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Coronavirus US live: Trump reportedly knew pandemic was likely in January Coronavirus US live: New York suffers highest single-day death toll
(32 minutes later)
Memos from trade adviser Peter Navarro, published by Axios, warned Trump of a likely pandemic months ago Governor Andrew Cuomo holds daily press conference, warning as deaths continue to rise that a return to normal life would depend on testing
New York governor Andrew Cuomo just wrapped up his daily briefing on the state’s response to coronavirus.
Here’s some of what he said:
New York saw the biggest single-day increase in its coronavirus death toll yesterday. New York has now lost 5,489 residents to coronavirus, up from 4,758 a day earlier. That figure represents about half of all coronavirus deaths across the United States.
Cuomo said restarting the state’s economy would depend on testing. The governor emphasized the state needs to scale up testing to help determine which residents have coronavirus antibodies and are unlikely to contract the virus again before the economy can restart.
Cuomo asked all residents to continue respecting social distancing restrictions, as some residents start asking when normal life might be able to resume. “I get it, but it’s only been 37 days,” Cuomo said. “Our behavior affects the number of cases.”
The Navy hospital ship Comfort will have 500 beds available for coronavirus patients. Cuomo called the president yesterday to ask him to allow the ship to start accepting coronavirus patients, a request that Trump granted. However, the shift to treating coronavirus patients means the ship will have to cut its number of hospital beds in half, from 1,000 to 500.
Governor Andrew Cuomo urged New Yorkers to remember that each coronavirus death represents a human being who had a family.
“I guess one could get numb to the numbers,” Cuomo said. “For myself, I can tell you, the last thing I do is get numb.”
The governor noted mourning in the state is intensifying as the death toll rises. “The pain is increasing. The grief is increasing,” Cuomo said. “How you could get numb to any of this, I can’t imagine.”
Cuomo said that he was proud of the work the state’s healthcare system has done to save every possible person from dying of coronavirus.
“You can’t save everyone,” Cuomo said. “This virus is very good at what it does, and it kills vulnerable people. ... We can’t stop that. The question is, are you saving everyone you can save?”
The governor added, “I don’t see the numbness, and I don’t think New Yorkers see the numbness.”
New York governor Andrew Cuomo applauded the work of medical professionals as the state grapples with the coronavirus pandemic.
“What they have done is incredible, just incredible,” Cuomo said.
The governor also thanked other essential workers, such as transit employees, who have continued to report to work.
“They know what they’re exposing themselves to, and they still do it,” Cuomo said. “God bless them.”
New York governor Andrew Cuomo said residents must avoid holding large funerals as the state’s coroanvirus death toll rises.
“These social distancing regulations are not just ‘please.’ They’re regulations,” said Cuomo, who doubled the fine for violating the “stay at home” order yesterday.
“Now is not the time for large religious gatherings,” Cuomo said. “You do no one a service by making this worse and infecting more people.”
New York governor Andrew Cuomo said he understood the frustration of residents who are asking when social distancing might come to an end.
“This is like Groundhog Day living through this bizarre reality that we’re in,” Cuomo said.
But the governor emphasized residents will need to continue to be patient in order to protect their loved ones and neighbors from contracting the virus.
“I get it, but it’s only been 37 days,” Cuomo said. “Our behavior affects the number of cases.”
Cuomo also noted the 1918 flu epidemic peaked in New York for six months, killing 30,000 of the state’s residents. “Social distancing is working,” Cuomo said. “I know that it’s hard, but we have to keep doing it.”
New York governor Andrew Cuomo said officials would look ahead to restarting the economy, but the governor noted the state is not there yet because coronavirus deaths are still happening at a high rate.New York governor Andrew Cuomo said officials would look ahead to restarting the economy, but the governor noted the state is not there yet because coronavirus deaths are still happening at a high rate.
Cuomo said the determination of when and how to restart the economy would depend on testing, particularly testing to confirm if people have coronavirus antibodies in their system and are likely immune to the virus.Cuomo said the determination of when and how to restart the economy would depend on testing, particularly testing to confirm if people have coronavirus antibodies in their system and are likely immune to the virus.
The governor said New York would need to scale up its testing capacity to test a large number of residents and announced the state would invest in testing companies working to expand capacity.The governor said New York would need to scale up its testing capacity to test a large number of residents and announced the state would invest in testing companies working to expand capacity.
New York governor Andrew Cuomo said the capacity of the Navy hospital ship Comfort would decrease now that it is going to start accepting coronavirus patients.New York governor Andrew Cuomo said the capacity of the Navy hospital ship Comfort would decrease now that it is going to start accepting coronavirus patients.
