Medics’ plea: We are all fed up but please stay firm on Covid rules

Ten people die with COVID-19 in the last 24 hours
 
 
     
   
     
  Nov 4, 2020  
     
 

Dear reader

Northern Ireland's churches have remained open despite the fresh round of coronavirus restrictions in the Province, however a church in Ballymoney has now had to close because of an outbreak. 

Hebron Free Presbyterian is believed to be the first church in Northern Ireland to be affected by multiple cases of Covid-19.

Church minister Reverend David Park said the decision was taken to close the building after the outbreak was detected and added that it has now undergone a deep clean. 

News Letter political editor Sam McBride also claimed on his Twitter account that Hillsborough and Moneyslane Free Presbyterian churches have closed because of small Covid-19 outbreaks. 

The news came as the Department of Health here confirmed another 10 deaths in the Province related to coronavirus. 

Another 679 positive Covid-19 cases were also recorded in the last 24 hours, with the department also revealing that 418 patients with Covid are being treated in our hospitals. Fifty of these patients are fighting for their lives in ICU. 

Positive news is in short supply in relation to the pandemic, but reports on Wednesday did claim that GPs are preparing for a December rollout of a Covid-19 vaccine. Healthcare staff and the over-85s could be first in line to get the vaccine. 

Alistair Bushe
Editor


Want total access to all of our online content? You can subscribe to our website, newsletter.co.uk for just £1 a month for 3 months - and it couldn't be easier.

Signing up will get you faster-loading articles, fewer adverts and access to exclusive content and events when we run them. To learn more, visit our Subscriptions page here.

 
     
  Ten people die with COVID-19 in the last 24 hours - 50 in ICU fighting for their lives  
     
  Another ten people have died within the last 24 hours with Coronavirus, the Department of Health has revealed.  
     
{$escapedtitle}
     
   
     
 
Article Image
Medics' plea: We are all fed up but please stay firm on Covid rules
 
The medical Royal Colleges have united to plead with the public to help the health service get through this difficult winter.
 
     
 
Article Image
'If you think Covid is a hoax or some conspiracy b******t, come spend a 12 hour night shift in ICU'
 
A Northern Ireland intensive care unit healthcare professional has sent a hard hitting message to anyone who thinks Covid-19 is a hoax or a conspiracy theory.
 
     
 
Article Image
'No engagement' with us on re-opening economy says business lobbyist
 
Several business have accused the First and Deputy First Ministers of failing to "engage" with them on plans to reopen the economy.
 
     
 
Article Image
Return to full lockdown needed in NI as health service creaks: Doctor
 
The Northern Ireland health service is now "hanging by a thread" with any recovery from the second wave of coronavirus still months away.
 
     
 
Article Image
Coronavirus: Pupils can do PE indoors with no cap on numbers says education minister
 
Stormont Education Minister Peter Weir says he has secured a legal change to allow schools more flexibility to deliver physical education.
 
     
 
Article Image
Coronavirus: A historic hit to NI weekly wages – but true extent of the turmoil is only hinted at
 
Within weeks of the coronavirus crisis gripping the Province, Northern Irish workers had already experienced the biggest dip in their weekly pay packets since the turn of the millennium.
 
     
     
     
   
     
     
     
   
 
 
   
 
You have received this email as you have an account on the News Letter, published by JPIMedia Publishing Ltd. To manage your individual newsletter preferences with us, please click here and log in to your account.
 
 
Alternatively you can update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive from JPIMedia Publishing Ltd, or unsubscribe from all future emails.

 
 
JPIMedia Publishing Ltd, a company registered in England and Wales with registered number 11499982, having its registered address at 1, King Street, London, England, EC2V 8AU, United Kingdom.

We will process your personal data in accordance with our privacy policy.
 

California Today: What We Know About the Election Results

Wednesday: Joe Biden definitely won California, as expected. Here’s what else happened on Election D
Voting at the Alameda County Courthouse, where an outdoor polling place was set up.Jim Wilson/The New York Times

If there’s one thing we can know for certain today, it’s that a lot of Californians — millions upon millions, more than the populations of many states — voted. (Also, that Joseph R. Biden Jr. won the state easily.)

Around 13.4 million ballots had already been cast, Paul Mitchell, vice president of the bipartisan data firm Political Data Inc., told me early on Tuesday evening, “and that’s not counting a lot of the ballots that are coming in right now.”

[Find results for all the California races.]

“Raw voter turnout is going to exceed anything the state’s ever seen,” he said.

Still, you might not have known that California was in the midst of a democratic deluge from the looks of voting centers on Election Day.

Mr. Mitchell said that according to projections, the final vote count could be between 16 and 17 million, with roughly two million likely to be in-person votes at the polls.

While there were reports of long lines in the Sacramento area and Riverside County, the mood at the polls seemed largely to range from serene to festive.

