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Month: October 2020

Blast from the past

Trump slams Hillary Clinton as 'nasty, mean enabler' of husband's affairs

Remember this?

Oct. 11, 2016 at 9:25 a.m.

Less that two hours after telling his massive Twitter following that “the shackles have been taken off me,” Donald Trump released a new TV commercial in which Hillary Clinton is shown stumbling at a memorial service for 9/11 victims.

You need to watch the ad before you read another word:

Remarkable stuff.

Clinton is shown coughing, needing assistance up steps and then, finally, having to be pulled into her security van after nearly fainting at the service last month in New York City. “Hillary Clinton doesn’t have the fortitude, strength or stamina to lead in our world,” says the ad’s narrator over the Clinton fainting footage. “She failed as secretary of state. Don’t let her fail us again.”

It is as blatant an attempt to suggest to voters that a candidate is not well enough for office as I have ever witnessed. While the ad has a patina of policy attached to it — and therefore can be defended by Trumpworld as suggesting she isn’t tough enough to stand up to world leaders — what’s really going on here is far clearer: Clinton is sick, the ad suggests, and she just can’t do the job.

Being nasty bitches is their brand so they haven’t missed a beat:

If Biden had the same instincts (and, more importantly, the same nasty bitch voters, which he doesn’t) he would run ads showing how Trump has probably personally infected his own staff, donors and voters because he’s a selfish ignoramus. But he doesn’t. In fact, even the LIncoln Project, which is ruthless, hasn’t gone there.

They are simply awful people. Some might even call them deplorable.

Arrogant super-spreaders

Trump, Who Claimed Masks Are for Suckers, Blames the Military and Law  Enforcement for Hope Hicks Getting COVID-19 | Vanity Fair

One of the best documented super-spreader events in the US is a wedding in Maine last August. Most of the people affected and all of the deaths were among people who had nothing directly to do with the wedding.

Rev. Todd Bell, a pastor at Calvary Baptist Church in Sanford, Maine, led the Aug. 7 wedding ceremony at a nearby church, and the 65 attendees were in violation of the state’s COVID-19 restrictions on crowd size and its mask mandate. The ceremony, along with the subsequent reception at Big Moose Inn, has now been linked to at least 180 infections and eight deaths.

I don’t know if they have figured out who patient zero might have been. But I think we may know who it is right away if this turns out to be a super-spreader events as well:

Hours before President Trump tested positive for the novel coronavirus and just one day before he was admitted to the hospital, he mingled with more than 200 people at his New Jersey golf club for a campaign fundraiser.

Less than a week before that, he welcomed 150 political allies and religious leaders — including several who are now infected — to the White House to meet the jurist he has nominated to the Supreme Court.

In between, the president met with dozens of aides without wearing a mask — even in close quarters and after top aide Hope Hicks had tested positive. He appeared before thousands at a rally in Minnesota. And he held a nationally televised debate with former vice president Joe Biden after holing up with debate preppers.

But there was little evidence on Saturday that the White House or the campaign had reached out to these potentially exposed people, or even circulated guidance to the rattled staffers within the White House complex.

As president, Trump is responsible for at least tens of thousands of the COVID deaths because he failed to competently lead the federal response and admittedly “downplayed” the seriousness of it in order to boost the stock market and his re-election.

This is another level. Last week he knowingly personally exposed hundreds of people to COVID. And he may very well will turn out to be one of the greatest super-spreaders of this pandemic.

Update —

Here’s another one:

U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson attended an Oktoberfest fundraising dinner on Friday evening while he was awaiting the test results that would show he was infected with COVID-19.

The Wisconsin Republican chose to attend the bash even though he knew that President Trump and many of his inner circle had tested positive for the coronavirus.

