Sunday, April 19, 2020
US governors feel heat to reopen from protesters, president

Members
of the Boogaloo Movement, attend a demonstration against the lockdown
over concern about COVID-19 at the State House, Saturday, April 18,
2020, in Concord, N.H. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)
AUSTIN,
Texas (AP) — Stores in Texas can soon begin selling merchandise with
curbside service, and hospitals can resume nonessential surgeries. In
Florida, people are returning to a few beaches and parks. And protesters
are clamoring for more.
Governors
eager to rescue their economies and feeling heat from President Donald
Trump are moving to ease restrictions meant to control the spread of the
coronavirus, even as new hot spots emerge and experts warn that moving
too fast could prove disastrous.
Adding
to the pressure are protests against stay-at-home orders organized by
small-government groups and Trump supporters. They staged demonstrations
Saturday in several cities after the president urged them to “liberate”
three states led by Democratic governors.
Protests
happened in Republican-led states, too, including at the Texas Capitol
and in front of the Indiana governor’s home. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott
already said that restrictions will begin easing next week. Indiana Gov.
Eric Holcomb — who signed an agreement with six other Midwestern states
to coordinate reopening — said he would extend his stay-at-home order
until May 1.
For
the first time in weeks, people were able to visit some Florida
beaches, but they were still subject to restrictions on hours and
activities. Beaches in big cities stayed closed.
Meanwhile, infections kept surging in the Northeast.
Rhode
Island, between the hot spots of Massachusetts and New York, has seen a
steady daily increase in infections and deaths, with nursing home
residents accounting for more than 90 of the state’s 118 deaths. The
state’s death rate of around 10 people per 100,000 is among the nation’s
highest per capita, according to data compiled by the COVID Tracking
Project.
Massachusetts
had its highest number of deaths in a single day on Friday, with 159.
Republican Gov. Charlie Baker, citing health experts’ advice, said
states should wait until infection rates and hospitalizations decline
for about two weeks before acting.
Trump,
whose administration waited months to bolster stockpiles of key medical
supplies and equipment, appeared to back protesters.
“LIBERATE
MINNESOTA!” “LIBERATE MICHIGAN!” “LIBERATE VIRGINIA, ” Trump said in a
tweet-storm in which he also lashed out at New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a
Democrat, for criticizing the federal response. Cuomo “should spend
more time ‘doing’ and less time ‘complaining,’” the president said.
At
his Saturday briefing with reporters, Cuomo cited more progress. The
state’s daily increase in deaths fell below 550 for the first time in
more than two weeks as hospitalizations continued to decline.
But
the crisis is far from over: Hospitals are still reporting nearly 2,000
new COVID-19 patients per day, and nursing homes remain a “feeding
frenzy for this virus,” he said.
“We are not at a point when we are going to be reopening anything immediately,” Cuomo said.
Several
hundred people rallied in Texas’ capital, chanting “Let us work!” Many
clamored for an immediate lifting of restrictions in a state where more
than 1 million have filed for unemployment since the crisis began.
The
rally was organized by a host of Infowars, owned by conspiracy theorist
Alex Jones, who joined protesters on the Capitol steps. Jones is being
sued in Austin over using his show to promote falsehoods that the 2012
Sandy Hook school massacre in Connecticut was a hoax.
In
Indianapolis, more than 200 people stood close together outside the
governor’s mansion, carrying American flags and signs demanding that
Gov. Holcomb lift restrictions. Indiana’s state health department
reported 529 new cases between April 7 and midday Friday, raising the
total to more than 10,600. The number of deaths rose by 26, to 545.
Elsewhere,
a few hundred demonstrators waved signs outside the Statehouse in New
Hampshire, which has had nearly 1,300 cases of the virus and more than
three dozen deaths.
“Even
if the virus were 10 times as dangerous as it is, I still wouldn’t stay
inside my home. I’d rather take the risk and be a free person,” said
one of the protesters, talk show host Ian Freeman.
Trump is pushing to relax the U.S. lockdown by May 1, a plan that hinges partly on more testing.
Public
health officials said the ability to test enough people and trace
contacts of the infected is crucial before easing restrictions, and that
infections could surge anew unless people continue to take precautions.
Vice
President Mike Pence delivered a commencement address at the U.S. Air
Force Academy in Colorado, a trip aimed at showing the country is on
course to gradually reopen.
