Barr Really Is Evil Or Incompetent, And Probably Both

Ken AshfordTrump & AdministrationLeave a Comment

Barr’s testimony today was just as awful as his worst critics would expect. While it wasn’t useful at eliciting new information, Barr did not succeed at filibustering over questions he wanted to ignore. Jim Jordan, whose favorite tactic is to scream and refuse to let witnesses answer questions, four times complained that Democrats had insisted on reclaiming their time when Barr tried to filibuster.

Democrats didn’t nail Barr on some of his key lies. For example, as he did in his written testimony, he complained that protestors were endangering federal judges; yet Democrats let him get away with the lie — which he yelled over and over that Amy Berman Jackson agreed with his view on the Stone sentencing. The reality is ABJ very pointedly disagreed with Barr’s decision that Stone should not be punished for threatening her.

The headline of the hearing, though, should be that, now that he’s finally testifying under oath, Barr backed off his claim — when releasing the Mueller Report — that the White House fully cooperated with the Mueller investigation. [This is about 45 minutes before the end.]

Joe Neguse: I want to go through a couple of your prior statements. On April 19–or, excuse me, April 18 of 2019, you stated that the White House fully cooperated with the Special Counsel’s investigation. You’re aware of that?

Barr: Umm hmm.

Neguse: Today, yes or no Mr. Barr with the penalty of perjury, do you testify that that statement was true at the time you made it?

Barr: I thought it to be true at the time I made it. Why isn’t it true–

Neguse: I’ll get to that Mr. Barr.

Barr: Does it have to do with quibbling over–

Neguse: Mr. Barr, I’ll get to that, reclaiming my time, you answered the question. I have another question for you. On June 19, of 2020,

Barr: Actually, I have to answer that question.

Neguse: Mr. Barr, you did answer that question.

Barr: No, you said under penalty of perjury. I’m going to answer the damn question.

Neguse: You said the answer was yes. Are you saying no?

Barr: I think what I was referring to — and I’d have to see the context of it — was the supplying of documents.

Neguse: No, Mr. Attorney General, the statement was not limited to the supply of documents. You stated it at a press — Mr. Attorney General —

Barr: I think that’s that I was talking about —

Neguse: Reclaiming my time —

Barr: I think that’s what I was talking about —

Neguse: Reclaiming my time. You stated at a press conference on April 19, 2019 that the White House fully cooperated with the Special Counsel’s investigation. You knew, when you made that statement, that the President had not agreed to be interviewed by the Special Counsel.

Barr: I think that was subsequently —

Neguse: Now on June 18th of this year —

Barr: I was referring to —

Neguse: Mr. Attorney General, I was referring to

Barr: The production of documents —

Neguse: Mr. Attorney General, on June 18th of this year, the Department of Justice issued a statement saying that Mr. Berman, the former US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, had quote, “stepped down.” You’re aware of that statement being released by the department, correct?

Barr: Yes.

Neguse: And do you testify today that that statement was true, at the time the Department issued it?

Barr: Um, he may not have known it, but he was stepping down.

Neguse: He may not have known that he was stepping down? That’s your testimony today?

Barr: He was being removed.

Neguse: Mr. Attorney General. The statement did not say he was being removed. It did not say he was being fired. It said that he was stepping down.

But I think the far more damning testimony from the Attorney General is that he is not familiar with the obstruction part of the Mueller Report.

Eric Swalwell had this exchange with Barr.

Swalwell: Mr. Barr, have you ever intervened other than to help the President’s friend get a reduced prison sentence for any other case where a prosecutor had filed a sentencing recommendation with a court?

Barr: A sentencing recommendation?

Swalwell: Yeah. Have you ever intervened, other than that case with the President’s friend?

Barr: Not that I recall–

Swalwell: Does that seem like something you’d recall? Where you would–

Barr: Well, I’m saying I can’t really remember my first — if you let me finish the question, I can’t remember thirty years ago I was Attorney General.

Swalwell: As Attorney General now?

Barr: Uh, no, I didn’t. But that’s because issues come up to the Attorney General in a dispute and I’ve never [starts yelling] I’ve never heard of a dispute … I’ve never heard of a dispute where line prosecutors

Swalwell: Mr. Attorney– Mr. Attorney–

Barr: [still yelling] Threaten to quit–

Swalwell: Well it’s a pretty big deal–

Barr: Because of a discussion over sentencing–

Swalwell: Mr. Barr, Americans from both parties are concerned that in Donald Trump’s America there are two systems of justice. One for Mr. Trump and his cronies. And another for the rest of us. But that can only happen if you enable it. At your confirmation hearing, you were asked, “Do you believe a President could lawfully issue a pardon in exchange for the recipient’s promise to not incriminate him?

Barr: Not to what?

Swalwell: You said, “That would be a crime.” You were asked, could a President issue a pardon in exchange for the recipient’s promise to not incriminate him, and you responded, “no, that would be a crime.” Is that right?

Barr: Yes, I said that.

Swalwell: You said “a crime.” You didn’t say, “it’d be wrong,” you didn’t say, “it’d be unlawful.” You said, “it’d be a crime.” And when you said that, that a President swapping a pardon to silence a witness would be a crime, you were promising the American people that if you saw that, you would do something about that, is that right?

Barr: That’s right.

Swalwell: Now, Mr. Barr, are you investigating Donald Trump for commuting the prison sentence of his long-time friend and political advisor Roger Stone?

Barr: No.

Swalwell: Why not?

Barr: Why should I?

Swalwell: Well, let’s talk about that. Mr. Stone was convicted by a jury on 7 counts of lying on the Russian investigation. He bragged that he lied to save Trump’s butt. But why would he lie? Your prosecutors, Mr. Barr, told a jury that Stone lied because the truth looked bad for Donald Trump. And what truth is that? Well, Donald Trump denied in written answers to the Russia investigators that he talked to Roger Stone during the time that Roger Stone with in contact with Agents of a Russian influence operation. There’s evidence that Trump and Stone indeed did talk during that time. You would agree that it’s a federal crime to lie under oath, is that right?

Barr: Yes.

Swalwell: It’s a crime for you, it’s a crime for me, and it’s certainly a crime for the President of the United States. Is that right?

Barr: Yes.

Swalwell: So if Donald Trump lied to the Mueller investigators, which you agree would be a crime, then Roger Stone was in a position to expose Donald Trump’s lies. Are you familiar with the December 3rd, 2018 tweet, where Donald Trump said Stone had showed “guts” by not testifying against him?

Barr: No, I’m not familiar with that.

Swalwell: You don’t read the President’s tweets?

Barr: No!

Swalwell: Well, there’s a lot of evidence in the President’s tweets, Mr. Attorney General, I think you should start reading them, because he said Mr. Stone, “showed guts,” but on July 10 of this year, Roger Stone declared to a reporter, “I had 29 or 30 conversations with Trump during the campaign period. Trump knows I was under enormous pressure to turn on him. It would have eased my situation considerably. But I didn’t. The prosecutors wanted me to play Judas, I refused.” Are you familiar with that Stone statement?

Barr: Actually I’m not.

Swalwell: So how can you sit here and tell us, why should I investigate the President of the United States,” if you’re not even aware of the facts concerning the President using the pardon or commutation power to swap the silence of a witness?

Barr: Because we require, you know, a reliable predicate before we open a criminal investigation.

Swalwell: And I just gave you, sir–

Barr: I don’t consider it, I consider it a very Rube, uh, Goldberg theory that you have —

Swalwell: Well it sounds like you’re hearing this theory for the first time.

Barr: And by the way if apply this standard it’d be a lot, it’d be a lot more people under investigation.

Swalwell: Mr. Attorney General, the very same day that Roger Stone said that Donald Trump — no surprise — commuted his

Barr: The two tiered standards of justice were really during the tail end of the Obama Administration.

Barr may well be unfamiliar with Trump’s December 3, 2018 tweet.

Let’s take his testimony as truth.

If that’s true, than Barr is also unfamiliar with the Obstruction portion of the Mueller Report. In passages just recently declassified by Billy Barr’s DOJ, the Mueller Report laid out how the back-and-forth between Stone and Trump might be evidence of obstruction.

As described above, in an interview on November 28, 2018, one week after submitting his written answers, the President criticized “flipping” and said that Stone (along with Manafort and Corsi) was “very brave” in indicating he would not cooperate with prosecutors.897 On December 2, 2018, Stone told the press that there was “no circumstance” under which he would “testify against the president.”898 He also said he had had no discussions about a pardon.899 On December 3, 2018, the President tweeted, “‘I will never testify against Trump.’ This statement was recently made by Roger Stone, essentially stating that he will not be forced by a rogue and out of control prosecutor to make up lies and stories about ‘President Trump.’ Nice to know that some people still have ‘guts!’”900

On January 24, 2019, a grand jury indicted Stone on charges of obstruction, witness tampering, and making false statements.901 One of the counts charged Stone with violating 18 U.S.C. § 1001 for testifying falsely in Congress that he had never told anyone involved in the Trump Campaign about discussions he was having during the campaign with an individual who acted as an intermediary between him and Assange.902 After making an initial court appearance on January 25, 2019, Stone told reporters, “There is no circumstance whatsoever under which I will bear false witness against the president, nor will I make up lies to ease the pressure on myself. . . . I will not testify against the President, because I would have to bear false witness.”903

That evening, Stone appeared on Fox News and indicated he had knowledge of the President’s answers to this Office’s written questions. When asked if he had spoken to the President about the allegation that he had lied to Congress, Stone said, “I have not” and added, “When the President answered the written interrogatories, he correctly and honestly said Roger Stone and I never discussed this and we never did.”904

[snip]

Finally, there is evidence that the President’s actions towards Stone had the potential to affect a decision about cooperating with the government. After Stone publicly announced that he would never provide evidence against the President’s interests, the President called Stone “very brave” and said he had “guts!” for not “testify[ing] against Trump.”

[snip]

With regard to the President’s conduct towards Stone, there is evidence that the President intended to reinforce Stone’s public statements that he would not cooperate with the government when the President likely understood that Stone could potentially provide evidence that would be adverse to the President. By late November 2018, the President had provided written answers to the Special Counsel’s Office in which the President said he did not recall “the specifics of any call [he] had” with Stone during the campaign period and did not recall discussing WikiLeaks with Stone. Witnesses have stated, however, that candidate Trump discussed WikiLeaks with Stone, that Trump knew that Manafort and Gates had asked Stone to find out what other damaging information about Clinton WikiLeaks possessed, and that Stone’s claimed connection to WikiLeaks was common knowledge within the Campaign. It is possible that, by the time the President submitted his written answers two years after the relevant events had occurred, he no longer had clear recollections of his discussions with Stone or his knowledge of Stone’s asserted communications with WikiLeaks. But the President’s conduct could also be viewed as reflecting his awareness that Stone could provide evidence that would run counter to the President’s denials and would link the President to Stone’s efforts to reach out to WikiLeaks. On November 28, 2018, eight days after the President submitted his written answers to the Special Counsel, the President criticized “flipping” and said that Stone was “very brave” for not cooperating with prosecutors. Five days later, on December 3, 2018, the President applauded Stone for having the “guts” not to testify against him. These statements, as well as those complimenting Stone and Manafort while disparaging Michael Cohen once Cohen chose to cooperate, support the inference that the President intended to communicate a message that witnesses could be rewarded for refusing to provide testimony adverse to the President and disparaged if they chose to cooperate.

The December 3, 2018 tweet was a key part of Mueller’s case that Trump’s discussion of pardons for Roger Stone were an effort to get him to be silent about the fact that Trump had lied (not just about talking about WikiLeaks, but also about a pardon for Julian Assange).

This was a key part of the Mueller Report’s analysis of the obstruction case against Trump.

And Billy Barr testified today, under oath, he’s not familiar with it.

It’s not just that Barr disclaims familiarity about Trump’s tweets (though his testimony was inconsistent about whether he saw the one claiming Stone’s sentence was unfair). It seems to be the case that Barr testified that he’s not familiar with the obstruction portion of the Mueller investigation.

And yet, the Attorney General claims to have reviewed that and concluded — for reasons that have nothing to do with DOJ’s policy that a President can’t be indicted — Trump did not commit obstruction.

In other words, the Attorney General’s sworn testimony as of today is that he’s not familiar with the obstruction case against Trump and — arguably — never read it, or at least is unfamiliar with the case it lays out about why, if Trump gave Stone clemency, it would be a crime.

Covid-19 Phase 3 Testing To Begin Today

Ken AshfordEbola/Zika/COVID-19 VirusesLeave a Comment

Phase 3 of an experimental COVID-19 vaccine begins today in the U.S. According to Dr. Stephen Hoge, president of Massachusetts-based Moderna, they are “optimistic, cautiously optimistic” that the vaccine will work and that the data will eventually prove it:

The biggest test yet of an experimental COVID-19 vaccine got underway Monday with the first of some 30,000 Americans rolling up their sleeves to receive shots created by the U.S. government as part of the all-out global race to stop the outbreak.

Final-stage testing of the vaccine, developed by the National Institutes of Health and Moderna Inc., began with volunteers at various U.S. sites given either a real shot or a dummy without being told which.

It will be months before results trickle in, and there is no guarantee the vaccine will ultimately work against the scourge that has killed about 650,000 people around the world, including almost 150,000 in the U.S.

After two doses, scientists will closely track which participants — those getting real shots, or a dummy — experience more infections as they go about their daily routines, especially in hard-hit areas where the virus still is spreading. Testing is planned at close to 90 sites, officials said.

From a test volunteer’s perspective:

In Binghamton, New York, nurse Melissa Harting received one of the first injections of the Moderna vaccine candidate. saying she was volunteering “to do my part to help out.”

“I’m excited,” Harting said. Especially with family members in front-line jobs that could expose them to the virus, she said, “doing our part to eradicate it is very important to me.”

But because a Covid-19 vaccine may go online in a comparatively short period of time (compared to the standard amount of time), there are reasons to be concerned:

The end of this global pandemic almost certainly rests with a vaccine. Experts caution, however, that it’s important to have realistic expectations about how much the first vaccines across the finish line will — and won’t — be able to accomplish.

First-generation vaccines often aren’t the ones that stop a new virus in its tracks, and experts’ hopes for an initial coronavirus vaccine are much more modest.

“Right now, we just need something that’s going to mitigate the damage this virus causes,” said Amesh Adalja, an infectious-diseases expert at Johns Hopkins University. “Maybe it doesn’t prevent you from getting infected, but it prevents you from getting hospitalized, or prevents you from dying … that would be huge.”

Questions remain about just how a Covid vaccine might work:

Some vaccines, like the one for measles, mumps and rubella, produce near-complete and long-lasting immunity. Others, like the annual flu shot, are important tools to help contain a virus but don’t achieve “sterilizing immunity.”

It’s not yet known how much protection any of the potential coronavirus vaccines might provide, or how long it would last.

“It’s hard to make vaccines against coronaviruses,” said Mark Poznansky, an infectious-disease specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital. “It doesn’t mean its not possible but it is a challenge, especially with COVID-19, where we don’t yet understand the inflammatory response to the virus and what part of the immune response is critical to prevent infection.”

While the initial evidence for COVID-19 vaccines seems promising, second- and even third-generation products will likely target more of the virus and, hopefully, generate stronger and longer-lasting immunity than the first few vaccines will offer, Poznansky said.

And of course, there are a number of questions that will be factored in when deciding who will receive a Covid-19 vaccine first, says Paul Kelleher, a professor of bioethics and philosophy at UW-Madison:

A pretty standard principle when it comes to healthcare resources is the goal of saving as many lives as possible, Kelleher says — or, when we’re thinking about a preemptive vaccine, really preventing as many deaths as possible. This utilitarian perspective aims to create the greatest benefit for the greatest number of people.

Even though this principle is a commonly used one in a public health crisis, “it’s somewhat foreign or unfamiliar for many healthcare professionals, whose main goal on a day-to-day basis in normal times is to do the best for the patient that’s in front of them,” Kelleher says. Sometimes tied to this is the concept that we should preserve those who are most essential to keeping society — and especially health infrastructure — running, because that will in turn keep more people safe.

Another idea in bioethics is the “life cycle” or “fair innings” principle, which argues that everyone should have an equal chance to live through life’s various stages, Kelleher adds. In the case of a pandemic, this would mean we should prioritize protecting young people over elderly people who have already had the chance to move through these stages.

Complicating questions abound: Should we focus on the people who are more likely to recover — like doctors in Italy, who were told to help those with the “greatest life expectancy” as hospitals were overrun and resources spread thin? Or is it our moral responsibility to protect the most vulnerable, following the principle of beneficence and the need to do good for others?

There’s also the argument of seeking out justice by prioritizing resources for those who have been treated unfairly in the past. Kelleher points out that throughout history, society has pushed some people into “social and environmental conditions that are hazardous to health,” making them more vulnerable in a health crisis like this one.

Barr’s Opening Statement

Ken AshfordTrump & AdministrationLeave a Comment

Billy Barr’s statement for his testimony today is here. It is as cynical and dishonest as you might imagine.

