The Commentariat -- February 12, 2021
Afternoon Update:
The Senate impeachment trial went into Q&A session at about 3:55 pm ET.
Aaron Blake of the Washington Post: "Whatever you think about Trump's culpability for the Capitol riot, the Trump team's presentation early on was overwhelmingly focused on things that didn't involve him. It was almost 100 percent whataboutism.... To rebut the argument from impeachment manager Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Tex.) that Trump had laid a predicate for what became the Jan. 6 riot by predicting a stolen election, Trump's legal team played videos that showed Democrats ... not doing that.... We knew based upon briefs filed by that Trump team that it would lean on the free speech argument, but we didn't know just how absolute it would assert that right is -- especially given that there are well-established limits on such rights in public discourse, including defamation and incitement." MB: If you have a WashPo subscription, definitely read the part about cavalry/calvary. It's a hilarious argument, boiling down to, "No, no, no, she really meant she was bringing a holy mountain."
It Was Just a Field Trip to an Historic Site. Or Something. Kyle Cheney & Andrew Desiderio of Politico: "Donald Trump's lead impeachment attorney on Friday denied that the violence at the Capitol on Jan. 6 amounted to an insurrection, a novel claim that contradicts the Justice Department and the broadly accepted version of events. 'Clearly, there was no insurrection,' Bruce Castor told senators as the former president's legal team mounted their first and only day of arguments in the Senate's impeachment trial. Federal indictments against those who participated in the violence at the Capitol referred to the events as an 'insurrection,' and Republican congressional leaders have echoed that characterization."
Haley Bets Against the Hawley/Cruz Horse. Celine Castronuovo of the Hill: "Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley issued stunning remarks breaking with former President Trump, telling Politico in an interview published Friday that she believes he 'let us down.... He went down a path he shouldn't have, and we shouldn't have followed him, and we shouldn't have listened to him. And we can't let that ever happen again.' Haley's remarks are her strongest yet against the former president in the aftermath of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot and come as Trump's legal team is set to present its defense of Trump on Friday in his second Senate impeachment trial." The interview, which is long & rambling, is by Tim Alberta & is published in Politico Magazine. As Alberta points out near the top, "Haley had navigated the Trump era with a singular shrewdness, messaging and maneuvering in ways that kept her in solid standing both with the GOP donor class as well as with the president and his base."
Melanie Is at the Spa Griping about Dr. Jill. Kate Bennett of CNN: "While ... Donald Trump watches his second impeachment trial unfold, Melania Trump spends most of her time post-White House relaxing at the spa and staying out of the fray.... Yet there have been moments of bitterness and regret, say several people with knowledge of Trump's conversations of late, most notably since Joe Biden's inauguration and with respect to the activities of her successor, Jill Biden." Although Melania Trump refused to sit for interviews with popular magazines, she is apparently upset that Jill Biden is getting so much press attention, uh, because she's will to sit for interviews. Also, too, Melania is upset Jill is getting attention for the work she is doing, even though Melania spent the first five months of Donald's presidency in New York. "... the former first lady is not blaming herself in hindsight, she's blaming others -- former staff members, magazine editors, and corporations and foundations...."
Matt Spetelnick, et al., of Reuters: "President Joe Biden's aides have launched a formal review of the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, reviving the Obama-era goal of closing the controversial facility with the aim of doing so before he leaves office, the White House said on Friday. Aides involved in internal discussions are considering an executive action to be signed by Biden in coming weeks or months, two people familiar with the matter told Reuters, signaling a new effort to remove what human rights advocates have called a stain on America's global image."
Alexandra Jaffe of the AP: "White House deputy press secretary T.J. Ducklo has been suspended for a week without pay after he reportedly issued a sexist and profane threat to a journalist seeking to cover his relationship with another reporter. White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that Ducklo's conduct was 'completely unacceptable.' Psaki said while she had not spoken about the incident with President Joe Biden, Ducklo and aides 'at the highest levels' of the White House's communications team had apologized for the incident.... Psaki said in a statement earlier Friday that Ducklo had been suspended without pay with the approval of White House chief of staff Ron Klain. She said Ducklo 'is the first to acknowledge this is not the standard of behavior set out' by Biden, and that Ducklo had sent the reporter in question 'a personal note professing his profound regret.'... On Friday, Vanity Fair published a report citing two unnamed sources that Ducklo had threatened the Politico reporter to try to suppress the story, telling her 'I will destroy you.'" MB: Assuming the Vanity Fair story is true, I would have fired Ducklo.
