Playbook PM: McConnell vs. the establishment

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Apr 23, 2020 View in browser
 
POLITICO Playbook PM

By Jake Sherman, Anna Palmer, Garrett Ross and Eli Okun

Presented by

IT IS NOW PRACTICALLY CERTAIN that the next knock-down, drag-out legislative fight of the coronavirus era will be over whether the federal government should send hundreds of billions of dollars to cash-strapped states, or allow them to declare bankruptcy.

IN ONE CORNER is Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL, who has cast doubt on the efficacy and propriety of sending hundreds of billions of dollars to states, and suggested they file for bankruptcy protection if they are in financial straits.

IN THE OTHER CORNER is, well, most other elected officials: President DONALD TRUMP and his occasional rival, Maryland's Republican Gov. LARRY HOGAN, both support Congress sending a pot of money to help states. New York Gov. ANDREW CUOMO and his occasional rival, Senate Minority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER, do as well. NANCY PELOSI, the powerful speaker of the House, represents a caucus of Democrats who believe the primary way to combat the depths of this crisis is continued aggressive federal spending.

IN SHORT, THE POLITICAL ESTABLISHMENT -- pockets of elected officials from the right, left and center -- says it recognizes the red ink that will be dripping off of state budgets, and says federal intervention is of critical importance.

ALL OF THIS WILL COME TO A HEAD in the coming months, when Congress begins to haggle over another stimulus package. The backdrop: 26 MILLION people out of work, nearly 50,000 Americans dead and nearly 1 million ill or recovered from the novel coronavirus.

MCCONNELL'S allies say the Kentucky Republican is, broadly speaking, representing a Senate Republican Conference that's bone tired of spending, and beginning to gain religion again on the ballooning federal budget deficit. Congress has OK'd nearly $2.5 trillion in spending over the last few months to help the country recover from the deadly virus.

BUT IT'S INCREASINGLY CLEAR that resisting assistance for state capitals is going to be difficult, as it has quickly become a priority on both sides of the aisle in state capitals like Albany and Annapolis, and in Washington itself.

CUOMO said in Albany today that suggesting states declare bankruptcy is "one of the really dumb ideas."

HOGAN, who chairs the National Governors Association with CUOMO, said in a Playbook Interview his state will have a $2.8 billion budget shortfall by July 1. The NGA has been lobbying for $500 billion in federal money for states. He said MCCONNELL will come to "regret" saying that states should file for bankruptcy protection, because "the last thing we need in the middle of an economic crisis is to have states all filing bankruptcy all across America and not able to provide services to people who desperately need them and further exacerbating the problems of this economic crisis."

HOGAN WAS LIKEWISE sharp in his criticism of Republicans like MCCONNELL'S team who call federal assistance a "blue-state bailout."

"THAT'S COMPLETE NONSENSE," HOGAN said. "These are well-run states. There are just as many Republicans as Democrats that strongly support this. ... I'm hopeful that we're going to be able to -- between the administration and the 55 governors in America, including the territories -- we're going to convince Sen. McConnell that maybe he shouldn't let all the states go bankrupt."

MCCONNELL'S OFFICE pointed to the Kentucky Republican's public remarks, and declined comment on HOGAN'S criticism.

OTHER HOGAN HIGHLIGHTS ...

-- HOGAN on dealing with TRUMP: "I don't go out of my way to, you know, poke the bear, or to criticize him unnecessarily. I just tried to be helpful with suggestions about the things that we really need, and I try to push for the things that we need."

-- WILL DMV RESIDENTS BE ABLE TO PLAY GOLF IN MD. SOON? "I think opening golf courses ... will be one of the early things that we do in the first part of our reopening. ... I don't see you being able to hang at the bar with your buddies in the clubhouse, but I think you'll be able to get out there and, you know, take a few swings in the grass in a safe way." Watch the full interview

 

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THE PITS ... 4.4 MILLION Americans filed for jobless claims last week, bringing the total number of unemployed to 26 MILLION.

-- BIGGEST INCREASES: Colorado, New York, Missouri, Florida and North Carolina.

HERE'S A STUNNING GRAF from Bloomberg, which shows the depths of the unemployment picture.

-- "The $600 Unemployment Booster Shot, State by State," by NYT's Ella Koeze: "Before the coronavirus, people receiving unemployment benefits in most states got, on average, less than half their weekly salaries. Now, as millions file claims, many are poised to receive more money than they would have typically earned in their jobs, thanks to the additional $600 a week set aside in the federal stimulus package for the unemployed."

Good Thursday afternoon.

