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Driving the Day:

https://twitter.com/Covid19WarRoom/status/1253297468869140486

By The Numbers
Thursday, April 23, 2020,  7:30 AM
Number of US cases reported: 842,624
Number of US deaths: 46,785
Total Number of People Tested in US: 4,482,434 (may not include all labs) 

Associated Press: AP-NORC poll: Few Americans support easing virus protections

CBS: Americans prioritize staying home and worry restrictions will lift too fast – CBS News poll

New York Times: What 5 Coronavirus Models Say the Next Month Will Look Like

What to Watch For Today

President Trump has no public events scheduled today.  The coronavirus task force will brief the press at 5:00 PM. 

Must Read Stories

Trump’s Lost Month of February: Another Management Failure, Another Example Of Him Not Listening To Experts As the US Fell Behind Other Nations In Testing

  • Reuters: Special Report: Former Labradoodle Breeder Tapped To Lead U.S. Pandemic Task Force: On January 21, the day the first U.S. case of coronavirus was reported, the secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services appeared on Fox News to report the latest on the disease as it ravaged China. Alex Azar, a 52-year-old lawyer and former drug industry executive, assured Americans the U.S. government was prepared. […] Shortly after his televised comments, Azar tapped a trusted aide with minimal public health experience to lead the agency’s day-to-day response to COVID-19. The aide, Brian Harrison, had joined the department after running a dog-breeding business for six years. Five sources say some officials in the White House derisively called him “the dog breeder.” Azar’s optimistic public pronouncement and choice of an inexperienced manager are emblematic of his agency’s oft-troubled response to the crisis.

Experts And Governors Agree: States Aren’t Ready To Reopen 

  • Washington Post: States Rushing To Reopen Are Likely Making A Deadly Error, Coronavirus Models And Experts Warn: By the end of the week, residents in Georgia will be able to get their hair permed and nails done. By Monday, they will be cleared for action flicks at the cineplex and burgers at their favorite greasy spoon. And it will almost certainly lead to more novel coronavirus infections and deaths. As several states — including South Carolina, Tennessee and Florida — rush to reopen businesses, the sudden relaxation of restrictions will supply new targets for the coronavirus that has kept the United States largely closed down, according to experts, math models and the basic rules that govern infectious diseases.
  • Politico: Governors Release New Plan For Reopening — And Suggest Few States Are Ready: A new road map from the nation’s governors for reopening the economy urges a cautious approach, saying the White House must dramatically ramp up testing and help states bolster other public health measures before social distancing can be safely pulled back. The plan from the National Governors Association and state health officials suggests a wide-scale reopening of the country isn’t imminent, even as President Donald Trump roots on Southern states that are dialing down restrictions despite warnings from health experts.
  • Washington Post (Analysis): The Trump Administration Says States Have The Testing Capacity They Need. Governors Say They Lack Testing Supplies:  Nearly one-third of governors over the past week have said they lack sufficient coronavirus testing supplies to reopen their states, according to a Fix analysis of public statements. The comments come as the Trump administration in recent days said states have the testing capacity needed to start to reopen if they choose. “Ultimately, we’re doing more testing I think than probably any of the governors even want,” President Trump said Tuesday. Many of the 16 governors who have said they lack testing supplies have not disputed they have ample testing capacity to start to reopen, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t other hindrances. Some, like New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D), have said his state needs to double existing testing, while others like Washington Gov. Jay Inslee (D) have said his state needs to quintuple existing testing.