Jesse McKinley & Luis Ferré-Sadurní of the New York Times: "Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and his top aides were facing new allegations on Friday that they covered up the scope of the death toll in the state's nursing homes from the coronavirus, after admissions that they withheld data in an effort to forestall potential investigations into state misconduct. The latest revelations came in the wake of private remarks by the governor's top aide, Melissa DeRosa, and a cascading series of reports and court orders that have nearly doubled the state's official toll of nursing home deaths in the last two weeks. The disclosures have left Mr. Cuomo, a third-term Democrat, scrambling to contain the political fallout, as lawmakers of both parties call for censure, including stripping the governor of his emergency powers during the pandemic, federal and state investigations and resignations of Ms. DeRosa and other top officials. In a conversation first reported on by the New York Post, Ms. DeRosa told a group of top lawmakers on Wednesday during a call to address the nursing home situation that 'basically, we froze,' after being asked last summer for information by the Trump administration's Department of Justice."
~~~~~~~~~~
Marie: It's 2/12 and the 212th birthday of Abraham Lincoln, deemed by many to be the U.S.'s "best" president, an apt day for lawyers to try to mount a defense of the worst president. The defense, sadly, will succeed, no matter if they do nothing but find and old phone book & read it, because the ladies & gentlemen sworn to be "impartial jurors" are more aligned with Jeff Davis than with Abe Lincoln. Happy Birthday, Abe!
~~~~~~~~~~
Eric Tucker, et al., of the AP: "After a prosecution case rooted in emotive, violent images from the Capitol siege, Donald Trump's impeachment trial shifts on Friday to defense lawyers prepared to make a fundamental concession: The violence was every bit as traumatic, unacceptable and illegal as Democrats say. But, they will say, Trump had nothing to do with it." MB: This is the "People don't kill people; guns kill people" argument. ~~~
~~~ The New York Times' story is here.
"Impartial Jurors" Meet with Trump Lawyers. Manu Raju & Alex Rogers of CNN: "A trio of Republican senators allied with ... Donald Trump met with his defense team Thursday evening, in the middle of an impeachment trial in which they will vote on whether to convict Trump and potentially bar him from holding public office again. Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Ted Cruz of Texas and Mike Lee of Utah were spotted going into a room in the US Capitol that Trump's lawyers were using to prepare for their arguments. Trump lawyer David Schoen said that the senators were 'very friendly guys' who just wanted to make sure they were 'familiar with procedure' on the eve of their rebuttal to the House impeachment managers' presentation.... Cruz said the meeting with the Trump defense team was an opportunity for 'sharing our thoughts' about their legal strategy." ~~~
~~~ "Impartial Jurors" Sit Out Trial. David Badash of the New Civil Rights Movement: "Fifteen of the 50 Republican Senators refused to show up for at least 'the first few hours' of Thursday's arguments by the Democratic managers in the Senate impeachment trial of ... Donald Trump, CNN's Manu Raju and Forbes report. That's 30 percent of the Republican caucus in the Senate, or nearly one-third of the GOP members. 'Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Rand Paul (R-Ky.) were both away from their desks, for instance, while Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho) was in the basement on his phone, CNN's Manu Raju reported,' Forbes adds. 'Many within the chamber were preoccupied with other activities: Sens. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) and Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) were reading papers, while, according to CNN's Jeremy Herb, Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) 'had a blank map of Asia on his desk and was writing on it like he was filling in the names of the countries.'" ~~~
~~~ Marie: I would not have been as nice to the "jurors" as the impeachment managers were. I would have told Hawley to get his feet off the furniture. I would have grabbed the map out of Rick Scott's hands & asked him how he could get Cambodia & Laos mixed up. I would have taken Burr's snacks away from him; "Just because I showed a video clip doesn't mean you're at the Bijou, buddy." ~~~
~~~ The "Impartial Jurors" Are the Accomplices, (And They're About to Drive the Getaway Car). Michelle Goldberg of the New York Times: "The most powerful moments of their presentation were the temporal juxtapositions, like Trump tweeting, 'Mike Pence didn't have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution,' even as cable news showed the MAGA horde hunting him. (One insurrectionist read Trump's tweet through a bullhorn.) It was both gutting and more riveting than I would have expected, an indelible documentary of Trump's culminating crime against the Republic. Yet in one regard, the story the House managers told was a distortion.... Many Republicans were not Trump's victims, but his enablers. Indeed, one of the most perverse things about this impeachment is that the jury is stacked with the defendant's accomplices. Several Republican senators were eager participants in Trump's big lie.... They're being given a chance to rewrite the shameful history of how the Republican Party has behaved for the last four years.They will almost certainly not take it."
