Showing posts with label JOHNSON B.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JOHNSON B.. Show all posts

May 27, 2021

Boris Johnson’s former top aide paints a damning picture of the U.K. government’s pandemic response.

 Dominic Cummings testifying about the British government’s response to the pandemic at a Parliamentary hearing in London on Wednesday.

Credit...UK Parliament, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

NY TIMES

LONDON — Dominic Cummings, the former top aide to Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain, on Wednesday painted a picture of chaos, incompetence and confusion at the heart of the government in a ferociously critical account of its early handling of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Testifying before lawmakers, Mr. Cummings said that Mr. Johnson had initially regarded Covid-19 as a “scare story” and at one point had suggested that a doctor inject him with the coronavirus on live television to play down the dangers to a worried public.

The prime minister was being advised by a health secretary, Matt Hancock, whom Mr. Cummings accused in his testimony of lying repeatedly, being unworthy of the health care workers he directed and presiding over the deadly transfer of elderly patients from hospitals to nursing homes, many of them carrying the virus.

And as the pandemic closed in on Britain, Mr. Johnson was distracted, his former aide said, by an unflattering story about his fiancée and her dog.

“When the public needed us most, the government failed,” said Mr. Cummings, the political strategist who masterminded Britain’s campaign to leave the European Union and engineered Mr. Johnson’s rise to power before falling out bitterly with his boss and emerging as a self-styled whistle-blower.

Mr. Cummings testified for more than seven hours, in a scene with few precedents in British politics: an unelected aide who had been arguably the nation’s second-most powerful man, offering an unfiltered look at the inner workings of the British government as it confronted the greatest national emergency since World War II.

“The problem in this crisis was very much lions led by donkeys, over and over again,” Mr. Cummings said.

Mr. Johnson, who was hospitalized with a severe case of Covid-19 in April 2020, flatly rejected several of the assertions of his former aide in his own appearance on Wednesday in Parliament, where lawmakers are trying to determine how the early days of the pandemic were botched so badly.

Mr. Cummings, 49, did not absolve himself of all blame. He admitted he had not been open about the reasons for a much-criticized road trip he made with his family that breached lockdown rules. And he acknowledged his mistake in not pushing the prime minister to lock down the country earlier than he did, in March of last year.

“Yes, it was a huge failing of mine,” Mr. Cummings told a joint meeting of Parliament’s Science and Technology Committee and Health and Social Care Committees. “I bitterly regret that I did not hit the emergency panic button earlier than I did.”

April 30, 2020

The US death toll passes 60,000. The US has also more than 1m cases UPDATES




Known global death toll passes 225,000
According to researchers at Johns Hopkins University, at least 226,771 people have died around the world, while at least 3,187,919 have been infected. The figures are likely to underestimate the scale of the pandemic because of suspected official underreporting and differing statistical recording regimes.

The US coronavirus death toll has surpassed 60,000. The US has also confirmed more than 1m cases of coronavirus, representing about a third of all cases from around the world.

Trump said federal guidelines aimed at limiting the spread of the virus would be “fading out”. The guidelines are set to expire tomorrow, and Trump signaled he was looking ahead to reopening the country, applauding governors who have started to allow some businesses to reopen with restrictions.

“I am very much in favor of what they’re doing,” Trump said. “They’re getting it going.”

Lab technicians loading vials of remdesivir, an experimental antiviral drug to treat the coronavirus, at a Gilead Sciences facility last month in California.
US drug trial shows ‘clear cut’ effect, says  Fauci

 A trial in the US shows the antiviral drug remdesivir, when given to Covid-19 patients,  presents a “clear-cut” effect, according to the head of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Dr Anthony Fauci. There are now over 60,000 U.S. deaths from covid-19

He hails it as proof a drug can block the coronavirus shortly after the medicine’s maker, Gilead Sciences, revealed it had met its primary goals. Fauci says the “data shows that remdesivir has a clear-cut, significant, positive effect in diminishing the time to recovery”, adding that it proves “that a drug can block this virus”.

The drug accelerated the recovery time of infected patients by 31 percent, from 15 days in patients who got a placebo to 11 days in people treated with remdesivir, Fauci said. But it only reduced the death rate from 11 percent to 8 percent, which Fauci said lacked statistical significance.

The drug must be given intravenously over 5 to 10 days and the NIAID trial results only apply to hospitalized patients. Remdesivir is not intended for use in the majority of patients, estimated to be 80 percent or more, who are infected with coronavirus but do not require hospitalization.

Eric Topol, director of the Scripps Research Translational Institute in La Jolla, Calif., said that remdesivir “isn’t a breakthrough drug, but it is safe.” Speeding recoveries and reducing the length of hospital stays can ease the burden on the health system. Remdesivir likely will serve as a basis for drug cocktails and better antivirals, experts said.