Johnson, who didn’t reveal his diagnosis until Saturday, justified his behavior in comments to the Madison, Wisconsin Capital Times by saying he only took his mask off when it was time to address the crowd. He also insisted that he was “at least 12 feet from anybody” during his speech at the event, which was sponsored by the Ozaukee County Republican Party. It was held at the River Club of Mequon, a self-described “casually elegant private club committed to personal service.”

“I feel fine, I feel completely normal,” he said in a conference call with reporters, adding that he didn’t “stick around” to mingle at the dinner.

Attendees paid from $40 for a single ticket to $500 for “gold host” status, which included two meal tickets, priority seating, and “special host recognition.” Former Wisconsin attorney general Brad Schimel was the evening’s featured guest, according to an invitation on the Ozaukee County Republican Party’s Facebook page.

Johnson has previously come out against statewide mask mandates, and warned against “overreacting.” We “don’t shut down our economy because tens of thousands of people die on the highways,” he said in March.

News of Johnson’s diagnosis comes as Wisconsin’s COVID-19 cases and deaths have risen to record levels.

He is the stupidest man in the Senate so this is unsurprising.

“My heart goes out”

“Before we even get started let’s — you know, the elephant in the room. President Trump’s in the hospital from Covid and … I just want to say my heart goes out to Covid,” said SNL host Chris Rock.

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Who’s next?

Scene from Roger Corman’s The Masque of the Red Death (1964).

There is no bottom. We as a nation learned that, what, two hundred weeks ago? And last week’s lesson? The number of shoes to drop is infinite. Elon Musk is working out how to use that to power his cars.

Who’s next? Come on, it’s the question everyone’s asking themselves.

The acting president of the United States is hospitalized at Walter Reed Medical Center with COVID-19. He is an object of confusion about his condition and the subject of who-knows-what Frankenstein-ish medical experimentation. His “body man” now tests positive for the coronavirus along with almost two dozen others inside the White House or in Donald J. Trump’s orbit. Yet to test positive are more GOP senators who were sitting near now-infected Sens. Thom Tillis and Mike Lee at Amy Coney Barrett’s Rose Garden coming out party on Sept. 26. Some sit on the Senate Judiciary Committee charged with holding her confirmation hearings. (Others met Barrett at a maskless reception inside the White House.)

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie checked himself into a hospital on Saturday after testing positive.

Maeve Reston of CNN writes:

For much of this year, Trump has spun an alternate reality about the dangers of coronavirus — disputing science and the efficacy of masks, downplaying the risks to the American people, and making false statements about how 99% of coronavirus cases in America are “totally harmless” or that the virus “affects virtually nobody.”

He encouraged his aides and advisers to live in that dangerous fantasy land, pushing his luck to the limits as late as this past week when he again recklessly gathered thousands of unmasked Americans at his political rallies and packed the top officials in government into a Rose Garden ceremony for his Supreme Court nominee. All the while, White House officials embraced the fallacy that administering rapid coronavirus tests frequently at the White House could provide a shield of immunity.

The Trump presidency began by insisting Americans deny the evidence of their own eyes. His press secretary angrily demanded they believe his inauguration crowd exceeded those of all presidents who came before his (especially Barack Obama’s). The White House’s alternate reality “crumbled” on Friday, Reston adds, when Marine One airlifted the acting president to Walter Reed.

Republicans long knew the former reality TV star heading their party was leading it off cliff, yet just kept marching. Now they are falling off it like … you know what they are falling like (Washington Post):

“There was a panic before this started, but now we’re sort of the stupid party,” said Edward J. Rollins, co-chairman of the pro-Trump super PAC Great America. “Candidates are being forced to defend themselves every day on whether they agree with this or that, in terms of what the president did on the virus.”

[…]

“Their extraordinary rejection of what scientists have been recommending is coming home to roost,” said Irwin E. Redlener, founding director of Columbia University’s National Center for Disaster Preparedness.

Redlener, a former Biden adviser, said that “everyone who hitched themselves to the president’s dishonest messaging about the virus is being confronted with the reality that the president himself is sick.”