In his first paragraph, he pays tribute to John Lewis, without mentioning the ways he personally is trying to roll back the ability for every citizen to vote (most notably, of late, by falsely suggesting that the only safe way to vote during a pandemic is susceptible to fraud).

In his second paragraph, he suggests only politicians are political, and then suggests “mobs” are among those pressuring DOJ to take political decisions.

We are in a time when the political discourse in Washington often reflects the politically divided nation in which we live, and too often drives that divide even deeper. Political rhetoric is inherent in our democratic system, and politics is to be expected by politicians, especially in an election year. While that may be appropriate here on Capitol Hill or on cable news, it is not acceptable at the Department of Justice. At the Department, decisions must be made with no regard to political pressure—pressure from either end of Pennsylvania Avenue, or from the media or mobs.

Then he spends five paragraphs addressing what he calls “Russiagate,” a term used exclusively by those who like to diminish the seriousness of an attack on our country.

Ever since I made it clear that I was going to do everything I could to get to the bottom of the grave abuses involved in the bogus “Russiagate” scandal, many of the Democrats on this Committee have attempted to discredit me by conjuring up a narrative that I am simply the President’s factotum who disposes of criminal cases according to his instructions. Judging from the letter inviting me to this hearing, that appears to be your agenda today.

Four paragraphs later, Billy Barr admits that the sole reason he returned to government was to avenge what he believed — as an admitted outsider!! — to be two systems of justice.

But as an outsider I became deeply troubled by what I perceived as the increasing use of the criminal justice process as a political weapon and the emergence of two separate standards of justice. The Department had been drawn into the political maelstrom and was being buffeted on all sides. When asked to consider returning, I did so because I revere the Department and believed my independence would allow me to help steer her back to her core mission of applying one standard of justice for everyone and enforcing the law even-handedly, without partisan considerations. Since returning to the Department, I have done precisely that. My decisions on criminal matters before the Department have been my own, and they have been made because I believed they were right under the law and principles of justice.

Remember: Billy Barr has repeatedly stated that the investigation into Trump’s associates (not Trump himself) was unprecedented, proving he’s either unaware of or uninterested in the two investigations into Hillary, both of which involved abuses (the ostensible reason for the firing of both Jim Comey and Andrew McCabe) and leaks. The only evidence that a biased FBI Agent was running an informant on a candidate during the election involved the Clinton Foundation investigation which — unlike the Russian investigation — is understood to be entirely predicated on dodgy opposition research. Clinton did sit for an interview in the investigation into her actions; Trump refused.

In other words, every complaint floated about the Russian investigation actually applies more readily to the two Clinton ones, the treatment of investigations which had some effect, however unmeasured, on the election.

Yet the Attorney General of the United States has now admitted that he came into office planning to avenge what he sees as the opposite. Importantly, he admits he formed this conclusion an outsider! That means he formed the conclusion in spite of — by his own repeated admission — not knowing the facts of the investigation. “I realize I am in the dark about many facts,” he admitted in his memo on what he believed Mueller was doing on obstruction. As part of his confirmation process, he told both Dianne Feinstein and the Senate Judiciary that, “As I explained in a recent letter to Ranking Member Feinstein, my memo was narrow in scope, explaining my thinking on a specific obstruction-of-justice theory under a single statute that I thought, based on media reports, the Special Counsel might be considering.”

Billy Barr decided to become Attorney General based off what he admitted then and has proven since to be badly mistaken understanding of what the Russian investigation entailed. That’s it. That’s why he agreed to become Attorney General.

Barr may think he’s working from an independent standpoint (a laughable claim in any case given his outspoken hatred for anything progressive), but he keeps admitting that he’s doing something worse, working from an understanding based off media portrayals rather than an understanding based off the public, much less the investigative, record.

No wonder Reggie Walton ruled that Attorney General Barr had spun the real outcome of the investigation. Barr, by his own admission, formed conclusions when he was “in the dark about many facts.” There’s no evidence he has revisited those conclusions since.

Billy Barr performs his own toxic bias in numerous other ways in his opening statement, for example by focusing on Antifa’s potential threat to law enforcement rather than Boogaloo’s much greater threat.

Most cynical, though, is the way he explains the storm troopers in Portland as an effort to defend not just Federal property (which it is, if counterproductively heavy-handed), but Article III judges.

Inside the courthouse are a relatively small number of federal law enforcement personnel charged with a defensive mission: to protect the courthouse, home to Article III federal judges, from being overrun and destroyed.

Barr has demonstrated his disdain for Article III judges over and over: by overriding the decisions of Emmet Sullivan on the Mike Flynn case, by lying to courts on census cases, by ignoring Supreme Court orders on DACA.

Most importantly, however, on issues pertaining to Trump’s flunkies — even the Roger Stone case that he has twice said was righteous — Barr completely dismissed the seriousness of an actual threat to a Federal judge. As I have noted, contrary to Barr’s repeated claims that Amy Berman Jackson agreed with the sentencing recommendation DOJ made after he made an unprecedented intervention to override a guidelines sentencing recommendation, she did not agree that his revised sentencing included the appropriate enhancements. Not only did Barr dismiss the seriousness of making a violent threat against a witness, but Barr’s revised sentencing memo eliminated the sentencing enhancement for threatening a judge, opining (as Barr has a habit of doing) that DOJ wasn’t sure whether Stone’s actions had obstructed his prosecution and trial under ABJ.

Moreover, it is unclear to what extent the defendant’s obstructive conduct actually prejudiced the government at trial.

This is why we have judges: to decide matters like this! Indeed, that’s the justification for recommending guidelines sentences in the first place — so the actual judge who presided over the case, rather than an Attorney General who has admitted to repeatedly forming opinions without consulting the actual record, makes the decisions based off the broadest understanding of the record. Even in this, his most egregious action, Billy Barr’s DOJ weighed in while admitting it didn’t have the knowledge to do so. And did so in such a way that minimized the danger of threats against Article III judges.

Billy Barr thinks the moms defending protestors in Portland are a threat to judges. But his repeated, acknowledged intervention on matters he knows fuckall about is a bigger threat to the rule of law, up to and including when that record includes threats against judges.

Weekly List 193

Ken AshfordWeekly ListLeave a Comment

This week, as the coronavirus raged out of control, passing 4 million U.S. cases and 145,000 deaths, Trump resurrected his daily coronavirus briefings — by himself, with no health officials. He also sought to divert attention to Portland, Oregon, where alarming images of unmarked federal law enforcement were seen shoving and tear-gassing growing crowds of Black Lives Matter protestors. Reporting indicated Trump has purposefully picked Portland to create imagery and video content of a culture war, which he continues to flame.

This week a series of stories came out about the corruption of the Trump regime, but in the chaos, got little attention. Reporting indicated Attorney General William Barr was behind Michael Cohen being sent back to prison, and Barr’s rationale for pushing out U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman was related to the Cohen investigation, and Barr potentially outed a F.B.I. source on Russia. The Department of Homeland Security was also under fire for admitting the agency had provided false information to justify Trump retaliating against New York.

Meanwhile, Trump was forced this week to retreat on several issues, as his poll numbers continued their plummet, and even some Republicans turned on him or refused to do his bidding. Trump abruptly canceled the Republican National Convention, amid his already imperiled re-election campaign.