Voters across the state sought out memorable places to play their part in democracy, from Dodger Stadium to a famous leather bar in San Francisco — a marked contrast from the March primary, when hourslong waits frustrated voters, particularly in the state’s most populous county, Los Angeles.

In Oakland, voters cast their ballots al fresco with a nice view of Lake Merritt. Workers used tongs to take ballots from voters in their cars.

ADVERTISEMENT

“We get a lot of jokes, like, ‘Can I have a side of ribs with that?’” one election worker told my colleague Thomas Fuller.

At Crenshaw High School in South Los Angeles, where the Los Angeles Lakers had sponsored a voting center, my colleague Tim Arango reported that voters saw Tuesday as a day for hope.

[Here’s background about key races in California.]

I decided to head to Porter Ranch in the San Fernando Valley, where I visited voting centers at a charter elementary school tucked among winding blocks of ranch houses framed by golden hillsides, and at a large church hall near a sprawl of upscale strip malls.

ADVERTISEMENT

The day was quiet, and election workers at both sites said they’d seen a steady flow of voters dropping off or casting ballots over the course of several days. Some voters had taken advantage of the state’s same-day registration process.

The election workers said that they encountered virtually no issues with voters wearing masks or following other rules.

I thought I’d be able to catch voters with strong preferences for either of the candidates for state’s 25th Congressional District seat, the Democratic State Assembly member Christy Smith or the Republican incumbent Mike Garcia, who as of early Wednesday morning were still locked in a very close battle.

But voters I spoke with said they were most focused on the top of the ticket, in spite of the fact that Mr. Biden’s victory in California was essentially a foregone conclusion.

ADVERTISEMENT

They said they looked to trusted organizations — one voter I spoke to cited the California G.O.P. and another mentioned the progressive organization KNOCK.LA — for guidance on ballot propositions.

If they didn’t skip local races altogether, they said they followed party affiliation.

“I didn’t vote in 2016,” Parvin Moosavi, 56, told me, as she stood outside Castlebay Lane Charter Elementary School. “But I think everyone should exercise their vote to kick him out.”

She was referring to President Trump.

Ms. Moosavi said she’d supported Senator Bernie Sanders previously, and while she was disappointed that he wasn’t the Democratic candidate, she felt strongly that Mr. Biden could help restore the middle class and better control the pandemic.

A health care worker, Ms. Moosavi said she’s lived in the United States for decades after moving from Iran. But she has family in Europe and if the president were re-elected, she would move there.

Outside of a voting center at InChrist Community Church not far away, Irwin Lehrhoff, 91, told me that in 2016 he voted for the president in hopes of seeing “a businessman, not a politician,” in the White House. On Tuesday, though, he cast a vote for Mr. Biden.

“It was just too many lies on Covid,” he said. “You can’t have a president you can’t trust.”

On the rest of his ballot, Mr. Lehrhoff, a Porter Ranch resident, said he “pretty much followed the Republican Party.”

What to know about results

A voter wore a face mask as he cast his ballot at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood.Ringo H.W. Chiu/Associated Press

Votes are still being counted in California, and will be for days. But with roughly 73 percent of votes reported, some of the races have been called, according to The Times’s tracker.

As with other states, Mr. Mitchell said mailed votes tended to skew Democratic, whereas in-person voters were more likely to be Republican. But, as we’ve mentioned, many of the biggest debates the state faced don’t split along clear partisan lines.

Here’s where things stand:

  • Proposition 17, aimed at restoring voting rights to people on parole for felony convictions, passed.
  • Proposition 20, an effort to crack down on some types of misdemeanor crimes and roll back some sentencing reforms, failed.
  • Proposition 21, which would have expanded local governments’ ability to enact rent control, failed.
  • Proposition 22, the astronomically expensive effort by gig companies to exempt themselves from a new labor law that would require them to treat workers as employees, passed.
  • Proposition 23, an effort to require more oversight of dialysis clinics, failed.

The rest, including some key ballot questions and crucial House races, were still too close to call. We’ll have more soon on what the results mean.

In other election news:

  • President Trump brazenly and falsely claimed that he had won the election. But ballots are still being counted and tabulated. Here’s a guide to what we can safely say we know and an hour-by-hour guide to when. [The New York Times]
  • And what would happen if the election results were contested? The process for deciding the presidential race has never been straightforward, but this year it’s especially unlikely to be smooth. Here’s what to expect. [The New York Times]

And Finally …

Lily Benson

If you voted in California, you got an “I Voted” sticker. But, look, you might want another one. You probably want another one. My colleagues made some digital stickers you can download. So have another sticker.

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.

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for California Today from The New York Times.

To stop receiving these emails, unsubscribe or manage your email preferences.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitterinstagram

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018