Nicholas Fandos of the New York Times: "The House Democrats prosecuting ... Donald J. Trump rested their case on Thursday, branding him a clear and present danger to United States democracy who could sow new violence like the deadly assault on the Capitol last month if he was not barred from holding office again. Calling on senators to render 'impartial justice' and embrace the 'common sense' of the country's founders, the nine impeachment managers closed their case by laying out the grave damage the Jan. 6 riot had caused not just to lawmakers or police officers at the Capitol, but to the democratic system and America's standing around the world. None of it, they argued, would have happened without Mr. Trump.... 'I'm not afraid of Donald Trump running again in four years,' said Representative Ted Lieu of California. 'I'm afraid he's going to run again and lose, because he can do this again.'... [Lead House manager Jamie] Raskin [D-Md.] said the evidence that Mr. Trump cultivated, incited and then showed no remorse for the attack warranted making him the first impeached president ever to be convicted and the first former president to be disqualified from holding future office." ~~~
~~~ Mike DeBonis & Seung Min Kim of the Washington Post: "House Democrats closed their impeachment case against Donald Trump on Thursday by linking his history of incendiary rhetoric and months-long campaign to undermine the November election to the statements of insurrectionists who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6 -- and raising the prospect of future violence without a conviction.... Trump's defense will begin at noon Friday. Although his lawyers are entitled to 16 hours of argument over two days, a spokesman said Thursday that they expect to rest their case in one day.... A short defense presentation could put the Senate on track to vote on Trump's conviction as soon as Saturday, particularly after key Democratic senators said they believed that the managers had proved their case against Trump and saw no need for testimony from additional witnesses."
Aaron Blake of the Washington Post provides a fairly good summary of Day 3 of the Trump Impeachment Trial 2.0 when he outlines key takeaways. MB: A few of the details embedded in the takeaways I didn't know before today, like this one: "Trump also endorsed a clip from a supporter saying 'the only good Democrat is a dead Democrat' -- before that supporter was arrested for his part in the Capitol riot." Eileen Sullivan of the New York Times outlines some takeaways here.
Preview of the Insurrection. An example of the case against Trump. House manager Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) lays out how the violent attacks on the Michigan state house & the plot to kidnap & execute Gov. Gretchen Whitmer presaged the January 6 attack on the Capitol: ~~~
Peter Baker of the New York Times: "With conviction in a polarized Senate seemingly out of reach, the House managers ... are aiming their arguments at two other audiences beyond the chamber: the American people whose decision to deny Mr. Trump a second term was put at risk and the historians who will one day render their own judgments about the former president and his time in power. Through the expansive use of unsettling video footage showing both Mr. Trump's words and the brutal rampage that followed, the managers are using their moment in the national spotlight to make the searing images of havoc the inexpungible legacy of the Trump presidency. Rather than let the outrage subside, the managers are seeking to ensure that Mr. Trump is held accountable even if he is acquitted in the Senate."
The New York Times' live updates of the impeachment trial Thursday are here. The Guardian's live updates are here. The Washington Post's live updates are here. (Also linked yesterday.)