THE HOUSE is voting later today to send another coronavirus relief bill to TRUMP.

TERRIFIC STORY ... WAPO: "They lived in a factory for 28 days to make millions of pounds of raw PPE materials to help fight coronavirus," by Meagan Flynn

IN MEMORIAM -- "Elizabeth Warren's oldest brother dies of coronavirus in Oklahoma," by The Boston Globe's Jess Bidgood: "Donald Reed Herring, the oldest brother of Senator Elizabeth Warren, died on Tuesday night in Norman, Okla., about three weeks after testing positive for coronavirus.

"Herring, a 20-year veteran of the U.S. Air Force, was 86. Warren, who has been a vocal critic of the Trump administration's halting response to the pandemic for months, has not previously revealed that her family was waging its own personal battle against the virus. She confirmed his death in a statement provided to the Globe and said the cause was coronavirus." Boston Globe

VA TROUBLES -- "VA medical facilities struggle to cope with coronavirus," by AP's Michael Casey and Hope Yen in Boston: "As she treated patient after patient infected with the coronavirus at a Veterans Affairs medical center in New York City, Heather Espinal saw stark warning signs. So many nurses had called in sick, she said, that the Bronx facility was woefully understaffed. ... Espinal is one of 1,900 VA health care workers who have become sick with the coronavirus, according to agency documents obtained by The Associated Press. Twenty have died.

"Another 3,600 of the 300,000-plus VA health care employees are quarantined and unable to work because they have been exposed to the virus, according to VA figures. As the coronavirus spreads across the U.S., VA health care facilities are struggling with shortages of workers and the equipment necessary to protect employees from contracting the virus, according to VA staff and internal documents obtained by the AP." AP

 

JOIN TODAY - COVID-19 AND THE ECONOMIC IMPACT ON WOMEN: It's no secret that the coronavirus has an economic impact - but did you know it's taking an especially heavy toll on the economic well-being of women? Join Women Rule Editorial Director Anna Palmer today at 4 p.m. EDT for a virtual conversation with Sallie Krawcheck, CEO and co-founder of Ellevest. Hear from Sallie on what steps women can take to regain control of their finances and weather the economic storm. Have a question for Sallie? Tweet it to @POLITICOLive using #AskPOLITICO. REGISTER HERE TO PARTICIPATE.

 
 

THE VENTILATOR HUNT -- "Coronavirus Pandemic Prompts Race in Latin America to Build Cheaper Ventilators," by WSJ's Juan Forero in Bogotá, Colombia, and Santiago Pérez in Mexico City: "With the coronavirus pandemic bearing down on Latin America and ventilators in short supply, engineers, entrepreneurs and physicians are coming together with an audacious goal: building their own breathing machines from scratch in a matter of weeks.

"In Colombia, they started in mid-March, using open-source specs from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Their partners, manufacturers in Medellín, began to retool automotive and appliance plants to make less expensive ventilators, with production costs at roughly $1,500 apiece, a fraction of the market price. They have started testing on pigs and hope to run clinical trials on people soon." WSJ

CENSUS UPDATE -- "Spotify and text-a-thons: How the census is reaching out during coronavirus," by Maya King and Danielle Muoio: "As the coronavirus bears down on cities and states across the nation, the Census Bureau has scrubbed in-person get-out-the-count work in favor of ad buys on Spotify, thousand-person text-a-thons and virtual speakers series. But despite an extensive statistical database and half-billion-dollar ad strategy to get a proper count, local officials warn that millions could still slip through the cracks.

"Spotify may not reach the hardest to count parts of the U.S. population. Those are the people in-person canvassers normally try to cajole to fill out census forms in person or online. The Census Bureau has extended the response deadline to Oct. 31 from August 15. ... It has also requested a delay of delivery of final data figures to the president by four months to April 30, 2021, pushing state redistricting operations into July of next year. So far, the United States' response rate sits just above 50 percent." POLITICO California

WHO'S LEFT HANGING -- "Young people are being left out of coronavirus economic relief efforts. That could be a big problem," by WaPo's Jacqueline Alemany and Brent Griffiths: "During the despair of the Great Depression, President Franklin D. Roosevelt established ambitious federally funded jobs programs directly aimed at buoying young people. Now, in the midst of the historic novel coronavirus pandemic, there's a growing consensus among lawmakers and policy wonks that young millennials and their Generation Z counterparts need the same kind of aggressive government boost.