Twitter users and others on Saturday began invoking Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Masque of the Red Death,” the classic cautionary tale of wealthy hubris and denial in a time of plague. Like Prince Prospero, Trump’s “incompetence, cynicism, and recklessness,” this “perilous variety of magical thinking,” writes New Yorker‘s  David Remnick, threatened not only his own health but the lives of those gathered around him. He inspired self-destructive behavior amongst his less-protected followers that sparked deadly outbreaks from coast to coast. At least guests at Prospero’s fateful ball wore masks.

Poe concludes, “one by one dropped the revellers in the blood-bedewed halls of their revel, and died each in the despairing posture of his fall.”

“Am I going out like Stan Chera?” Trump asked aides. Chera, a New York real-estate developer, died of COVID in April.

That is to be determined. But his myth shattered, Trump might yet go out like Barry Goldwater.

Update: Removed Lawrence Tribe’s tweet. Seems it was appropriated.

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Bully boy lost that debate. Bigly.

Debate a shoutfest as President Trump repeatedly interrupted Joe Biden

Some NYT polling on the debate (which happened what? 8 months ago?)

By overwhelming margins, voters in Pennsylvania and Florida were repelled by President Trump’s conduct in the first general election debate, according to New York Times/Siena College surveys, as Joseph R. Biden Jr. maintained a lead in the two largest battleground states.

Over all, Mr. Biden led by seven percentage points, 49 percent to 42 percent, among likely voters in Pennsylvania. He led by a similar margin, 47-42, among likely voters in Florida.

The surveys began Wednesday, before the early Friday announcement that President Trump had contracted the coronavirus. There was modest evidence of a shift in favor of Mr. Biden in interviews on Friday, including in Arizona where a Times/Siena survey is in progress, after controlling for the demographic and political characteristics of the respondents.

One day of interviews is not enough to evaluate the consequences of a major political development, and it may be several days or longer before even the initial effects of Mr. Trump’s diagnosis can be ascertained by pollsters.

The debates long loomed as one of the president’s best opportunities to reshape the race in his favor. He has trailed in Pennsylvania and Florida from the outset of the campaign, and he does not have many credible paths to the presidency without winning at least one of the two — and probably both.

Instead, a mere 22 percent of likely voters across the two pivotal states said Mr. Trump won the debate Tuesday. It leaves the president at a significant and even daunting disadvantage with a month until Election Day.

Based on a New York Times/Siena College poll of 1,416 likely voters in Florida and Pennsylvania from Sept. 30 to Oct. 2.

In follow-up interviews with half a dozen mainly Republican respondents, none said the president’s coronavirus diagnosis was affecting their voting decision. But some said the debate did affect the way they were thinking about the election, with all but one using the word “bully” to describe the president. [Did they just notice?]

Voters disapproved of the president’s conduct in the debate by a margin of 65 percent to 25 percent. More than half of voters said they strongly disapproved of his conduct.

“I think that Donald Trump acted like a big bully on the stage,” said Cindy Von Waldner, 63, a lifelong Republican from Titusville, Fla. The president began to lose her support when the pandemic hit, and she said she did not believe he took it seriously enough or was transparent enough with the American people. She said she would most likely vote for Mr. Biden, her first time casting a Democratic ballot.

The revulsion against Mr. Trump’s performance extended well into his reliable base. One-third of the president’s supporters said they disapproved of his performance, including 11 percent who did so strongly. A modest but potentially significant 8 percent of people who backed him in the survey said the debate made them less likely to support Mr. Trump’s candidacy.

The debate didn’t change the mind of Peralte Roseme, a 35-year-old independent in West Palm Beach, Fla, who voted for President Obama and now plans to vote for Mr. Trump. Mr. Roseme, who is Black, said it felt “horrible” that he refused to directly condemn white supremacists and told one far-right group to “stand by,” but he supported Mr. Trump in the survey.