Major
cities in Brazil also saw protests Saturday by hundreds of people
denouncing pandemic lockdown measures also opposed by President Jair
Bolsonaro, a fierce critic of stay-at-home measures imposed by state
governments.
In Asia, some nations that until recently appeared to have the outbreak under control reported fresh flareups.
Singapore
reported a sharp, one-day spike of 942 infections, the highest in
Southeast Asia, mostly among foreign workers staying in crowded
dormitories. That brought the total to almost 6,000 in the city-state of
6 million.
Total
cases topped 10,000 in Japan, where Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has said
he’s concerned that people are not observing social distancing and
announced a 100,000-yen ($930) cash handout to each resident as an
incentive to stay home.
There
have been tentative signs that measures to curb the outbreak are
working, with the rate of new infections slowing across Europe.
France
and Spain started dismantling some field hospitals, while the number of
active cases in Germany has slowly declined over the past week as
people recover.
France’s
national health agency said Saturday that the number of virus patients
in intensive care dropped for the 10th straight day, and overall virus
hospitalizations have fallen for three consecutive days. The country has
seen almost 20,000 virus deaths.
The
agency urged the French public to stick to strict confinement measures,
which have been extended until at least May 11: “Don’t relax our
efforts at the moment when confinement is bearing fruit.”
Spanish
Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said his government will seek to extend
the state of emergency to May 9 but begin easing the total confinement
of children beginning April 27.
Children
are thought to be a major source of transmission even if they rarely
fall ill from the virus. They’ve been confined to their homes for five
weeks, prompting parents to ask that they be allowed to at least take a
daily walk.
Sánchez
announced in a televised news conference late Saturday that kids would
be able “to get out of their houses for a period on a daily basis,” but
the specifics needed to be ironed out with experts.
The
national lockdown would be rolled back only when Spain’s embattled
health system is ready for a possible rebound of infections, he said.
The
virus is believed to have infected more than 2.3 million people
worldwide. While most recover, the outbreak has killed at least 155,000
people, according to a Johns Hopkins University tally based on figures
supplied by health authorities around the globe.
The
number almost certainly underestimates the actual toll. Nearly
everywhere, thousands have died with COVID-19 symptoms — many in nursing
homes — without being tested for the virus, and have thus gone
uncounted.
___
Jordans reported from Berlin. Associated Press journalists from around the world contributed to this report.
‘Republican AOC’ Laura Loomer gains steam in Florida congressional run
A Florida hurricane may be about to hit Washington, D.C.
Laura Loomer, a 26-year-old conservative provocateur running for Congress in the Sunshine State, is gaining strength with activists and donors buzzing about the possibility she is the conservative answer to New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
“She’s the Republicans' AOC,” longtime GOP strategist Roger Stone gushed to The Post. “She’s young. She’s energetic. She’s feisty. She’s anti-establishment, and she has an enormous national following, as does AOC, which can help finance a congressional race.”
Like the Queens/Bronx congresswoman, few took Loomer seriously when she declared her candidacy in the heavily-blue 21st district back in August 2019. Long considered a fringe GOP voice, with stints at James O’Keefe’s Project Veritas and the Canadian far-right Rebel Media, she is most well known for her strident criticism of Islam, which has resulted in bans from Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Medium, Paypal, Venmo, GoFundMe, Lyft, Uber, Uber Eats and MGM Resorts.
But she is raising serious money. Loomer’s campaign collected $204,786 in the first quarter of 2020, according to April filings with the Federal Election Commission, bringing her total haul to nearly $600,000 — significantly more than her eight GOP primary rivals combined.
Among her more than 9,000 individual donors are some big names: Home Depot billionaire Bernard Marcus ($2,800) and Eric Javits, a former US ambassador ($1,000).
Karen Giorno, a 30-year veteran of GOP politics who served as Donald Trump’s 2016 Florida state director, is running Loomer’s campaign. The district is home to the president’s Mar-a-Lago club and now his official residence.
Critics have frequently labeled Loomer’s commentary as racist and Islamophobic. After news emerged that Sayfullo Saipov, the suspect in a terrorist attack in New York City which killed eight people, was an Uber Driver, Loomer called for the creation of ride-share app that would not employ Muslims. She told The Post the remark was intended to “raise awareness” about vetting drivers and that she was “not sorry” about it.
