White House press
secretary Kayleigh McEnany on Wednesday called out CNN’s Chris Cuomo
for taking a “less safe version" of hydroxychloroquine during his recent
bout with the coronavirus. "You had Chris Cuomo saying, ‘The
president knows that hydroxychloroquine is not supported by science. He
knows it has been flagged by his own people and he has been using it.’
Well, Cuomo mocked the president for this,” McEnany said. She
then compared hydroxychloroquine -- which President Trump recently said
he is taking to prevent catching the virus -- to the version that Cuomo
claims to be using. “Hydroxychloroquine, of course, is an
FDA-approved medication with a long-proven track record for safety," she
continued, "and it turns out that Chris Cuomo took a less safe version
of it called quinine which the FDA removed from the market in 2006
because of its serious side effects, including death. So, really
interesting to have that criticism of the president." Cuomo’s
wife, Christina Cuomo, recently addressed her husband's coronavirus
recovery, explaining he’s taking “potenized quinine,” which she called a
“natural antibiotic.” On Monday, President Trump told reporters
he has been using hydroxychloroquine as a prophylactic against the
coronavirus for a little more than a week. Trump has been
extolling the potential benefits of hydroxychloroquine since the
beginning of the crisis, but medical experts and health officials have
debated how effective the anti-malaria drug is for either preventing or
treating the coronavirus.
Together
with the Nevada GOP, Republican National Committee (RNC) chairwoman
Ronna McDaniel on Wednesday demanded the state investigate what she
called a "shady" and potentially illegal "backroom deal" by local
politicians that would alter voting procedures ahead of the state's all
mail-in June 9 primary.
In a letter
to Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford, McDaniel and the state party
charged that the Democratic-controlled Clark County Commission reached a
secretive agreement with state Democrats that could have violated the
state's open public meeting law. The RNC is specifically concerned that
"Democrat Party bosses are now forcing Nevada’s largest county to waste
over $300,000 of taxpayer money to mail ballots to all inactive voters." That break in normal protocol, Republicans warn, would greatly enhance the risk of fraud. The money would also effectively finance some "ballot harvesters," or operatives who can retrieve scores of ballots from individuals and turn them in. Some states, including Nevada, ordinarily prosecute ballot harvesters; others permit the practice to varying degrees. The
Clark County District Attorney’s Office, on behalf of the Clark County
Registrar of Voters, has filed a joinder that states: “At the direction
of local county officials, the Clark County Registrar of Voters is
setting up two additional election day voting sites and will mail absent
ballots to all registered voters, including inactive voters, at
additional expense.” The new rules came just 48 hours before a trial was set to begin in a lawsuit filed
by state Democrats against the Nevada secretary of state, which the RNC
was contesting as an intervening party. As part of the lawsuit,
Democrats demanded the suspension of provisions of Nevada law that enhance ballot verification. Marc
Elias, an ex-Hillary Clinton lawyer representing Nevada Democrats,
specifically called for Nevada to stop throwing out ballots when
signatures on voters' ballots appear different from those on voters'
registrations, saying "lay election officials have never had the
necessary expertise" to make an accurate determination. Elias also
demanded that Nevada "require mail-in ballots be sent to all registered
voters in Nevada, not just those in an active status." Elias said that
state election law doesn't distinguish between the two categories of
voters. Further, Elias pushed for the state to suspend prosecutions for
ballot harvesting, ostensibly for safety reasons during the pandemic.
Using
some detective work, the RNC assessed that Nevada Democrats have
already implemented some of those measures without disclosing them to
the public.
Voters masked against coronavirus line up at Riverside High School
for Wisconsin's primary election Tuesday April 7, 2020, in Milwaukee.