"But historians doubt any government intervention of the kind that helped lift a generation of young people out of poverty in the 1930s would be workable today. Conspicuously left out of the $2 trillion stimulus package, most high school seniors and many college students are not eligible for broad financial assistance from the government to help them dig out of the pandemic's economic hole." WaPo

COLLEGE IMPACT -- "Desperate for fall enrollees, colleges are luring students with campus perks and cold cash," by WaPo's Jon Marcus: "Put down a deposit and, at some schools, your tuition will never go up. Like to sleep in? Other colleges will give you early registration privileges so you don't get stuck with morning classes. Still others are throwing in free food, free football tickets, even free books autographed by celebrity faculty members in residence. ...

"In a twist of timing, some of the inducements are a consequence of a Justice Department action that forced college admissions officers to drop key parts of their professional code of ethics, which prohibited many of these kinds of appeals and banned colleges from pursuing each other's students." WaPo

THE RIPPLE EFFECT -- "Vaccine Rates Drop Dangerously as Parents Avoid Doctor's Visits," by NYT's Jan Hoffman: "As parents around the country cancel well-child checkups to avoid coronavirus exposure, public health experts fear they are inadvertently sowing the seeds of another health crisis. Immunizations are dropping at a dangerous rate, putting millions of children at risk for measles, whooping cough and other life-threatening illnesses. ...

"The problem is global. National immunization programs in more than two dozen countries have been suspended, which could also leave more than 100 million children vulnerable, a consortium of international organizations, including UNICEF and the World Health Organization, recently reported." NYT

 

OUR NEIGHBORS NEED YOUR HELP: Layoffs, school closures, and health fears. Everyone is struggling, and our neighbors need our help now more than ever. From grab-and-go dinners for kids to boxes of groceries for seniors, you can help provide critical support for people in the greater D.C. community who need it most. No one should go hungry during this pandemic. Together, we can make sure no one has to. Please support the Capital Area Food Bank's COVID-19 response today.

 
 

E-RING READING -- "Fox News regular Anthony Tata to be tapped as Pentagon policy chief," by Daniel Lippman and Lara Seligman: "Anthony Tata, a retired Army brigadier general, novelist and Fox News regular, will be tapped as the next Pentagon policy chief, according to three people with knowledge of the decision.

"If confirmed by the Senate, Tata would replace John Rood, who was forced out in February as part of President Donald Trump's loyalty purge after two years in the job. According [to] two current administration officials and one former defense official, Tata beat out Douglas Macgregor, another retired Army officer and frequent Fox News commentator, for the job. Both were interviewed by Trump." POLITICO

BETWEEN BARACK AND A HARD PLACE -- "Biden's ties to Obama could hamper appeal to Latino voters," by AP's Will Weissert: "For many Latinos, Biden's embrace of the Obama years is a frightening reminder of when the former president ejected about 3 million people living in the U.S. illegally, earning him the moniker of 'deporter in chief.' That's one reason Latinos overwhelmingly backed Bernie Sanders during the Democratic primary.

"But with the Vermont senator out of the race and Biden left as the presumptive Democratic nominee, Latinos face an agonizing choice. They could look past Biden's resume and vote for him or sit out the election and risk another four years of President Donald Trump, who escalated his hard-line stance this week with an executive order freezing some immigration into the U.S. during the coronavirus pandemic." AP

MEDIAWATCH -- "The New York Times Will Pause Printing of Sports and Travel Sections," by Cheddar's Michelle Castillo: "In a note that will be sent out to employees this week, executive editor Dean Baquet and managing editor Joseph Kahn told employees the Travel section of the newspaper will be replaced with a new section called At Home which will debut on Sunday. In addition, the Sunday Sports section will no longer be printed separately and will be folded into the front section of the newspaper. Additional travel-related stories could live throughout the paper."

WELCOME TO THE WORLD -- Atossa Araxia Abrahamian, a senior editor at The Nation, and Joe Bernstein, a technology reporter at BuzzFeed, welcomed Kian Leo Bernstein on Tuesday in New York City.

 

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Coronavirus briefing: Northern Ireland planning for second wave of infections

A quartet of young opera singers have joined together in lockdown to pay a musical tribute to NHS workers.
 
 
     
   
     
  Apr 23, 2020  
     
 

Good evening, 


It is almost universally accepted that developing an effective means of contact tracing to track the spread of coronavirus offers a key route out of this crisis. 


So it was very encouraging to hear Northern Ireland's chief medical officer Dr Michael McBride tell the Stormont health committee on Thursday that an enhanced contact tracing programme will be piloted here from next week.


In some other positive news, health minister Robin Swann said extra critical care capacity is not expected to be needed in Northern Ireland during the first wave of the coronavirus outbreak. However, Mr Swann added that preparations would need to be made for a likely second wave of infections later in the year.