Trump Administration Muzzles Critical Scientists, Endangering Americans’ Lives

  • New York Times: Health Dept. Official Says Doubts on Hydroxychloroquine Led to His Ouster: The official who led the federal agency involved in developing a coronavirus vaccine said on Wednesday that he was removed from his post after he pressed for rigorous vetting of hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malaria drug embraced by President Trump as a coronavirus treatment, and that the administration had put “politics and cronyism ahead of science.” Rick Bright was abruptly dismissed this week as the director of the Department of Health and Human Services’ Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, or BARDA, and removed as the deputy assistant secretary for preparedness and response. He was given a narrower job at the National Institutes of Health.
  • Washington Post: Under Trump, Coronavirus Scientists Can Speak — As Long As They Mostly Toe The Line: The remarkable spectacle provided another illustration of the president’s tenuous relationship with his own administration’s scientific and public health experts, where the unofficial message from the Oval Office is an unmistakable warning: Those who challenge the president’s erratic and often inaccurate coronavirus views will be punished — or made to atone. In a statement Wednesday, for example, Rick Bright — who until recently led the agency working on a coronavirus vaccine — said he was removed from his post for resisting efforts to “provide an unproven drug on demand to the American public.” The result is a culture in which public health officials find themselves scrambling to appease and placate Trump, a mercurial boss who is focused as much on political and economic considerations as scientific ones.
  • Reuters: Trump Has CDC Director Clarify Remarks on Second Virus Wave:  The director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was called on by President Donald Trump on Wednesday to walk back his remark that the second wave of novel coronavirus in the fall could be worse than the current situation. CDC Director Robert Redfield made the widely circulated comment in an interview Tuesday with the Washington Post. On Wednesday, Trump tweeted that the health expert was misquoted and would be putting out a statement. Redfield, however, said he was quoted accurately. “I think it’s really important to emphasize what I didn’t say: I didn’t say that this was going to be worse,” Redfield said at the daily White House coronavirus briefing. “I said it was going to be more difficult and potentially complicated because we’re going to have flu and coronavirus circulating at the same time.”

Failures At HHS Hobbled Pandemic Response 

  • Wall Street Journal: Health Chief’s Early Missteps Set Back Coronavirus Response: Many factors muddled the administration’s early response to the coronavirus as officials debated the severity of the threat, including comments from Mr. Trump that minimized the risk. But interviews with more than two dozen administration officials and others involved in the government’s coronavirus effort show that Mr. Azar waited for weeks to brief the president on the threat, oversold his agency’s progress in the early days and didn’t coordinate effectively across the health-care divisions under his purview.

They’re Doing It Again: Pence And Trump Downplay Risks Of A Second Wave Of Infections

  • The Hill: Trump Says Coronavirus ‘May Not Come Back At All’: President Trump on Wednesday expressed confidence that the coronavirus will not hit the U.S. with the same severity if it returns in the fall, suggesting that the disease that has killed tens of thousands of Americans “may not come back at all.” The comments came as part of a broader diatribe against a Washington Post headline that he felt unfairly characterized the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) warning that a second wave of the coronavirus could coincide with flu season.  But Trump’s assertion that the virus would either be weakened or nonexistent in the fall breaks with medical experts who have cautioned that it will be present in American life for months or years to come.
  • Wall Street Journal: Pence Says Coronavirus Could Be Largely Past by Early June: Vice President Mike Pence said the White House hopes the coronavirus epidemic can be “largely in the past” by early June. Mr. Pence didn’t make a firm prediction about when the U.S. economy can be fully reopened. But he said “the trend lines continue to be encouraging,” including in some of the country’s most hard-hit cities, and offered a generally ambitious timeline for revival of normal activities. “We truly do believe as we move forward, with responsibly beginning to reopen the economy in state after state around the country, that by early June, we could be at a place where this coronavirus epidemic is largely in the past,” Mr. Pence said in an interview Wednesday with “The Journal,” a Gimlet and Wall Street Journal podcast.

Worth Watching

Across the Trump administration agencies are failing to protect their workers and the American people from the threat of coronavirus: 

  • Politico: Democrats blast Trump team’s handling of federal workers in coronavirus crisis
  • Politico: Agriculture Department leaves meat inspectors hunting for safety gear
  • Associated Press: VA medical facilities struggle to cope with coronavirus
  • Kaiser Health News: OSHA Probing Health Worker Deaths But Urges Inspectors To Spare The Penalties

Headlines

Trump’s Failures 

Associated Press: VA medical facilities struggle to cope with coronavirus

Kaiser Health News: OSHA Probing Health Worker Deaths But Urges Inspectors To Spare The Penalties

NBC: Some places have flattened the coronavirus curve but nationally, we’re not even close

New York Times (Opinion): Another Problem With the U.S. Virus Response, in a Chart

New York Times: Health Dept. Official Says Doubts on Hydroxychloroquine Led to His Ouster