Alan Feuer of the New York Times: "Chilling new details emerged on Thursday about the plot by the Oath Keepers militia group to attack the Capitol as prosecutors said that members discussed a brazen plan to ferry 'heavy weapons' in a boat across the Potomac River into Washington and began training sessions 'for urban warfare, riot control and rescue operations' well before Election Day. The new accounts about the Oath Keepers' role in the Capitol assault came on the third day of ... Donald J. Trump's impeachment trial and included allegations that a member of the militia group was 'awaiting direction' from Mr. Trump about how to handle the results of the vote in the days that followed the election.... The Justice Department has brought charges against more than 200 people in the attack on the Capitol last month, but the case against [Jessica] Watkins and her two co-defendants, Thomas E. Caldwell and Donovan Crowl, is among the most serious to have emerged from the vast investigation." ~~~
~~~ Katelyn Polantz of CNN: "The Justice Department is now making clear that a leader among the Oath Keepers paramilitary group -- who planned and led others in the US Capitol siege to attempt to stop the Biden presidency -- believed she was responding to the call from ... Donald Trump himself. 'As the inauguration grew nearer, [Jessica] Watkins indicated that she was awaiting direction from President Trump,' prosecutors wrote in a filing Thursday morning. This is the most direct language yet from federal prosecutors linking Trump's requests for support in Washington, DC, to the most militant aspects of the insurrection.... 'Her concern about taking action without his backing was evident in a November 9, 2020, text in which she stated, "I am concerned this is an elaborate trap. Unless the POTUS himself activates us, it's not legit. The POTUS has the right to activate units too. If Trump asks me to come, I will. Otherwise, I can't trust it." Watkins had perceived her desired signal by the end of December.'" (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~
~~~ Rachel Weiner & Spencer Hsu of the Washington Post: "A former U.S. Navy intelligence officer and FBI official from Virginia has emerged as a key figure in the federal investigation of the Jan. 6 Capitol breach, as U.S. prosecutors alleged Thursday that he organized a group of trained fighters and was in contact with self-styled militia groups including the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers and Three Percenters. In asking a federal judge to detain Thomas Edward Caldwell, 66, pending trial, prosecutors revealed some of the most explicit evidence to date of discussions allegedly indicating coordination and planning among groups under scrutiny for the assault on Congress that left one police officer and four others dead, delayed the confirmation of President Biden's victory.... Prosecutors allege Caldwell used his military and law enforcement background to plan violence -- including possible snipers and weapons stashed on a boat along the Potomac River -- weeks ahead of the Capitol insurrection."
Spencer Hsu & Rachel Weiner of the Washington Post: "Five people worked with Proud Boys from Kansas City and other unnamed individuals to breach the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, U.S. prosecutors alleged, unsealing charges Thursday in one of the largest co-defendant cases yet brought in an investigation in which more than 200 have been charged. The defendants, wearing helmets, vests and tactical gear marked with fluorescent orange tape, 'appeared to gesture and communicate to one another' to coordinate efforts during and after forcing entry to the Capitol, the FBI alleged. Surveillance footage showed at least four taking actions to prevent police from deploying descending metal barriers to seal off underground access to the Capitol, allowing the invading crowd to surge forward, the FBI said in a 28-page affidavit dated Wednesday. The arrests of William Chrestman, Christopher Kuehne, Louis Enrique Colon, all of Kansas City, and siblings Felicia and Cory Konold bring the number of those affiliated with the Proud Boys to nearly 18 among those charged with battling law enforcement and obstructing the electoral vote confirmation of President Biden's victory." ~~~
~~~ Marie: It's worth remembering that members of both the Proud Boys & the Oath Keepers served as "bodyguards" for Roger Stone, the criminal dirty-trickster & friend of Trump whom Trump pardoned in December. While I have no idea what Stone & the gang discussed, it doesn't seem likely they just chatted about car engines, great Midwest bars & muscle shirts. I'm not saying there was a Jan. 6 conspiracy in which Trump was directly involved via Stone, but -- given what we know about Trump & his mob-boss methods -- it doesn't seem nuts to think there well might have been.