The new coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms for most people,
but for some, especially older adults and people with existing health
problems, it can cause more severe illness or death. (AP Photo/Morry
Gash)
"Some unspecified Clark County officials voluntarily
decided after the suit was filed on April 16—but before the joinder was
filed on May 4—to yield to part of the plaintiffs’ demands," the RNC
wrote to Ford. "Yet between those two dates, the only advertised County
Commission meeting where commissioners could have discussed those
decisions occurred on Tuesday, April 21, 2020. And the agenda for that meeting
provides no evidence that the commissioners addressed issues of
additional in-person voting places or mail-in ballots during it." "We
respectfully ask you to investigate under NRS 241.039 whether the Clark
County Commissioners violated Nevada’s open public meeting law when
they decided, behind closed doors, to capitulate to the plaintiffs’
demands," the RNC added. "The Clark County Commission took costly,
substantial action regarding the June primary without notifying,
broadcasting, or allowing citizens to provide their input. To be
complete, your investigation should examine not only which unidentified
county officials made the decision referred to in Clark County’s
joinder, but also when they made that decision, and whether they
consulted with outside groups before doing so." The RNC
continued:" No doubt the governmental defendants in that case—including
your office—exchanged emails throughout the weekend before Clark County
filed its May 4 joinder. Some of those emails very likely disclose at
least in part how Clark County’s decision unfolded. But whether focused
on those emails or not, time is of the essence; actions taken in
violation of the public meeting law are void, NRS 241.036, yet the
primary is scheduled for June 9." The furtive move to mail out more ballots was particularly troubling, the RNC said, citing a Fox News report that thousands of ballots have
been sent out by the Clark County Election Department to inactive
voters – those who have not voted in recent elections, a roster that can
include people who either have moved or are deceased – and the
envelopes are piling up in post office trays, outside apartment
complexes and on community bulletin boards in and around Las Vegas. HOW BALLOT HARVESTING HELPED DEMS ROUT GOP IN CALIFORNIA The
excess ballots have drawn complaints from local residents who worry
that anyone could pick up a ballot off the street and cast a fraudulent
vote, as well as from Republican Party officials in the state who see a
nefarious motive behind the vote-by-mail system being employed by the
Democrat-dominated Clark County Commission.
“What’s
going to happen with these things, they’re not secured at all and there
are thousands of them just sitting here,” Jenny Trobiani, a postal
worker in Clark County, told Fox News that she has seen hundreds
of ballots being mailed to inactive voters. “This just seems fraudulent
to me, something stinks here." Republicans have argued that many states fail to adequately clean up their voter rolls. Last year, California was forced to remove 1.5 million ineligible voters after a court settlement last year when California's rolls showed a registration of 112 percent. "The
Clark County commissioners’ decision to capitulate behind closed doors
is bad enough, but that harm is compounded by the significant monetary
costs of these secret changes," the RNC argued. "Ms. Lorena Portillo,
Assistant Registrar of Voters of Clark County, affirmed in an affidavit
that the cost for additional printers to be delivered and programed will
be $138,997.50; the cost for mailing the additional ballots will be
$184,738.01; and that '[b]ased on past experience, at least 90% of
those' additional ballots 'will come back as undeliverable.' In other
words, the additional costs Clark County taxpayers will incur based on
the direction that Mr. Gloria received from unnamed county officials
exceeds $300,000, with more than $166,000 to be spent on mailings that
even county officials expect will not reach their intended recipient." The
RNC has taken aggressive steps to combat what it sees as an increasing
risk of election fraud. Earlier this month, the RNC launched ProtecttheVote.com,
a digital platform that the GOP says is part of its all-hands-on-deck
effort to "protect against the Democrats' assault on our elections" as
progressives push for sweeping changes, including vote-by-mail and more
ballot harvesting, amid the coronavirus pandemic. The launch comes after the RNC and Trump campaign doubled their legal budget to $20 million after an initial commitment of
$10 million in February, saying they wanted to "fight frivolous
Democrat lawsuits and uphold the integrity of the elections process." “In
battleground states across the country, Democrats are using the
coronavirus as an excuse to push through their long-sought partisan
agenda, but we are fighting back to protect the vote," RNC Chairwoman
Ronna McDaniel said in a statement to Fox News. "The RNC will stop at
nothing to ensure the integrity of our elections is upheld in the face
of Democrats’ brazen assaults. Americans deserve to have confidence in
their elections, and we will not stand idly by while Democrats try to
sue their way to victory in November.”
That
was a message echoed by President Trump in a tweet last month: "GET RID
OF BALLOT HARVESTING, IT IS RAMPANT WITH FRAUD. THE USA MUST HAVE VOTER
I.D., THE ONLY WAY TO GET AN HONEST COUNT!"
A Republican state representative in Illinois was reportedly removed from a legislative session in Springfield Wednesday for refusing to wear a mask. The
Illinois House voted 82-27 to remove Rep. Darren Bailey for violating a
newly adopted rule requiring masks for members, staff and visitors to
help prevent the spread of the coronavirus, the Chicago Tribune reported. Democratic Rep. Emanuel “Chris” Welch made the motion for removal after Bailey refused to put on a mask when asked.