  1. On Tuesday, NYT reported their analysis of CDC data revealed 179,500 more Americans died from March 15 to July 11 than in a normal year — 45,000 higher than the official coronavirus death count during that period.
  2. On Thursday, WAPO published an article on page 1 above the fold titled, “Trump stirs fears he won’t accept an election loss,” possibly leading to an unprecedented test of America’s democracy.
  3. Trump has questioned the security of voting by mail at least 50 times this year, making unfounded claims about rampant fraud. This year the final count could take days or weeks due to large amount of absentee ballots.
  4. Unfounded claims have also been echoed by allies Attorney General William Barr, Newt Gingrich, and Rep. Matt Gaetz. One Republican said if it is a blowout he will leave, but trouble would ensue if it is close.
  5. Joe Biden warned donors on an online campaign event Thursday that Trump “is going to try to indirectly steal the election by arguing that mail-in ballots don’t work.”
  6. On Saturday, ESPN reported the Canadian government said the Major League Baseball Toronto Blue Jays are not allowed to play games at their home field, citing the pandemic outbreak in the U.S. and players traveling.
  7. On Saturday, the Trump campaign said he would switch from in-person rallies, to tele-rallies. At a tele-rally for Michigan supporters, Trump said, “I want to get out there and do the rally as soon as we can.”
  8. Trump continued to stoke racism, invoking the suburbs, saying Democrats “want to eliminate single family zoning, bringing who knows into your suburbs,” saying it will be “unsafe” and “your housing values will go down.”
  9. On Saturday, a large new study in South Korea found children ages 10 to 19 spread the coronavirus just as much as adults, children under 10 years-old less so — raising concern of spread when schools reopen.
  10. On Saturday, NYT reported that on a copy of an internal Department of Homeland Security memo, acting Secretary Chad Wolf was warned that federal officers did not have proper training for their Portland deployment.
  11. The memo anticipated future deployments: “Moving forward, if this type of response is going to be the norm, specialized training and standardized equipment should be deployed to responding agencies.”
  12. Gov. Kate Brown said she asked Wolf to withdraw, but he refused. Prosecutors opened a criminal investigation into a protester being shot in the head by federal officers outside the federal courthouse.
  13. Protests following the killing of George Floyd hit their 50th night on Saturday. Protests continued at the federal courthouse with messages such as “Stop Using Violence on Us” and “History Has Its Eye on You.”
  14. On Sunday, a new ABC News/WAPO poll found Biden leads Trump on trust to lead against the pandemic by 20 points at 54% trust Biden, 34% trust Trump. When the outbreak started they were virtually tied.
  15. On attributes, 35% say Trump is honest and trustworthy, 35% say he understands problems of people like you, 33% say he has the personality and temperament to lead, and 33% say he can unite not divide.
  16. Trump’s approval fell to 39% approve, 57% disapprove, down from 48% approve, 46% disapprove in March. Also, 76% say Trump “crosses the line in terms of what’s acceptable,” while just 26% say that of Biden.
  17. On Sunday, Trump golfed again at his club in Virginia with Sen. Lindsey Graham. Before golfing, Trump tweeted his 2016 campaign slogan, which he has reverted to, “MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!” — and retweeted it.
  18. Trump also tweeted, “We are trying to help Portland, not hurt it…Their leadership has, for months, lost control of the anarchists and agitators,” and lying, “These were not merely protesters, these are the real deal!”
  19. Trump also tweeted, “The Radical Left Democrats, who totally control Biden, will destroy our Country as we know it,” claiming, “Unimaginably bad things would happen…Look at Portland…with 50 days of anarchy.”
  20. Trump also tweeted, “So we catch Obama & Biden…SPYING on my campaign, AND NOTHING HAPPENS?” adding, “I hope not! If it were the other way around, 50 years for treason. NEVER FORGET!!!!”
  21. On Sunday, Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler told “State of the Union” there were “dozens if not hundreds of federal troops” in the city, adding, “Their presence here is actually leading to more violence and more vandalism.”
  22. On Sunday, Reuters reported facing declining poll numbers, Trump is seeking to make “law and order” a central campaign issue in an attempt to appeal to critical suburban voters.
  23. Melanie Damm said she saw unidentified federal officers fire tear gas canisters into a group of mothers, assembled as the “Wall of Moms” in Portland on Saturday night, calling the violence an “overreaction.”
  24. White House chief of staff Mark Meadows told Fox Business new measures would be rolled out, saying, “whether it’s Chicago or Portland, or Milwaukee…we need to make sure our communities are safe.”
  25. On Sunday, WAPO reported Navy veteran Christopher David, 53, went to the Portland protest to ask federal troops, “Why are you not honoring your oath? Why are you not honoring your oath to the Constitution?”
  26. Viral video showed David was pushed, beaten with a baton, and sprayed in the face with a chemical irritant before stumbling away to seek medical help. He learned at the hospital his hand was broken in two places.
  27. On Sunday, Politico reported three House chairs — Judiciary Chair Jerrold Nadler, Homeland Security Chair Bennie Thompson, and Oversight Chair Carolyn Maloney asked inspector generals to investigate the use of federal officers in Portland.
  28. The three requested the DOJ and DHS IGs investigate the use of federal law enforcement “to suppress First Amendment-protected activities in Washington, D.C.; Portland, and other communities” across the U.S.
  29. On Sunday, Florida coronavirus cases continued to surge for the fifth day with more than 10,000 new daily cases. The U.S. death toll from the pandemic passed 140,000.
  30. On Sunday, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms tweeted in addition to his suit on masks, that “Gov. Brian Kemp asked for an emergency injunction to “restrain” me from issuing press statements and speaking to the press.”
  31. Bottoms told “Face the Nation” that “My responsibility as the Mayor of Atlanta is to make decisions on behalf of the people of Atlanta that will protect our citizens,” adding, “this is not about politics, this is about people.”
  32. On Sunday, Trump made his biggest media appearances in months, in an interview with Fox News anchor Chris Wallace on “Fox News Sunday.” Trump was visibly rattled at times defending his coronavirus response.
  33. With more than 140,000 dead, when asked his statement that the virus with ‘disappear,’ Trump said, “It’s going to disappear, and I’ll be right…You know why? Because I’ve been right probably more than anybody else.”
  34. Trump repeated his false claim, “If we tested half as much, those numbers would be down.” Wallace corrected Trump, noting testing was up 37%, but the number of cases has shot up by 194%.
  35. Trump falsely claimed, “Many of those cases are young people that would heal in a day. They have the sniffles and we put it down as a test. Many of them…I guess it’s like 99.7 percent, people are going to get better.”
  36. Trump falsely claimed, “I think we have one of the lowest mortality rates in the world.” Wallace said, “It’s not true, sir. We had 900 deaths on a single day just this week.” A flustered Trump sent an aide to get a chart.
  37. Fox News showed a Johns Hopkins chart, while Wallace explained to viewers the U.S. had the 7th highest mortality rate in the world. The White House chart did not include countries doing better than the U.S.
  38. Trump diverted, saying, “It came from China. They should’ve never let it escape,” and falsely claimed cases are lower in Europe because “they don’t test.” Trump also called Dr. Antony Fauci, “a little bit of an alarmist.”
  39. Asked about a national mandate for masks, Trump said, “all of sudden everybody’s got to wear a mask, and as you know masks cause problems, too,” then adding, “I’m a believer in masks. I think masks are good.”
  40. When Wallace asked Trump is he was offended by the Confederate flag, Trump deflected: “people proudly have their Confederate flags, they’re not talking about racism. They love their flag. It represents the South.”
  41. Trump also threatened to veto a defense spending bill if it required bases named after Confederate leaders to be renamed, saying of Fort Bragg, “We’re going to name it after the Rev. Al Sharpton?” — a civil rights leader.
  42. Asked about the recent increase of violence in cities such as Chicago and New York, Trump said, “they’re Democrat-run cities, they are liberally run. They are stupidly run.”
  43. Asked if he could be a gracious loser, Trump said, “You don’t know until you see. It depends. I think mail-in voting is going to rig the election. I really do,” adding, “I have to see” when asked if he will accept the election results.
  44. Trump questioned Biden’s mental acuity, saying he should take the test Trump took. Wallace said, “I took the test,” and “it’s not the hardest test,” adding there was a picture and it says, “‘What’s that’ and it’s an elephant.”
  45. Trump also questioned Biden’s ability to do an interview with Wallace, saying, “Let Biden sit through an interview like this, he’ll be on the ground crying for mommy. He’ll say, ‘Mommy, mommy, please take me home.’”
  46. On Sunday, WAPO reported six months after the coronavirus first hit the U.S., the country’s ineffective response and inability to contain it has shocked the world. Another spike could lead to more unnecessary death.
  47. While many countries have driven infection rates close to zero, the virus is out of control in the U.S. The national response is fragmented and politicized. Testing shortcomings are being felt acutely.
  48. Other wealthy countries have avoided a dramatic viral resurgence. The U.S. miscalculation was reopening too early. The U.S. has responded like a country with vastly lower wealth and health-care resources.
  49. The U.S. is now averaging 19.6 cases per 100,000 versus 1.0 for the E.U, 1.0 for Canada, and 0.3 for Japan. On deaths, the U.S. has .22 per 100,000 versus .03 for Canada, .02 for the E.U. and .00 for Japan.
  50. The U.S. had ranked No. 1 out of 195 countries in the Global Health Security Index in October. Experts say Trump disbanded a pandemic response team, and pushed the response down to states.
  51. Experts say the U.S. is approaching a tipping point at which the country’s public health systems become so overwhelmed, they collapse. The delays in testing had a cascading effect on ability to trace and slow the outbreak.
  52. On Sunday, NYT reported as Trump continues to ignore the coronavirus crisis and promote clear public-health guidelines, some Republicans have concluded they will need to ignore or contradict his public statements.
  53. Republicans broke from Trump on issues like face masks and trust in Fauci as conditions deteriorated in their own states and Trump’s indifference. An aide to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said Trump “got bored with it.”
  54. Former House Speaker Paul Ryan issued a bleak assessment on Trump’s 2020 prospects amid a slide with suburban voters, saying if that sticks, Trump “cannot win states like Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania.”
  55. On Sunday, McClatchy reported it had obtained a State Department whistleblower complaint on Secretary Mike Pompeo, noting repeated attempts to inform leadership and legal advisers about his “questionable activities.”
  56. The complaint noted the whistleblower and others had additional evidence to back up their allegations against Pompeo but were “blocked” from reporting the activity to the department’s Office of Legal Affairs.
  57. The complaint says others were notified too concerning activities in Washington, D.C., New York Florida and overseas, but, “To my knowledge, none of them ever took action to resolve the issues.”
  58. On Sunday, NYT reported Roger Stone used a racial slur in an interview on “The Mo’Kelly Show” on Saturday night. He could be heard muttering “arguing with this Negro” in the background about the host, who is Black.
  59. On Sunday, U.S. District Court Judge Esther Salas’s 20 year-old son was shot and killed and her husband injured by a man dressed in a fake FedEx uniform who showed up at their home. The shooter took his own life.
  60. The suspect was identified as Roy Den Hollander, a self-described “anti-feminist,” who described himself as a Trump volunteer, and left a pro-Trump paper trail full of misogyny and racism, some directed at the judge.
  61. On Monday, responding to Trump’s comment that he may not accept the election result, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told MSNBC “Whether he knows it yet or not, he will be leaving.”
  62. Pelosi added, “there is a process,” and quipped, “It has nothing to do with a certain occupant of the White House doesn’t feel like moving and has to be fumigated out of there.”
  63. On Monday, Trump told reporters that federal law enforcement in Portland has “done a fantastic job in a very short period of time,” adding, “No problem. They grab them; a lot of people in jail.”
  64. Trump called the unrest in Portland “worse than Afghanistan,” and added, “We’re looking at Chicago, too. We’re looking at New York. All run by very liberal Democrats. All run, really, by the radical left.”
  65. On Monday, the Chicago Tribune reported Trump is expected to send new federal forces to Chicago this week. One Immigration and Customs Enforcement official confirmed the planned deployment.
  66. DHS did not respond to comments, but the Justice Department said it would be an expansion of ‘Operation Legend,’ which saw several federal law enforcement agencies assist local police in Kansas City, Missouri.
  67. On Monday, acting DHS Sec. Wolf told Fox News, “I don’t need invitations by the state, state mayors, or state governors to do our job. We’re going to do that, whether they like us there or not.”
  68. Shortly after, Fox News contributor Andrew Napolitano said, “What happened in Portland…was unlawful and unconstitutional,” adding, “Sending armed, untrained police into the streets…caused more violence.”
  69. On Monday, in a letter to congressional leadership and the Trump regime, Democratic mayors from Seattle, Atlanta, Chicago, Portland, Kansas City, and D.C. condemned federal forces being deployed to their cities.
  70. In a letter to Wolf and AG Barr, the mayors added, “Deployment of federal forces in the streets of our communities has not been requested nor is it acceptable,” and called it “unconstitutional.”
  71. The letter noted the tactics used by federal law enforcement in Portland is what we would expect “from authoritarian regimes — not our democracy,” and slammed the lack of oversight and training.
  72. On Monday, St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner filed charges against Mark McCloskey and Patricia McCloskey, the St. Louis couple who aimed guns at protestors, charging them with menacing protestors.
  73. Missouri Gov. Mike Parson (R) has said that he would likely pardon the McCloskeys if they were charged. Sen. Josh Hawley (R) sent a letter to the DOJ Thursday saying Gardner’s investigation was an abuse of power.
  74. Later Monday, Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt (R) filed an amicus brief asking for the charges to be dismissed. The AG has no jurisdiction over criminal cases, but criticized Gardner, who is a Black woman.
  75. Later Monday, 67 current and former state and federal prosecutors signed a statement defending Gardner, and denounced interference by Schmitt, and his “shameful, aggressive and blatantly political attacks.”
  76. On Monday, the House voted 215-190, largely along party lines, to add limits to the 1807 Insurrection Act, as Trump threatened to invoke it to deploy active-duty troops against recent protests over racial injustice.
  77. The Amendment would require the president to consult with Congress “in every possible instance” before invoking the act, and to certify to Congress that a state is unwilling or unable to suppress an insurrection.
  78. On Monday, Trump told reporters he was bringing back the daily coronavirus briefings, citing the ratings: “Record numbers watching. In the history of cable television, television, there’s never been anything like it.”
  79. On Monday, before departing to Savannah, Georgia to help the city fight Covid-19, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said, “The federal government is still in denial about this virus. It still refuses to follow the science.”
  80. On Monday, a day after dismissing masks in his Fox News interview, Trump tweeted a photo of himself wearing a face mask, saying, “We are United in our effort to defeat the Invisible China Virus.”
  81. Trump added, “many people say that it is Patriotic to wear a face mask when you when you can’t socially distance. There is nobody more Patriotic than me, your favorite President!”
  82. On Monday, hours after tweeting that wearing a face mask is ‘patriotic,’ Trump was seen at a D.C. fundraiser without one. D.C. requires a mask when traveling or when social distancing is not possible.
  83. On Monday, the World Series champion Washington Nationals announced Fauci would throw the first pitch of their season opener, noting he “has been a true champion for our country during the COVID-19 pandemic.”
  84. On Monday, Missouri Gov. Mike Parson said of reopening schools, “These kids have got to get back,” saying when they get sick, “they’re not going to the hospitals…They’re going to go home,” and, “We gotta move on.”
  85. On Monday, Florida’s largest teachers union sued Gov. Ron DeSantis over his administration’s push to fully reopen schools next month, saying it violates a state mandate to keep public schools “safe and secure.”
  86. On Monday, lawyers for Michael Cohen sued AG Barr, the head of the Bureau of Prisons, and the warden at the federal prison in Otisville, saying Cohen being taken back into custody was in retaliation for an upcoming book.
  87. The filing, which was joined by the American Civil Liberties Union, called for his immediate release, saying the move violated Cohen’s First Amendment right to free speech.
  88. On Wednesday, NYT updated their story on Barr’s ouster of Geoffrey Berman, the U.S. attorney in Manhattan, saying it was the SDNY case against Cohen on hush-money payments that started the rift.
  89. Cohen had already pleaded guilty when Barr was sworn in in February. Barr spent weeks questioning the prosecutors over their decision to charge Cohen with violating campaign finance laws in the spring of 2019.
  90. Barr asked DOJ officials in Washington to write a memo outlining legal arguments that could be used to undermine Cohen’s conviction and undercut similar prosecutions in the future. They refused to comply.
  91. On Thursday, a federal judge ordered that Cohen be released from prison by Friday, finding Cohen was sent back to prison in retaliation for his plans to write a book about Trump.
  92. On Monday, a federal appeals court upheld a jury’s convictions and 32-month prison sentence of ex-Halkbank manager Hakan Atilla, calling the evidence against the Turkish banker “overwhelming.”
  93. On Monday, supermarket chain Trader Joe’s said it would change the branding on some of its international food products, responding to a petition that called terms like “Trader Ming’s” and “Trader José” racist.
  94. On Monday, an AP sports reporter said NASCAR fans at a qualifier in Tennessee booed Black driver Bubba Wallace, who advocated for banning Confederate flags and drew Trump’s ire, and cheered when he crashed.
  95. On Monday, San Francisco Giants manager Gabe Kapler joined several of his players in kneeling during the national anthem, becoming the first Major League Baseball manager to do so.
  96. On Monday, the Supreme Court rejected House Democrats’ request to expedite litigation over Trump’s financial records in an unsigned order, with no explanation. Only Justice Sonia Sotomayor would have granted it.
  97. On Monday, a former Fox Business producer and a frequent guest filed a lawsuit accusing former Fox News anchor Ed Henry of rape, and hosts Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson, and Howard Kurtz of sexual misconduct.
  98.  On Monday, returning from an unscheduled fishing trip after his top writer resigned over racist and sexist comments last week, Fox News host Tucker Carlson claimed that the NYT was endangering his family.
  99. Carlson falsely claimed the Times planned to reveal where his family live in an upcoming story in an effort to intimidate him, and suggested his show could expose the home addresses of the reporter and Times editors.
  100. Carlson said, “They hate my politics. They want this show off the air,” adding, “the whole point of the exercise: to inflict pain on our family, to terrorize us, to control what we say. That’s the kind of people they are.”
  101. Carlson added, “How would Murray Carpenter and his photographer, Tristan Spinski, feel if we told you where they live…We could do that. We know who they are.” Shortly after, they were doxed on Twitter.
  102. The NYT Twitter account responded to a tweet by Carlson, saying the Times “does not plan to publish Tucker Carlson’s residence, which Carlson was aware of before his broadcast tonight.”
  103. Carlson ally Meghan McCain, co-host of “The View,” condemned doxing, tweeting it was “the most violating thing in the entire world.” Acting deputy DHS Secretary Ken Cucchinelli added, “That is clearly their intent.”
  104. Carpenter told WAPO on Thursday that as a result of Carlson’s remarks, he had received thousands of abusive, threatening, and hateful emails. His family members also received direct threats.
  105. NYT executive editor Dean Baquet said Carlson “misled his viewers into believing we would publish his address” adding, “he was aware that we had no intention of doing so,” and was “told we would not reveal his home.”
  106. On Tuesday, more than 280 WSJ and Dow Jones reporters, editors, and other employees cited concern in a letter to publisher Almar Latour about misinformation in the paper’s opinion section.
  107. The letter proposed more prominently labeling editorials and opinion columns, saying that some opinion pieces have included an “erroneous conclusion,” or “basic factual inaccuracies.”
  108. On Thursday, the WSJ Editorial Board countered, claiming it was “probably inevitable that the wave of progressive cancel culture would arrive at the Journal,” but “these pages won’t wilt under cancel-culture pressure.”
  109. On Tuesday, Twitter announced it has taken sweeping actions to limit the reach of the conspiracy theory QAnon content, citing problems with misinformation and harassment, known as “swarming” or “brigading.”
  110. Twitter banned 7,000 QAnon accounts, and limited 150,000 others as part of the crackdown. A spokesperson said the platform was acting now because of rising harm associated with the conspiracy theory.
  111. On Tuesday, Trump sent a series of tweets. He thanked Fox News for the “good reviews and comments on my interview with Chris Wallace.” AP reported an aide said Trump was caught off guard by the interview.
  112. Trump also tweeted about Kapler kneeling, saying, “any time I witness a player kneeling during the National Anthem, a sign of great disrespect for our Country and our Flag, the game is over for me!’
  113. Trump also lied, tweeting, “You will never hear this on the Fake News concerning the China Virus, but by comparison to most other countries, who are suffering greatly, we are doing very well.”
  114. Trump also again lied about voter fraud, tweeting, “Mail-In Voting, unless changed by the courts, will lead to the most CORRUPT ELECTION in our Nation’s History! #RIGGEDELECTION” There is no evidence of this.
  115. When the tweet was posted at Facebook, that platform added a label telling users, “Get official voting info on how to vote in the 2020 U.S. election at usa.gov/voting.”
  116. On Tuesday, presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden said of Trump’s coronavirus response, “He’s quit on the country,” adding, “he’s unable to explain how he’ll actually help working families hit the hardest.”
  117. On Tuesday, nurses with NNU, a nationwide union of registered nurses, gathered in D.C. and placed 164 pairs on shoes on the lawn of the Capitol, representing nurses who died from Covid-19, and demanded action.
  118. Nurses advocated for the $3 trillion HEROES Act, which would provide economic assistance to working families and state, local, and tribal governments, and increase funding for PPE and other medical supplies.
  119. On Tuesday, ABC News reported Trump properties have continued to host gatherings where some guests and employees flout state and local face-covering mandates, as well as the Trump Org’s own public rules.
  120. On Tuesday, Politico reported the RNC will sell Donald Jr.’s upcoming book, “Liberal Privilege,” to donors who contribute at least $75. The RNC also boosted Donald Jr.’s previous book, landing it on the NYT bestseller list.
  121. On Tuesday, AP reported 21 state attorneys general sued Trump saying a new federal rule altered practices of 30 years by undermining their ability to protect rivers, lakes, and streams within their borders.
  122. On Tuesday, Sen. Tom Cotton “Fox & Friends” compared the protestors in Portland to “insurrectionists” who started the Civil War, saying they “are little different from the insurrectionists who seceded.”
  123. On Tuesday, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany defended Trump not wearing a mask at a Monday fundraiser, saying Trump is “acting appropriately,” and that he “is the most tested man in America.”
  124. McEnany also lied, claiming Trump “has always been consistent on this that masks are, according to the CDC, recommended but not required,”
  125. On Tuesday, Politico reported members of the House Freedom Caucus, all white men, tore into Rep. Liz Cheney in a closed-door meeting over her supporting Fauci and a primary opponent of one of their members.
  126. Rep. Jim Jordan also chastised Cheney for not backing Trump, listing recent high-profile examples. Rep. Andy Biggs said if she has a problem with Trump, she should keep it to herself.
  127. Rep. Matt Gaetz, who is not a member of the caucus, called on Cheney to step down from her No. 3 House position, tweeting she “has worked behind the scenes (and now in public)” against Trump and his agenda.
  128. On Tuesday, The Hill reported GOP Rep. Ted Yoho was heard calling Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez a “fucking bitch” after a heated exchange on crime and policing on the steps of the Capitol.
  129. On Tuesday, WAPO reported according to new filings, Trump, the Republican Party, and two affiliated committees have spent a record-breaking $983 million on his re-election since 2017.
  130. Despite the record spending, Trump lagged Biden by double-digits nationally amid sagging support for his handling of the coronavirus and weakened economy, and faces a narrow path to victory.
  131. On Tuesday, Trump issued a memo to Commerce Department Secretary Wilbur Ross instructing him to exclude unauthorized immigrants from the numbers used to divide up seats in Congress among the states.
  132. The move would mark an unprecedented change to the constitutionally mandated count of every person living in the country. Trump does not have the final authority over the census. Democrats will fight the measure.
  133. On Tuesday, Trump revived his daily coronavirus briefing, without any public health officials, designed to project a commanding role as his poll numbers for handling the pandemic and against Biden continued to fall.
  134. Trump uncharacteristically stayed on message for his 30-minute speech, warning, “It will probably unfortunately get worse before it gets better,” in contrast to saying it will disappear. More than 141,000 had died.
  135. Trump said, “If you watch American television, you think that the United States was the only country involved with and suffering from the China virus,” adding, “Well, the world is suffering very badly.”
  136. Trump shifted on masks, saying, “Get a mask. Whether you like the mask or not, get a mask,” adding, “They have an effect,” and later saying, “I’m getting used to the mask.”
  137. Trump also claimed, “no governors needs anything right now.” ABC News fact-checked by reaching out to states, and found at least 13 states said some of their requests for medical supplies were still unfilled.
  138. Asked about Ghislaine Maxwell, who awaits a trial on charges she helped recruit girls for Jeffrey Epstein who were sexually abused, Trump said, “I haven’t really been following it too much. I just wish her well, frankly.”
  139. Shortly after, Pelosi told CNN Trump “recognized the mistakes that he has made by now embracing mask wearing,” adding, “it is a pandemic that has gotten worse” because of his inaction, and calling it the “Trump virus.