Cuomo asked Trump yesterday to allow the Comfort to start taking coronavirus patients to provide some relief to overwhelmed emergency rooms in New York, a request that the president granted.Cuomo asked Trump yesterday to allow the Comfort to start taking coronavirus patients to provide some relief to overwhelmed emergency rooms in New York, a request that the president granted.
But Cuomo said the number of hospital beds on the Comfort would decrease from 1,000 to 500 now that the ship will be treating coronavirus patients.But Cuomo said the number of hospital beds on the Comfort would decrease from 1,000 to 500 now that the ship will be treating coronavirus patients.
New York governor Andrew Cuomo is holding his daily briefing on the state’s response to coronavirus.New York governor Andrew Cuomo is holding his daily briefing on the state’s response to coronavirus.
The governor noted the three-day average of hospitalizations is down, indicating the state is “reaching a plateau in the total number of hospitalizations.”The governor noted the three-day average of hospitalizations is down, indicating the state is “reaching a plateau in the total number of hospitalizations.”
But the New York death toll continues to steeply rise. The state has now recorded 5,489 deaths, up from 4,758 a day earlier. Those 731 deaths represent the highest single-day increase in the death toll since the crisis started.But the New York death toll continues to steeply rise. The state has now recorded 5,489 deaths, up from 4,758 a day earlier. Those 731 deaths represent the highest single-day increase in the death toll since the crisis started.
New York also still has the highest number of cases of any US state, with 138,836 cases of coronavirus already confirmed.New York also still has the highest number of cases of any US state, with 138,836 cases of coronavirus already confirmed.
Joe Biden said he would like Bernie Sanders to be “part of the journey,” although not his running mate, if he wins the Democratic nomination.Joe Biden said he would like Bernie Sanders to be “part of the journey,” although not his running mate, if he wins the Democratic nomination.
Biden has a significant lead in the delegate count, but Sanders remains in the race, despite an increasingly narrow path to the nomination.Biden has a significant lead in the delegate count, but Sanders remains in the race, despite an increasingly narrow path to the nomination.
Asked whether Sanders should drop out, Biden told the “Today” show, “No, I wouldn’t presume to do that. ... It’s a hard, hard decision and Bernie has a lot of really devoted followers. It’s a difficult decision to make. But it’s his to make. I’m not going to suggest what he should do.”Asked whether Sanders should drop out, Biden told the “Today” show, “No, I wouldn’t presume to do that. ... It’s a hard, hard decision and Bernie has a lot of really devoted followers. It’s a difficult decision to make. But it’s his to make. I’m not going to suggest what he should do.”
Biden made clear that if he wins the nomination, he would seek Sanders’ input on the issues that fueled the progressive senator’s campaign.Biden made clear that if he wins the nomination, he would seek Sanders’ input on the issues that fueled the progressive senator’s campaign.
“If I’m the nominee I can tell you one thing: I would very much want Bernie to be part of the journey, not as a vice presidential nominee but just engaging in all the things that he’s worked so hard to do, many of which I agree with,” Biden said.“If I’m the nominee I can tell you one thing: I would very much want Bernie to be part of the journey, not as a vice presidential nominee but just engaging in all the things that he’s worked so hard to do, many of which I agree with,” Biden said.
The former vice president applauded Sanders for his “incredible following,” as the frontrunner tries to convince his rival’s supporters to back him in the general election.The former vice president applauded Sanders for his “incredible following,” as the frontrunner tries to convince his rival’s supporters to back him in the general election.
Biden also said he did not think the November election should be delayed or postponed because of coroanvirus, even as today’s rocky primary in Wisconsin raises questions about how to safely conduct in-person voting amid a pandemic.Biden also said he did not think the November election should be delayed or postponed because of coroanvirus, even as today’s rocky primary in Wisconsin raises questions about how to safely conduct in-person voting amid a pandemic.
The White House has confirmed Stephanie Grisham is leaving her role as press secretary to rejoin the first lady’s team.The White House has confirmed Stephanie Grisham is leaving her role as press secretary to rejoin the first lady’s team.
“My replacements will be announced in the coming days and I will stay in the West Wing to help with a smooth transition for as long as needed,” Grisham said in a statement released by the White House.“My replacements will be announced in the coming days and I will stay in the West Wing to help with a smooth transition for as long as needed,” Grisham said in a statement released by the White House.
Grisham served as both press secretary and communications director in the Trump White House, so it appears two people may be taking on those roles now.Grisham served as both press secretary and communications director in the Trump White House, so it appears two people may be taking on those roles now.
Grisham will serve as the first lady’s chief of staff and spokesperson. The White House statement noted that Melania Trump’s previous chief of staff, Lindsay Reynolds, resigned earlier this week to spend time with family.Grisham will serve as the first lady’s chief of staff and spokesperson. The White House statement noted that Melania Trump’s previous chief of staff, Lindsay Reynolds, resigned earlier this week to spend time with family.