“You have to get your foot in the door, and this is a good first step, for sure,” Rajesh T. Gandhi, an infectious disease doctor at Massachusetts General Hospital.   Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security said, “There’s clearly going to be people who don’t need it, who are going to get better on their own, and there’s going to be people who are too sick to get it,” he said.

Gilead also said that people who were given the drug within 10 days of first showing symptoms fared somewhat better than patients who were given the drug later.

A top World Health Organization official declined comment on Wednesday on reports that Gilead Science’s remdesivir could help treat Covid-19, the respiratory disease caused by the novel coronavirus, but said that further data was needed, Reuters reports.

“I wouldn’t like to make any specific comment on that, because I haven’t read those publications in detail,” Dr Mike Ryan, head of the WHO’s emergencies programme, told an online briefing in response to a question, adding it can sometimes take a number of publications to determine a drug’s efficacy.

“Clearly we have the randomised control trials that are underway both in the UK and US, the ‘Solidarity trials’ with WHO. Remdesivir is one of the drugs under observation in many of those trials. So I think a lot more data will come out,” he said.

Ryan added: “But we are hopeful this drug and others may prove to be helpful in treating Covid-19.”
A Dongfeng Honda factory in Wuhan, China. Chinese factories are up and running again, but consumers aren’t spending much yet.
The stock market rallied after the news about remdesivir.
With more than a million coronavirus cases reported in the United States and more than 26 million people out of work, the hunger for good news was so strong on Wednesday that reports that a possible treatment for the coronavirus showed early signs of promise helped rally the stock market.

President Trump and his advisers similarly embraced optimism as a theme in a week when the nation surpassed 60,000 deaths from the virus. As states begin to lift quarantines, the White House has continued to offer a revisionist history of the pandemic in which the actions of Mr. Trump and his team were not belated and inadequate, but bold and effective


The US economy shrank by 4.8% last quarter, according to new data from the commerce department.

The figure is the latest indication of the devastating impact the pandemic is having on the economy.

U.S. gross domestic product, the broadest measure of goods and services produced in the economy, fell at a 4.8 percent annual rate in the first quarter of the year, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. That is the first decline since 2014 and the worst quarterly contraction since 2008, when the country was in a deep recession.

Things will get much worse. Widespread layoffs and business closings did not happen until late March, or the very end of the last quarter, in most of the country. Economists expect figures from the current quarter, which will capture the effects of the shutdown more fully, to show that G.D.P. contracted at an annual rate of 30 percent or more.

“They’re going to be the worst in our lifetime,” Dan North, the chief economist for the credit insurance company Euler Hermes North America, said of the second-quarter figures. “They’re going to be the worst in the post-World War II era.”



A new poll indicates most Americans are not ready to reopen the country.

The PBS NewsHour/NPR/Marist poll showed large majorities of Americans are uncomfortable with reopening schools or restaurants unless coronavirus testing is significantly expanded. Americans are split in how they view President Donald Trump’s handling of the economy, the poll suggested, with 50 percent of U.S. adults saying they approved and 48 percent that they disapproved with relatively little change since March when businesses around the country began to shutter. When asked about how the president has handled the coronavirus pandemic, 55 percent of Americans said they do not think he is doing a good job, up slightly from 49 percent in March.

Boris Johnson and Carrie Symonds announce birth of baby boy
A statement released by the couple said they had a “healthy baby boy at a London hospital earlier this morning”. A spokeswoman for the prime minister and his partner said both mother and baby were “doing very well”.

Johnson returned to frontline work on Monday after suffering from coronavirus and spending time in intensive care.
Hundreds gathered on the streets of Williamsburg Tuesday for the funeral of a rabbi who reportedly died of Covid-19.
A crowded Brooklyn funeral creates a crisis for de Blasio.

New York City’s mayor, Bill de Blasio, personally oversaw the dispersal of a large, tightly packed Hasidic Jewish funeral on Wednesday, lashing out at the conduct of mourners, sparking angry counter-criticism from community leaders.

The local police precinct did not stand in their way, a testament to the Hasidic community’s influence in the Williamsburg neighborhood. But by 7:30 p.m., an estimated 2,500 ultra-Orthodox Jewish men had arrived to mourn Rabbi Chaim Mertz, packing together shoulder-to-shoulder on the street and on the steps of brownstones, violating social distancing guidelines and turning the funeral into one of most fraught events of the virus crisis for Mayor Bill de Blasio.

Police began to disperse the mourners, and the mayor lashed out on Twitter at “the Jewish community, and all communities,” saying he had instructed the Police Department “to proceed immediately to summons or even arrest those who gather in large groups.”

Mr. de Blasio spent much of Wednesday on the defensive over his handling of the funeral and his use of the phrase “Jewish community” in his public criticism of the mourners.