  140. On Tuesday, the U.S.reported more than 1,000 daily deaths, the highest since late May. Hospitalizations rose to 59,000, the third highest level since the start of the pandemic. Florida saw record high hospitalizations.
  141. On Tuesday, a CDC study found the actual number of Covid-19 cases could be 6 to 24 times higher than the confirmed number of cases, based on data primarily from 10 U.S. cities and states.
  142. On Tuesday, Tom Ridge, the first homeland security secretary, said in an interview on Trump’s deployment, “it would be a cold day in hell before I would consent to an uninvited, unilateral intervention,” citing Portland.
  143. Ridge added, “The department was established to protect America from the ever-present threat of global terrorism. It was not established to be the president’s personal militia.”
  144. On Tuesday, Illinois Sens. Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth introduced legislation “to block the Trump administration from deploying federal forces as a shadowy paramilitary against Americans.”
  145. Duckworth called what was happening in Portland “deeply troubling.” Gov. J.B. Pritzker said, “We’re going to do everything we can to prevent them from coming,” and if they do come, we’ll do all we can “to get them out.”
  146. On Tuesday, Truthout reported that Portland’s Wall of Moms was joined by Dads with Leaf Blowers, who used the blowers to disperse tear gas and send it back at federal troops.
  147. On Tuesday, the Oregonian reported Jennifer Kristiansen, 37, a lawyer who was part of the Wall of Moms said she heard a woman nearby say she had been hit by an officer’s baton, and shortly after, she was arrested.
  148. Kristiansen said said one of the arresting officers turned her around and pushed her against the wall of the federal courthouse, then touched her breast and butt. She said it was unclear if it was intentional.
  149. She said she was put in an elevator in the building with four officers, and taken to a holding cell, where she stayed by herself. No one read her her rights. When officers tried to question her, she cited the Fifth Amendment.
  150. On Tuesday, Sen. Susan Collins said she would withhold support of Trump in 2020, claiming she only picks sides when she is not on the ballot. Notably, she endorsed John McCain while she was running in 2008.
  151. On Tuesday, NYT reported Trump asked Robert Wood Johnson IV, the U.S. ambassador to Britain, in February 2018 to lobby the UK government to have the British Open golf tournament at Trump Turnberry.
  152. Lewis Lukens, the ambassador’s deputy at the time, advised against it, saying it would be an unethical use of the presidency for private gain, but Johnson did ask David Mundell, the UK’s secretary of state for Scotland.
  153. Lukens emailed the State Department to notify them. A few months later, he was forced out. Colleagues say Johnson forced out Lukens after he gave a speech which included a positive anecdote about Barack Obama.
  154. Johnson also has allegations against him for racist, sexist and xenophobic behavior. Complaints were raised last fall with the State Department IG. The review was completed in February, but has not been made public.
  155. Johnson denied all allegations in a tweet. The State Department called him “a valued member of the team who has led Mission UK honorably and professionally,” adding, “We stand by Ambassador Johnson.”
  156. On Tuesday, Secretary of State Pompeo ordered the Chinese consulate in Houston to close, claiming China was “stealing” intellectual property, including targeting labs developing Covid-19 vaccines.
  157. The Chinese government retaliated on Friday, ordering the closure of the American consulate in Chengdu, and blaming the Trump regime for the deterioration in relations.
  158. On Wednesday, Miami Herald reported Dr. Deborah Birx warned state and local leaders in a private phone call that 11 cities are seeing major surges in cases and need to take aggressive action to mitigate their outbreaks.
  159. Health experts said such warning should be made public. The cities included Baltimore, Cleveland, Columbus, Indianapolis, Las Vegas, Miami, Minneapolis, Nashville, New Orleans, Pittsburgh, and St. Louis.
  160. On Wednesday, NYT reported Trump has continued to remind people polls can be wrong, including telling Chris Wallace on Sunday, “I’m not losing,” after Wallace presented him with a poll showing him down by 8 points.
  161. Trump also cited “boat parades” in a tweet as a measure for his voter enthusiasm. His campaign and top advisers have echoed him in dismissing polls showing him down, dismissing them as an extension of “the media.”
  162. Privately Trump thinks he is down, but not by as much as the polls show. His pollsters tell him regularly that it is a close race, and the polls reflect polling bias, and battleground states are closer than the polls are showing.
  163. Trump’s political opponents assume he knows he is losing badly, and his dismissal is a strategy to sow confusion and doubt about the results. But aides say Trump has not let reality of how bad things are sink in.
  164. On Wednesday, NBC News reported the Biden campaign accused Sen. Ron Johnson, Chair of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, of pushing forward an investigation based on materials from pro-Kremlin Ukrainians.
  165. The campaign accused Johnson of, in effect, being “party to a foreign influence operation.” In a letter to the FBI, the campaign called it an example of how foreign disinformation campaigns target Congress.
  166. On Wednesday, Trump announced to reporters that he plans to deploy federal law enforcement units to Chicago and Albuquerque, despite objections from state and local leaders.
  167. Trump dubbed it “Operation Legend,” named after 4-year-old LeGend Taliferro, who was shot and killed last month in Kansas City. Trump said federal law enforcement will be sent to “drive down violent crime.”
  168. Barr claimed as part of Operation Legend, “Just to give you an idea of what’s possible, the FBI went in very strong into Kansas City…we’ve had 200 arrests.” Kansas City officials said there was only one arrest.
  169. Shortly after, Ridge described Trump’s plan as a “reality TV approach” to a serious problem, telling CNN, “Have they talked to the mayor? Have they talked to the chief of police? Have they talked to the U.S. attorney?”
  170. On Wednesday, at his daily coronavirus briefing, Trump was pressed on his announcement that he was sending federal police to Chicago and Albuquerque. He said, “Chicago should be calling us. And so should Philadelphia and Detroit and others to go in and really help them.”
  171. Trump said on a vaccine, “We think we have a winner,” referring to an agreement with Pfizer to manufacture and distribute 100 million doses; however, Trump appeared without any health officials to validate it.
  172. Trump also echoed a false claim by Education Department Secretary Betsy DeVos that children are ‘stoppers’ of Covid-19, saying children “don’t transmit very easily, and a lot of people are saying they don’t transmit.”
  173. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, as of July 16 there were 242,000 children who tested positive, 8% of all cases, including a 46% increase from July 2 to July 16, even if mortality among children is low.
  174. Trump added, “We would like to see schools open. We want to see the economy open.” As he spoke, Dr. Birx told Fox News, “there’s still open questions” as to children transmitting the virus to adult.
  175. Later Wednesday, Trump bragged in a Fox News interview about taking the cognitive test he took, saying he was asked the words, “Person. Woman. Man. Camera. TV” in the right order, repeating the words several times.
  176. Cable television and social media played his remarks in a loop. Anti-Trump Republicans produced an online ad mocking him, and T-shirts, sweatshirts, and other clothing items were produced with the words “Person. Woman. Man. Camera. TV.”
  177. It was still unclear what test Trump was referring to. The White House physician said Trump took the Montreal Cognitive Assessment in 2018. MOCA test for signs of dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, or other conditions.
  178. On Wednesday, GOP Gov. Mike DeWine ordered a mask mandate in Ohio, as did GOP Gov. Eric Holcomb for Indiana, and Democratic Gov. Tim Walz for Minnesota. More than 30 states had statewide masks mandates.
  179. On Wednesday, NPR reported the Wall of Moms said their driving vision is that “we moms would take some physical hits in hopes our Black and Brown kids, friends, neighbors, and loved ones will be spared some pain.”
  180. In addition to the leaf blowers used to blow away tear gas, some dads also brought hockey sticks to swing tear gas canisters back at federal agents. State and federal leaders continued to call for agents to leave the city.
  181. On Wednesday, NYT reported in the 55th consecutive night of protests in Portland, protestors used umbrellas, pool noodles, and sleds for shields, along with wearing bicycle helmets and football pads.
  182. On Wednesday, Portland’s mayor was tear-gassed by federal agents while speaking to protestors. Mayor Wheeler appeared slightly dazed and coughed, telling reporters it was the first time he had been tear-gassed.
  183. On Thursday, Trump attacked Ridge, tweeting, “watched failed RINO Tom Ridge…trying to justify his sudden love of the Radical Left Mayor of Portland,” adding, “Love watching pathetic Never Trumpers squirm!”
  184. Trump also joined his allies attacking Cheney, tweeting she “is only upset because I have been actively getting our great and beautiful Country out of the ridiculous and costly Endless Wars” and making ‘so-called allies’ pay.
  185. On Thursday, the Labor Department reported weekly unemployment claims ticked higher to 1.4 million. This marked the 19th straight week of job losses in excess of 1 million.
  186. On Thursday, Ocasio-Cortez blasted her Republican colleagues of perpetuating a “culture” of sexism in a House floor speech, after Yoho took to the floor Wednesday to offer an apology Democrats said was insincere.
  187. Ocasio-Cortez called out Yoho, saying, “What I do have issue with is using women — our wives and daughters — as shields and excuses for poor behavior,” adding, “I am someone’s daughter, too.”
  188. On Thursday, in a 5-5 vote, the Kansas school board rejected Gov. Laura Kelly’s executive order announced last week to delay school reopening by three weeks amid a surge in coronavirus cases.
  189. On Thursday, Politico reported Kimberly Guilfoyle and Donald Jr. jumped on a private plane after she tested positive, leaving more than a half-dozen junior campaign staffers who were left to quarantine in Rapid City, South Dakota.
  190. The aides felt deserted and scared they would get sick in an unfamiliar city. They later sought out Trump campaign’s chief of staff to vent. There are growing GOP worries about internal turmoil in the campaign.
  191. On Thursday, NYT reported Trump’s lead with white voters has all but vanished to 48-45 over Biden, putting the Republican Party’s structural advantage in the House, Senate, and Electoral College in jeopardy.
  192. On Thursday, a Quinnipiac poll found with coronavirus cases surging in Florida, Trump’s approval fell there to 37%, 59% disapprove. He trailed Biden 51-38 in the state — in April, Biden was up just 46-42.
  193. On Thursday, a Fox News poll found Biden leading Trump in battleground states Pennsylvania (50/39), Minnesota (51/38) and Michigan (49/40) — with Trump’s approval falling in all three states.
  194. On Thursday, DOJ IG Michael Horowitz and DHS IG Joseph Cuffari said in a letter that they will examine how federal law enforcement conducted themselves at clashes with protestors in Portland and Lafayette Square.
  195. Horowitz said he will investigate U.S. marshals’ use of force in Portland, and how parts of the DOJ, including the FBI and Drug Enforcement Administration, were used to quell protests in D.C. last month.
  196. Cuffari said he opened an investigation into allegations that Customs and Border Patrol agents “improperly detained and transported protesters” in Portland, and would review the deployment of DHS there.
  197. The investigations will look at a nonlethal munition fired by one of the Marshal Services officers guarding the courthouse on July 12. The protestor needed surgery. State and local law enforcement are investigating too.
  198. The investigations will also look into Navy-veteran Christopher David being attacked by U.S. marshals outside the courthouse. Videos of the incidents drew widespread criticism from protestors and lawmakers.
  199. On Thursday, CNN reported the Department of Housing and Urban Development announced a new plan which dismantles rules requiring local governments to demonstrate progress against housing discrimination in exchange for grants.
  200. The rule states applicants “generally … must take an active role rather than be passive,” and eliminated the assessment the Obama administration instituted in 2015, as well as Clinton-era requirements.
  201. The new rule guts the requirements at Trump’s direction. Trump has cited the Obama-era rule while attempting to attract white suburban voters by stoking fears with decades-old racist tropes.
  202. On Thursday, House Homeland Security Committee Chair Bennie Thompson said his panel would hold a hearing next week to examine the DHS response to the protests in Portland.
  203. On Thursday, Trump quoted a NY Post article about Biden’s “plan for a federal takeover of local zoning laws,” adding, “Biden will destroy your neighborhood…I will preserve it and make it even better!
  204. Trump addressed his tweet to women, saying, “The Suburban Housewives of America must read this article.” Trump was widely mocked for using the term ‘housewives,’ with comparisons drawn to the 1950s.
  205. On Thursday, the U.S. passed 4 million coronavirus cases, with cases trending upward in 39 states. The numbers of hospitalizations and deaths also continued to increase daily.
  206. The pace of infections also quickened: it took 98 days to reach 1 million cases, 44 days to reach 2 million cases, 26 days to reach 3 million cases, and just 15 days to reach 4 million cases.
  207. On Thursday, Mother Jones reported Trump adviser Stephen Miller claimed his grandmother Ruth Glosser did not die of Covid-19, despite a death certificate saying she did. Glosser’s son blamed the Trump regime.
  208. On Thursday, at his daily coronavirus briefing, Trump abruptly canceled the Republican National Convention in Jacksonville, weeks after moving the event from North Carolina because state officials required precautions.
  209. Trump said, “We won’t do a big, crowded convention, per se — it’s not the right time for that.” The announcement came as Trump has spent weeks urging states, including Florida, to reopen their economies and schools.
  210. Trump claimed his political advisers tried to convince him they could make the convention work, and “enthusiasm” was building, claiming, “There’s nothing more important in our country than keeping our people safe.”
  211. NYT reported the decision to cancel was made in the last 24 hours. Trump’s advisers urged him to take the virus seriously, and assure voters the storm will pass. Until this week, he has done the opposite.
  212. Trump also said at the daily briefing that he had spoken with Putin to discuss the virus and arms control. There was no mention of Russia’s efforts to hack vaccine research or place bounties on U.S. troops.
  213. On Thursday, NYT reported as Trump pushes for full reopening, St. Andrew’s Episcopal School, where Barron attends, notified parents it would not fully reopen this fall, allowing limited in-person education.
  214. On Thursday, the Fairfax County, Virginia school board voted unanimously to rename the Robert E. Lee High School after John Lewis.
  215. On Thursday, in the opening game of the MLB 2020 season, managers and coaches of the New York Yankees and Nationals knelt in unison in support of Black Lives Matter. Fauci threw out the first pitch.
  216. On Thursday, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot ordered two statues of Christopher Columbus to be ‘temporarily removed’ overnight, after protestors clashed with police in violent demonstrations.
  217. On Thursday, Trump appeared on “Hannity.” Trump said of canceling the RNC, “We’re setting an example. We don’t want to have people so close together.” Notably Trump was still pushing to reopen schools.
  218. Trump threatened to send more troops to U.S. cities: We will put in 50,000, 60,000 people that really know what they’re doing. And they’re strong. They’re tough,” adding, “we’d go in with 50,000, 75,000 people.”
  219. Trump also bragged about federal agents gassing the mayor of Portland, saying, “Mayor Wheeler….he’s — he made a fool out of himself,” adding, “they knocked the hell out of him. That was the end of him.”
  220. Trump again blamed China, saying, “The whole world was hit. China allowed it to escape to Europe and to the whole world, including us,” and “we are going to win. And we are going to win sooner rather than later.”
  221. Trump repeated his conspiracy theory: “Obama and Vice President Biden, and the whole group of them with Brennan and Comey and McCabe and Lisa Page and Strzok…they spied…this is illegal as can be, this is treason.”
  222. On Thursday, WAPO reported journalist Eddy Binford-Ross, a 17 year-old high school reporter, was shoved and gassed by federal agents. She said, “I almost threw up because I was coughing so hard.”
  223. Later Thursday, a federal judge in Portland issued a 14-day temporary restraining order blocking federal law enforcement from arresting or using physical force against journalists and legal observers.
  224. The order was the first limits placed on federal officers in Portland. The judge wrote the DOJ was wrong when it argued that journalists did not have a right to stay when streets were closed, to see if it was lawfully done.
  225. Later Thursday, NYT reported the Trump regime is quietly deploying the Special Response Team, operated under CBP, to Seattle ahead of what were expected to be large-scale protests this weekend.
  226. Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan said she spoke to Wolf and he assured her the regime had no plans to deploy a surge of agents. Durkan said in an interview, “Any deployment here would, in my view, undermine public safety.”
  227. On Thursday, a judge in Seattle ruled five news outlets must comply with a subpoena from the Seattle Police Department, and turn over unpublished video and photos from a May 30 racial justice protest that turned violent.
  228. On Thursday, Fauci said in a podcast interview that he has received hate mail and “serious threats against me, against my family… my daughters, my wife,” adding, “I mean, really? Is this the United States of America?”
  229. On Thursday, the CDC released promised guidelines for reopening — with some schools weeks away from the start of their academic year — placing a heavy emphasis on getting students back to classrooms.
  230. The guidelines described the social, emotional, and mental risks of keeping students at home, and have broad outlines on how to resume in-person instruction in line with what the CDC has recommended for other entities.
  231. On Thursday, NYT reported Trump’s DHS admitted to making false statements to justify expelling New York residents from the Global Entry program that allows travelers to speed through airports and borders.
  232. In a court filling, a surprise retreat by the Trump regime, DHS admitted the inaccuracies “undermine a central argument” in the Trump regime’s case for barring New Yorkers from the programs.
  233. DHS falsely argued New York was an outlier in restrictions placed on the access the immigration authorities to State Department of Motor Vehicles records, claiming the state could not be trusted in the Global Entry program.
  234. The filing was in response to lawsuits by New York State and New York Civil Liberties Union. DHS said, “Defendants deeply regret the foregoing inaccurate or misleading statements” and apologized.
  235. On Friday, New York Gov. Cuomo threatened to sue the Trump regime for damages over banning NY residents from Global Entry, saying DHS “abused government resources to advance political purposes.”
  236. Cuomo also accused two DHS officials, acting Secretary Wolf and acting Deputy Secretary Cuccinelli, of potential criminal liability, saying, “It was a clear abuse of government power for political purposes.”
  237. Cuomo called on Barr and Congress to launch investigations into DHS’s actions. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer joined Cuomo in his call for a probe, asking DHS IG Cuffari to investigate the “false claim.”
  238. On Friday, William Evanina, director of the National Counterintelligence and Security Center, warned in a statement Russia, China, and Iran are working to influence the 2020 election, in “a direct threat to the fabric of our democracy.”
  239. Evanina said, “Russia’s persistent objective is to weaken the United States and diminish our global role. Using a range of efforts, including internet trolls and other proxies, Russia continues to spread disinformation.”
  240. Pelosi, Schumer, and Democratic leaders said Evanina’s warning “does not go nearly far enough in arming the American people with the knowledge they need,” and gives “a false sense of equivalence” for the three countries.
  241. On Friday, press secretary McEnany kicked off the daily briefing by playing a propaganda-like video of violence in Portland, while accusing “the media” of ignoring the protests, which she described as “riots.”
  242. Fox News cut away from the briefing while the video aired. Host Harris Faulkner said, “We were not expecting that video,” adding, “Some tough images there, a lot of things that we didn’t anticipate to be shown.”
  243. McEnany also said Trump is “appalled by cancel culture…specifically as it pertains to cops,” citing “PAW Patrol,” a cartoon show about rescue dogs, claiming it was canceled. “PAW Patrol” tweeted it has not been canceled.
  244. On Friday, Trump-appointed Postmaster General Louis DeJoy announced he would cut overtime and other expenses of the cash-strapped agency, which he warned would lead to slower mail delivery ahead of the election.
  245. On Friday, a SurveyMonkey poll found approval for GOP governors in hard-hit states Florida, Arizona, Texas, and Georgia plummeting. All four had disapproval about 55%, and approval below 45% and trending lower.
  246. On Friday, days before 20 million Americans were set to lose a temporary $600 weekly benefit, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said it could take “a few weeks,” as Republicans looked to scale back benefits.
  247. On Friday, WAPO settled its lawsuit with Nick Sandmann, who was at the center of a viral March for Life video controversy. Terms were not disclosed. Sandmann took to Twitter to celebrate.
  248. On Friday, the number of daily coronavirus topped 74,000 cases — a new record high. The U.S. also recorded its fourth consecutive day of more than 1,000 deaths.
  249. On Friday, NYT reported the U.S. is in the top 10 of the world’s worst coronavirus hot spots, which included countries in the Persian Gulf, South Africa, Israel, and several in Latin America.
  250. On Friday, the CDC acknowledged in a report that one-third of coronavirus patients who are not hospitalized do not recover quickly, and instead experience ongoing symptoms, such as fatigue and cough.
  251. On Friday, NBC News reported most of the $38 million raised by the RNC host committee for the convention’s original location in Charlotte has been spent. The Jacksonville host committee raised an additional $6 million.
  252. Now as Trump’s team searches for a new stage for him to deliver his acceptance speech, the team will also need to find a way to appease donors who have nothing to show for their donations.
  253. Trump’s allies were caught off-guard by his cancellation on Thursday. Convention organizers were still preparing for a three-day event, and were fundraising up until the time of the announcement.
  254. On Friday, a federal judge denied a request by Oregon’s AG for an order that would require federal law enforcement to identify themselves when making arrests, and place limits on the detention and arrests of protesters.
  255. The judge found AG Ellen Rosenblum lacked standing to bring a lawsuit on behalf of Oregon residents. Multiple other lawsuits relating to federal troops’ presence are proceeding forward.
  256. On Friday, WAPO reported an Air Force surveillance plane from a secretive unit flew missions from an airport serving Portland. The Air Force claimed the service conducted “previously planned test flights.”
  257. On Friday, thousands protested in Portland, in the largest protest of the week. A “Wall of Vets” marched with the group, then lined up in front of a fence erected outside the federal courthouse.
  258. On Friday, WAPO reported Trump signed an executive order on June 26 to quell civil unrest by sending DHS troops, and hoped to frame and create a culture war — right vs. left, right vs. wrong.
  259. By time he signed the order, protests had largely died down around the country, except in Portland, which has a long tradition of protest as a subculture of anarchism, where largely peaceful protests were continuing.
  260. With his sinking poll numbers, Trump focused on Portland as a way to appear as a field general in cultural conflict. Trump looked to amplify his law and order message, to show he is the last bastion of safety.
  261. The White House had long wanted to amplify strife in cities, and create viral online content. DHS dubbed the deployment Operation Diligent Valor. By mid-July there were more than 100 officers.
  262. Trump has taken a keen interest in the tactical operations against protestors: Trump frequently calls Wolf for updates in the middle of the night while the tear gas is thickest in Portland.
  263. The scenes of militarized federal forces stunned Americans, and unnerved former DHS officials. The presence has also re-energized protestors — rendering the federal courthouse a proxy for the Trump regime itself.
  264. Late Saturday, the Supreme Court voted 5-4, with Chief Justice John Roberts siding with liberal justices, to reject a Nevada church’s request to block the cap on attendees for religious services imposed by the state amid the pandemic.
  265. On Saturday, NYT reported after federal agents flooded the streets around the federal courthouse in Portland with tear gas Friday, officers advanced into the streets, venturing beyond the courthouse they are there to protect.
  266. The aggressive incursion, with batons and riot gears, stretched the legal limits of federal law enforcement. Oregon officials say federal agents are illegally taking on the role of riot police.
  267. On Saturday, WSJ reported 120 agents from the Border Patrol’s elite unit Bortac, which usually tracks smugglers, serves high-risk warrants, and raids stash houses, have been deployed to the streets of Portland.
  268. On Saturday, Reuters reported tens of thousands marched in Khabarovsk, Russia to protest Putin’s detention of the region’s popular governor, Sergei Furgal, who claims he was falsely arrested on murder charges.
  269. On Saturday, NYT reported law enforcement declassified information that could lead to the identification of a Russia expert who collected research for the Steele dossier, and agreed to tell the F.B.I. what he knew about it.
  270. Barr directed the FBI to declassify a redacted report about its 2017 interview of Igor Danchenko, and provide it to Sen. Graham, who made the interview public, and called the Russia investigation “corrupt.”
  271. The decision by the DOJ and FBI to declassify the interview report was highly unusual, and places a witness at risk. Barr is set to testify before lawmakers on Tuesday about abuses of power.
  272. On Saturday, CNN reported local television stations owned by Sinclair Broadcasting will air the conspiracy theory documentary “Plandemic,” which claims Fauci was responsible for the creation of the coronavirus.
  273. On Saturday, WAPO reported this was a week of retreats for Trump as the coronavirus surged out of control: Trump backed using masks, canceled the RNC, and backed off from demanding a payroll tax in the relief bill.
  274. For most of his 3 1/2 years in office, Trump has controlled Republicans in Congress. But with his poll numbers plunging and weakened politically by his response to the pandemic, they are no longer bending to his will.
  275. On Saturday, Trump tweeted, “the Democrats in the House are trying to undo my big win Travel Ban Bill,” adding, “Hopefully, will be DEAD in the Senate! The Dems have gone Stone Cold Left — Venezuela on steroids!
  276. On Saturday, Trump flew to New Jersey to golf and spend the weekend at his Bedminster golf club. This marked the 281st time Trump has golfed during his 1,077 days in office.
  277. As the week came to a close, there were 15,800,544 worldwide cases and 641,013 dead from the coronavirus. The U.S. had 4,137,411 cases (26.2%), 145,860 deaths (22.8%), and a mortality rate of 3.5%.