New Illinois Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, wearing a
mask because of the coronavirus at State Capitol May 20, 2020, in
Springfield. (Erin Hooley / Chicago Tribune / Pool)
Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker said Bailey showed a
“callous disregard for life, callous disregard for people’s health” in
his refusal. “You
just [ask] a doctor [to] tell you why people wear masks in the first
place. It’s to protect others. So clearly, the representative is not
interested in protecting others," he said. Illinois House Republican Leader Jim Durkin urged everyone to follow the new rule. “We
cannot ignore nor compromise the health and safety of every member of
the General Assembly, their family members, every one of our staffers
who works tirelessly for us,” Durkin said, according to the Tribune. Other members were resistant to wearing masks but eventually complied. "If
we are required. I will play along," Republican state Rep. Chris Miller
said, according to WMAQ-TV in Chicago. "I don’t want to be a
distraction from the real issues of JB's Failed leadership." Republican state Rep. Brad Halbrook agreed, “If the rule is adopted I will abide by it.” Bailey sued the governor in April over Pritzker's extension of the state’s stay-at-home order. A judge ruled against him. Earlier
this month, Bailey told Fox News Pritzker is "trampling" the rights of
Illinois residents with the continued coronavirus restrictions. "The law
is not being upheld and that's our problem," he said Bailey
told reporters Wednesday he also refused to take a voluntary
coronavirus test being offered to lawmakers before the session, WMAQ reported.
More than 600 doctors signed onto a letter sent to President Trump Tuesday pushing him to end the "national shutdown" aimed at slowing the spread of the coronavirus, calling the widespread state orders keeping businesses closed and kids home from school a "mass casualty incident" with "exponentially growing health consequences." The
letter outlines a variety of consequences that the doctors have
observed resulting from the coronavirus shutdowns, including patients
missing routine checkups that could detect things like heart problems or
cancer, increases in substance and alcohol abuse, and increases in
financial instability that could lead to "[p]overty and financial
uncertainty," which "is closely linked to poor health." "We are
alarmed at what appears to be the lack of consideration for the future
health of our patients," the doctors say in their letter. "The
downstream health effects ... are being massively under-estimated and
under-reported. This is an order of magnitude error." The
letter continues: "The millions of casualties of a continued shutdown
will be hiding in plain sight, but they will be called alcoholism,
homelessness, suicide, heart attack, stroke, or kidney failure. In
youths it will be called financial instability, unemployment, despair,
drug addiction, unplanned pregnancies, poverty, and abuse. "Because the harm is diffuse, there are those who hold that it does not exist. We, the undersigned, know otherwise." The
letter comes as the battle over when and how to lift coronavirus
restrictions continues to rage on cable television, in the courts, in
protests and among government officials. Those for lifting the
restrictions have warned about the economic consequences of keeping the
shutdowns in effect. Those advocating a more cautious approach say that
having more people out and about will necessarily end with more people
becoming infected, causing what National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases Director Dr. Anthony Fauci warned in a Senate
hearing last week would be preventable "suffering and death." But
these doctors point to others that are suffering, not from the economy
or the virus, but simply from not being able to leave home. The doctors'
letter lists a handful of patients by their initials and details their
experiences. "Patient E.S. is a mother with two children whose
office job was reduced to part-time and whose husband was furloughed,"
the letter reads. "The father is drinking more, the mother is depressed
and not managing her diabetes well, and the children are barely doing
any schoolwork." "Patient A.F. has chronic but previously stable
health conditions," it continues. "Her elective hip replacement was
delayed, which caused her to become nearly sedentary, resulting in a
pulmonary embolism in April." Dr.