“I don’t think he’s racist or anything like that,” he said of Mr. Trump. Instead, he said he thought Mr. Trump was thinking: “I just don’t want to lose votes. These are people in my corner, why would I put them down?”

In a direct comparison with a Times/Siena survey of Pennsylvania conducted before the debate, the president’s personal ratings slumped across the board. The share of voters who thought Mr. Trump was honest and trustworthy and had the temperament and personality to be president dropped by more than a net 10 percentage points.

Based on New York Times/Siena College polls in Pennsylvania, with 725 likely voters from Sept. 25 to Sept. 27 and 706 likely voters from Sept. 30 to Oct. 2.

The president and his allies had long argued that Mr. Biden would disqualify himself with a poor performance in the debates, creating an opening for the president to reassemble his winning coalition. But Pennsylvania voters were about as likely to say Mr. Biden had the mental sharpness to serve effectively as president as they were before the debate. More voters said Mr. Trump didn’t have the mental sharpness it takes than said the same of Mr. Biden.

While Mr. Trump failed to capitalize on a rare opportunity to claw back into the race, the findings suggest that the debate did not shift the contest decisively in Mr. Biden’s direction, either. The results were close to the average of pre-debate surveys in both states, another reflection of the unusually stable polling results ahead of the election. In Pennsylvania, the race was even somewhat closer than it was in a Times/Siena poll conducted before the debate, which found Mr. Biden ahead by nine percentage points.

[…]

The polls found that voters in Florida and Pennsylvania remained deeply divided along the familiar demographic lines of the Trump era, with the president leading among white voters without a college degree and Mr. Biden countering with a significant lead among nonwhite voters and white four-year college graduates.

Mr. Biden led among voters 65 and older in both states, continuing one of the more surprising electoral shifts of this election cycle in two of the oldest states in the country.

In Pennsylvania, Mr. Trump faces a large deficit among white college-educated voters, who back Mr. Biden, 59 percent to 31 percent. Mr. Biden held a similar 60-32 percent lead in the suburbs of Philadelphia, doubling Hillary Clinton’s margin of victory in the region four years ago.

Mr. Trump nonetheless remained at the edge of competitiveness in Pennsylvania, thanks to a significant lead among white voters without a college degree. Over all, Mr. Trump led Mr. Biden, 58 percent to 34 percent, among white voters without a degree, who represent around half of likely voters in the state.

Surveys have tended to suggest a closer race in Florida, with pollsters showing Mr. Trump with surprising strength among Hispanic and particularly Cuban-American voters. The Times/Siena poll found no signs of any significant gains by Mr. Trump among the state’s Hispanic voters, however, with Mr. Biden leading among that group, 58-34. In Miami-Dade County over all, Mr. Biden leads, 61-30. In both cases, the results are comparable to or better than Hillary Clinton’s margin four years ago, though the estimates for smaller subgroups carry a considerable margin of sampling error. Mr. Biden narrowly led an even smaller sample of less than 50 Cuban-American voters, who were registered as Republicans by nearly a two-to-one margin.

You can understand why Trump would be desperate to change the subject after that performance but getting COVID and recklessly exposing a bunch people possibly including Biden (who he didn’t bother to inform of his diagnosis) may not be a big help.

I hate to alarm you but …

The Atlantic’s Ed Yong is one of the best COVID reporters around. And he reminds us that Biden isn’t necessarily out of the woods:

“I don’t wear masks like him,” President Donald Trump said during Tuesday night’s presidential debate, deriding his opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden. “Every time you see him, he’s got a mask.” But at nearly 1 a.m. eastern time today, Trump announced that he had tested positive for the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, which causes COVID-19.  