What’s Up With Portland?

Ken AshfordPolice Brutality/Reform, Race, Trump & AdministrationLeave a Comment

Today marks the 50th straight day of protests in Portland, Oregon—which have been ongoing since shortly after the May 25 murder of George Floyd. The protests have been largely peaceful, but there have been several well-documented episodes of violence, vandalism and property damage. In the past few days, however, the protests have been met with what appears to be a significant federal law enforcement response—the contours of (and legal authorities for) which are, at best, unclear. By all appearances, there are now at least 100 federal law enforcement officers on the ground in Portland. But media reports suggest that many of those officers (a) are not wearing identifiable uniforms or other insignia, (b) are not driving marked law enforcement vehicles, and (c) are not identifying themselves either publicly or even to those whom they have detained and arrested. Making matters worse, local authorities—from the mayor to the sheriff to the governor—have repeatedly insisted not only that they don’t want federal assistance but that the federal response is aggravating the situation on the ground. Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf, in contrast, has repeatedly taken to Twitter to claim that local authorities are refusing to restore order—albeit with only vague references to which federal laws are not being enforced (and repeated allusions to “graffiti” and other property damage by “violent anarchists”).

In all of these respects, what’s happening in Portland appears to be a reprise of much of what happened in Washington, D.C., at the beginning of June, when Attorney General William Barr called upon a wide array of statutory authorities to commandeer hundreds of federal law enforcement officers in order to “restore order” in the nation’s capital. At the time, many who both criticized and defended Barr’s actions pointed to the federal government’s unique legal authority over the District of Columbia—implying (whether as a feature or a bug) that the same authorities wouldn’t be available, at least to the same extent, in the 50 states. But if nothing else, the events in Portland appear to underscore that the federal government sees no such distinction—and that it believes it has the power to similarly deploy federal law enforcement authorities across the country, even (if not especially) over the objections of the relevant local and state officials.

All of this raises a host of questions, very few of which can be answered at this point. This post is not meant as a comprehensive explainer but, rather, as an effort to separate out the many distinct (if overlapping) issues that the federal response in Portland appears to raise. Thus, what follows is a list of questions and a few tentative thoughts as to possible answers. Needless to say, it would behoove Attorney General Barr and Acting Secretary Wolf to answer these questions—and to do so sooner rather than later.

Question 1: Which agencies’ officers are being utilized for federal law enforcement purposes in Portland, and under which statutory authorities?

In June, the attorney general pointed to a host of agencies and authorities in a letter responding to D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser. In his words,

We have deployed personnel from the major law enforcement components of the Department of Justice, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives; the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”); the Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”); and the U.S. Marshals Service (“USMS). Each of those agencies acts within the scope of its federal authorities, and where useful and appropriate, we have assigned additional duties to the agencies to assist in the enforcement of federal law. For instance, we have assigned additional law enforcement responsibility to DEA under 21 U.S.C. § 878(a)(5), and USMS has deputized officers from the Department of Homeland Security and from BOP, including its Special Operations Response Teams, to assist in the enforcement of federal law. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 561,566.

It also appears that the federal government is using Customs and Border Protection officers in Portland—which, like so much of the United States, lies less than 100 miles from an international border (yes, the Pacific Ocean counts). Although federal immigration authorities are generally nationwide, there are a few specific authorities (and some important constitutional exceptions) that come into play “along the border.” Simply put, there are a ton of statutory authorities that allow the federal government to use a wide array of federal law enforcement officers to enforce federal law (including destruction or vandalism of federal property). Those authorities don’t usually require officers to stay in their regulatory lanes (for instance, immigration officers can arrest for any federal offense committed in their presence). There’s a good bet that that’s at least part of what’s going on here. And although many of those authorities extend only to offenses against (and on) federal property, if a federal officer personally observes such an offense, it is not controversial that he or she can arrest the offender even if the arrest takes place on a public street.

Question 2: Okay, but which federal laws are being enforced?

This is a significant question, and the answer is hardly obvious. Unlike D.C., which is entirely federal territory (and where even “local” law is technically “federal”), Portland is principally subject to the sovereignty of the state of Oregon. There is some federal property in Portland, but not much. And federal law enforcement officers do not generally have the authority (under federal law, anyway) to enforce state laws on nonfederal property. Some of Acting Secretary Wolf’s statements have referred to vandalism of “courthouses,” including the three federal courthouses in downtown Portland. And there are a handful of other federal buildings in the city. But this is where the Portland situation starts to look very different from D.C. Protecting a federal courthouse from vandalism is an easy case for the use of federal law enforcement authorities. If, as media reports have suggested, federal officers are patrolling streets a significant distance from federal buildings (and arresting protestors who pose no imminent threat thereto), that would be far murkier.

Question 3: What authority do these federal officers have to detain and arrest individuals?

Insofar as federal law enforcement officers are enforcing federal law and/or state law on federal property, federal law also provides detention and arrest authorities. Of course, detention and arrest must still comport with the federal Constitution—under which warrantless arrests require probable cause to believe the individual has committed a crime.

Like most states, Oregon does authorize federal officers to enforce state law. Under Oregon Revised Statutes § 133.245, a federal officer may arrest any person “[f]or any crime committed in the federal officer’s presence if the federal officer has probable cause to believe the person committed the crime.” The statute also provides, however, that “[t]he federal officer shall inform the person to be arrested of the federal officer’s authority and reason for the arrest,” and that “[a] federal officer making an arrest under this section without unnecessary delay shall take the arrested person before a magistrate or deliver the arrested person to a peace officer.” (The statute also allows the federal officer to use the same physical force that a local or state officer would be allowed to use in effectuating the arrest.) In other words, federal law enforcement officers in Portland could have the legal authority to arrest individuals when they have probable cause for violations of federal or state law—but in the latter case, there are statutory notice and transfer requirements that, if media reports are accurate, are not being honored. But the Oregon statute also requires state certification that federal officers have received proper training before effectuating arrests under state law before such arrests can happen. Suffice it to say, it is hardly clear that any of the federal officers have received such certification here.

Question 4: How come none of these federal officers have to identify themselves?

As Rachel Brown and Coleman Saunders explained on Lawfare last month, there’s no general requirement under federal law that federal law enforcement officers disclose either their identity or the identity of their employer. (One of the many reforms that seems worth pursuing in response to recent events is to consider whether there are circumstances in which federal law should require identification.) The messier question is whether Oregon law requires them to do so. As noted above, the Oregon statute that authorizes federal law enforcement officers to enforce Oregon law requires the officers to identify their authority and their reason for making the arrest. It does not seem like a stretch to interpret that provision to require officers to identify themselves at least as a federal law enforcement officer, if not as an employee of a specific federal agency with law enforcement authority. That doesn’t mean that these officers must wear uniforms or drive marked vehicles, but it shouldn’t be remotely controversial to require federal officers, when making arrests, to make it clear to those whom they are arresting why they have the legal authority to do so.

Question 5: Is the Department of Homeland Security in charge? If so, why?

By all accounts, the federal law enforcement response in D.C. last month was coordinated by, and run through, Attorney General Barr and the Department of Justice. Here, in contrast, the response seems to be under the control of Acting Secretary Wolf. If so, it’s unclear why that would be the case, given that most of the authorities the attorney general identified in June are authorities he possesses in his capacity as attorney general. True, there are a number of law enforcement agencies in the Department of Homeland Security, but only a handful of them seem to be relevant to the situation in Portland (again, perhaps including Customs and Border Protection). And insofar as the hook for much of this response is the protection of Portland’s federal courthouses, that’s the bailiwick of the U.S. Marshals Service—an arm of the Department of Justice.

Question 6: How will we learn the answers to any of these questions?

Whatever the answers to the above questions, there ought to be common cause on the need to hear them. The federal government does not seem especially inclined to volunteer answers, which leaves things to Congress or the courts. Congress, of course, can attempt to compel testimony from executive branch officials (although we know how that story goes). And it’s only a matter of time before litigation also requires the federal government to account, under penalty of perjury, for exactly what its officers are tasked with doing in Portland and what they have done. But insofar as any of these individual federal law enforcement officers have exceeded their authority, it’s worth emphasizing that it is increasingly difficult to hold federal law enforcement officers liable for damages—even for violating constitutional rights. Not only would federal law enforcement officers be able to argue that they’re entitled to “qualified immunity” in such cases, but the Supreme Court has made it harder and harder for federal courts to allow private parties to sue federal law enforcement officers for damages even in cases in which no immunity defense is available. And so not for the first time this summer—and likely not for the last—the real upshot may be the need for Congress to enact comprehensive law enforcement reforms, not just to the substantive authorities that law enforcement officers may and may not exercise, but to when they must be required to identify themselves and to whom.

***

There’s definitely reason to be alarmed about what’s going on in Portland. And even if the federal officers are technically complying with the relevant statutes, there’s something more than just unseemly about camouflaged officers who refuse to identify themselves or their employer purporting to conduct arrests on the streets of American cities. Whether these officers are in fact abusing their authorities or not remains to be seen, but either answer would be deeply troubling.

Whose Side Is Trump On?

Ken AshfordEbola/Zika/COVID-19 Viruses, Trump & AdministrationLeave a Comment

One factor keeping Americans from grasping the magnitude of the COVID-19 pandemic is that outside the viral hot spots so few know anyone who has caught the disease or died from it. Here in this county of 260, 000, we knew three afflicted in March at a time there were only 40 cases on record. How is that possible? They were never tested despite the now-classic symptoms. Tests were being rationed and the one man and two women did not qualify.

They recovered at home in time. In New York City, many never lived to make it to the hospital. Many of them were never tested either.

As valiantly as local officials struggle to save lives, the nation’s non-response has been a national disgrace (Washington Post):

Six months after the coronavirus appeared in America, the nation has failed spectacularly to contain it. The country’s ineffective response has shocked observers around the planet.

Many countries have rigorously driven infection rates nearly to zero. In the United States, coronavirus transmission is out of control. The national response is fragmented, shot through with political rancor and culture-war divisiveness. Testing shortcomings that revealed themselves in March have become acute in July, with week-long waits for results leaving the country blind to real-time virus spread and rendering contact tracing nearly irrelevant.

“It’s deliberate”

Beth Cameron, once senior director for the National Security Council’s global health security and biodefense team the Trump administration disbanded, told the Post:

“I just never expected that we would have such a lack of federal leadership, and it’s been deliberate,” she said. “In a national emergency that is a pandemic, spreading between states, federal leadership is essential. And if there was any doubt about that, we ran that experiment from March and April until now. It failed. So we have to run a different experiment.”

The White House punted to the states. The acting president is trying to avoid responsibility for pandemic response failures while claiming credit for any successes.

Making matters worse, Donald Trump “is also trying to block billions of dollars that GOP senators want to allocate for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and billions more for the Pentagon and State Department to address the pandemic at home and abroad,” the Washington Post reported over the weekend.