Mark McDonald, a psychiatrist, noted in a conversation with Fox News
that a 31-year-old patient of his with a history of depression who was
attending school to get a master's degree in psychology died about two
weeks ago of a fentanyl overdose. He blames the government-imposed
shutdown. "She had to stay in her apartment, essentially in house
arrest as most people here in [Los Angeles] were for weeks and weeks,
she could not see her therapist -- she could speak to the therapist over
the phone but she couldn't see her in person. She could not attend any
of her group meetings, which were helping to maintain her abstinence
from opiates ... and she relapsed into depression. "She was just
too withdrawn to ask for help," McDonald continued before noting that
due to regulations only six people could be at her funeral. "She was
simply trying to escape from her pain... I do blame these actions by the
government for her death." Fox News asked McDonald, as well as
three other doctors who were involved with the letter, if they thought
the indirect effects of the shutdowns outweighed the likely direct
consequences of lifting them -- the preventable "suffering and death"
Fauci referred to in last week's Senate hearing. All four said that they
believe they do. "The very initial argument ... which sounded
reasonable three months ago, is that in order to limit the overwhelmed
patient flux into hospitals that would prevent adequate care, we needed
to spread out the infections and thus the deaths in specific locales
that could become hotspots, particularly New York City... It was a valid
argument at the beginning based on the models that were given,"
McDonald said. "What we've seen now over the last three months is that
no city -- none, zero -- outside of New York has even been significantly
stressed." McDonald is referring to the misconception that
business closures and stay-at-home orders aimed at "flattening the
curve" are meant to reduce the total number of people who will fall ill
because of the coronavirus. Rather, these curve-flattening measures are
meant largely to reduce the number of people who are sick at any given
time, thus avoiding a surge in cases that overwhelms the health care
system and causes otherwise preventable deaths because not all patients
are able to access lifesaving critical care.
Dr. Mark McDonald is one of the doctors who signed onto a letter
raising the alarm about health harms caused by coronavirus lockdown
orders. (Courtesy/Mark McDonald)
McDonald
said that "hospitals are not only not overwhelmed, they're actually
being shut down." He noted that at one hospital in the Los Angeles area
where Dr. Simone Gold, the head organizer of the letter, works "the
technicians in the ER have been cut by 50 percent." Gold also said
the effects of the shutdown are more serious for the vast majority of
people than the potential virus spread if it is quickly lifted. "When
you look at the data of the deaths and the critically ill, they are
patients who were very sick to begin with," she said, "There's always
exceptions. ... But when you look at the pure numbers, it's
overwhelmingly patients who are in nursing homes and patients with
serious underlying conditions. Meaning, that that's where our resources
should be spent. I think it's terribly unethical... part of the reason
why we let [the virus] fly through the nursing homes is because we're
diverting resources across society at large. We have limited resources
we should put them where it's killed people." People of all ages,
of course, have been shown to be able to catch the coronavirus. And
there have been reported health complications in children that could
potentially be linked to the disease. Fauci also warned about assuming that children are largely protected from the effects of the virus. “We don't know everything about this virus … especially when it comes to children,” Fauci said in a Senate hearing last week. “We ought to be careful and not cavalier.” Newport
Beach, Calif., concierge doctor Dr. Jeffrey Barke, who led the letter
effort with Gold, also put an emphasis on the disparity in who the virus
effects. "There are thousands of us out there that don't agree
with the perspective of Dr. Fauci and [White House coronavirus response
coordinator] Dr. [Deborah] Birx that believe, yes, this virus is deadly,
it's dangerous, and it's contagious, but only to a select group of
Americans," he said. "The path forward is to allow the young and
healthy, the so-called herd, to be exposed and to develop a degree of
antibodies that both now is protective to them and also prevents the
virus from spreading to the most vulnerable."
Dr. Simone Gold is a co-founder of A Doctor a Day, an organization
dedicated to elevating the voices of doctors who disagree with the
coronavirus shutdowns. (Courtesy/Simone Gold)
Dr.
Scott Barbour, an orthopedic surgeon in Atlanta, reflected the comments
the other doctors made about how the medical system has been able to
handle the coronavirus without being overwhelmed, but also noted that
the reported mortality rates from the coronavirus might be off. "The
vast majority of the people that contract this disease are asymptomatic
or so minimally symptomatic that they're not even aware that they're
sick. And so the denominator in our calculation of mortality rate is far
greater than we think," he said. "The risk of dying from COVID is
relatively small when we consider these facts." Gold, an emergency
medicine specialist based in Los Angeles, led the letter on behalf of a
new organization called A Doctor a Day. A Doctor a Day has not
yet formally launched but sent the letter, with hundreds of signatures
from physicians nationwide, to the White House on Tuesday. Gold and the
group's co-founder, Barke, said they began the organization to advocate
for patients against the government-imposed coronavirus shutdowns by
elevating the voices of doctors who felt that the negative externalities
of the shutdowns outweigh the potential downside of letting people
resume their normal business. To