Wisconsin’s lieutenant governor predicted the state’s presidential primary today would be a “Shit Show.”Wisconsin’s lieutenant governor predicted the state’s presidential primary today would be a “Shit Show.”
The Democratic official’s tweet comes a day after the Wisconsin Supreme Court blocked governor Tony Evers’ executive order to cancel in-person voting out of concern about spreading coronavirus.The Democratic official’s tweet comes a day after the Wisconsin Supreme Court blocked governor Tony Evers’ executive order to cancel in-person voting out of concern about spreading coronavirus.
The number of polling sites across the state has nosedived because so many poll workers have quit, and voters are already reporting long lines as they try to cast their ballots.The number of polling sites across the state has nosedived because so many poll workers have quit, and voters are already reporting long lines as they try to cast their ballots.
Stephanie Grisham, the White House press secretary who has not yet held a briefing, is reportedly leaving her role after about nine months.
CNN reports:
Grisham was frequently criticized for refusing to hold White House briefings, which were a daily feature of past administrations but started becoming less and less frequent under Graham’s predecessor, Sarah Sanders.
Surgeon general Jermone Adams said he “never saw” a Jan. 29 memo from Peter Navarro, Trump’s top trade adviser, warning the coronavirus outbreak could become a pandemic.
Adams defended the White House’s response to the pandemic, saying, “We’ve been saying for decades that this is a possibility. ... Many people at all levels just did not expect something like this to happen at this magnitude.”
When NBC News’ Savannah Guthrie pressed him on that last point, saying the memo proved some White House advisers were aware of how bad this situation could get, Adams said, “There were preparations going on the entire time.”
Trump has been repeatedly criticized for incorrectly predicting coronavirus would miraculously “disappear” without affecting many Americans, and reports of Navarro’s memo have intensified accusations that the president mishandled the government’s early response.
Lines are already long at polling places in Wisconsin, with voters saying they are preparing to wait for hours to cast their ballots.
So many poll workers have quit over concerns about coronvairus that only five polling sites are open today in Milwaukee, down from 180.
The confusion and expected drop in turnout in Wisconsin have raised serious concerns about the November general election, particularly if coronavirus makes a return at the end of the year, as many experts have predicted.
The Guardian’s Daniel Strauss reports:
Congressman John Lewis, a civil rights icon, endorsed former vice president Joe Biden for president on Tuesday morning.
“I’m delighted, very pleased, very happy, and very honored to take the time to endorse a friend, a man of courage, a man of conscience as the Democratic nominee for president of the United States,” Lewis said of backing Biden during a call with reporters. “It is my belief that we need Joe Biden now more than ever before.”
Lewis’s endorsement comes as most Democratic lawmakers and the majority of the party’s voters fall in line behind Biden. Vermont senator Bernie Sanders is still running against Biden in the Democratic primary, but his path is increasingly narrow.
Lewis, in endorsing Biden, urged him to pick a woman as his running mate if the former vice president wins the nomination.
“It would be a good to have a woman of color,” Lewis said. “It would be good to have a woman who looks like the rest of America - smart, gifted, a fighter, a warrior and we have plenty of able women. Some are black, white, Latino, Asian American, Native American. I think the time is long past for making the White House look like the whole of America.”
During a recent debate Biden said if elected president, he would nominate an African American woman to the Supreme Court and would pick a woman as his running mate.
Other influential lawmakers, including South Carolina congressman Jim Clyburn, have said that Biden should pick a woman of color as his running mate.
In an interview with the Financial Times Clyburn name checked California senator Kamala Harris and former Obama administration national security adviser Susan Rice (which he called a “sleeper”) as possible running mates for Biden.
George Conway, a Trump critic who is married to senior White House adviser Kellyanne Conway, offered his take on the president and his team amid the pandemic.
“He’s 100% insane, and nobody in the administration has the balls to tell him that,” Conway said of Trump and his advisers.
Conway’s jab follows reports that one of Trump’s top advisers warned the president of the coronavirus outbreak potentially evolving into a pandemic in late January.
Conway has become a vocal critic of the president, even though his wife worked on Trump’s campaign and has been with the administration since his inaugruation.
This is Joan Greve in Washington, taking over for Martin Pengelly.
As Sam Levine reported, thousands of Wisconsin voters are likely to be disenfranchised today after the Democratic governor’s effort to cancel in-person voting failed.
Because of concerns about the coronavirus pandemic, more than 100 jurisdictions in Wisconsin reported last week that they don’t have enough poll workers to staff even one voting place, and Milwaukee’s number of polling sites is down from 180 to five.