New York Times: A Coronavirus Death in Early February Was ‘Probably the Tip of an Iceberg’

New York Times: The Cold Calculations America’s Leaders Will Have to Make Before Reopening

Politico: Ousted vaccine expert battles with Trump team over his abrupt dismissal

Politico: Trump says he told Kemp: ‘I totally disagree’ with move to reopen Georgia

Politico: Democrats blast Trump team’s handling of federal workers in coronavirus crisis

Politico: Governors release new plan for reopening — and suggest few states are ready

Politico: Trump downplays risk of coronavirus rebound

Politico: Agriculture Department leaves meat inspectors hunting for safety gear

Reuters: Special Report: Former Labradoodle breeder tapped to lead U.S. pandemic task force

Reuters: Trump Has CDC Director Clarify Remarks on Second Virus Wave

Vox: Opening up the economy won’t save the economy

Wall Street Journal: Health Chief’s Early Missteps Set Back Coronavirus Response

Wall Street Journal: Pence Says Coronavirus Could Be Largely Past by Early June

Washington Post: Under Trump, coronavirus scientists can speak — as long as they mostly toe the line

Washington Post: Pentagon plans to dispatch Blue Angels and Thunderbirds in coronavirus response

Washington Post: Here’s one big reason U.S. coronavirus tests are lagging: test kits made by private companies

Washington Post: States rushing to reopen are likely making a deadly error, coronavirus models and experts warn

Washington Post (Analysis): The Trump administration says states have the testing capacity they need. Governors say they lack testing supplies.

Trump’s Lies and Misinformation 

The Hill: Trump says coronavirus ‘may not come back at all’

New York Times: Fox News Stars Trumpeted a Malaria Drug, Until They Didn’t

Vox: A disturbing new study suggests Sean Hannity helped spread the coronavirus

Trump and the GOP Not Looking Out For You 

Associated Press: Many small businesses say loans won’t get them to rehire

Axios: Drugmaker tripled the price of a pill as it pursued coronavirus use

Bloomberg: ‘Shake Shack Loophole’ Stays Open, Spawns a Washington Whodunit

CNN: Stores struggle to get shoppers to wear masks

Daily Beast: South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem’s COVID-19 Inaction Has Made Her a Right-Wing Hero

NPR: Small Business Rescue Earned Banks $10 Billion In Fees

New York Times: As Leaders Urge Face Masks, Their Behavior Muffles the Message

New York Times: Banks Gave Richest Clients ‘Concierge Treatment’ for Pandemic Aid

Politico: Celebrity chefs, insurers lobby Trump in fight over massive claims payouts

Politico: McConnell pushes ‘bankruptcy route’ as local governments struggle

Wall Street Journal: Dallas Hotel Owner Is Biggest Beneficiary of Coronavirus Loan Program

Washington Post: How a family-owned Nebraska bank became a leader on coronavirus loans

Washington Post: Trump signs order pausing immigration for 60 days, with exceptions

Washington Post (Opinion): Trump can’t defeat the coronavirus. But he can wage war on immigrants.

Washington Post: This coal company with ties to the Trump administration just got a $10 million small-business loan

Yahoo: Birx says Georgia residents ‘can be very creative’ about getting tattoos and haircuts while social distancing

Affordability and Access

Associated Press: Administration offers plan to cover COVID care for uninsured

NBC: Got coronavirus? You may get a surprise medical bill, too

Vox: How the Covid-19 pandemic will leave its mark on US health care

Campaigns and Elections

Miami Herald: Mail voting expected to ‘explode’ in Florida as coronavirus reshapes 2020 elections

NPR: Coronavirus Response Shows How A National Crisis Can Again Transform Politic

Congress

Politico: Pelosi scraps proxy voting plan after GOP outcry

Wall Street Journal: Small-Business Loan Fund May Run Dry Again. Is There Another Way?

