails, with context and analysis, that show the experts' rising sense of frustration and then anger as their advice seemingly failed to break through to the administration, raisin the odds that more people would likely die."
Jonathan Lemire, et al., of the AP: "Interviewed at Davos, [Switzerland, at] a gathering of global elites in the Swiss Alps, the president on Jan. 22 played down the threat posed by the respiratory virus from China, which had just reached American shores in the form of a solitary patient in Washington state. 'We have it totally under control,' Trump said on CNBC. 'It's one person coming in from China, and we have it under control. It's going to be just fine.' When Trump spoke in Switzerland, weeks' worth of warning signs already had been raised. In the ensuing month, before the president first addressed the crisis from the White House, key steps to prepare the nation for the coming pandemic were not taken. Life-saving medical equipment was not stockpiled. Travel largely continued unabated. Vital public health data from China was not provided or was deemed untrustworthy. A White House riven by rivalries and turnover was slow to act. Urgent warnings were ignored by a president consumed by his impeachment trial and intent on protecting a robust economy that he viewed as central to his reelection chances."
Calvin Woodward of the AP: "For several months..., Donald Trump and his officials have cast a fog of promises meant to reassure a country in the throes of the coronavirus pandemic. Trump and his team haven't delivered on critical ones. They talk numbers. Bewildering numbers about masks on the way. About tests being taken. About ships sailing to the rescue, breathing machines being built and shipped, field hospitals popping up, aircraft laden with supplies from abroad, dollars flowing to crippled businesses. Piercing that fog is the bottom-line reality that Americans are going without the medical supplies and much of the financial help they most need from the government at the very time they need it most -- and were told they would have it.... Bold promises and florid assurances were made, day after day, from the White House and a zigzagging president who minimized the danger for months and systematically exaggerates what Washington is doing about it. 'We're getting them tremendous amounts of supplies,' [Trump] said of health care workers. 'Incredible. It's a beautiful thing to watch.' This was when Americans were watching something else entirely -- doctors wearing garbage bags for makeshift protection." (Also linked yesterday.)
Ashley Parker, et al., of the Washington Post: "The Trump administration still has no clear plan for ending the coronavirus crisis, but it does have many task forces. There is the official task force led by Vice President Pence.... There is the 'Opening Our Country Council,' an economic task force announced Friday.... There is the group that reports directly to ... Jared Kushner, a cadre dismissively dubbed 'the shadow task force' that helps Kushner with his roving list of virus troubleshooting. And there is also the 'doctors group,' a previously unreported offshoot of the original task force..., created in part to push back against demands that the health experts view as too reckless. In theory, the task forces are all working toward the same goal: defeating the novel coronavirus and getting the nation back to work -- and life -- as quickly as possible. But the reality is far more complicated: a bureaucratic nesting doll of groups with frequently competing aims and agendas." ~~~
<~~~ Ezra Klein of Vox (April 10): "In different ways, all [the major] plans ... for what comes after social distancing ... say the same thing: Even if you can imagine the herculean political, social, and economic changes necessary to manage our way through this crisis effectively, there is no normal for the foreseeable future. Until there's a vaccine, the United States either needs economically ruinous levels of social distancing, a digital surveillance state of shocking size and scope, or a mass testing apparatus of even more shocking size and intrusiveness."
Jacob Bogage of the Washington Post: "... the coronavirus crisis is shaking the foundation of the U.S. Postal Service in new and dire ways. The Postal Service's decades-long financial troubles have worsened dramatically, as the volume of the kind of mail that pays the agency's bills -- first-class and marketing mail -- has withered during the pandemic. The USPS needs an infusion of money, and President Trump has blocked potential emergency funding for the agency that employs around 600,000 workers, repeating instead the false claim that higher rates for Internet shipping companies Amazon, FedEx and UPS would right the service's budget. Trump threatened to veto the $2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, or Cares Act, if the legislation contained any money directed to bail out the postal agency, according to a senior Trump administration official and a congressional official...." ~~~
~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: The entire federal government revolves around Trump's petty biases, and his antipathy for the USPS is one of them.