New Yorkers may remember her better for such colorful stunts as disrupting a Trump-mocking rendition of Julius Caesar at Shakespeare in the Park, chaining herself to Twitter’s New York headquarters, protesting a women’s march in Foley Square, and placing a burqa on the fearless girl statue on Wall Street.
Loomer said her social-media gag order was partly what inspired her run.
“They silenced me and violated my civil rights,” Loomer told The Post. “I started thinking to myself, that what happened to me will happen to everyday Americans who don’t have my soap box.”
In addition to taking on big tech, Loomer has marketed herself as strongly pro-Israel, tough on terrorism, pro-gun and an unswerving supporter of President Trump.
If elected, Loomer said she planned to take on AOC and her Squad mates — several of whom she casually refers to as “Jihadis.”
“I am a one-woman squad,” she said. “Republicans need more firepower. They need people who aren’t going to cower in fear of these women.”
Campaign manager Giorno said, “The experience I had on the campaign with Donald Trump is really one of the reasons why I took a look at Laura Loomer. She reminded me a little bit of Donald Trump. She is very frenetic, in a good way, constant energy, high expectations of herself and others … she impressed me and I don’t get impressed very easily.”
Team Loomer said they expect to blow out the crowded GOP field in the Aug. 18 primary before heading into a final matchup with the Democratic incumbent — Lois Frankel, a former West Palm Beach mayor elected to Congress in 2013. In 2016, she prevailed over Republican Paul Spain with 62.7% of the vote, even as Donald Trump went on to win the state by more than 100,000 votes.
Stone said Frankel is a weaker incumbent than Queens Rep. Joe Crowley, who AOC famously knocked off in a huge upset.
Laura Loomer, a 26-year-old conservative provocateur running for Congress in the Sunshine State, is gaining strength with activists and donors buzzing about the possibility she is the conservative answer to New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
“She’s the Republicans' AOC,” longtime GOP strategist Roger Stone gushed to The Post. “She’s young. She’s energetic. She’s feisty. She’s anti-establishment, and she has an enormous national following, as does AOC, which can help finance a congressional race.”
Like the Queens/Bronx congresswoman, few took Loomer seriously when she declared her candidacy in the heavily-blue 21st district back in August 2019. Long considered a fringe GOP voice, with stints at James O’Keefe’s Project Veritas and the Canadian far-right Rebel Media, she is most well known for her strident criticism of Islam, which has resulted in bans from Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Medium, Paypal, Venmo, GoFundMe, Lyft, Uber, Uber Eats and MGM Resorts.
But she is raising serious money. Loomer’s campaign collected $204,786 in the first quarter of 2020, according to April filings with the Federal Election Commission, bringing her total haul to nearly $600,000 — significantly more than her eight GOP primary rivals combined.
Among her more than 9,000 individual donors are some big names: Home Depot billionaire Bernard Marcus ($2,800) and Eric Javits, a former US ambassador ($1,000).
Karen Giorno, a 30-year veteran of GOP politics who served as Donald Trump’s 2016 Florida state director, is running Loomer’s campaign. The district is home to the president’s Mar-a-Lago club and now his official residence.
Critics have frequently labeled Loomer’s commentary as racist and Islamophobic. After news emerged that Sayfullo Saipov, the suspect in a terrorist attack in New York City which killed eight people, was an Uber Driver, Loomer called for the creation of ride-share app that would not employ Muslims. She told The Post the remark was intended to “raise awareness” about vetting drivers and that she was “not sorry” about it.
New Yorkers may remember her better for such colorful stunts as disrupting a Trump-mocking rendition of Julius Caesar at Shakespeare in the Park, chaining herself to Twitter’s New York headquarters, protesting a women’s march in Foley Square, and placing a burqa on the fearless girl statue on Wall Street.
Loomer said her social-media gag order was partly what inspired her run.
“They silenced me and violated my civil rights,” Loomer told The Post. “I started thinking to myself, that what happened to me will happen to everyday Americans who don’t have my soap box.”
In addition to taking on big tech, Loomer has marketed herself as strongly pro-Israel, tough on terrorism, pro-gun and an unswerving supporter of President Trump.
If elected, Loomer said she planned to take on AOC and her Squad mates — several of whom she casually refers to as “Jihadis.”
“I am a one-woman squad,” she said. “Republicans need more firepower. They need people who aren’t going to cower in fear of these women.”