A photo from one of those five Milwaukee polling sites showed voters wearing masks and trying to socially distance as they waited to cast their ballots:
Here’s a report from Sam Levine, our voting rights reporter, on a dramatic and bizarre day in Wisconsin yesterday and what’s to come today:
Oddly enough, Donald Trump has a recommendation for Wisconsin conservatives:
Here’s more key reading from Sam, on Wisconsin and threats to the right to vote:
Here’s a tweet thread that Donald Trump may not like too much. It’s about Gretchen Whitmer, Democratic governor of Michigan, a state in which more than 17,000 Covid-19 cases have been confirmed and 727 people have died, according to Johns Hopkins figures.
Trump’s distaste for Whitmer is well-known – he called her “that woman from Michigan” at one White House briefing. Detroit journalist Chad Livengood is following her interview on 1320 WILS-AM, “Lansing’s More Compelling Talk Radio”. It’s fascinating reading.
“Whitmer cites [University of Michigan] modeling that Michigan’s coronavirus outbreak won’t peak until late April,” Livengood writes. “She was asked about what plans there are to restart the economy: ‘It is too early to start implementing anything. We know yesterday we had 110 Michiganders lose their battle with Covid-19.’”
Donald Trump was warned at the end of January by one of his top White House advisers that coronavirus had the potential to kill hundreds of thousands of Americans and derail the US economy, unless tough action were taken immediately, new memos have revealed.
The memos were written by Trump’s economic adviser Peter Navarro and circulated via the National Security Council widely around the White House and federal agencies. They show that even within the Trump administration alarm bells were ringing loudly by late January, at a time when the president was consistently downplaying the threat of Covid-19.
The memos, first reported by the New York Times and Axios, were written by Navarro on 29 January and 23 February. The first memo, composed on the day Trump set up a White House coronavirus task force, gave a worst-case scenario of the virus killing more than half a million Americans.
According to the Times, it said: “The lack of immune protection or an existing cure or vaccine would leave Americans defenseless in the case of a full-blown coronavirus outbreak on US soil. This lack of protection elevates the risk of the coronavirus evolving into a full-blown pandemic, imperiling the lives of millions of Americans.”
The second memo went even further, predicting that a Covid-19 pandemic, left unchecked, could kill 1.2m Americans and infect as many as 100m.
This was not the first time Trump and his White House team were warned that the virus had the potential to devastate the US and needed to be dealt with quickly and firmly. Senior scientists, epidemiologists, and health emergency experts in the US and around the world delivered that message clearly early on in the crisis, only for Trump to continue belittling the scale of the threat which he compared falsely to the dangers of seasonal flu.
But the emergence of the memos from such a senior aide within the White House will make it much more difficult for Trump to claim – as he has done on multiple occasions – that nobody was able to predict the severity of the disease. As the pandemic has swept across the country, the president has come under mounting criticism for having done too little, too late in response, leading to mass shortages of diagnostic testing, protective gear for frontline health workers and ventilators for the very sick.
…and welcome to another day of coverage of the coronavirus outbreak in the US. Figures, according to researchers at Johns Hopkins University, first:
Cases confirmed: 368,036
Deaths: 10,982
Cases in New York, the worst-hit state: 131,815
Deaths in New York: 4,758
Other states are struggling too, of course: there have been more than 1,000 deaths in New Jersey and Michigan, California and Louisiana are also particularly hard hit. And case and death numbers will no doubt increase today.
There are all sorts of news lines out there of course, perhaps the biggest being British prime minister Boris Johnson’s admission to intensive care. Here’s the latest report from our London office. And here’s the UK live blog with constant updates.
In the US, Julia Carrie Wong has an in-depth look at Donald Trump’s support for hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malaria drug that has not been shown to be safe or effective against Covid-19 but which the president wants Americans to take:
The president pushed the drug again at his White House briefing on Monday, a briefing which was also, by the by, attended by Chanel Rion, a correspondent from One America News Network whose presence at briefings and leading questions to Trump have caused consternation in the mainstream media. Here’s Adrian Horton’s write-up of what John Oliver had to say about that and OAN in general on Sunday night.
We have a lot more this morning, of course, including:
Michael Sainato on Amazon workers who say the company values profit over their safety amid the pandemic.
A devastating report from Oliver Laughland in Reserve, Lousiana, aka Cancer Alley but now home to a new foe.
Another dispatch from a frontline nurse: The ER Diaries: ‘I have come to embrace that we’re at war’.
The Axios website, meanwhile, is out with a major scoop: Democrats including Nancy Pelosi have consciously echoed the famous Watergate question – What did the president know and when did he know it? – when investigating the White House’s lagging response to the emerging threat of Covid-19.
On Monday night, Axios published memos from trade adviser Peter Navarro which warned Trump of a likely pandemic in January. Axios’s newsletter headline on Tuesday morning? “POTUS Knew!”
Ed Pilkington will have more on that shortly…