Jonathan Allen, et al., of NBC News: "... for some government officials familiar with the supply-chain end of the coronavirus fight, [a deal with DuPont to make & sell Tyvek bodysuits at an elevated price] was yet another example of Trump's task force serving industry, as the White House tried to corner the market on medical supplies. For weeks, Trump has resisted pressure to use the full power of his office to temporarily turn the private sector into an arm of the federal government in a national emergency. But he and his lieutenants instead have used the crisis to make federal assets and personnel ancillary to industry.... In doing so, the vice president's coronavirus task force -- mostly through a supply-chain unit led by Admiral John Polowczyk and heavily influenced by White House adviser Jared Kushner -- has favored some of the nation's largest corporations and ignored smaller producers of goods and services with long track records of meeting emergency need.... They have also operated almost entirely in the dark.... The story of the supply-chain group, a power center within the larger task force run by Vice President Mike Pence, is one of chaos, secrecy and ineptitude..., officials said."
This. Is. Nuts. Jay Hancock, et al., of Kaiser Health News in the Daily Beast: "... executives at ... beleaguered [hospital] systems are blasting the government's decision to take a one-size-fits-all approach to distributing the first $30 billion in emergency grants. HHS confirmed Friday it would give hospitals and doctors money according to their historical share of revenue from the Medicare program for seniors -- not according to their coronavirus burden.... States such as Minnesota, Nebraska and Montana, which the pandemic has touched relatively lightly, are getting more than $300,000 per reported COVID-19 case..., according to a Kaiser Health News analysis. On the other hand, New York, the worst-hit state, would receive only $12,000 per case.... HHS 'has failed to consider congressional intent' in distributing the $30 billion by not accounting for 'the number of COVID-19 cases hospitals are treating,' New Jersey Sens. Bob Menendez and Cory Booker and Rep. Bill Pascrell said in a Friday letter to [HHS Secretary Alex] Azar." Thanks to Akhilleus for the link. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
Screw American Workers, Ctd. Dave Jamieson of the Huffington Post: "The Trump administration announced Friday afternoon that employers outside of the health care industry generally won't be required to record coronavirus cases among their workers, a decision that left some workplace safety advocates incredulous. COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, is classified as a recordable illness, meaning employers would have to notify the Occupational Safety and Health Administration when an employee gets sick from an exposure at work. But the nation's top workplace safety agency now says the majority of U.S. employers won't have to try to determine whether employees' infections happened in the workplace unless it's obvious. 'OSHA is kidding, right?' tweeted David Michaels, who helmed OSHA throughout the presidency of Barack Obama. It is not a joke. OSHA, which is part of the Labor Department, released an enforcement memo Friday spelling out the recording rules.... [The policy] could leave both them and the government in the dark about emerging hotspots in places like retail stores or meatpacking plants." ~~~
~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: OSHA is part of the Labor Department. Jamieson: "The Labor Department, under Trump and Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia, has portrayed those kinds of employer [reporting] obligations as burdensome red tape." In a WashPo story linked yesterday, we learned that Eugene Son of Nino "has used his department's authority over new laws enacted by Congress to limit who qualifies for joblessness assistance and to make it easier for small businesses not to pay family leave benefits. The new rules make it more difficult for gig workers ... to get benefits, while making it easier for some companies to avoid paying their workers coronavirus-related sick and family leave...." So we don't care if you get sick at work and if your job makes you sick, you're not going to get unemployment benefits. ~~~
~~~ Screw "Essential Workers." Franco Ordoñez of NPR: "New White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows is working with Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue to see how to reduce wage rates for foreign guest workers on American farms, in order to help U.S. farmers struggling during the coronavirus, according to U.S. officials and sources familiar with the plans. Opponents of the plan argue it will hurt vulnerable workers and depress domestic wages.... The nation's roughly 2.5 million agricultural laborers have been officially declared 'essential workers' as the administration seeks to ensure that Americans have food to eat and that U.S. grocery stores remain stocked." --s
Erica Werner of the Washington Post: "Top GOP leaders in Congress said Saturday they would not negotiate with Democrats and instead insisted lawmakers approve more money for a small business lending program for firms impacted by the coronavirus pandemic. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) released a joint statement Saturday morning saying they would not agree to any compromise with Democrats that changed their proposal to add $250 billion to the Paycheck Protection Program, which is being run by the Small Business Administration.... Democrats don't want to sign off on the $250 billion increase without also adding hundreds of billions for hospitals, cities, states and food stamp recipients. They also want ensure half the proposed $250 billion goes through community banks, emergency grants and other programs aimed at underserved communities." A Politico story is here. (Also linked yesterday.)