Campaign manager Giorno said, “The experience I had on the campaign with Donald Trump is really one of the reasons why I took a look at Laura Loomer. She reminded me a little bit of Donald Trump. She is very frenetic, in a good way, constant energy, high expectations of herself and others … she impressed me and I don’t get impressed very easily.”
Team Loomer said they expect to blow out the crowded GOP field in the Aug. 18 primary before heading into a final matchup with the Democratic incumbent — Lois Frankel, a former West Palm Beach mayor elected to Congress in 2013. In 2016, she prevailed over Republican Paul Spain with 62.7% of the vote, even as Donald Trump went on to win the state by more than 100,000 votes.
Stone said Frankel is a weaker incumbent than Queens Rep. Joe Crowley, who AOC famously knocked off in a huge upset.
California mayor who compared Trump backers to KKK dies in plane crash: report
A California mayor who recently said he would resign over social media posts comparing Trump supporters to members of the Ku Klux Klan was killed in a plane crash Saturday, according to a report.
Auburn Mayor Bill Kirby was identified as the person killed when a small plane went down near Auburn Airport just after 11 a.m. local time, FOX 40 Sacramento reported.
The other person on the plane apparently survived but there was no immediate information about that person’s identity or medical condition.
Kirby, who was also a physician, took heat from Auburn residents earlier this week during a city council meeting that was conducted by video because of the coronavirus outbreak.
In one of the posts, the mayor allegedly shared a photo of a Ku Klux Klan hood, with the caption, “Good news for Trump supporters is that most of them already have masks,” FOX 40 reported. The post was later taken down.
Kirby told residents he blamed President Trump for a lack of proper gear and testing capabilities in his work as a physician.
“This president has put us all at risk,” Kirby said.
During the city council meeting, officials and the public heard a string of voicemails that the council had received from residents infuriated by Kirby’s online posts.
“These comments are hateful, degrading, bigoted and more consistent with the mentality of a 15-year-old,” one voicemail said, according to FOX 40.
The mayor appeared remorseful at the meeting when he talked about the posts.
“I spent 40 years dedicating my life to serving the community of Auburn as a physician and through my volunteer efforts. Am I perfect? No. We’re all a little flawed,” Kirby said.
Kirby said he planned to step down as mayor at the next council meeting on April 27.
The plane crash is being investigated by the National Transportation Safety Board and the Federal Aviation Administration, California state fire officials told the station.
Auburn is a city of about 13,000 residents located about 33 miles northeast of Sacramento.
Fox News’ Jack Durschlag contributed to this story.
Auburn Mayor Bill Kirby was identified as the person killed when a small plane went down near Auburn Airport just after 11 a.m. local time, FOX 40 Sacramento reported.
The other person on the plane apparently survived but there was no immediate information about that person’s identity or medical condition.
Kirby, who was also a physician, took heat from Auburn residents earlier this week during a city council meeting that was conducted by video because of the coronavirus outbreak.
In one of the posts, the mayor allegedly shared a photo of a Ku Klux Klan hood, with the caption, “Good news for Trump supporters is that most of them already have masks,” FOX 40 reported. The post was later taken down.
Kirby told residents he blamed President Trump for a lack of proper gear and testing capabilities in his work as a physician.
“This president has put us all at risk,” Kirby said.
During the city council meeting, officials and the public heard a string of voicemails that the council had received from residents infuriated by Kirby’s online posts.
“These comments are hateful, degrading, bigoted and more consistent with the mentality of a 15-year-old,” one voicemail said, according to FOX 40.
The mayor appeared remorseful at the meeting when he talked about the posts.
“I spent 40 years dedicating my life to serving the community of Auburn as a physician and through my volunteer efforts. Am I perfect? No. We’re all a little flawed,” Kirby said.
Kirby said he planned to step down as mayor at the next council meeting on April 27.
The plane crash is being investigated by the National Transportation Safety Board and the Federal Aviation Administration, California state fire officials told the station.
Auburn is a city of about 13,000 residents located about 33 miles northeast of Sacramento.
Fox News’ Jack Durschlag contributed to this story.
Sen. Graham blasts Pelosi: 'She hates Trump to the point of hurting our own nation'
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's criticism of President Trump over his halting of funding to the World Health Organization goes beyond just a personal attack, U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said Saturday night.
"So her issue is she hates Trump to the point of hurting our own nation," Graham said on Fox News' "Justice with Judge Jeanine."