Barbara Starr & Caroline Kelly of CNN: "Military officials overseeing the authorization process to launch nuclear weapons were unaware on January 6 that then-Vice President Mike Pence's military aide carrying the 'nuclear football' was potentially in danger as rioters got close during the violent Capitol insurrection, according to a defense official. The vice president is always accompanied by a backup of the 'football,' which contains the equipment to carry out orders to launch a nuclear strike. It must be ready at all times and is identical to what the president carries, in case he becomes incapacitated. US Strategic Command became aware of the gravity of the incident after seeing a video played at the Senate impeachment trial Wednesday showing Pence, his Secret Service agents and a military officer carrying the briefcase with classified nuclear launch information running down a flight of stairs inside the Capitol to get to safety, the official said."
Michael Schmidt & Luke Broadwater of the New York Times: "A little more than a month after the Capitol siege, a fuller picture of the injuries sustained by the police has emerged from court documents, footage revealed at ... Donald J. Trump's impeachment trial, accounts provided by officers and interviews with law enforcement officials and experts. The Capitol assault resulted in one of the worst days of injuries for law enforcement in the United States since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. At least 138 officers -- 73 from the Capitol Police and 65 from the Metropolitan Police Department in Washington -- were injured, the departments have said. They ranged from bruises and lacerations to more serious damage such as concussions, rib fractures, burns and even a mild heart attack.... The number of those injured does not account for the dozens, if not hundreds, of officers whom law enforcement officials estimate will suffer in years to come with post-traumatic stress disorder and the dozens who most likely contracted the coronavirus from unmasked Trump supporters who overran the Capitol, the experts and officials said."
Michigan. WXYZ Detroit: "Mike Shirkey, the Republican majority leader of the Michigan state senate, was caught on a hot mic Wednesday seemingly walking back an apology he made earlier this week for calling the riots at the U.S. Capitol a 'hoax.' Earlier this week, a video of Shirkey's meeting with Republican leaders from Hillsdale County leaked in which Shirkey referred to the Jan. 6 riots as a 'hoax,' and placed blame on Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell, claiming he 'wanted to have a mess.' On Tuesday, Shirkey apologized for those comments, saying that he 'regrets the words that I chose and I apologize for my insensitive comments'. But on Wednesday while on the Senate floor, Shirkey was caught on a hot mic appearing to completely walk back the apology he made the day before. 'Frankly, I don't take back any of the points I was trying to make,' Shirkey said during a conversation with Lt. Governor Garlin Gilchrist, a Democrat." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~
~~~ Marie: In the context of this NYT story, linked here a few days ago, Shirkey's walk-back of a walk-back are especially frightening.
Trump Has Taught Nutjobs that "Free Speech" Includes Making Death Threats. Tina Burnside & Hollie Silverman of CNN: "A North Carolina man has been charged with making threats to kill President Joe Biden, according to a federal criminal complaint unsealed in court Thursday. David Kyle Reeves, 27, of Gastonia, North Carolina, was arrested February 5 for knowingly and willfully making threats to take the life of and inflict bodily harm upon the President, according to newly unsealed court documents. Prosecutors allege that between January 28 and February 1, Reeves contacted the White House switchboard multiple times by phone and made threats against President Biden and others.... Reeves called [a Secret Service] agent several times ... making threats against the President, the agent and others. Reeves told the Secret Service agent 'that he had free speech and did nothing wrong,' according to an affidavit in support of the criminal complaint."
Made in China. Lara Jakes of the New York Times: "In his more than two years as secretary of state, Mike Pompeo pulled no punches against China, regularly criticizing it for human rights abuses, military aggressions and the spread of the coronavirus. But when it came to passing out party favors, Mr. Pompeo relied on the country to help produce the perfect pen. Documents released on Thursday show that Mr. Pompeo used taxpayer funds to buy 400 specially embossed pens, worth more than $10,000 in total, for guests who attended private dinners at the State Department as he mulled his political future."
If you would like to think about Rep. Marjorie Greene (Q-Ga.) having extramarital sex, then this Daily Mail story is for you. MB: Even though I didn't actually read the story, I, for one, am glad to see the Mail getting back to its regular beat. For some reason I thought the Mail had become a Murdoch enterprise, but I was wrong. The controlling shareholder is Jonathan Harmsworth, 4th Viscount Rothermere. It is nice to know what it means to be upper-crust in the U.K.