Tara Golshan of the Huffington Post: "Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is a full-time senator again, and he wants Democrats to back legislation that would cover health care for all during the coronavirus pandemic. Sanders and Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) proposed an emergency version of their signature 'Medicare for All' legislation on Friday: the Health Care Emergency Guarantee Act, which would have Medicare reimburse all out-of-pocket costs for both insured and uninsured Americans throughout the coronavirus pandemic.... The two lawmakers want a federal backstop for the millions of Americans who have lost their health insurance due to unemployment in recent weeks, as well as some financial aid for the potentially high costs of hospitalization and treatment for COVID-19 patients."
Florida. A Deadly Spring Break. Patricia Mazzei & Frances Robles of the New York Times: "Weeks before Florida ordered people to stay at home, the coronavirus was well into its insidious spread in the state, infecting residents and visitors who days earlier had danced at beach parties and reveled in theme parks. Only now, as people have gotten sick and recovered from -- or succumbed to -- Covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, has the costly toll of keeping Florida open during the spring break season started to become apparent. Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, has blamed travelers from New York, Europe and other places for seeding the virus in the state. But the reverse was also true: People got sick in Florida and took the infection back home.... Slow action by Florida's governor left local leaders scrambling to make their own closure decisions during one of the busiest and most profitable times of the year for a state with an $86 billion tourism economy. The result was that rules were often in conflict, with one city canceling a major event while a neighboring city allowed another event to continue.... With little testing available, local officials made decisions blindly." Emphasis added. ~~~
~~~ Nicholas Nehamas & Daniel Chang of the Miami Herald: "Florida is significantly under-reporting the state's COVID-19 testing backlog, a blind spot in the data that could obscure the pandemic's size and hamper efforts to decide when it's safe to end restrictions such as social distancing -- even as Gov. Ron DeSantis touts the state's transparency when it comes to coronavirus. On its public website, the Florida Department of Health says about 1,400 people statewide are waiting for their test results. But that's an undercount, the department acknowledged in response to questions from the Miami Herald. And it's likely a massive one. That's because the state only reports the number of Floridians waiting to hear back from state labs, not private ones -- and those private labs are completing more than 90% of Florida's tests. The state website doesn't say that its figures exclude the vast majority of pending tests for the novel coronavirus." ~~~
~~~ Daniel Chang of the Miami Herald: "Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' general counsel called a representative of the Miami Herald's law firm seeking to quash a public records lawsuit that would force the state to divulge the names of all elder-care facilities that have had a positive test for the coronavirus. The back-door pressure -- through an attorney that had no involvement in the case -- paid off. The law firm, Holland & Knight, told Sanford Bohrer, a senior partner with decades of representing the Miami Herald, to stand down and abandon the lawsuit.... The state has yet to provide a legal justification for its refusal to provide records. Under Florida's public records law, records are considered public unless the custodian can provide a legal basis for withholding them." --s ~~~
~~~ Michael Sallah & Scot Pham of BuzzFeed News: "Just weeks after a coronavirus outbreak in a Florida assisted living facility, the state's most powerful nursing home organization sent a letter to Gov. Ron DeSantis with an urgent request: Grant the homes sweeping protections from legal claims arising from the viral scourge. The response: DeSantis is considering it. In one of the first such requests in the country, the governor's office is consulting with some of the state's top lawyers to see if such immunity can be provided to nursing homes and other healthcare providers, the chief of Florida's top healthcare agency told members of the Florida Health Care Association on Thursday." ~~~
~~~ Steve Contorno & Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times: "From New York to Ohio to California, the nation's governors are leading the way during the coronavirus crisis, using their offices to provide residents with consistent messages that promote public safety. Then there's Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. A month into an international pandemic, the leader of the nation's third-largest state has confounded with conflicting orders. DeSantis has made erroneous claims -- like on Thursday when he suggested no one under the age of 25 has died from the coronavirus in the United States. He has pushed unproven medical cures while dismissing advice from health experts. He has shared wrong information, potentially affecting millions of people, that went uncorrected for hours.... The approval ratings of most governors have soared during the crisis. DeSantis, one of America's most popular governors a few months ago, has seen his support plummet. One poll found him the third-worst rated governor at handling the coronavirus in the country."