In a tweet, the mayor called the large processional “absolutely unacceptable”, and vowed to bring social gatherings such as that event to an end while movements are still restricted by coronavirus guidelines.

A follow-up tweet from the mayor drew criticism for singling out the Jewish community and generalizing about its members: On Wednesday morning De Blasio apologized at a press event for a heavy-handed response, saying: “If you saw anger and frustration, you’re right. I spoke out of real distress. People’s lives were in danger right before my eyes.”

On the same day as the funeral, crowds gathered to watch a city flyover by the US navy’s Blue Angels and the air force’s Thunderbirds planes in honor of healthcare workers.

“Only bigots have a problem when a few 100 Hasidim do what thousands of people in the same city have done the same day: not social distance,” the Orthodox Jewish Public Affairs Council tweeted.

The Bad News Won’t Stop, but Markets Keep Rising

Trillions in stimulus dollars have convinced Wall Street that the government has its back, and investors are seizing on even glimmers of good news about the pandemic.

by the end of the day, the S&P 500 stock index had risen 2.7 percent.

That’s been the pattern lately. The drumbeat of grim news — one million known coronavirus cases in the United States, businesses are collapsing, the unemployment rate could reach 16 percent — has done little to deter stocks’ upward march.

Since March 23, when the Federal Reserve announced plans to make unlimited purchases of financial assets to prop up Wall Street, the S&P 500 has soared by more than 31 percent. The unlikely rally created more than $5 trillion of stock market wealth, allowing investors to reclaim more than half of their losses from a steep sell-off earlier this year, in the early days of the pandemic.

Why are stocks climbing when news about the economy isn’t getting much better, and the severity of the public health crisis has barely abated? There are two main reasons: First, trillions of dollars of stimulus money from the Fed and Congress come with an implicit guarantee that the government will limit investors’ risk no matter how bad it gets. Second, the periodic glimmer of positive news fuels investors’ optimism that things can only get better.

Wednesday delivered on both fronts, after officials said that an antiviral drug made by Gilead Sciences showed promise in treating Covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. Also, the Federal Reserve said it would hold interest rates near zero and continue to do everything it could to stabilize the economy.
Food companies have been drawing on stockpiles of meat in cold storage, but they have warned that supplies to supermarkets could soon dwindle if plants remain closed amid illnesses.

Meatpacking plants are now ‘critical infrastructure,’ 

President Trump’s declared on Tuesday that meatpacking plants were “critical infrastructure” that should be kept open during the pandemic sent a powerful signal that protecting the nation’s food supply was a federal priority.

But exactly how the executive order would keep plants running, even in the middle of outbreaks that have sickened thousands of workers and turned the facilities into hot spots, was unclear.

“This is more symbolism than substance,” said Steve Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas. “He’s opening the door for the executive branch to take some far more specific actions vis-à-vis the meat plants, but the order itself doesn’t do anything.”

While the order does not explicitly mandate that plants stay open, it could allow the Agriculture Department to potentially force meat companies to fulfill orders from retailers, effectively keeping them in some capacity.

Lobbyists for the meat industry said the executive order, which allowed for the Defense Production Act to be invoked and could shield companies from lawsuits, was significant because it created federal guidelines for the steps plants needed to take to prevent the virus from spreading. Though it did not explicitly mandate that plants stay open, it signaled that the decisions around whether to reopen should be driven by the federal government and not the local authorities.

“This order tells them they need to stay open, and they get cover,” Howard Roth, the president of the National Pork Producers Council, said on a conference call on Wednesday.

Still, the order does not address some critical questions, such as whether the plants should test all their workers for the virus before reopening. Some plants have reopened without widespread testing.
Nearly half of inmates at Terminal Island federal prison infected ...
Officials began testing every inmate at a federal prison in California; 4 in 10 have the virus

More than 40 percent of inmates at federal prison in Southern California have tested positive for the coronavirus, authorities say, a wave of infections revealed after officials moved to test everyone held there.

The Bureau of Prisons reported that 443 of the 1,055 inmates held at Terminal Island, a low-security federal prison in San Pedro, Calif., have tested positive. Two inmates at Terminal Island have died from the virus so far, the bureau reported.

A spokesman for the bureau said Wednesday that while this represented more than 4 in 10 inmates at the prison, only 10 percent of the people tested had symptoms such as coughing or a fever. The spokesman said the plan to test everyone will help the prison slow the spread of infection by identifying and isolating people who have the virus and no symptoms.
Second-week crash' is time of peril for some COVID-19 patients ...
‘Second-week crash’ is time of peril for some covid-19 patients
During the first week that she had covid-19, Morgan Blue felt weak, with a severe backache and a fever. The symptoms did not alarm doctors at her local emergency department, however. They sent her home after she showed up at the hospital.