gather signatures for the letter, Gold and Barke partnered with the
Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS), a doctors' group
that advocates for less government interference in the relationship
between doctors and patients, and notably has taken part in
legal challenges against the Affordable Care Act and advocated to allow
doctors to use hydroxychloroquine on themselves and their patients. Gold,
in a conversation with Fox News, lamented that the debate around
hydroxychloroquine has become politicized, noting that it is taken as a
preventative measure for other diseases and that the potentially harmful
effects of the drug mainly affect people with heart issues. The drug is approved to treat malaria, lupus and rheumatoid arthritis, but the Food and Drug Administration
has said that "[h]ydroxychloroquine and chloroquine have not been shown
to be safe and effective for treating or preventing COVID-19." The
FDA has also warned health professionals that the drug should not be
used to treat COVID-19 outside of hospital or research settings. Gold
said she has direct knowledge of physicians who are taking
hydroxychloroquine and said that although "we will see" about its
efficacy as it is studied more, there have been some indicators that it
could be effective at preventing or mitigating COVID-19 and she could
therefore understand why doctors might take the drug themselves or
prescribe it to their patients. There is also other research that
appears to indicate hydroxychloroquine is not an effective treatment for
the coronavirus, which has largely informed the consensus that the
risks of the drug outweigh the potential benefits. Gold,
who is a member of the national leadership council for the Save Our
Country Coalition -- an assortment of conservative groups that aim "to
bring about a quick, safe and responsible reopening of US society" --
also said she was concerned that her message about the harms of
shutdowns is becoming politicized. She said that she agreed with the
general principles of the coalition and decided to sign on when
asked, but hasn't done much work with it and is considering asking to
have her name removed because people are largely associating her message
on reopening the country with a conservative political point of view. "I
haven't done anything other than that," she said. "It's causing a big
misunderstanding about what I'm doing so I actually think I'm just going
to take my name off because it's not really supposed to be political." Gold also said she is not associated with the Trump reelection campaign in any way, referring to her inclusion in an Associated Press
story about the Trump campaign's efforts to recruit doctors to support
the president's message on lifting coronavirus restrictions. The AP
story details a call organized CNP Action, also part of the Save Our
Country Coalition, which involved a senior Trump campaign staffer and
was aimed at recruiting "extremely pro-Trump" doctors to make television
appearances calling for the reopening of the economy as quickly as
possible. Fox News' Andrew O'Reilly and the Associated Press contributed to this report.
WASHINGTON
(AP) — Republican political operatives are recruiting “extremely
pro-Trump” doctors to go on television to prescribe reviving the U.S.
economy as quickly as possible, without waiting to meet safety
benchmarks proposed by the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention to slow the spread of the new coronavirus.
The
plan was discussed in a May 11 conference call with a senior staffer
for the Trump reelection campaign organized by CNP Action, an affiliate
of the GOP-aligned Council for National Policy. A leaked recording of
the hourlong call was provided to The Associated Press by the Center for
Media and Democracy, a progressive watchdog group.
CNP Action is part of the Save Our Country Coalition,
an alliance of conservative think tanks and political committees formed
in late April to end state lockdowns implemented in response to the
pandemic. Other members of the coalition include the FreedomWorks Foundation, the American Legislative Exchange Council and Tea Party Patriots.
A
resurgent economy is seen as critical to boosting President Donald
Trump’s reelection hopes and has become a growing focus of the White
House coronavirus task force led by Vice President Mike Pence.
Tim
Murtaugh, the Trump campaign communications director, confirmed to AP
that an effort to recruit doctors to publicly support the president is
underway, but declined to say when the initiative would be rolled out.
“Anybody
who joins one of our coalitions is vetted,” Murtaugh said Monday. “And
so quite obviously, all of our coalitions espouse policies and say
things that are, of course, exactly simpatico with what the president
believes. ... The president has been outspoken about the fact that he
wants to get the country back open as soon as possible.”
During
an emergency such as the current pandemic, it’s important that the
government provide consistent science-based information to the public,
said Dr. Wafaa El-Sadr, an epidemiology professor
at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health. Dr. Anthony
Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert and a member of the
White House’s coronavirus task force, has been among the most visible
government experts warning that lifting lockdowns too quickly could lead
to a spike in deaths.
El-Sadr said having doctors relay contradictory information on behalf of the president is “quite alarming.”
“I
find it totally irresponsible to have physicians who are touting some
information that’s not anchored in evidence and not anchored in
science,” El-Sadr said. “What often creates confusion is the many voices
that are out there, and many of those voices do have a political
interest, which is the hugely dangerous situation we are at now.”
Murtaugh said the campaign is not concerned about contradicting government experts.
“Our
job at the campaign is to reflect President Trump’s point of view,”
Murtaugh said. “We are his campaign. There is no difference between us
and him.”