Meanwhile ~~~
Rebecca Beitsch of the Hill: "The Biden administration on Friday rolled out its plans for addressing tens of thousands of migrants camped out at the southern border as it seeks to replace the Trump administration's 'remain in Mexico' policy. President Trump's policy, rolled out in 2019, blocked migrants at the Mexican border from entering the U.S. to apply for asylum, leaving what the Biden administration estimates is now around 25,000 people awaiting their fate in Mexico. In what the administration deemed as Phase 1 of their plan, the U.S. will begin processing as many as 300 people per day at three different undisclosed ports of entry starting Feb. 19.... The U.S. will begin by processing those who have already enrolled in Trump's Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) program who must then coordinate with a forthcoming international organization who will help coordinate housing and test migrants for Covid-19. Only those with a negative test will be permitted to enter. Administration officials said they would 'start small' in an effort to ensure the system is working and that migrants can 'be processed in a timely fashion with due regard for public health in the middle of a pandemic.'"
Jeff Stein of the Washington Post: "America's federal debt is set to exceed the size of the entire U.S. economy this year for only the second time since the end of World War II, a reflection of the extraordinary emergency measures approved by Congress in response to the coronavirus pandemic, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said Thursday.... It's the second time it's happened, in two years. Democratic lawmakers and many economists say another spending blitz is necessary to stabilize an economy that has stalled out and a job market that faces the prospect of permanent scarring. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome H. Powell said the unemployment rate for January should be considered closer to 10 percent, rather than the official number of 6.3 percent, due to misclassification errors and workers permanently leaving the labor force.... The CBOs debt estimates are based on current policy and do not account for the $1.9 trillion stimulus package Democrats are expected to pass in a matter of weeks."
Stacey Abrams & Lauren Groh-Wargo in a New York Times op-ed on "how to turn a red state blue" (or purple): "The steps toward victory are straightforward: understand your weaknesses, organize with your allies, shore up your political infrastructure and focus on the long game. Georgia's transformation is worth celebrating, and how it came to be is a long and complicated story, which required more than simply energizing a new coterie of voters. What Georgia Democrats and progressives accomplished here -- and what is happening in Arizona and North Carolina -- can be exported to the rest of the Sun Belt and the Midwest, but only if we understand how we got here."
Anna Kambhampaty of Politico: "The conservative activist organization Project Veritas was suspended from Twitter on Thursday for violating platform rules. The account was 'permanently suspended for repeated violations of Twitter's private information policy,' a Twitter spokesperson said. The group's founder, James O'Keefe, had his account temporarily locked, also for violation of the private information policy. 'The account owner is required to delete the violative Tweet to regain access to their account,' the spokesperson said."
The Pandemic, Ctd.
The Washington Post's live updates of Covid-19 developments Friday are here. The New York Times' live updates Friday are here.
** Isaac Stanley-Becker, et al., of the Washington Post: "President Biden said Thursday his administration had finalized deals for another 200 million doses of the two coronavirus vaccines authorized in the United States, securing sufficient shots to cover everyone currently eligible for inoculation by the end of July. In remarks capping an afternoon tour of the National Institutes of Health, Biden said the federal government had purchased 100 million more doses from Pfizer and German company BioNTech, as well as 100 million more from Moderna, using options built into existing contracts with those companies. The announcement was the centerpiece of an emotional address from Biden, who made a point of speaking through his mask as he called it a 'patriotic responsibility' to wear one." ~~~
~~~ Katie Rogers & Noah Weiland of the New York Times: “... but President Biden warned that logistical hurdles would most likely mean that many Americans will still not have been vaccinated by the end of the summer.... Both vaccines are two-dose regimens, spaced three and four weeks apart. Mr. Biden lamented the 'gigantic' logistical challenge he faces during an appearance at the National Institutes of Health. He also expressed open frustration with the previous administration. 'It's one thing to have the vaccine,' Mr. Biden said. 'It's another thing to have vaccinators.'... Dr. Anthony S. Fauci predicted on Thursday morning that as early as April, any American could begin seeking a vaccine in an 'open season' that would extend availability beyond priority categories."