Trump appears to believe the flood of new cases is because testing creates cases as if by cause and effect. Even as he brags the U.S. has “the best testing” and “the most testing,” he opposes it. More cases make him look bad. The CDC has made him look bad. Their funding has to go.

Sam Hammond of the right-leaning Niskanen Center told the Post, “Senate Republicans have asked for funding to help states purchase test kits in bulk. As it currently stands, the main bottleneck to a big ramp-up in testing is less technical than the White House’s own intransigence.”

David Carney, adviser to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, tells the New York Times the president “got bored” with the pandemic.

Betrayed

The once can-do United States cannot. The U.S. is headed for another massive spike in sickness and death with no leadership at the top:

Kristin Urquiza, 39, said she tried warning her father, Mark — a lifelong Republican — against going out and risking infection. In their home state of Arizona, as leaders including Gov. Doug Ducey (R) sprinted to reopen in May and June, Urquiza could tell she was losing the argument.

“When the president, the governor and people on cable news are all saying one thing, how do you compete with that?” she said. “He would push back. ‘I hear what you’re saying, but why would the governor say it’s safe to go out if it’s not true?’ ”

Americans who start brawls other over toys and appliances at Black Friday sales took the reopenings to mean “All Clear.” It wasn’t. Urquiza’s father learned the hard way:

Her father died of the virus June 30. In the obituary she wrote, she lashed out at government leaders.

“He was a huge supporter of Trump and Arizona governor Ducey. He believed what they said. And they betrayed him,” she said in an interview.

Trump wants to get back to his adulation rallies. In an interview Sunday with Chris Wallace of Fox News Sunday, Trump doubled down on his prediction the virus will simply “disappear” someday. But before that happens, and likely before the November elections, many more of his supporters will know someone sickened or killed by COVID-19. He will not be able to rally away or frighten away their pain.

One 120-bed nursing home here had coronavirus infections among three-quarters of its residents. Thirty of those died. Fifty-two staff members were infected before the outbreak ended. That is what the acting president means by the virus disappearing someday.

Weekly List 192

Ken AshfordWeekly ListLeave a Comment

This week, as the coronavirus raged out of control in many states, Trump sought to discredit Dr. Anthony Fauci, with several members of the regime publicly attacking Fauci’s credibility. Reporting indicated Trump had lost interest in the pandemic, with an adviser telling the Post, Trump’s “not really working this anymore. He doesn’t want to be distracted by it” — as the country hit a daily record 77,000 new cases.

As Trump continued his fall in the polls, he fired his campaign manager, but stuck with his strategy of us vs. them: this week repeatedly invoking the white “suburbs” and stoking not-so-well disguised racist tropes of integration. He turned a Rose Garden speech meant to address deregulation into a bizarre, meandering, hour-long campaign speech — drawing ire from even Fox News.

In new tests of authoritarian boundaries, Trump sent federal law enforcement to Portland, Oregon — uninvited and unwelcome — to quell protests. In what House Speaker Nancy Pelosi described as “unidentified stormtroopers” and “Trump’s secret police,” law enforcement in unmarked cars were seen grabbing protestors off the streets and whisking them away. Trump also sought to hide the extent of the pandemic, by ordering hospitalization data to be sent to Washington rather than the CDC, and threatening to block funding for testing in the upcoming coronavirus relief bill.