On the May 11 call, Nancy Schulze, a GOP activist
who is married to former Rep. Dick Schulze, R-Pa., said she had given
the campaign a list of 27 doctors prepared to defend Trump’s reopening
push.
“There
is a coalition of doctors who are extremely pro-Trump that have been
preparing and coming together for the war ahead in the campaign on
health care,” Schulze said on the call. “And we have doctors that are …
in the trenches, that are saying ‘It’s time to reopen.’”
The
idea quickly gained support from Mercedes Schlapp, a Trump campaign
senior adviser who previously served two years as the president’s
director of strategic communications.
“Those
are the types of guys that we should want to get out on TV and radio to
help push out the message,” Schlapp said on the call.
“They’ve already been vetted. But they need to be put on the screens,” Schulze replied.
Schlapp’s
husband agreed the president is getting criticized for not appearing to
follow the advice of public health experts. Matt Schlapp is chairman of
the American Conservative Union, which hosts the annual Conservative Political Action Conference attended by conservative luminaries.
“The
president’s going to get tagged by the fake news media as being
irresponsible and not listening to doctors,” Matt Schlapp said on the
call. “And so we have to gird his loins with a lot of other people. So I
think what Nancy’s talking about … this is the critical juncture that
we highlight them.”
Matt Schlapp told AP on Monday that he stood behind what he said on the leaked call.
“There
is a big dynamic in the national media that will not give President
Trump any credit,” he said. “It’s important to get the message out there
that most people recover from corona. Most people are not in mortal
danger with corona and that we can safely open up the economy.”
As several Republican governors moved last week to lift their state lockdowns, the National Ensemble Forecast
used by the CDC to predict COVID-19 infections and deaths saw a
corresponding increase. The CDC now forecasts the U.S. will exceed
100,000 deaths by June 1, a grim milestone that previously was not
predicted to occur until late in the summer.
As of Tuesday, more than 1.5 million Americans had tested positive for COVID-19, with more than 91,000 deaths reported nationwide.
Experts,
including Fauci, have said that is likely an undercount, with the true
number being much higher. Meanwhile, Trump has suggested, without
providing evidence, that the official death toll from the virus is being
inflated.
Schulze,
who was working to organize the pro-Trump doctors, did not respond to
messages from AP seeking comment. But after the AP contacted the Trump
campaign seeking comment for this story, a Washington public relations
firm that frequently works for conservative groups distributed an open
letter to Trump signed by more than 400 doctors calling the state
coronavirus lockdowns a “mass casualty event” causing “millions of
casualties” from alcoholism, homelessness, suicide and other causes.
“It
is impossible to overstate the short, medium, and long-term harm to
people’s health with a continued shutdown,” the letter said. “Losing a
job is one of life’s most stressful events, and the effect on a person’s
health is not lessened because it also has happened to 30 million other
people. Keeping schools and universities closed is incalculably
detrimental for children, teenagers, and young adults for decades to
come.”
The first signature on the letter was Dr. Simone Gold, an emergency medicine specialist
in Los Angeles who is listed as a member of the Save Our Country
Coalition on the group’s website. She has recently appeared on
conservative talk radio and podcast programs
to advocate for the use of hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malaria drug
that Trump says he is taking because he believes it can prevent COVID-19
even though his own administration has warned it can have deadly side effects. Gold said she has prescribed the drug to two of her patients with good results.
The
Food and Drug Administration warned health professionals last month
that the drug should not be used to treat COVID-19 outside of hospital
or research settings due to sometimes fatal side effects.
Gold
told AP on Tuesday she started speaking out against shelter-in-place
and other infection control measures because there was “no scientific
basis that the average American should be concerned” about COVID-19.
Like the president, she is advocating for a fast reopening, and argues
that because the majority of deaths so far have been the elderly and
people with preexisting conditions, younger people should be working.
Gold denied she was coordinating her efforts with Trump’s reelection campaign.
“But put this in there: I’m honored to be considered,” she said.
More than 60 representatives from organizations in central California
and local officials signed a letter to state lawmakers Tuesday asking
for a weekly stipend for workers in the state illegally who have lost
their jobs due to the coronavirus, according to a report. The
letter, which was sent to two assemblymembers from Santa Barbara and
San Luis Obispo and one state senator, called on lawmakers and Gov.