As president, Trump’s dire mishandling of the U.S. pandemic response has contributed to the deaths of about 200,000 Americans and at least 7.2 million infections. But now that he himself is sick, one has to wonder: How many people has Trump personally infected? And could Biden be one of them? Encouragingly, Biden tested negative for the virus today, but “a negative test doesn’t say he’s completely in the clear,” says Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at Columbia University. Several factors suggest that he could have been exposed to the virus during the debate, and should continue to take precautions for at least another week.

First, there are the conditions of the debate itself. The coronavirus mostly spreads through the air, traveling from the nose and mouth of an infected person in either large, wet particles (droplets) or smaller, drier ones (aerosols). Most droplets fall to the ground within six feet of their source, and Trump and Biden were clearly standing farther apart than that. But “aerosols behave like cigarette smoke and don’t stop at six feet,” says Linsey Marr, who studies airborne-disease transmission at Virginia Tech. “Imagine Trump was smoking the whole time. Would Biden have been exposed to some of that?”

When thinking about COVID-19 transmission, there are no absolutes, only probabilities.

The distance between Trump and Biden lowered the odds of infection: The farther Trump’s aerosols traveled, the more dilute they would have become. But almost everything else about the debate increased the risk that those aerosols could have found their way into Biden’s nose. People release about 10 times more aerosols when talking than when breathing silently, Marr says, and even more when talking loudly. Trump certainly did that—for 90 minutes, in an enclosed space, without wearing a mask, and often in Biden’s direction. “It wasn’t a one-off cough by someone in the audience,” says Joseph Allen, an environmental-health expert at Harvard University. “It was one and a half hours of constant emissions.” These are the same conditions that make bars and restaurants such risky venues for COVID-19 transmission.

The debate took place inside a spacious atrium at Case Western Reserve University, in Cleveland, and ventilation—how often air is circulated, how thoroughly it is filtered, and where the vents are—would have affected Biden’s risk of catching viruses from Trump. These factors are unclear. Under advice from the Cleveland Clinic, the university detailed several steps to protect the health of participants, including limited attendance, disinfectant measures, and extra space between seats. “But what was notably absent was any mention of healthy building strategies, like filtration and ventilation,” Allen says. “These are things that should be thought about all the time, and certainly in this case.”

Second, there’s the matter of Trump himself. One of the most crucial questions—and the biggest unknowns—is whether he was contagious during the debate. The incubation period for COVID-19—the time between becoming infected and developing symptoms—can last two to 14 days, but is most often four to five days. But people can be infectious one to three days before their symptoms first emerge. Assuming that Trump first developed symptoms on Wednesday (when aides say he was feeling poorly) or yesterday (when he got the test that led to his diagnosis), he would most likely have been infected last weekend, and been infectious on the night of the debate.  

In a statement, the Cleveland Clinic said that “everyone permitted inside the debate hall tested negative for COVID-19 prior to entry.” [We now know that Trump and his entourage didn’t get tested there. They arrived too late and were admitted on “the honor system.” Think about that… digby]

But no test is perfect, and the fastest ones are more likely to produce false-negative results, failing to detect viruses that are actually present. Even the more sensitive tests have false-negative rates of 38 percent on the first day of symptoms, and almost 100 percent four days before that. In those early days, “you’d expect virus levels to be increasing exponentially,” Rasmussen says. “It’s completely plausible that you could test negative, and a few hours later, test positive.”[…]

“Everyone who was at the debate should now be quarantining as much as possible, monitoring themselves closely for symptoms, wearing masks, and keeping their physical distance as much as possible,” says Eleanor Murray, an epidemiologist at Boston University. That goes for Biden, too, despite today’s negative test. After being exposed to the virus, half of the people who go on to show symptoms are symptomatic by day five—that would be Sunday for Biden, if he was exposed during the debate. About 98 percent of people are symptomatic by day 12, which would be next Sunday. If Biden is still testing negative a week from now, “it’ll be a good sign that there’s little likelihood of having been infected,” Murray says. Until then, he has to wait.