It was sad to read about the death of one of the founders of the DUP on Thursday. Charlie Poots, son of the current agriculture minister Edwin Poots, became a close friend of the late Rev Ian Paisley and survived a republican murder bid in 1976. 


The death of Mr Poots came just a day after Jeffrey Donaldson, the DUP MP for Lagan Valley, announced the death of his father, Jim Donaldson. 


Everyone at the News Letter sends our condolences to the wider Poots and Donaldson families. 

 

Stay safe,


Alistair Bushe, Editor

Here are today's headlines:

  • Northern Ireland is set to begin planning for a second wave of COVID-19 infections predicted to arrive later in the year, Health Minister, Robin Swann has revealed. Minister Swann, who made the comments while appearing before the Northern Ireland Health Committee on Thursday, said the lack of certainty surrounding a possible vaccine makes planning for a second wave of infections the practical and responsible next step to take. "Modelling has indicated that we are now in the peak of the first wave of the pandemic but it's too early to confirm whether the current figures represent the peak," he said. "And in the absence of a vaccine we will have to plan for a potential second wave of COVID-19 cases later in the year."
  • The number of people to die in Northern Ireland after testing positive for COVID-19 has risen by 13 to 263 in the last 24 hours. The 13 new deaths all occurred in hospitals throughout Northern Ireland. The total number of patients to test positive for COVID-19 in Northern increased by 142 to 3,016. A total of 858 patients availed of 1,006 tests around Northern Ireland in the last 24 hours.
  • Contact tracing to track the spread of coronavirus is set to start in Northern Ireland next week. Chief medical officer Michael McBride told the Stormont health committee that an enhanced contact tracing programme will be piloted. He said it was previously stopped based on "sound public health considerations", adding that as the nation moves into the next phase it will become "crucially important" to ramp up contact tracing to get on top of local pockets of the virus. Dr McBride said officials will work alongside colleagues in the UK and the Republic of Ireland using similar digital platforms to share information and enhance tracing.
  • The UK government announced this evening that testing will be extended to essential workers and their families. The full list of essential workers can be found here
  • There have been a further 616 coronavirus related deaths across the UK, taking the total to 18,738. It is the lowest weekday rise for three weeks.
  • Our latest Alone Together coronavirus podcast is now available to download. The latest episode pays tribute to the health heroes in our communities who are in the front line of the battle against the virus. You can download it from Apple, Spotify, and Entale

 

 

 

 
     
  Coronavirus: Young NI opera singers in online Mozart tribute to NHS staff  
     
  A quartet of young opera singers have joined together in lockdown to pay a musical tribute to NHS workers.  
     
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Article Image
Donation of 60-year-old wedding present reduces NI scrubs charity organiser 'to a blubbering mess'
 
A 'Scrubs for NHS' charity organiser has revealed how receiving a charity donation of sheets she received in a wedding present 60 years ago &quote;reduced me to a blubbering mess&quote;.
 
     
 
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Carnlough lecturer leading by example on Covid-19 ward
 
A Carnlough woman is to donate her payment for weekend healthcare assistant shifts at Antrim Hospital to Ulster University's cornavirus testing fundraising appeal.
 
     
     
     
   
     
     
     
 
 
   
 
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California Today: Inside the Bay Area’s Geriatric Homeless Shelter

Homeless shelters, like elder care homes, have seen outbreaks.
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By Jesse Bedayn and Brett Simpson

Anthony Deloney in the courtyard garden at St. Mary's Center in Oakland on March 31. Mr. Deloney was one of only 11 homeless seniors still residing at St. Mary's, the only senior homeless shelter in the Bay Area, before it closed last week.Stephanie Penn

Good morning.

(Here’s the sign-up, if you don’t already get California Today by email.)

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OAKLAND — Anthony Deloney is homeless and 63 years old, a frightful combination in this pandemic. Yet this is how Mr. Deloney described his fate on a recent Thursday afternoon: “Every day the sun rises, there’s something for me to look forward to.” His hopefulness, it turned out, rested on a single lucky break that graced an otherwise hard-luck life.

Mr. Deloney had found refuge in the only homeless shelter in the Bay Area dedicated to serving seniors.

There are some 28,000 homeless residents in this region. Thousands are senior citizens. Out of that population, just 11 homeless seniors — Mr. Deloney among them — found themselves quarantined inside St. Mary’s Center in downtown Oakland. They were watched and worried over by a vigilant, exhausted staff of mostly volunteers who worked around the clock in masks and gloves serving meals, delivering medicine, changing sheets, cleaning toilets, sanitizing surfaces and doing their utmost to make sure no one from the infected world beyond the center’s steel gates set foot inside.