Kansas. A Safer Easter Sunday for Kansans. Jason Breslow of NPR: "The Kansas Supreme Court has voted to uphold an executive order by the state's governor limiting the size of church gatherings on Easter Sunday, ending a dramatic legal clash in which the court was asked amid a global pandemic to decide between public health and religious liberty. In a ruling issued on Saturday, the court said Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly was within her rights when she announced an order on Tuesday limiting religious gatherings in the state to 10 people. The ruling came after an extraordinary morning session in which the court's seven justices heard oral arguments via videoconference in order to comply with social distancing guidelines.... Republican leaders on the state's Legislative Coordinating Council [had] voted to revoke the order, calling it a violation of the constitutional right to freedom of religion and an example of executive overreach."
Mississippi. Asthon Pittman of The Jackson Free Press: "All 'elective surgeries,' including abortions, will cease in Mississippi for the next two weeks under a new executive order, Gov. Tate Reeves announced Friday. The governor claimed that the move will free up personal protective equipment for hospitals to use as they deal with an escalating number of COVID-19 cases statewide.... [T]he number of confirmed novel coronavirus cases climbed to 2,469...Mississippi boasts the highest infant mortality rate in the country.... African American infants have nearly twice the mortality rate as white infants in Mississippi.... On April 3, the Jackson Free Press first reported that Reeves signed a proclamation declaring that April is 'Confederate Heritage Month,' celebrating the four-year period when Mississippi seceded from the Union in order to preserve slavery." --s ~~~
~~~ Texas. Alice Ollstein of Politico: "Abortion rights advocates asked the [U.S.] Supreme Court on Saturday night to overturn part of the Texas governor's sweeping ban on abortions during the coronavirus pandemic -- the first of similar restrictions to reach the high court. Texas and several Republican-led states that have long led the legal battle to restrict abortion have sought to cut off access as the health crisis escalated in recent weeks, contending the procedure would drain medical resources. The new petition to the Supreme Court sets up a key test of how the more conservative roster of judges will address the right to an abortion established in Roe v. Wade."
Josh Marshall of TPM on a "sign of the times": a scam in which the scammers claimed to have a cache of 39 million N95 masks available for sale to US entities.
Here are SNL's opening credits & Tom Hanks' monologue, both of which are also signs of the times. The opening credits feature SNL musical producer Hal Willner, who died this week, probably of Covid-19. ~~~
~~~ This SNL tribute to Willner is really sweet.
** U.K. Rowena Mason of the Guardian: "Boris Johnson has left hospital after spending a week in hospital with Covid-19 and will go to Chequers to continue his recovery. The prime minister was being treated at St Thomas' hospital in south London and had spent time in the hospital's intensive care unit after his situation deteriorated. A No10 spokesman said: 'The PM has been discharged from hospital to continue his recovery, at Chequers'."
Vatican. Pope Francis Is Smarter Than Your Average Kansas Republican. Martin Farrer of the Guardian: "The pope and other Christian leaders are preparing to give their annual Easter addresses over the internet as churches stand empty and countries around the world continue to extend lockdowns to stop the spread of coronavirus. Pope Francis will break with centuries of tradition and livestream his Easter Sunday mass to allow the world's 1.3 billion Catholics to celebrate their holiest holiday."