"She hates Trump to the point of hurting our own nation.""She is condemning President Trump for cutting funds off of the WHO because they've been in China's pocket, as she at one time mentioned, the fact the virus came out of China, that the Chinese Communist Party lied to the American people and the world at large."
— U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.
Pelosi blasted Trump’s decision to freeze funding for the WHO, vowing Wednesday to “swiftly” challenge the action amid the coronavirus crisis. In a statement, Pelosi, D-Calif., said the halt in funding amid the global pandemic was “senseless.”
Graham defended President Trump and his Chinese travel ban for protecting Americans.
"President Trump has done a damn good job protecting this country," Graham said. "He closed down travel to China when nobody in the world suggested we should. On March 13th, he declared a national emergency, put CDC guidelines into place that I think have saved a million Americans.
"You may not agree with me, but I believe if we'd done nothing, if President Trump had not acted March 13th, there'd be a million-plus dead Americans."
"President Trump has done a damn good job protecting this country. He closed down travel to China when nobody in the world suggested we should."The senator also commented on China's role in the global pandemic, saying the Communist country needs to atone for its role.
— U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.
"Gross negligence and willful deception by the Chinese government has led to 22 million Americans being unemployed and 38,000 Americans dead," Graham said. "And China needs to pay."
Fox News' Brooke Singman contributed to this report.
Saturday, April 18, 2020
Marines race down NYC pier carrying oxygen tanks to help save patients outside USNS Comfort
Facing an unexpected surge in ambulance arrivals at the USNS Comfort hospital ship docked in New York City -- some running dangerously low on oxygen -- Marines on security detail ran hundreds of yards down the pier carrying fresh tanks, the Navy said this week.
On a busy day, the Comfort receives about one ambulance every half hour. But last Tuesday, due to an emergency evacuation of a nearby hospital, 10 ambulances raced toward Pier 90 in Lower Manhattan at the same time, according to a Navy news release.
The government sent the Comfort to New York at the end of March to help bolster local hospitals and offer relief amid the coronavirus outbreak that has pushed health care systems to the brink.
Coordinating traffic and security screening with the NYPD at the entrance to the pier were U.S. Marine Sgt. Austin Loppe and his security team, according to the release.
They encountered a patient in one of the ambulances in deteriorating condition and whose oxygen tank was dangerously low.
“Even just going a couple minutes without oxygen, the human brain starts losing function and having permanent brain damage,” Loppe said. “So that wasn’t something that myself or any of my Marines were willing to let happen to an American citizen.”
The Marines halted the other ambulances and rushed the critical patient’s arrival, getting the ambulance to the front of the line for emergency care, according to authorities.
Then another patient arrived low on oxygen, and as the Marines began prioritizing the order in which the patients could board the vessel, they decided that they should bring oxygen tanks down to their end of the gigantic pier.
So they went to get them, running hundreds of yards to pick them up -- and then bring them back to the patients.

“They sprinted down the NYC pier to deliver oxygen -- saving a patient's life. The Marines taking part in the USNS Comfort security team are based in Camp Lejeune, N.C., according to authorities. They had been training for an overseas deployment before they were sent to New York.
Alan Reyes, a rear admiral in the Navy Reserve and the chief operating officer of the USO, told Fox News earlier this week that he had deployed aboard the USNS Comfort a decade ago in response to a devastating earthquake in Haiti.
“Watching the Comfort pull into New York Harbor was a really poignant moment for me,” he said, noting that the Navy’s massive hospital ships are a sign of hope and relief.
“There’s heroes out there, and we're just really blessed that they’re doing what they’re doing, and we have to do what we can to support them,” he added.
California protest erupts over state’s coronavirus stay-at-home rules
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| Protestors demonstrate against stay-at-home orders that were put in place due to the COVID-19 outbreak, Friday, April 17, 2020, in Huntington Beach, Calif. (Associated Press) |
A protest of more than 200 demonstrators broke out in Southern California on Friday against the state’s stay-at-home-orders in reaction to the coronavirus outbreak, according to reports.
The action in Huntington Beach, south of Los Angeles, was similar to others staged this week in Michigan, Ohio and other locations as Americans seek a return to a more normal life after more than a month of mitigation measures intended to slow the spread of the virus, also known as COVID-19.
As in the other locations, demonstrators in Huntington Beach alleged that state-government-imposed restrictions, intended as safeguards, were becoming an infringement on their personal freedoms.