  1. On Monday, WAPO reported Trump has made 20,000 false or misleading statements while in office. Trump reached 10,000 lies in 827 days, averaging 12 per day, and took only 440 days to reach the next 10,000, averaging 23 per day.
  2. On Saturday, Trump was seen publicly wearing a face mask for the first time during a visit to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center to meet wounded servicemembers and Covid-19 health care providers.
  3. Before he left the White House and got on a helicopter, Trump told reporters, “When you’re in a hospital, especially … I think it’s a great thing to wear a mask.” He only wore the mask inside the hospital.
  4. On Saturday, Robert Mueller broke his silence for the first time since stepping down as special counsel, rebuking Trump’s Roger Stone clemency in an op-ed, “Roger Stone remains a convicted felon, and rightly so.”
  5. Mueller wrote, we found “numerous links between the Russian government and Trump campaign” including Stone, and Russia “perceived it would benefit from a Trump presidency and worked to secure that outcome.”
  6. He noted Stone lied about the identity of his intermediary to WikiLeaks, the existence of written communications with his intermediary and his communication with the Trump campaign, and tampered with a witness.
  7. Mueller added, “We made every decision in Stone’s case…on the facts and the law,” and those who “conducted these investigations and prosecutions acted with the highest integrity,” adding, “Claims to the contrary are false.”
  8. On Saturday, Trump shot back at the only two Republican Senators who criticized his clemency, calling Sens. Pat Toomey and Mitt Romney “RINOs,” saying they have no problem with the actions of his enemies.
  9. On Sunday, the editorial board of the conservative National Review criticized Trump’s commutation of Stone’s sentence, calling it “indefensible,” saying he was justly convicted and “deserved to go to jail.”
  10. On Sunday, Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Lindsey Graham said Mueller may be invited to testify, tweeting Democrats on the panel have previously requested it, and “That request will be granted.”
  11. On Saturday, NBC News reported that turnout was a factor in Trump canceling his rally scheduled in Portsmouth, New Hampshire tonight. The NH GOP state party scrambled all week to get people to attend.
  12. On Saturday, in an interview with the Times, Elaine Duke, who served as the Department of Homeland Security’s acting secretary following Hurricane Maria, said Trump considered selling Puerto Rico.
  13. Duke said Trump asked, “Can we outsource the electricity? Can we can we sell the island? You know, or divest of that asset?” She added the idea was never seriously considered or discussed after Trump raised it.
  14. On Saturday, The Scotsman reported the Trump Organization plans to build a “new class coastal retreat” in Scotland, targeting retirees and wealthy golf enthusiasts — the largest foreign development since Trump took office.
  15. On Sunday, Trump golfed at one of his properties for the 277th time, as the coronavirus surged. He defended himself, tweeting, “My “exercise” is playing…a quick round of golf.” He was seen driving a golf cart.
  16. Trump again lied, claiming, “Obama played more and much longer rounds” — Obama had played 102 rounds at this point — adding, “When I play, Fake News CNN, and others…scream “President Trump is playing golf.””
  17. Trump also tweeted, “We have now built 240 Miles” of his wall, and 450 miles would be built by year-end, adding, “The Radical Left Democrats want Open Borders for anyone, including many criminals, to come in!”
  18. Trump also tweeted, “No, Radical Left anarchists, agitators, looters or protesters will not be knocking down or harming,” statues or monuments, threatening, “If they even try, an automatic 10 years in prison. Sorry!”
  19. On Sunday, Education Department Secretary Betsy DeVos told “State of the Union” she wants school fully reopened in the fall, saying, “Kids need to be in school. They need to be learning, they need to be moving ahead.”
  20. When asked if she can assure parents and teachers they will not catch the virus, DeVos said, “Well, the key is that kids have to get back to school,” and there are “really good examples that have been used in the private sector.”
  21. DeVos told “Fox News Sunday” schools could lose funding, saying, “American investment in education is a promise to students and their families. If schools aren’t going to reopen…they shouldn’t get the funds.”
  22. On Sunday, U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams, wearing a face mask, told “Face the Nation” the Trump regime is “trying to correct” its guidance on face masks, adding, “But it’s very hard to do.”
  23. On Sunday, Admiral Brett Giroir, who leads the regime’s testing efforts, told “This Week” that “We expect deaths to go up” over the next two to three weeks, noting, “you have more cases, more hospitalizations.”
  24. On “Meet the Press,” Giroir criticized Dr. Anthony Fauci, saying, “I respect Dr. Fauci a lot, but Dr. Fauci is not 100 percent right, and he also doesn’t necessarily — he admits that — have the whole national interest in mind.”
  25. On Sunday, Florida reported 15,300 new daily cases, a U.S. record. Gov. Ron DeSantis has resisted calls for mandatory statewide face masks. The U.S. reported more than 60,000 new daily cases three days in a row.
  26. On Sunday, NBC News reported the White House is actively seeking to discredit Fauci. An official gave NBC a list of nearly a dozen past comments by Fauci that the official said had ultimately proven to be wrong.
  27. The move was characteristic of opposition research used in political campaigns, seeking to discredit and marginalize an opponent, even as the virus surged and the U.S. passed 135,000 deaths and 70,000 daily cases.
  28. WAPO reported Trump is annoyed that Fauci is polling better than him: a recent NYT-Sienna College poll found 67% of respondents said they trusted Fauci for “accurate information” on Covid-19, compared with 26% for Trump.
  29. On Sunday, WAPO reported long delays in getting coronavirus test results, with some states struggling to provide them in seven days, others longer, are making the results virtually useless in stopping spread.
  30. The rising demand caused shortages of swabs, chemical reagents, and equipment. The delay in testing has made it impossible to replicate the model that successfully worked in other countries: test, trace, and isolate.
  31. On Sunday, Business Insider reported Japanese authorities demanded answers after major Covid-19 outbreaks at two U.S. Marine bases there, saying they were “shocked” and furious at the U.S. not taking it seriously.
  32. On Sunday, Axios reported in an effort to trap leakers, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows is feeding specific nuggets of false information to staffers to see if it get passed on to reporters.
  33. On Monday, Trump quoted a tweet by his social media director of a video clip of Biden, and added, “Is this what you want for your President??? With no ratings, media will go down along with our great USA!”
  34. Trump also tweeted, “Never in history have Police been treated so badly” as in “Democrat run cities,” which he called “a mess,” and “Radical Left politicians that are treating them so badly, and so disrespectfully!!!”
  35. Trump also complained again about Fox News, tweeting, “So hard to watch,” adding, “Their contributors are a disaster, and all over the place. The Radical Left has scared Fox into submission.”
  36. Trump also tweeted, “The Silent Majority will reign!” And also tweeted, “The Lamestream Media is not talking about what is happening with the Stock Market and JOBS…The Radical Left will destroy the USA.”
  37. Trump also retweeted former game show host Chuck Woolery, sharing a tweet on coronavirus, saying, “Everyone is lying. The CDC, Media, Democrats, our Doctors, not all but most, that we are told to trust.”
  38. Later Monday, Woolery tweeted, “To further clarify and add perspective, Covid-19 is real and it is here. My son tested positive for the virus.” By Thursday, Woolery’s Twitter account no longer existed.
  39. On Monday, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo told reporters, “Trump’s COVID scandal makes what Nixon did at Watergate look innocent. Nobody died in the Watergate scandal. Thousands of people are going to die in this.”
  40. On Monday, Fauci said on a webinar that Covid-19 is “clearly the most challenging” public health crisis he’s ever dealt with, including HIV, Ebola, Anthrax, and Zika, adding, “We haven’t even begun to see the end of it.”
  41. On Monday, three states, including hard-hit California, New Mexico, and Oregon put new restrictions on indoor activities, rolling back their reopening. Wyoming extended restrictions.
  42. On Monday, NPR reported the U.S. military is deploying 740 military health professionals to Texas and California to help with the surge in those states’ coronavirus cases.
  43. On Monday, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany told “Fox & Friends” the regime will “leave it to localities” to create guidelines for reopening schools. Last week, the regime said it would supply guidelines.
  44. On Monday, federal judge Amy Berman Jackson demanded more information on Trump’s clemency for Stone, ordering the parties provide her with a copy of the executive order by Tuesday.
  45. On Monday, NBC News reported 17 states and the District of Columbia sued the Trump regime over its rule that takes visas from international students, calling it a “cruel, abrupt, and unlawful action.”
  46. On Monday, at a roundtable on law enforcement, Trump repeated the surge of coronavirus cases, blaming, “when you test, you create cases. So we’ve created cases.”
  47. Trump also blamed Obama and Biden, saying, “Biden and Obama stopped their testing — they just stopped it. You probably know that. I’m sure you don’t want to report it.” Covid-19 did not exist when Obama was in office.
  48. Trump continued to stoke division, saying, “When you have 20 people killed, 22 people killed in one weekend in Chicago, and you have 88 shootings — it’s not even conceivable. That’s worse than Afghanistan.”
  49. Trump also said the federal government may need to “take over cities” to combat rising crime, adding, “Numbers are going to be coming down even if we have to go and take over cities.”
  50. Attorney General William Barr praised Trump at the roundtable, saying, “First, let me say what an honor it is for me to serve under a President who is such a strong supporter of law enforcement,” but made no mention of granting clemency to Stone.
  51. Later Monday, speaking to reporters, Trump said he does not rule out pardoning Michael Flynn, saying he will wait “until I find out what’s going to happen,” adding, “I think he’s doing very well with respect to his case.”
  52. On Monday, AZ Central reported on a photo showing Gov. Doug Ducey at a graduation barbecue with no face mask or social distancing — despite his administration giving that advice to help stop spread.
  53. On Monday, NBC News reported Kimberley Chavez Lopez Byrd, a beloved longtime Arizona elementary school teacher, died of Covid-19 after sharing a classroom for summer school with two teachers, who turned out also to be positive.
  54. On Monday, a photo of Texas Sen. Ted Cruz flying aboard American Airlines without a mask was shared on social media. Cruz’s office claimed he was drinking coffee, but he was later seen in the terminal without one.
  55. Cruz is chair of the Senate Commerce subcommittee, which has jurisdiction over airlines and the FAA. In June, American Airlines said masks are required on flights and can be removed to eat or drink.
  56. On Monday, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signed into law a 6-week abortion ban. A federal judge quickly blocked the measure. Same day, Tennessee saw a record 3,314 daily coronavirus cases.
  57. On Monday, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms blasted Gov. Brian Kemp for stopping her effort to impose more restrictions amid the state’s surge, calling it “baffling.” New York state is helping Atlanta with testing.
  58. On Monday, after Florida Gov. DeSantis finally started sharing data on Covid-19 hospitalizations, data showed more than 8,000 were hospitalized, up more than a thousand over the weekend alone.
  59. On Monday, NYT reported an analysis by nonpartisan consumer advocacy group Families U.S.A. found a record 5.4 million Americans lost health insurance between February and May, higher than in any single year.
  60. On Monday, Dan Scavino, White House deputy chief of staff for communications, posted a cartoon mocking Fauci, likening him to a faucet drowning Uncle Sam, and adding, “Sorry, Dr. Faucet!”
  61. The cartoon was drawn by artist Ben Garrison, whose work is often promoted by the alt-right. Garrison was disinvited from a White House event because his work contains anti-Semitic messaging.
  62. On Monday, top Trump ally Stephen Moore told the Daily Beast that he is is preparing a new assault on Fauci, showing “times Dr. Fauci’s been wrong during not just [this pandemic], but during his entire career.”
  63. Moore said he and his team at the Committee to Unleash Prosperity have been working on the memo for weeks, and that they will send their final product to the White House and Trump and to “publicize it,” once ready.
  64. On Monday, a man in a MAGA hat in Kansas flashed his gun at a BBQ restaurant when a student working there asked him to wear a mask as ordered by the governor. The state had a record 1,080 daily cases Monday.
  65. On Tuesday, Sean Ruis, 43, stabbed a 77 year-old man after an argument at a Quality Dairy Store in Eaton County, Michigan, over Ruis’ refusal to wear a face mask.
  66. On Monday, in response to requests from its football players, University of Texas announced it will make sweeping changes, including renaming a hall and field, and erecting a statue for UT’s first Black football letterman.
  67. On Monday, the NFL Washington Redskins announced the team would change its name following pressure from sponsors. Owner Daniel Snyder had fiercely resisted calls to do so for more than two decades.
  68. On Monday, McEnany told reporters Trump believes the Native American community “would be very angry” about the NFL team name change, saying, “These teams name their teams out of strength, not weakness.”
  69. On Monday, NYT reported that the State Department quietly lifted a ban on sales of silencers to private overseas buyers, intended to protect U.S. troops from ambushes, after efforts by gun industry lobbyists.
  70. Michael Williams, as American Suppressor Association general counsel, tried for two years to overturn the ban, then as a White House lawyer he passed it through. ASA could make $250 million a year off the ban.
  71. On Monday, a New York judge lifted the restraining order on Mary Trump’s book, on the eve of its release, citing the First Amendment and the John Bolton case of the horse being out of the barn.
  72. On Monday, a federal judge in Indiana halted what would have been its first execution in 17 years, saying the execution “poses an unconstitutionally significant risk of serious pain.” The Trump regime said it would appeal.
  73. On Tuesday, the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 to go ahead with execution of Daniel Lewis Lee. Attorney General Barr said Lee “finally faced the justice he deserved.”
  74. On Tuesday, four bipartisan former CDC directors wrote in an op-ed, “No president ever politicized its science the way Trump has,” adding, “We’re seeing the terrible effect of undermining the CDC play out.”
  75. On school reopening, they said, “it is extraordinary for guidelines to be undermined after their release.” And noting, “Sadly, we are not even close to having the virus under control. Quite the opposite, in fact.”
  76. On Tuesday, JAMA Editor Howard Bauchner said the “whisperings, innuendos, and attacks from the White House and others” on Fauci are “unseemly and unfair” and show a lack of commitment to public health.
  77. On Tuesday, Giroir told the “Today” show on accusations of public health officials lying, “we may occasionally make mistakes based on the information we have, but none of us lie. We are completely transparent.”
  78. On Tuesday, CDC Director Robert Redfield warned on a webinar that “the fall and the winter of 2020 and 2021 are going to be the probably one of the most difficult times that we experienced in American public health.”
  79. Redfield said the pandemic could be brought under control over the next four to eight weeks if “we could get everybody to wear a mask right now.” He noted “ample evidence” of asymptomatic spread.
  80. Redfield also contradicted Fauci, blaming “a lot of Northerners decided to go South for vacations,” for the outbreaks in several Southern states, rather than their reopening too soon.
  81. On Tuesday, Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney formally announced the city would cancel all large outdoor events, including the Philadelphia Marathon, through at least February 28 due to the pandemic.
  82. On Tuesday, the Sun Sentinel reported 31% of children in Florida tested have been positive. Public health officials warned that much is not known about the long-term health consequences of the virus on children.
  83. On Tuesday, an Axios-Ipsos poll found most Americans say it would be too risky to send their children back to school in the fall, including 82% of Democrats and 53% of Republicans, as well as 89% of Black Americans.
  84. On Tuesday, a Gallup poll showed GOP governors are losing residents’ support on Covid-19: just 43% say their governor communicates clearly, down from 54% a month ago. Democrats were stable at 58%.
  85. On Tuesday, CNN reported both Canada and Mexico announced they will extend their U.S. border closures for another month, until at least late August, amid spikes of confirmed cases across the U.S.
  86. On Tuesday, the White House launched a new ad campaign called “Find Something New,” which encouraged people who are unemployed or unhappy in their jobs to go out and “find something new.”
  87. The campaign is the product of the White House’s American Workforce Policy Advisory Board, co-chaired by Ivanka and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross. Finding a job has taken on a new urgency with the pandemic.
  88. On Tuesday, the Trump regime rescinded its order that would have stripped international students of their U.S. visas if their college was holding online courses, and will reinstate a policy giving flexibility.
  89. The federal judge overseeing the case brought by Harvard and M.I.T., which was set to go to trial Tuesday, announced in a Massachusetts court that the government and plaintiffs had reached a resolution.
  90. On Tuesday, NBC News reported internal documents showed the the Strategic National Stockpile and the Federal Emergency Management Agency have an inadequate stockpile amid the latest coronavirus surge.
  91. The disclosure came as Trump and senior regime officials pressured states to reopen. For example, the federal stockpile has fewer than 900,000 gloves in reserve after shipping 82.7 million of them.
  92. The federal stockpiles have 29,000 pairs of goggles on hand, and has only been able to provide 29% of the 4.9 million requested. On surgical masks, just 29% of the 17.9 million surgical gowns requested have been shipped.
  93. On Tuesday, in an interview with CBS News, when asked why Black Americans are still dying at the hands of law enforcement, Trump said, “So are White people. What a terrible question to ask. So are White people.”
  94. Asked about his defense of the Confederate flag, Trump said, “All I say is freedom of speech. It’s very simple. My attitude is freedom of speech. Very strong views on the Confederate flag. With me, it’s freedom of speech.”
  95. On Tuesday, the Trump regime ordered hospitals to bypass the CDC, and send all coronavirus patient information to a central database in Washington in a notice from the Department of Health and Human.
  96. The move alarmed public health experts, who feared the data — including daily data on how many people are being treated, and how many beds and ventilators are available — will be distorted for political gain.
  97. On Tuesday, Trump said he would appoint controversial former aide Sebastian Gorka to the National Security Education Board, which oversees the government’s national security education program.
  98. On Tuesday, it what was called a news conference in the Rose Garden, carried initially live by CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News, Trump gave a meandering 57-minute monologue, then only six minutes for questions.
  99. The speech was heralded as an announcement of new measures against China to punish it for its oppression of Hong Kong, but Trump quickly went off-script to a campaign-style rally, running from one topic to another.
  100. Trump drifted on topics, often in a run-on sentence, from China to the Paris Accord to crumbling highways to the economy to energy taxes to trade with Europe to illegal immigration to crime in Chicago.
  101. Trump also repeatedly attacked Biden, saying he would get rid of windows if elected, and would “abolish the suburbs” and had “gone so far right.” Trump also challenged Biden’s mental acuity.
  102. White House reporter for the Times noted, “Even for those who follow Mr. Trump regularly and understand his shorthand, it became challenging to follow his train of thought.”
  103. One senior official said Trump’s initially planned speech may have devolved into a rambling monologue because Biden received extensive television coverage earlier in the day for his $2 trillion climate plan.
  104. Fox News covered Trump’s speech in its entirety. After, anchor Bret Baier noted, “had President Obama made this kind of speech from the Rose Garden, Republicans on Capitol hill would likely have been up in arms.”
  105. NBC News veteran Andrea Mitchell tweeted, “I have covered 7 Presidents. I have never seen a POTUS use the Rose Garden or any White House platform to launch a political attack against his opponent for reelection.”
  106. Later Tuesday, Ivanka tweeted a photo of her holding a can of Goya beans, with the caption, “If it’s Goya, it has to be good” in English and Spanish. Ethics watchdogs said the tweet violated the Standards on Conduct, known as the Hatch Act.
  107. The White House defended Ivanka, saying, “Only the media and the cancel culture movement would criticize Ivanka for showing her personal support for a company that has been unfairly mocked, boycotted and ridiculed.”
  108. On Friday, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics filed an ethics complaint over Ivanka’s photo with the Office of Government Ethics, saying it violated the Hatch Act.
  109. CREW also filed ethics complaints against White House chief of staff Meadows for two Fox News appearances in which he advocated for Trump’s re-election against Biden, saying it violated the Hatch Act.
  110. Later Tuesday, USA Today ran an op-ed by White House trade adviser Peter Navarro which claimed Fauci “has been wrong about everything I interacted with him on.” The column ran in print Wednesday.
  111. Navarro claimed Fauci fought against stopping flights from China, flip-flopped on the use of masks, and said there was only anecdotal evidence on hydroxychloroquine despite one study showing it reduced mortality.
  112. Amid criticism of its publication, later Wednesday, USA Today ran a fact-check story by its Washington reporter Ledyard King examining five of Navarro’s claims.
  113. Also later Wednesday, a note by Bill Sternberg, editorial page editor, admitted USA Today had solicited and published the column, but it was “misleading and did not meet fact-checking standards.”
  114. On Wednesday, a White House spokesperson said the op-ed “didn’t go through normal White House clearance processes and is the opinion of Peter alone” and Trump values the expertise of the medical professionals.
  115. Asked by reporters if he was okay with what Navarro wrote, Trump said, “I get along very well with Dr. Fauci,” and when pressed added, “That’s Peter Navarro, but I have a very good relationship with Dr. Fauci.”
  116. Trump added, “He made a statement representing himself. He shouldn’t be doing that,” adding, “We’re all on the same team, including Dr. Fauci.”
  117. Chief of staff Meadows added the op-ed “was an independent action that was a violation of well-established protocols,” and Trump “did not approve it,” and “publicly noted that Peter should not have written this.”
  118. Later Wednesday, in an interview with the AtlanticFauci called White House efforts to discredit him “bizarre,” and added, “I cannot figure out in my wildest dreams why they would want to do that.”
  119. Fauci also noted the talking points released by the White House painting him as inaccurate on the coronavirus were “nonsense,” saying, “I stand by everything I said. Contextually, at the time I said it, it was absolutely true.”
  120. Fauci added, “I think they realize now that that was not a prudent thing to do, because it’s only reflecting negatively on them,” and said of the Navarro op-ed, “I can’t explain Peter Navarro; he’s in a world by himself.”
  121. On Wednesday, a Quinnipiac poll found Biden leading Trump 52-37, up from 49-41 a month ago. Biden’s lead with Independent voters grew to now back him 51-34 percent, up from 43-40.
  122. The poll also found 31% think Trump is honest, 35% say he has good leadership skills, 37% that he cares about the average American. On coronavirus information, 30% trust Trump, 67% trust Fauci.
  123. On Trump’s handling of the coronavirus, 35% approve, 62% disapprove, and 62%/31% say he is hurting rather than helping contain the spread. His overall approval was 36% approve, 60% disapprove— his worst since August 2017.
  124. On school re-opening, 61% disapprove of Trump’s handling, 29% approve. On Russia bounty, 59% say they do not trust Trump, and 62–25% that they are not satisfied with Trump’s response to the reports.
  125. On Wednesday, Walmart announced the company will require face masks in all its U.S. stores starting July 20, becoming the largest company to impose restrictions.
  126. On Wednesday, CNN reported Los Angeles and San Diego, California schools will extend remote learning into the fall. However, Orange County voted to fully reopen schools, with no social distancing or masks.
  127. On Wednesday, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt announced he had tested positive for Covid-19. The state had a record 993 daily cases on Tuesday — as many as the state reported from June 1 to June 10, before Trump’s rally.
  128. On Tuesday, Mississippi Today reported after years of activism, a Confederate monument at the entrance of the University of Mississippi was removed. The statue will be moved to a nearby cemetery.
  129. On Wednesday, the city council in Asheville, North Carolina passed a resolution 7-0 approving apologizing to its Black residents for the city’s role in slavery, and racist and discriminatory practices past and present.
  130. The resolution also calls for reparations in the form of investments in their community such as “increasing minority home ownership,” “increasing minority business ownership and career opportunities,” and more.
  131. On Wednesday, the U.S. surpassed 3.5 million cases. The outbreak has increased in 41 states in the past two weeks. More than 137,000 Americans had died.
  132. In Kansas, Gov. Laura Kelly said, “I can’t in good conscience open schools.” In Ohio, Gov. Mike DeWine said, “this is not a drill. It certainly is not any hoax…The enemy is here.” California hit a record of 11,000 daily cases.
  133. On Wednesday, as Vice President Mike Pence planned an indoor rally at Ripon College in Wisconsin, the school’s president emailed campus that there was a “mixed response” and the school was only renting a room to the campaign.