Gavin Newsom to "exercise their authority to put an end to the exclusion
of undocumented workers from California’s safety net, and provide
weekly income support for all workers whose families are struggling due
to job loss during this crisis," according to the News Times San Luis
Obispo. Assemblymember Monique Limón of Santa Barbara, who
received a letter, also signed a separate letter on Monday to Newsom,
calling on him to adopt an “undocumented worker partial income
replacement program.” Undocumented workers make up an estimated 10 percent of the workforce in California, but the state's $125 million coronavirus
relief fund for workers in the state illegally is only expected to help
a small fraction of them and some are calling for even more funding. Santa
Maria Councilmember Gloria Soto, who signed Tuesday's letter,
previously said supporting local nonprofits will help undocumented
workers get financial assistance. The Mixteco/Indigena Community
Organizing Project "is one of the organizations that will be helping the
state of California distribute the funds that the state has allocated
for undocumented families here in our own community, so continuing to
support organizations like those," she said, according to the News Times. California’s coronavirus
relief website crashed for more than two hours Monday morning by
millions seeking benefits on the first day workers in the state illegally could apply.
“The
website is currently up and running, and we are continuing to increase
its capacity,” Scott Murray, a spokesman for the state’s Department of
Social Services, said, acknowledging the high volume, according to The
Fresno Bee. “We understand that the demand is high for the Disaster
Relief Assistance for Immigrants program.” In addition, nonprofit relief hotlines were overwhelmed by the number of callers trying to reach the required live person. The
Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles, one of the
nonprofits chosen to distribute the funds, had more than 1 million calls
Monday. “Day 1 of the #DRAI project, CHIRLA worked to ensure 668
residents in LA and Orange County got on their way to receive the
#coronavirus aid they desperately need,” the nonprofit said in a tweet.
“Not letting the 1,137,000 calls or the 6 million website visits stop
us.” CALIFORNIA OPENS UP CORONAVIRUS FUNDING FOR IMMIGRANTS IN STATE ILLEGALLY, FACES BACKLASH Lucas
Zucker, who runs a nonprofit north of Los Angeles, called the chaotic
start a “nightmare we all knew was coming," the Guardian
reported. "We’re putting a Band-Aid on an open chest wound." “Websites
and phone lines across the state crashed," he tweeted. "Our team saw so
much frustration, anger and sadness from folks just trying to feed
their kids. The need here is way too large to be met with a one-time
disaster relief fund.
Ana
Padilla, executive director of UC Merced’s Community and Labor Center,
said the state’s $125 million fund is expected to run out “very
quickly.” The Los Angeles Times reported that
Sacramento has freed up $75 million in taxpayer money for the fund,
which could help about 150,000 who may be facing severe hardships during
the pandemic. The other $50 million will be paid by organizations and private donors, according to the Guardian. The fund will give a one-time $500 payment for an individual or $1,000 for a family. California is the first state to rollout such a program. A
lawsuit filed by the Center for American Liberty seeking to stop the
funds from being distributed was dismissed by the state’s Supreme Court
earlier this month, according to the Bee. Recipients
must prove they are unable to receive benefits from any federal
assistance programs and provide evidence they are going through severe
financial hardship because of the virus.
Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the novel program through an executive order in April. “Every
Californian, including our undocumented neighbors and friends, should
know that California is here to support them during this crisis,” Newsom
said at the time. Republican
Assemblyman Jordan Cunningham of San Luis Obispo and Democratic state
Sen. Hannah Beth-Jackson were also sent letters, according to the News Times. Fox News' Edmund DeMarche contributed to this report.
Senate Armed Services Committee member Tom Cotton, R-Ark., joined "Hannity"
Tuesday to discuss his proposed legislation that would prevent the
federal government from sending taxpayer-funded stimulus dollars to
states or cities that issue payments to people in the U.S. illegally. "We
shouldn’t be spending hard-earned taxpayer dollars on
illegal immigrants at a time when 35 million Americans are out of work,"
Cotton said. "If we are going to be giving relief checks to those
people who are out of work, we need to focus on American citizens, not
illegal immigrants." Under
Cotton's No Bailouts for Illegal Aliens Act, states or cities must
certify that illegal aliens are not receiving coronavirus stimulus
checks or other payments. State and city governments that refuse to
comply with the certification requirements will not be eligible for
funds from the CARES Act. Paycheck Protection Program loans,
unemployment benefits and relief checks sent to American citizens in
those locations would not be affected. "New York, Illinois, New
Jersey, California have some of the highest state income taxes in the
entire country," host Sean Hannity told Cotton. "Now, there is more
waste, fraud, abuse, debt, deficits. They are now trying to get people
like yourself and people in red states that elect responsible
politicians that don’t tax and spend to death to bail them out. That
means bailout their stupidity. "You talk about
illegal immigration," Hannity added. "How much is that costing the
state of California every year, the state of New York every year? A lot
of money. Cotton also told Hannity that he is still looking to
legislate a policy that will encourage domestic production of
pharmaceuticals. While many major pharmaceutical companies
currently make their home in places like California, New Jersey
and Connecticut, many of the necessary ingredients are sourced from
overseas. "Unfortunately,
Sean, it is a tragic irony that the country that unleashed this
pandemic on the world also controls many of the most basic
pharmaceutical ingredients for the United States," he said. "That does
have to stop. "I've got legislation that would give incentives to
build more manufacturing capacity right here in the United States and
ultimately ban the import of pharmaceuticals from China many of which
are adulterated to begin with."