The image of Trump shouting at Biden on a national stage raises the specter of the former infecting the latter. But as ever, the pandemic says as much about the world we live in as the behavior of individuals. That we are even weighing the possibility of the incumbent president inadvertently infecting his opponent with a pandemic virus during a nationally televised event should be an indictment of America’s laxity in dealing with the pandemic—its reticence to restrict indoor activities, which give the virus the best chance of finding new hosts; its failure to enforce measures like masks, which might render such events safer; and its continuing inability to control the disease, which many nations have brought to heel.

The White House has had a terrible time understanding how the virus is spread, somehow believing that being tested on a given day confers some kind of immunity until the next test or that it is infallible and a negative test requires no further precautions. They aren’t smart.

Let’s hope the Biden camp is smarter. But then, how could they not be? A pile of mushrooms is smarter than the Trump team.

It is impossible to feel sorry for these people

They didn’t care about others because they believed their own hype:

As America locked down this spring during the worst pandemic in a century, inside the Trump White House there was the usual defiance.

The tight quarters of the West Wing were packed and busy. Almost no one wore masks. The rare officials who did, like Matthew Pottinger, the deputy national security adviser, were ridiculed by colleagues as alarmist.

President Trump at times told staff wearing masks in meetings to “get that thing off,” an administration official said. Everyone knew that Mr. Trump viewed masks as a sign of weakness, officials said, and that his message was clear. “You were looked down upon when you would walk by with a mask,” said Olivia Troye, a top aide on the coronavirus task force who resigned in August and has endorsed former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.

In public, some of the president’s favorite targets were mask-wearing White House correspondents. “Would you take it off, I can hardly hear you,” Mr. Trump told Jeff Mason of Reuters in May, then mocked Mr. Mason for wanting “to be politically correct” when he refused.

This past week, a White House long in denial confronted reality after Mr. Trump and the first lady both tested positive for the virus, along with Hope Hicks, a top White House aide, and Bill Stepien, the Trump campaign manager, among others. The outcome appeared shocking but also inevitable in a West Wing that assumed that rapid virus tests for everyone who entered each morning were substitutes for other safety measures, like social distancing and wearing masks.

But the outcome was also a byproduct, former aides said, of the recklessness and top-down culture of fear that Mr. Trump created at the White House and throughout his administration. If you wanted to make the boss happy, they said, you left the mask at home.

When the nation went into lockdown in March, Mr. Trump was determined to play down the virus. He talked of reopening as soon as Easter, April 12, pushed states to lift restrictions early and pressured schools, churches and businesses to go back to normal, all in the hope of saving his campaign.

But behind the White House gates, Mr. Trump and his aides relied heavily on the daily rapid testing available to them. At times Mr. Trump took numerous rapid tests throughout the day.

Aides were divided on the risks. Jared Kushner, Mr. Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, and Dan Scavino, the White House social media director, were among the least concerned, colleagues said. They viewed themselves as protected because of the testing available to them and maintained that getting the virus was not a death sentence.

Ms. Hicks, a longtime aide who is one of the president’s closest advisers, was more concerned, colleagues said. She took more precautions than most others and sometimes wore a mask in meetings.

Colleagues said that newcomers to Mr. Trump’s orbit, like Kayleigh McEnany, the White House press secretary, never wore a mask in his presence, in what was interpreted by other staff members as an attempt to please the new boss.

As the months progressed, a small number of people in the White House tested positive, including a valet to the presidenta top aide to the vice president and Robert C. O’Brien, the national security adviser. But when few others did, aides to the president grew even less concerned.

By June, the month before Mr. O’Brien tested positive, the White House had already stopped conducting temperature checks for people entering the complex. Only those aides who were interacting directly with the president received daily tests. Masks remained rare sightings.

The attitude was widespread in the administration. At the Justice Department in May, Attorney General William P. Barr told a New York Times Magazine reporter who arrived in a mask for an interview that “I’m not going to infect you,” and then sat by as an aide suggested, twice, that the reporter take the mask off. The reporter did.