  134. On Wednesday, Trump sent a series of tweets. Trump attacked Biden: “Has anybody seen or reviewed the written “pact” between Bernie Sanders & Sleepy Joe,” calling it “The guaranteed destruction of America.”
  135. Trump also tweeted his support for Goya: “@GoyaFoods is doing GREAT. The Radical Left smear machine backfired, people are buying like crazy!” causing fresh calls from the Latino community to boycott the company.
  136. Trump also tweeted at “Fox & Friends”while the show was airing, saying, “88 and 2 (really 1) in ENDORSEMENTS…and @FoxNews was critical. Has anyone ever done so well?” after Jeff Sessions lost in the primary.
  137. Trump also tweeted, “96% Approval Rating of President Trump in the Republican Party.” This, and the claim on endorsements, were lies. Notably, major media outlets stopped covering these tweets.
  138. Trump also made reference to a controversial opinion writer leaving the Times, tweeting, “Wow. The @nytimes is under siege,” adding, “They never covered me correctly — they blew it. People are fleeing, a total mess!”
  139. Trump also tweeted, “The Biden-Sanders unity plan takes a sledgehammer to charter schools, punishing students for their zip codes. No one will be SAFE in Joe Biden’s America!”
  140. And tweeted, “Biden and the Radical Left want to Abolish Police, Abolish ICE, Abolish Bail, Abolish Suburbs, Abolish the 2nd Amendment — and Abolish the American Way of Life,” adding, “No one will be SAFE.”
  141. On Wednesday, WAPO reported with the coronavirus spreading out of control, Trump has no plan to address the pandemic. Almost all developed countries have managed to control the virus, except the U.S.
  142. There was no national strategy, apart from unenforced guidelines. When Trump makes proclamations like reopen schools, the regime did not develop plans of how to do so, leaving it to states and local authorities.
  143. The federal government is taking no role in testing or contact tracing. Experts say 5 million tests per day are needed, but just 600,000 are being conducted, and results often take more than a week to get back.
  144. On Wednesday, ABC News reported Trump and Fauci spoke for the first time since early June. A regime official said Trump “characterized the call as very good and friendly,” and they “are working toward the same goal.”
  145. On Wednesday, Fauci said in an interview with “InStyle” that this week was “very stressful” and that he did not like “the conflict,” adding, “I’m an apolitical person,” and “I don’t like to be pitted against the president.”
  146. On Wednesday, days after last week’s Supreme Court ruling against him, Trump’s lawyers renewed their effort to the Manhattan district attorney’s access to his financial records.
  147. In a court filing with the federal judge in Manhattan, Trump’s lawyers argued the DA’s subpoena seeking eight years of his corporate and personal tax returns was too broad and politically motivated.
  148. On Wednesday, the Twitter accounts of some of America’s most high-profile politicians, including Biden, Barack Obama, and Mike Bloomberg were hacked, raising concerns about security ahead of the election.
  149. The accounts of Apple, Tesla CEO Elon Musk, AmazonCEO Jeff Bezos, and Microsoft founder Bill Gates were hijacked, given the hackers the potential ability to influence and sway public opinion by using these voices.
  150. On Wednesday, Gov. Cuomo announced New York State would be sending PPE, test kits, and other medical equipment to Atlanta, saying, “we are paying it forward,” noting Atlanta Mayor Bottoms’ efforts to fight this virus.
  151. Later Wednesday, in a new executive order, Georgia Gov. George Kemp overruled local governments that have issued mandatory mask laws, nullifying a mask mandate in Atlanta and elsewhere.
  152. Later Wednesday, Trump replaced campaign manager Brad Parscale with veteran GOP operative Bill Stepien, amid sinking poll numbers. Trump’s relationship with Parscale had been strained since the failed Tulsa rally.
  153. Trump has been pushed by allies in recent months to expand his base and define his run against Biden. In his rambling Rose Garden speech, Trump framed the election as the starkest choice in U.S. history.
  154. On Thursday, the Labor Department reported weekly jobless claims rose another 1.3 million, slightly higher than expected, and the 17th straight week of job losses in excess of 1 million.
  155. On Thursday, Gallup found a big swing in party preferences in 2020: in January, 47% were Republicans or leaning and 45% Democrat or leaning (+2R)  — in June, 50% were Democrat and 39% Republican (+11D).
  156. On Thursday, the U.K., U.S., and Canadian intelligence agencies accused a Russian hacking group of cyberattacks targeting organizations involved in coronavirus vaccine development in the three countries.
  157. The hacking group APT29 — also known as “Cozy Bear” and “the Dukes” — was behind the malicious activity. The group was accused of hacking the Democratic National Committee before the 2016 U.S. election.
  158. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told Russian state-run news agency TASS on Thursday that “Russia has nothing to do with these attempts and we do not accept such accusations.”
  159. On Thursday, Maryland GOP Gov. Larry Hogan wrote in an op-ed about how Trump played down the severity of the coronavirus outbreak, and left states on their own, including Maryland, for testing supplies and strategy.
  160. On Thursday, Politico reported the RNC will move to significantly restrict attendance at its convention in Jacksonville. Top officials met with Trump Monday evening. Trump has demanded an in-person convention.
  161. RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel wrote in the letter to RNC members that with coronavirus cases surging in Florida “adjustments must be made to comply with state and local health guidelines.”
  162. On Thursday, the Health and Human Services Inspector General found Medicare chief Seema Verma violated federal contracting rules by steering more than $5 millions in contracts that ultimately benefited GOP-aligned friends.
  163. On Thursday, Politico reported Trump’s team has launched a sweeping loyalty test for officials across departments including HHS, Treasury, Labor and Commerce and the top tier positions in the Trump regime.
  164. The one-on-one interviews being conducted are to test each official’s loyalty to Trump, and are meant to root out threats of leaks and other potentially subversive acts in the months ahead of the election.
  165. On Thursday, in remarks on the South Lawn meant to be on deregulation, Trump again evoked the ‘suburbs’ in making a play for white suburban voters using a divisive and racist messaging once made against integration.
  166. Trump warned fair housing regulations designed to combat housing segregation will “obliterate” the suburbs, saying, “Your home will go down in value and crime rates will rapidly rise.”
  167. Trump said, “Biden and his bosses from the radical left want to significantly multiply what they’re doing now,” saying the result is “you will totally destroy the beautiful suburbs. Suburbia will be no longer as we know it.”
  168. On Thursday, the Miami Herald reported Trump regime officials acknowledged the Homestead shelter for migrant children did not conduct child-abuse background checks for employees now accused of sex abuse.
  169. On Thursday, LA Times reported Mary Trump’s book, “Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World’s Most Dangerous Man,” set a first-day record for the publisher of 950,000 first day sales.
  170. On Thursday, Florida reported 14,000 new daily cases and a record 156 more deaths. Gov. DeSantis said the state would start shifting testing away from commercial labs that have long delays to deliver results.
  171. On Thursday, the Salt Lake Tribune reported scores of protestors without masks packed a room for the Utah County Commission meeting for two hours on reopening schools, to demand in-person classes without masks.
  172. On Thursday, ProPublica reported the CDC removed data on hospital capacity around the country from its website, and then amid a public outcry restored the data.
  173. The agency noted the data may no longer be updated because of a change in federal reporting requirements by the Trump regime this week, for hospitals to report data to HHS not the CDC.
  174. In a statement, HHS said it “is committed to being transparent with the American public about the information it is collecting on the coronavirus,” and “has directed CDC to re-establish the coronavirus dashboards.”
  175. On Thursday, at the daily briefing, asked about online learning, McEnany said Trump “has said unmistakably that he wants schools to open,” and claimed, “The science should not stand in the way of this.” This is not true.
  176. McEnany also called mayor Lori Lightfoot “the derelict mayor of Chicago” and suggested she should request federal aid to combat the city’s problems. Lightfoot tweeted, “Hey, Karen. Watch your mouth.”
  177. On Thursday, in a speech at the National Constitution Center, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the founding principles of American life are “under attack” by protestors and the mainstream media.
  178. Pompeo was there to release the first report of the Commission on Unalienable Rights, which after a year’s work claimed property rights and religious freedom, the foremost unalienable rights, are under attack.
  179. Pompeo said the “core of what it means to be an American, indeed the American way of life itself, is under attack. Instead of seeking to improve America, leading voices promulgate hatred of our founding principles.”
  180. Pompeo also criticized the NYT’s 1619 Project on the history of American slavery, saying, “They want you to believe the Marxist ideology,” and, “The Chinese Communist Party must be gleeful.”
  181. On Thursday, Atlanta Mayor Bottoms said, “A better use of taxpayer money would be to expand testing and contact tracing. If being sued by the state is what it takes to save lives in Atlanta, then we will see them in court.”
  182. On Thursday, Gov. Kemp sued Mayor Bottoms and city council to block the city from enforcing its mandate to wear a mask, saying Bottoms had overstepped her authority by disobeying his executive order.
  183. As of Thursday, Georgia reported more than 3,4000 daily cases, with more than 2,800 people hospitalized — the highest on record. The state reported that 84% of its critical care beds were full.
  184. On Thursday the U.S. hit another daily record of 77,255 cases according to Johns Hopkins, breaking a previous record six days earlier of 67,791. California, Florida, and Texas accounted for nearly half the cases.
  185. On Thursday, 3M announced it had investigated more than 4,000 reported instances of suspected price gouging, counterfeiting, and fraud, and filed 18 lawsuits relating to its N95 masks.
  186. On Thursday, Judge Dolly Gee delayed the deadline for the release of migrant children held by ICE until July 27, after both parties asked for more time to negotiate how the 97 children impacted will be released.
  187. On Thursday, Sen. Dianne Feinstein announced she will introduce the amendment to the next coronavirus relief bill that would bar states that do not implement mask mandates from receiving stimulus funding.
  188. Later Thursday, Oregon Public Broadcasting reported around 2 a.m. Thursday night, federal law enforcement officers in unmarked vehicles jumped out and grabbed protestors off the streets in Portland.
  189. The officers wore green military fatigues and generic “police” patches. Mark Pettibone told the Post after leaving a peaceful protest he was approached, and was unsure if they were police or far-right extremists.
  190. Pettibone was detained and searched for a weapon. He did not have one. They drove him to a federal courthouse and placed him in a holding cell. They read him and asked if he would waive his Miranda rights. He said no.
  191. The officers then let him go. Pettibone did not know why they arrested him, or if what happened to him legally qualifies as an arrest. He was not told why he was arrested. Legal scholars questioned the constitutionality.
  192. Civil rights activists suggested the Trump regime is testing the limits of its executive power. Federal officers from the U.S. Marshals Service and Department of Homeland Security have stormed Portland’s streets.
  193. Sen. Ron Wyden tweeted on Thursday, “A peaceful protester in Portland was shot in the head by one of Donald Trump’s secret police,” after Marshals Service officers severely wounded a peaceful protester Saturday.
  194. Wyden added, “Trump and Chad Wolf are weaponizing the DHS as their own occupying army to provoke violence on the streets of my hometown because they think it plays well with right-wing media.”
  195. There have been nightly protests in Portland in the six weeks since the killing of George Floyd. Trump sent federal officers on July 10 to quell violence, at times using tear gas despite a state law that bans its use.
  196. Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler tweeted criticism of DHS on Tuesday, decrying the “violence federal officers brought to our streets in recent days, and the life-threatening tactics Wolf’s agents use.”
  197. Acting DHS Sec. Chad Wolf responded in a statement Thursday that Portland is “under siege” by “a violent mob,” and claiming that “Each night, lawless anarchists destroy and desecrate property.”
  198. Wolf later Thursday appeared on “Hannity” and said he was called by “not only the mayor but the governor,” and told to “Please pack up and go home,” adding, “that’s just not gonna happen on my watch.”
  199. Wolf claimed, “we need to make sure that we’re supporting our law enforcement officers here and making sure that they’re going to continue to protect the federal courthouse here. That’s what the DHS does.”
  200. On Friday, Wolf tweeted a photo of him addressing men in camouflage, and added, “Our men and women in uniform are patriots. We will never surrender to violent extremists on my watch.”
  201. On Friday, deputy secretary of Homeland Security Ken Cuccinelli told Fox News, “What we’ve seen around the country is where responsible policing is advanced, violence recedes.”
  202. Cuccinelli added, “Portland hasn’t gotten that memo. Nor have a lot of other cities. And the president is determined to do what we can, within our jurisdiction, to help restore peace to these beleaguered cities.”
  203. On Friday, Gov. Kate Brown tweeted, “I told Acting Secretary Wolf that the federal government should remove all federal officers from our streets. His response showed me he is on a mission to provoke confrontation.”
  204. Brown added the tactics being used in Portland are “coming from the same President who used tear gas to clear out peaceful protesters in Washington, DC to engineer a photo opportunity.”
  205. On Friday, White House adviser Kellyanne Conway told “Fox & Friends” that Trump should bring back his daily briefings on the coronavirus, saying his “numbers were much higher when he was out there.”
  206. On Friday, WAPO reported that the rancor between Trump, who is focused on the economy and his reelection, and scientists amid the surge in cases, has undermined the U.S. response, which lags other developed countries.
  207. Trump recently has committed less time and to the virus. One adviser said he is “not really working this anymore. He doesn’t want to be distracted by it. He’s not calling and asking about data. He’s not worried about cases.”
  208. Fauci, Redfield, and even Mick Mulvaney, the White House chief of staff during the start of the pandemic, have been publicly speaking out, criticizing testing capacity and suggesting everyone should wear a mask.
  209. Nearly 90 organizations, including the American Society for Microbiology and the Infectious Diseases Society of America, sent letters to Pence, head of the White House task force, condemning the regime’s attacks on Fauci.
  210. Republican leaders, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Rep. Liz Cheney, have been advised by health officials of the dire state of what is coming with flu season, and the urgent need for masks.
  211. On Friday, LA Times reported as Trump sinks, he is pulling down Republicans running for the Senate too, giving Democrats their best hope of winning the White House, Senate, and House in a decade.
  212. New campaign finance reports filed with the Federal Election Commission showed Democratic candidates outpacing Republicans last quarter by a 3 to 1 margin. Biden said Democrats could win 55 Senate seats.
  213. On Friday, an NBC News/WSJ poll found a divide emerging inside the GOP between Trump supporters (53% of the party) and those who are more supporters of the party than of Trump (39% of the party).
  214. Of the non-Trump Republicans, 54% approve of his handling of the coronavirus (versus 92 %), 46% approve of his handling of race relations (versus 91%), and 70% say they will vote for Trump (versus 100%).
  215. On Friday, a WAPO-ABC News polls found on Trump’s handling of the coronavirus, 60% disapprove, 38% approve, down from 53% disapprove, 46% approve in May. Notably 19% of Republicans disapprove.
  216. The poll also 52% “strongly” disapprove of his handling, and found more than 6 in 10 say they do not trust what Trump says about the outbreak, including 2 in 3 Independents and nearly 3 in 10 Republicans.
  217. On face masks, 79% report wearing a mask at least “most of the time” when around other people outside their home, including 57% who report wearing a mask all the time.
  218. On Friday, Gov. DeSantis said in an interview he is not ordering closure of gyms despite the surge in his state, saying it “doesn’t make sense,” citing, “most people who are going to the gyms are in the low-risk groups.”
  219. On Friday, an employee at a Ralphs supermarket in Los Angeles used pepper spray and called the police on a man who was asked and refused to wear a face mask, and then started ramming a woman with a shopping cart.
  220. On Friday, CNBC reported Trump properties have made more than $17 million from the campaign and RNC since 2016. In the second quarter, Trump Victory steered $3 million to Trump properties.
  221. The payments also showed that on March 31 and April 1, there were a series of 43 payments totaling $380,000 from the Trump campaign to Trump Hotels for a week-long “donor retreat,” held in early March.
  222. The campaign also paid Las Vegas Sands, the casino company owned by Trump and GOP donor Sheldon Adelson, payments totaling $250,000 in March, as Trump hoped to take part in a fundraiser at Adelson’s home.
  223. On Friday, Politico reported the White House is blocking CDC director Redfield from testifying next week in a hearing on reopening schools held by the House Education and Labor Committee.
  224. Pence has said the CDC would issue guidance for reopening this week, and Redfield had indicated shortly as well. Friday, the CDC said of guidance, a “full set will be published before the end of the month.”
  225. On Friday, House Judiciary Committee Chair Jerrold Nadler said his panel will mark up two bills next week meant to rein in Trump’s pardon power, saying of Trump’s clemency for Stone, “This quid pro quo is unacceptable.”
  226. On Friday, CNN reported Trump had the official portraits of former Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush moved from the prominent Grand Foyer of the White House to a rarely used room.
  227. Tradition calls for the portraits of the recent presidents to be given the most prominent placement. The paintings were moved into the Old Family Dining Room, outside of Trump’s vantage point in the White House.
  228. On Friday, Defense Sec. Mark Esper effectively banned Confederate flags from military bases, saying in a memo that the American flag is the “principal flag we are authorized and encouraged to display.”
  229. While not specify which flags were prohibited, he stated, “flags we fly must accord with the military imperatives of good order and discipline, treating all our people with dignity and respect, and rejecting divisive symbols.”
  230. On Friday, Monroe County Prosecutor Erika Oliphant announced charges against two of the men involved in the attempted lynching of Vauhxx Booker outside of Bloomington, Indiana on July 4.
  231. On Friday, Trump’s former campaign manager, Brad Parscale, called the media “a criminal network” who “have zero intention to tell the truth,” and said he is happy to fight with Trump against “America’s biggest enemy.”
  232. On Friday, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, 87, announced in a letter she had a recurrence of cancer, but a July 7 scan showed chemotherapy significantly reduced the liver lesions, and she is “fully able” to work.
  233. On Friday, NBC News reported 1,072 of the 1,798 inmates at a federal prison in Seagoville, Texas had tested positive, as well as ten staff members. The outbreak was the largest yet at a federal prison.
  234. On Friday, California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced both public and private schools must use online learning until the state’s measures are met. He added Orange County will not be allowed to reopen, despite their vote.
  235. On Friday, in a preview of his interview with Fox News anchor Chris Wallace, Trump was fact-checked on his assertion that “they [Democrats] want to defund the police and Biden wants to defund the police.”
  236. Wallace responds, “Sir, he does not.” Trump falsely claims, “He signed a charter with Bernie Sanders…” Wallace said the charter said nothing about defunding the police. Trump replies, “Oh really?”
  237. Trump then said, “OK, let’s go” and called for someone off-camera to get a copy of the charter. Later, Wallace said in a teaser clip on Fox News that Trump “couldn’t find any indication — because there isn’t any.”
  238. Later Friday, Trump tweeted, “Corrupt Joe Biden wants to defund our police. He may use different words, but when you look at his pact with Crazy Bernie, and other things, that’s what he wants to do.”
  239. Trump also attacked Mary Trump, tweeting his “seldom seen niece who knows little about me, says untruthful things about my wonderful parents (who couldn’t stand her!) and me, and violated her NDA.”
  240. Trump added, “She’s a mess!” Mary replied on Twitter, “5.23 million v. 5.11 million,” noting her interview on MSNBC’s “Maddow” had more viewers than Trump’s Hannity” appearance in June.
  241. Mary told Rachel Maddow that she had heard Trump and other family members use the N-word and anti-Semitic language frequently. Trump did not respond.
  242. On Friday, Biden said he is now as the presumptive Democratic nominee receiving intelligence briefings, and warned Russia is trying to meddle in November’s U.S. election.
  243. Biden said, “The Russians are still engaged in trying to delegitimize our electoral process. Fact,” and added China also was conducting activities “designed for us to lose confidence in the outcome” of the 2020 election.
  244. On Friday, in a statement, Customs and Border Patrol said its agents were responsible for at least one arrest captured in a video, claiming the person was suspected of assaulting federal officers or damaging federal property.
  245. On Friday, the ACLU filed a lawsuit against DHS and Marshals Service to block federal law enforcement from dispersing, arresting, threatening to arrest, or using physical force against journalists or legal observers.
  246. On Friday, Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum filed a lawsuit against DHS, U.S. Marshals Service, Customs and Border Protection, and Federal Protection Service for their actions, and asked for a temporary restraining order.
  247. The lawsuit said their agents “allegedly engaged in unlawful law enforcement in violation of the civil rights of Oregonians by seizing and detaining them without probable cause.”
  248. Rosenblum said in a statement, “These tactics must stop. They not only make it impossible for people to assert their First Amendment rights to protest peacefully” and “create a more volatile situation on our streets.”
  249. Later Friday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi tweeted about Portland, noting, “Unidentified stormtroopers. Unmarked cars. Kidnapping protesters and causing severe injuries in response to graffiti.”
  250. Pelosi added, “These are not the actions of a democratic republic. @DHSgov’s actions in Portland undermine its mission,” adding, “Trump & his stormtroopers must be stopped.”
  251. Pelosi added, “First Amendment speech should never be met with one-sided violence from federal agents acting as Trump’s secret police,” calling it “disgraceful behavior we would expect from a banana republic.”
  252. On Friday, Rep. John Lewis, the civil rights icon who helped organize and was the youngest keynote speaker at the March on Washington in 1963, and who was called the “conscience of Congress,” died at age 80.
  253. Later Friday, Trump send 35 tweets or retweets after the announcement of Lewis’s death, but did not acknowledge the news in any way.
  254. On Saturday, Trump did not issue a statement on Lewis’ death. He headed to his course in Virginia for his 278th round of golf since taking office. At 11 a.m., he ordered flags flown at half-staff for the remainder of the day.
  255. On Saturday, Biden said in a statement, “We are made in the image of God, and then there is John Lewis,” and said he spoke to Lewis days before and “He asked us to stay focused on the work left undone to heal this nation.”
  256. On Saturday, NBC News reported the public health director in Nueces County, Texas said 85 infants under one-year old tested positive Friday, setting a single-day record.
  257. On Saturday, The Hill reported that young people are increasingly driving the spread of Covid-19 in many states around the country, prompting at least 12 states to re-close bars and restaurants.
  258. Although young people are less likely to be hospitalized and die, accounting in part for the lower mortality in the recent spike, public health officials warned they can act as vectors of spread to vulnerable Americans.
  259. On Saturday, NYT reported Dr. Deborah Birx believed in mid-April that the virus was fading, and the U.S. would follow a curve like that of Italy based on models. Fauci disagreed, saying “models are only models.”
  260. Meadows held daily meeting that Birx was the only health official to attend, along with Hope Hicks, the chiefs of staff for Jared and Pence, economic adviser Kevin Hassett, and a few others.
  261. Birx delivered the news inside the White House that people were hoping for: “All metros are stabilizing,” and the virus hit its “peak.” The authors of the IHME model cautioned Birx that their model was only a snapshot.
  262. In mid-April, Trump grew impatient with stay-at-home recommendations, amid high unemployment and falling poll numbers. On April 16, Trump shifted responsibility to the states. On April 17, he tweeted, “LIBERATE!”
  263. Not until early June did White House officials recognize their assumptions about the course of the pandemic were wrong. Birx discovered the virus had spread with invisible ferocity during May when states reopened.
  264. Redfield estimated in April and May they were missing 10 cases for every one they confirmed. There are now still internal divisions about publicly acknowledging the reality of the situation.
  265.  Trump’s disdain for testing played a role in missing the spread, and allowing it to spread uncontrollably. Public health officials also noted Trump’s unwillingness to wear a mask set an example that others followed.
  266. On Saturday, WAPO reported the Trump regime is looking to block billions of funding for states to conduct testing and contact tracing from the upcoming coronavirus relief bill.
  267. The regime is also looking to block billions sought by GOP senators for the CDC, as well as billions more for the Pentagon and State Department to address the pandemic at home and abroad.
  268. As the week came to a close, there were 14,114,752 worldwide cases and 597,861 dead from the coronavirus. The U.S. had 3,672,947 cases (26.0%), 139,480 deaths (23.3%), and a mortality rate of 3.8%.