Amanda Holpuch of the Guardian: "The US could have averted 40% of the deaths from Covid-19, had the country's death rates corresponded with the rates in other high-income G7 countries, according to a Lancet commission tasked with assessing Donald Trump's health policy record. Almost 470,000 Americans have died from the coronavirus so far, with the number widely expected to go above half a million in the next few weeks. At the same time some 27 million people in the US have been infected. Both figures are by far the highest in the world. In seeking to respond to the pandemic, Trump has been widely condemned for not taking the pandemic seriously enough soon enough, spreading conspiracy theories, not encouraging mask wearing and undermining scientists and others seeking to combat the virus's spread." Thanks to RAS for the link. MB: I have been wondering what sort of number could be attached to Trump's Covid-19 failures. This scientific effort is useful. (Also linked yesterday.)
Noah Weiland, et al., of the New York Times: "... Donald J. Trump was sicker with Covid-19 in October than publicly acknowledged at the time, with extremely depressed blood oxygen levels at one point and a lung problem associated with pneumonia caused by the coronavirus, according to four people familiar with his condition. His prognosis became so worrisome before he was taken to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center that officials believed he would need to be put on a ventilator, two of the people familiar with his condition said.... The new details about his condition and about the effort inside the White House to get him special access to an unapproved drug to fight the virus help to flesh out one of the most dire episodes of Mr. Trump's presidency. The new revelations about Mr. Trump's struggle with the virus also underscore the limited and sometimes misleading nature of the information disclosed at the time about his condition.... Mr. Trump's physician, Dr. Sean P. Conley, repeatedly downplayed concerns about Mr. Trump's condition during his illness." A CNN story is here.
New York. Bernard Condon & Jennifer Peltz of the AP: "More than 9,000 recovering coronavirus patients in New York state were released from hospitals into nursing homes early in the pandemic under a controversial directive that was scrapped amid criticism it accelerated outbreaks, according to new records obtained by The Associated Press. The new number of 9,056 recovering patients sent to hundreds of nursing homes is more than 40% higher than what the state health department previously released. And it raises new questions as to whether a March 25 directive from Gov. Andrew Cuomo's administration helped spread sickness and death among residents, a charge the state disputes.... The new figures come as the Cuomo administration has been forced in recent weeks to acknowledge it has been underreporting the overall number of COVID-19 deaths among long-term care residents. It is now nearly 15,000 up from the 8,500 previously disclosed."
Beyond the Beltway
New York. Savador Hernandez of BuzzFeed News: "Felony charges were dropped Thursday against two police officers in Buffalo, New York, who violently shoved a 75-year-old protester, causing him to fall, hit his head on the sidewalk, and bleed from his ear, officials said. Graphic video of the incident captured by local NPR station WBFO showed the moment officers shoved the peace activist during a Black Lives Matter protest in June, and quickly went viral. The footage shows the man, Martin Gugino, walking up to police officers as they begin to yell 'Move!' and 'Push him back!' while enforcing a city curfew.... Police had initially told reporters Gugino 'tripped and fell,' without making any mention of the officers' role.... Two of the officers seen in the video, Aaron Torgalski and Robert McCabe, had faced second-degree assault charges, but a grand jury that reviewed the cases voted to dismiss them, Erie County District Attorney John Flynn said at a news conference Thursday."
Texas. Alex Samuels & Kate McGee of the Texas Tribune: "Late last year, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton fired multiple senior aides who accused him of accepting a bribe. A court filing obtained by The Texas Tribune reveals for the first time what four of those aides believe Paxton received in exchange for helping a donor with his business affairs. An updated version of a lawsuit filed by the four whistleblowers claims that Austin real estate developer Nate Paul helped Paxton remodel his house and gave a job to a woman with whom Paxton allegedly had an affair. In return, the aides allege, Paxton used his office to help Paul's business interests, investigate Paul's adversaries and help settle a lawsuit. The claims in the filing provide even more details about what the former aides believe Paxton's motivations were in what they describe as a 'bizarre, obsessive use of power.'"