2020 Elections
AP: "Joe Biden has won the Alaska Democrats' party-run presidential primary, beating Sen. Bernie Sanders days after Sanders suspended his campaign. Biden beat Sanders Saturday 55.3% to 44.7%. A total of 19,759 votes were cast. Biden gets 11 delegates and Sanders gets 4. Sanders would have won more delegates but after ending his bid for the nomination last week, Sanders is no longer eligible to win delegates based on the statewide vote in primaries and caucuses, according to Democratic National Committee rules.... The Alaska primary originally was scheduled for April 4, but concerns with COVID-19 upended plans. In response, the party, which had planned to offer voting by mail and at in-person locations, went exclusively to a vote-by-mail system. The primary itself was new to Alaska Democrats, who moved from their traditional caucuses to a primary for this year's race.... It used rank-choice ballots. The party said it sent in early March ballots to every person who was registered as a Democrat as of mid-February, more than 71,000."
Biden Will Have to Address This Now. Lisa Lerer & Sydney Ember of the New York Times: "A former Senate aide who last year accused Joseph R. Biden Jr. of inappropriate touching has made an allegation of sexual assault against the former vice president, the Democratic Party's presumptive presidential nominee this fall. The former aide, Tara Reade, who briefly worked as a staff assistant in Mr. Biden's Senate office, told The New York Times that in 1993, Mr. Biden pinned her to a wall in a Senate building, reached under her clothing and penetrated her with his fingers. A friend said that Ms. Reade told her the details of the allegation at the time. Another friend and a brother of Ms. Reade's said she told them over the years about a traumatic sexual incident involving Mr. Biden. A spokeswoman for Mr. Biden said the allegation was false. In interviews, several people who worked in the Senate office with Ms. Reade said they did not recall any talk of such an incident or similar behavior by Mr. Biden toward her or any women. Two office interns who worked directly with Ms. Reade said they were unaware of the allegation or any treatment that troubled her. Last year, Ms. Reade and seven other women came forward to accuse Mr. Biden of kissing, hugging or touching them in ways that made them feel uncomfortable.... No other allegation about sexual assault surfaced in the course of [the Times' extensive] reporting, nor did any former Biden staff members corroborate any details of Ms. Reade&'s allegation. The Times found no pattern of sexual misconduct by Mr. Biden."
Montana Governor's Race. Don Pogreba of The Montana Post: "[T]he campaign for Montana Attorney General Tim Fox accused Greg Gianforte, our current US House Representative and his rival for the GOP nomination for governor, of financing his campaign by insider trading capitalizing on COVID-19.... It's an incredible claim, no doubt based on the research that shows Gianforte, rather than putting his investments into a blind trust as promised, has invested hundreds of thousands of dollars over the past three months in companies hoping to profit from COVID-19, including the French manufacturer of Hydroxychloroquine.... [I]t's incomprehensible to me that it's not of news value that the sitting Republican Attorney General just accused the sitting Republican Congressional representative of breaking the law and of profiteering off a global crisis that has killed 16,000 Americans in only a few weeks." --s ~~~
~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Fox's accusation seems un-possible. Gianforte seems like such a nice guy who would not do anything even slightly criminal -- like, say, bodyslam a specs-wearing reporter for asking him a legitimate question.
Ashley Cullins of The Hollywood Reporter: "Journalists, litigants and even actor Tom Arnold for years have been trying to get their hands on unaired footage from The Celebrity Apprentice that allegedly incriminates Donald Trump -- and on Thursday a New York federal judge ordered MGM to hand over tapes in a lawsuit over an alleged multilevel marketing scam. Whether they're those tapes remains to be seen.... Former Apprentice contestant Summer Zervos, who accuses Trump of sexually assaulting her in 2007, is also fighting to get unaired footage in her defamation lawsuit. Multiple former contestants, including Arnold and Penn Jillette have said Trump regularly made sexist and 'racially insensitive' comments on set." --s
Beyond the Beltway
U.K. Eeew News. Allison Quinn & Blake Montgomery of the Daily Beast: "Wikileaks founder Julian Assange fathered two children with a lawyer who was helping him fight extradition to the U.S. while he was holed up in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, according to The Daily Mail. The lawyer, Stella Morris, told the Mail that she had decided to come forward about the relationship now because she fears for his life as long as he is in the high-security Belmarsh prison. Assange has been at the prison in London since last spring, when he was sentenced to 50 weeks. The Mail also cited court records regarding the United States' attempted extradition of Assange that mentioned the two young children." Mrs. McC: Can't imagine why the Ecuadorians wanted to get Assange out of there.