A three-year-old
interview clip of former National Security Adviser Susan Rice
resurfaced Tuesday after the declassified email she sent to herself on
the final day of the Obama administration was released. During an
April 2017 appearance on PBS News Hour, Rice was asked about the
then-breaking revelations about members of President Trump's transition
team having been surveilled before he took office. "In the last
few hours, we've been following a disclosure by the chairman of the
House Intelligence Committee, Devin Nunes, that in essence, during the
final days of the Obama administration, during the transition after
President Trump had been elected, that he and the people around him may
have been caught up in surveillance of foreign individuals and their
identities may have been disclosed. Do you know anything about this?"
PBS anchor Judy Woodruff asked. "I know nothing about this," Rice said at the time. "I was surprised to see reports from Chairman Nunes on that count today." Rice
then pivoted to Trump's accusation that then-President Barack Obama had
"wiretapped" him during the 2016 election, insisting that "nothing of
the sort occurred." She later insisted that "no president, no White
House can order the surveillance of another American citizen. That can
only come from the Justice Department with the approval of a FISA
court." She later stressed that Nunes' assertion at the time was
that the surveillance was "legal and lawful" and that it was a
"potentially incidental collection." "That means that the target
was either a foreign entity or somebody under criminal investigation and
that the Americans who were talking to those targets may have been
picked up," Rice explained. However, the newly released email
appeared to indicate Rice had knowledge of the surveillance that took
place that led to the "unmasking" of then-incoming National Security
Adviser (NSA) Michael Flynn from his communications with the then-Russian ambassador. The
email, which was written on Jan. 20, 2017, documented a Jan. 5 Oval
Office meeting with then-President Obama and others, during which he
provided guidance on how law enforcement needed to investigate Russian
interference in the 2016 presidential race. Parts of it were released
previously, but the section on then-FBI Director James Comey's response
had been classified as "TOP SECRET" until now. Comey suggested to
Obama that the National Security Council (NSC) might not want to pass
"sensitive information related to Russia" to Flynn, according to a newly declassified email that Flynn's predecessor sent herself on Inauguration Day. The
section showed that Comey affirmed to Obama he was proceeding "by the
book," and went on to discuss concerns about Flynn's known conversations
with Russia's ambassador at the time -- conversations that would play a
role later in the criminal case against Flynn. Rice
continued in her email: "From a national security perspective, Comey
said he does have some concerns that incoming NSA Flynn is speaking
frequently with Russian Ambassador [Sergey] Kislyak. Comey said that
could be an issue as it relates to sharing sensitive information.
President Obama asked if Comey was saying that the NSC should not pass
sensitive information related to Russia to Flynn." Rice then
wrote: "Comey replied, 'potentially.' He added that he has no indication
thus far that Flynn has passed classified information to Kislyak, but
he noted that 'the level of communication is unusual.'" In
a statement Tuesday evening about the email's release, a representative
for Rice stressed that “no discussion of law enforcement matters or
investigations took place, despite accusations to the contrary.” The
spokeswoman also insisted the Obama administration did not change the
way it briefed Flynn, saying Rice briefed Flynn for more than 12 hours
on four separate occasions during the transition. “Ambassador Rice
did not alter the way she briefed Michael Flynn on Russia as a result
of Director Comey’s response,” representative Erin Pelton said. Last
week, a list of top Obama officials who had requested the "unmasking"
of Flynn was released. The list included Comey, former Vice President
Joe Biden, former CIA Director John Brennan, former DNI James Clapper,
former U.N. ambassador Samantha Power and former White House
chief-of-staff Denis McDonough. Fox News' Brooke Singman contributed to this report.