Democratic Response

Politico: Schumer’s Senate Democrats show sharper edge in coronavirus era

Washington Post: Biden makes end run around Trump as the president dominates the national stage

Disinformation

New York Times: Chinese Agents Helped Spread Messages That Sowed Virus Panic in U.S., Officials Say

Politico: Moscow’s coronavirus offensive

Economic Impact

Axios: Where coronavirus is fueling more and less energy use

Bloomberg: Food Rationing Is New Reality for Buyers Once Spoiled for Choice

Education

Axios: Coronavirus sends American universities over a cliff

New York Times: Imagine Online School in a Language You Don’t Understand

Hospitals and Health Care Workers

Associated Press: ER Staff Saves Lives, Suffers In Hot Spot 

Buzzfeed: Nurses And Doctors Are Sharing The Graphic Effects Of Wearing Face Masks As They Continue Fighting On The Front Lines Of The Coronavirus

The Hill: Dentists want coronavirus testing kits before reopening

New York Magazine: Medical Workers’ Looming Mental-Health Crisis

Inequality

Kaiser Health News: The Other COVID Risks: How Race, Income, ZIP Code Influence Who Lives Or Dies

NPR: Minorities Often Work These Jobs. They Were Among First To Go In Coronavirus Layoffs

NPR: Navajo Families Without Internet Struggle To Home-School During COVID-19 Pandemic

Talking Points Memo: Vote-By-Mail, Critical In Pandemic, Poses Risks For Voters Of Color

Wall Street Journal: A Top Immunologist on Why Coronavirus Is Killing More African-Americans

International

The Guardian: Anger in Sweden as elderly pay price for coronavirus strategy

New York Times: ‘Instead of Coronavirus, the Hunger Will Kill Us.’ A Global Food Crisis Looms.

New York Times: ‘This Government is Lucky’: Coronavirus Quiets Global Protest Movements

Washington Post: Avoiding The Loneliness Of A Coronavirus Hospital Death 

In the States

Des Moines Register: Coronavirus at meat packing plants worse than first thought, USA TODAY investigation finds

Kaiser Health News: The Inside Story Of How The Bay Area Got Ahead Of The COVID-19 Crisis

New York Times: Tight-Knit Company Towns Reel as Coronavirus Rolls Through

Wall Street Journal: Coronavirus Forces New York to Send Bodies Out of State for Cremation

Washington Post: Las Vegas mayor: Reopen casinos, let the ones with the most infections then close

Washington Post: In New York’s largest hospital system, 88 percent of coronavirus patients on ventilators didn’t make it

Media

Bloomberg: Fox Cuts Pay to Cope With Health Crisis Its Own Hosts Downplayed

Nursing Homes

Wall Street Journal: Coronavirus Deaths in U.S. Nursing, Long-Term Care Facilities Top 10,000

Personal Narratives

Vanity Fair: How Donald Trump Almost Killed My Husband

Philanthropy

Associated Press: Amid pandemic, charities and nonprofits face huge challenges

Protests

Buzzfeed: There’s More To Know About The Video Of A Mother Arrested On A Playground For Violating Stay-At-Home Orders

Kansas City Star: Conservative activists help promote ‘grassroots’ protests of stay-at-home orders

Public Safety

The Economist: Domestic violence has increased during coronavirus lockdowns

Politico: Judge orders transfer or release for some inmates at virus-wracked Ohio federal prison

Wall Street Journal: Rikers Island Jail Guards Are Dying in One of the Worst Coronavirus Outbreaks

Wall Street Journal: Confusion Hampers Coronavirus-Driven Inmate Releases

Washington Post: ‘A recipe for disaster’: American prison factories becoming incubators for coronavirus

Science

Business Insider: As more experimental coronavirus vaccines start human testing, industry leaders and experts doubt they’ll be ready before 2022

Buzzfeed: Two Antibody Studies Say Coronavirus Infections Are More Common Than We Think. Scientists Are Mad.

New York Times: Solving The Mysteries Of Coronavirus With Genetic Fingerprints 

New York Times: The Untold Story of the Birth of Social Distancing

Social Impact

New York Times: The  Juggle of Working Motherhood, Trapped at Home

Trump Campaign

ABC: Trump’s post-briefing campaign shows are also a ratings hit online

Trump Tweets 

CDC Director was totally misquoted by Fake News @CNN on Covid 19. He will be putting out a statement. [@realDonaldTrump, 4/22/20

[@realDonaldTrump, 4/22/20