Even on Friday, only hours after the president had announced at 1 a.m. on Twitter that he and the first lady had tested positive, the White House was trying to project that it was business as usual. “We had a great jobs report this morning,” Mark Meadows, the president’s chief of staff, told reporters at the White House. “Unfortunately, that’s not what everybody is focused on this morning.”

Nonetheless, they made every effort to carry on with a nothing-to-see-here-folks mentality.

Mr. Meadows, who had been in close contact with the president in recent days, arrived at work without a mask, and continued to claim that a mask was not necessary because he had tested negative. (Mr. Meadows wore a mask when he accompanied Mr. Trump, also in a mask, to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Friday evening.)

Remember this?

Basically, they were asking for it. And they were leading a whole bunch of their followers to do the same thing.

I particularly love the fact that Jared was unconcerned because he didn’t think the illness was that bad. I assume the 200,000+ dead people and their families don’t have a lot of pity for him now.

Update:

Onward Christian Trumpie

Donald Trump's coronavirus diagnosis thrusts spotlight on Vice President  Mike Pence | Deccan Herald

The unctuous super-Christian Mike Pence doing his Dear Leader’s work:

Vice President Mike Pence in March directed the nation’s top disease control agency to use its emergency powers to effectively seal the U.S. borders, overruling the agency’s scientists who said there was no evidence the action would slow the coronavirus, according to two former health officials. The action has so far caused nearly 150,000 children and adults to be expelled from the country.

The top Centers for Disease Control and Prevention doctor who oversees these types of orders had refused to comply with a Trump administration directive saying there was no valid public health reason to issue it, according to three people with direct knowledge of the doctor’s refusal.

So Pence intervened in early March. The vice president, who had taken over the Trump administration’s response to the growing pandemic, called Dr. Robert Redfield, the CDC’s director, and told him to use the agency’s special legal authority in a pandemic anyway.

Also on the phone call were Pence’s chief of staff, Marc Short, and acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf. Redfield immediately ordered his senior staff to get it done, according to a former CDC official who was not authorized to discuss internal deliberations and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The CDC’s order covered the U.S. borders with both Mexico and Canada, but has mostly affected the thousands of asylum seekers and immigrants arriving at the southern border. Public health experts had urged the administration to focus on a national mask mandate, enforce social distancing and increase the number of contact tracers to track down people exposed to the virus.

But Stephen Miller, a top aide to President Donald Trump who has been a vocal opponent of immigration, pushed for the expulsion order.

“That was a Stephen Miller special. He was all over that,” said Olivia Troye, a former top aide to Pence, who coordinated the White House coronavirus task force. She recently resigned in protest, saying the administration had placed politics above public health. “There was a lot of pressure on DHS and CDC to push this forward.”

The only difference between Trump and Pence is the tweeting.

A public disservice announcement

Link.

As of this writing, two Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee have tested positive for COVID-19: Sens. Mike Lee of Utah and Thom Tillis of North Carolina. Nebraska Republican Sen.

Ben Sasse has tested negative but will self-quarantine. Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa refuses to be tested even after meeting with Lee on Thursday. Both serve on Judiciary. More Republican Judiciary members at the acting president’s Rose Garden ceremony last week shared the second row with those now known to be infected.

Esquire’s Charlie Pierce:

McConnell says the nomination remains at full throttle and on schedule, but the reporting out of Washington indicates that the White House staff is completely freaking out, and that the Senate majority over which McConnell presides is wondering if pumping the brakes a bit might be the play now. [WaPo’s Robert] Costa managed to pry this money quote out of a GOP aide, who wants the Leader to take next week off:

“If some in the Republican caucus get sick, we are screwed.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell insisted on Friday morning he means to press “full steam ahead” on Amy Coney Barrett’s nomination to the Supreme Court. Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) could end up mighty lonely and short on votes at his own hearing.

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