Placards held by protesters Friday held messages such as “Defy Fascist Lockdown,” “Stop the Tyranny, Open California,” and “We Deem Our Governor Non Essential.”
“I don’t think there’s any reason for us to be on lockdown now. We didn’t have any dangers. We have no danger in our hospitals now of overflowing.”Earlier in the week, three Southern California churches filed a lawsuit against Gov. Gavin Newsom, accusing the Democrat of “criminalizing church attendance” with orders limiting social gatherings.
— Paula Doyle, 62, Costa Mesa resident
Newsom, 52, a former mayor of San Francisco who became governor in January 2019, issued his stay-at-home order March 19, becoming one of the first governors to do so. The move has been credited with helping the nation’s most populous state keep its infection and fatality numbers relatively low considering its population of some 39.5 million people.
He said Tuesday he foresees a loosening of the state’s stay-at-home orders but did not provide a specific date.

The governor said at a news conference that the public’s adherence to his orders had “bent the curve” on the number of infections in the state, suggesting the limits could end in the near future.
“The models have changed because of your behavior,” Newsom said. “This will not be a permanent state.”
But protesters in Huntington Beach – and oceanfront city of about 200,000 residents – expressed frustration with the governor’s limits during Friday’s demonstration.
“It’s not dangerous out here. It’s not,” Benny White, 33, of Compton, told the L.A. Times. “I’ve seen plenty of people out here. The beaches are open. It’s a nice, beautiful day. What are we doing? Stop being a germophobe.”

The protest was organized largely via social media and began around 1 p.m. local time, the Orange County Register reported. Police asked the crowd to break up around 3:30 p.m., the report said.
As of late Friday, California had more than 29,000 confirmed cases of coronavirus and had recorded just over 1,000 deaths.
Fox News’ Danielle Wallace and Andrew O’Reilly contributed to this story.
Crenshaw, Maher clash over Trump: Is goal to make president 'look bad' or 'get to the truth'?
Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, had a fierce debate with "Real Time" host Bill Maher on Friday over President Trump's handling of the coronavirus outbreak -- one that examined the president's "style" of communicating versus the substance of his policies.
During the discussion, Crenshaw said some fundamental questions need to be asked whenever anyone criticizes the president.
"When people make these accusations," Crenshaw said, "I have to ask them: Is the goal to make Trump look bad or is the goal to get to the truth? Because there are two separate sets of answers for that."
"Is the goal to make Trump look bad or is the goal to get to the truth? Because there are two separate sets of answers for that."Maher began by pressing Crenshaw, who served as a Navy SEAL, to defend his support for Trump, a president who Maher said has "pass-the-buck, lie, finger-point, and shirk-responsibility" tendencies.
— U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas
Crenshaw responded by expressing his support for the country and acknowledging that, "the president's success is certainly tied to the success of the country."
The congressman added that he and other GOP lawmakers are frequently asked by the media to defend their support of the president.
"Republicans always get asked this question and this demand where we have to answer, 'What do we feel about him? Don't you want to comment about his latest tweet and the way he lashed out? And no, I don't," Crenshaw said. "I can't defend everything. He doesn't have the same style as I do. I don't consider him to be my spiritual guide by any means."
The "Real Time" host then grilled Crenshaw on Trump's actions instead of his "style," pointing to reports that the president "was warned" by various aides about the severity of the coronavirus outbreak weeks before it became a global crisis. Crenshaw pushed back, pointing to Trump's travel ban on China.
Maher then challenged Crenshaw on the travel ban, accusing Trump of "lying" about it since people "are still coming in" from China and said Trump's order affected only "foreign nationals."
"The reality is about 40,000 people came in after that," Crenshaw said. "These were U.S. citizens and green-card holders and passport holders being repatriated. U.S. citizens. So you have to make the argument then that we shouldn't allow them in.
"It sounds to me that you're fully agreeing with President Trump on this one and everybody else disagreed with him," he told Maher. "And if you're saying that the travel restriction should have been more extreme, then fine. You clearly had the foresight back then but nobody else did."
"If you're saying that the travel restriction should have been more extreme, then fine. You clearly had the foresight back then but nobody else did."Crenshaw then knocked former Vice President Joe Biden, who disapproved of Trump's travel ban at the time, as well as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., for posing legislation to stop it. He also pushed back at Maher's "timeline" critical of the president's alleged inaction, citing a House vote Pelosi oversaw for banning flavored tobacco instead of prioritizing the growing pandemic.