[Read about an outbreak at San Francisco’s largest homeless shelter.]

“The good Lord takes care of the blind and crippled as well as the seniors,” Mr. Deloney said as he gave an impromptu tour of the center’s garden of blossoming trees and flowers.

“We don’t think about the virus in here,” he said.

But, in fact, the virus was about all Sharon Cornu could think about. As the executive director of St. Mary’s, Ms. Cornu was all too aware of how the novel coronavirus is ravaging places where the elderly live in close quarters. Only weeks ago, men in hazmat suits were carrying bodies out of a nursing home in nearby Hayward, where scores of residents were infected.

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“None of our procedures anticipated this scale of a global pandemic,” Ms. Cornu said.

The full weight and meaning of this realization first coalesced within Ms. Cornu in mid-March when the order came for the entire Bay Area to shelter in place. At the time, she had 30 homeless seniors in her care at St. Mary’s. They slept in cots a few feet from one another, and there wasn’t near enough space to enforce proper social distancing.

[Track every confirmed coronavirus case in California by county.]

So Ms. Cornu and her staff scrambled to move guests out of St. Mary’s and into every nearby single-room apartment they could find. They sought to reunify others with relatives. Although they could arrange spots for only 19 people, their efforts created enough room to position cots at a safe distance for the remaining 11. Ms. Cornu also had much of her staff work from home, leaving only a skeleton crew of people like Janny Castillo, who found herself choking back tears when they discussed how to protect those who remained. Once homeless herself, Ms. Castillo was terrified of carrying the disease into St. Mary’s.

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Mary Hanna waiting for a shelter bed outside St. Vincent de Paul of Alameda County in Oakland earlier this month.Stephanie Penn

Researchers estimate homeless seniors will be up to three times as likely to die if infected by Covid-19. This is because homeless seniors have higher rates of chronic illnesses, and their bodies seem to age faster on the street. (Many develop frailties commonly seen in people 20 years older.) “It’s a crisis upon a crisis upon a crisis,” said Margot Kushel, director of the Center for Vulnerable Populations at the University of California, San Francisco.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has responded by securing 15,000 hotel rooms around the state for the homeless, with preference given to the elderly, those with symptoms and those who test positive. But according to the latest state figures, most of the rooms remain unused, which leaves thousands of homeless seniors either in the street or in shelters that offer none of St. Mary’s special protections.

Not far from St. Mary’s is St. Vincent de Paul of Alameda County, an 80-bed shelter for the general population. On a rainy afternoon, a line formed under the building’s awning, where Mary Hanna, 79, sat knitting on a milk crate. Ms. Hanna, a former English professor, always gets a bed at St. Vincent’s — she volunteers two hours a day to secure first pick. But the sleeping area, she said, is crowded. “I hear coughing all night, and that worries me,” she said.

Back at St. Mary’s, Mr. Deloney was taking advantage of the relative safety and comfort, even using the shelter’s computers to take courses in automotive technology.

But for the small staff of St. Mary’s, the stress of protecting and caring for 11 people week after week was becoming unbearable and unsustainable. They began searching for “transitional housing’’ where they could place their remaining clients, Mr. Deloney included. They began exploring how they could support their clients by delivering meals and medicine to their temporary homes.

“Like other shelter providers, as we learned of the challenges faced by hospitals and nursing homes in managing exposure to Covid-19, we determined that we were not equipped to continue providing a healthy environment and needed to move shelter residents to individual rooms,” Ms. Cornu wrote in an email.

By April 7, the Bay Area’s last refuge for homeless seniors sat empty, one more victim of Covid-19.

Do you have a connection to a California nursing home? Across the nation, nursing homes and long-term care facilities for the elderly have been hit hard by the coronavirus crisis. We want to hear from nursing home and long-term care workers, residents and family members throughout the state about what they are seeing in their facilities. Please fill out this form.

California Today goes live at 6:30 a.m. Pacific time weekdays. Tell us what you want to see: CAtoday@nytimes.com. Were you forwarded this email? Sign up for California Today here and read every edition online here.

Jill Cowan grew up in Orange County, graduated from U.C. Berkeley and has reported all over the state, including the Bay Area, Bakersfield and Los Angeles — but she always wants to see more. Follow along here or on Twitter.

California Today is edited by Julie Bloom, who grew up in Los Angeles and graduated from U.C. Berkeley.

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