— U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas
"Your criticism appears to be based on one thing -- that Trump was overly optimistic," Crenshaw said. "That's his style. You can criticize it, that's fine, but it's not connected to the actions that were actually taken."
The GOP lawmaker also asked Maher whether the American people "would have accepted" a lockdown of the country sooner -- when there were "only 102 cases" of coronavirus in the U.S. on March 3.
"I provide all of that context as we try to basically accuse this man of ... he's being accused of having blood on his hands," Crenshaw said. "And context is so important here. If we're going to criticize somebody's actions, we have to do it with the facts they knew at the time. So I'm just trying to be fair here. I don't really care about defending him or his actions. I just care about letting people know the truth. And when people make these accusations, I have to ask them: Is the goal to make Trump look bad or is the goal to get to the truth? Because there are two separate sets of answers for that."
Trump ‘fomenting domestic rebellion,’ Dem governor Inslee says
A series of Twitter messages posted by President Trump showed the president is “fomenting domestic rebellion,” a Democrat governor alleged Friday.
Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee leveled the charge in a statement that also accused the president of encouraging “illegal and dangerous acts,” Q13 FOX of Seattle reported.
Inslee’s accusations came on the same day that others -- such as New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and U.S. Sen. Angus King of Maine -- raised the temperature of their rhetoric against the president and his administration as much of the nation remained under stay-at-home orders resulting from the coronavirus outbreak.
The attacks also came one day after the president unveiled guidelines titled "Opening Up America Again," a series of steps for reopening and reviving the U.S. economy.
Whether the Democrats' attacks were spontaneous or part of the party’s election-year strategy, as it looks to deny Trump a second term, was not immediately clear.
Earlier in the day, the president posted a series of messages saying, “LIBERATE MINNESOTA!,” “LIBERATE MICHIGAN!,” and ‘LIBERATE VIRGINIA,” in a show of support for citizens of those states who have been protesting stay-at-home orders or, in the case of Virginia, recent gun control measures enacted by state Democrats. (Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz announced some easing of that state's rules Friday, the same day protesters gathered outside his home.)
Inslee derided the president’s tweets as “unhinged rantings.”
“His unhinged rantings and calls for people to ‘liberate’ states could also lead to violence,” Inslee’s statement said, according to Q13 FOX. “We’ve seen it before. The president is fomenting domestic rebellion and spreading lies even while his own administration says the virus is real and is deadly.”

Inslee, 69, is a former congressman who has been Washington’s governor since 2013. In recent weeks he has won praise – including from President Trump and members of the president’s Coronavirus Task Force – for his efforts to stem the spread of the virus after Washington initially led the nation in both infections and deaths.
As of late Friday, Washington was no longer in the top 10 states in either infections or deaths.
Earlier in the week, Inslee joined an alliance with California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, also Democrats, to jointly decide when to reopen their states’ economies.
His Friday offensive against President Trump came the same day as at least two other no-holds-barred rhetorical attacks against the president or his administration.
In New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo launched a lengthy tirade against the president in a news conference, demanding more federal dollars for his state, which leads the nation in both coronavirus infections and fatalities.
"First of all, if he's sitting home watching TV, maybe he should get up and go to work, right?" Cuomo said at one point, referring to the president.
“Don’t ask the states to do this without the funding,” Cuomo added later, asserting that the president's placing of the onus on the states without the funding necessary to have a successful reopening was “the opposite of the buck stops here.”
He added: “Don’t pass the buck without passing the bucks.”
Cuomo’s rant drew a response from the president.
"Governor Cuomo should spend more time 'doing' and less time 'complaining'. Get out there and get the job done. Stop talking!" Trump tweeted Friday.
Also Friday, U.S. Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, accused the Trump administration of “dereliction of duty” during a conference call about coronavirus between a group of Senate Democrats and Vice President Mike Pence, Politico reported.
“I have never been so mad about a phone call in my life,” King reportedly said.
Democrats were frustrated by what they viewed as inadequate answers from Pence and members of the Coronavirus Task Force regarding COVID-19 testing and other topics, the report said.
On Friday, Pence told reporters that states "have enough tests to implement the criteria of phase 1" of the White House plan to reopen the economy "if they choose to do so."
Fox News’ Brooke Singman and Marisa Schultz contributed to this story.
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