But on Day 8, the 26-year-old customer service representative from Flint, Mich., abruptly felt as though she was choking. An ambulance took her to the hospital, where she spent eight days, four of them in intensive care, before she recovered and was able to go home.

There is little consensus among doctors and experts about why the second week of covid-19 seems to be so dangerous for some people. But critical care specialists, EMTs and others are aware of this frightening aspect. Learning on the fly as they confront the virus, clinicians interviewed by The Washington Post speculated about the influence of an individual’s genes, the virus’s effect on lung tissue, overactive immune responses, and blood clotting. 

Doctors say the overwhelming majority of covid-19 cases do not require hospitalization. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. covid-19 patients are currently hospitalized at a rate of 29.2 per 100,000 people. That represents about 10 percent of the 1 million known cases so far. Of those, only a small percentage require intensive care or ventilators, and only some will experience a rapid deterioration of their health.

But people with the coronavirus can crash before or after they are hospitalized. Doctors report seeing patients who wait too long to seek care, including those who do not feel the symptoms of plummeting oxygen levels, such as shortness of breath, until they are in crisis. No one is sure why. Many people’s lungs remain flexible for a while, allowing carbon dioxide out and forestalling the sensation that they aren’t getting enough oxygen.

“The people who actually crash, they’ve actually been sick a while,” said Merceditas Villanueva, an associate professor of medicine at the Yale School of Medicine. “They’ve underestimated how sick they are."

Another line of thought focuses on the virus’s possible effect on the cardiovascular system. Researchers have suggested that some crashes are caused by events such as heart attacks, strokes and clots related to blood complications.

Eytan Raz, a neurointerventional radiologist at NYU Langone Health, said one theory is that some of the clotting complications may be caused by an overreactive immune response that comes after the virus has settled in, multiplied and triggered a defensive army of antibodies. It also could explain why people with cardiovascular disease, diabetes and obesity, as well as smokers, are more likely to have severe illness.

Ventilators also may contribute to the crash, Buhr said, especially in overwhelmed hospitals where doctors cannot spend enough time fine-tuning the devices that force oxygen into the lungs. Too much pressure on strained lungs can produce more of the inflammatory response to the coronavirus, worsening the clogging of air sacs called alveoli.

“We don’t like to talk about that one as much, but treatment of critically ill people is very complicated,” Buhr said. “Ventilators don’t work like meds. Adjusting the ventilator requires a lot of hands-on effort. And, in particular when hospitals are under stress, it’s much more difficult to provide that level of care.”

Within the field, a debate has broken out about whether physicians are turning to ventilators too often and too early, driven by the traditional response to remarkably low blood oxygen levels in some patients who show none of the symptoms of oxygen deprivation. Some doctors have advocated a more conservative initial response that would spare more patients the sedation, intubation and side effects of mechanical ventilation.

Aware of the hazards of the second week of the disease, hospitals have employed multiple tactics. Some are putting patients on oxygen earlier and using blood thinners prophylactically to prevent clots. At UCLA, caregivers more aggressively monitor ventilator pressure and use proning — placing patients on their stomachs — as much as 16 hours a day, Buhr said. The technique has been shown to increase the amount of oxygen getting into the lungs of patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome, a hallmark of severe covid-19.
Fauci says second wave of coronavirus is 'inevitable' | TheHill

Fauci: Second wave of coronavirus is ‘inevitable’

A second wave of the novel coronavirus is “inevitable,” said Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

The nation’s top epidemiologist said in a Tuesday interview with the Economic Club that the virus probably won’t go away because it’s highly transmissible and globally spread.

“It’s not going to disappear from the planet which means as we get into next season … in my mind, it’s inevitable that we will have a return of the virus or maybe it never even went away,” he said, noting that parts of the world like southern Africa are seeing an increase in cases. “When it does, how we handle it, will determine our fate.”

Fauci said identifying people who are infected, isolating them and tracing their contacts in an effective and efficient way will be instrumental in keeping the number of projected deaths down to about 70,000 or 80,000 as states move to reopen their economies. New cases will emerge in the process, he said.


“If by that time we have put into place all of the countermeasures that you need to address this, we should do reasonably well,” he said. “If we don’t do that successfully, we could be in for a bad fall and a bad winter. ”
Push to reopen economy runs up against workers and consumers ...
Push to reopen economy runs up against workers and consumers worried about risk

Plans for a swift reopening of malls, factories and other businesses accelerated Tuesday, but they quickly collided with the reality that persuading workers and consumers to overlook their coronavirus fears and resume their roles in powering the U.S. economy may prove difficult.

Businesses in Georgia — including massage parlors and barbershops — began welcoming customers Friday for the first time since Gov. Brian Kemp (R) issued a mandatory shelter-in-place order on April 2. And in Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott (R) is allowing certain businesses, including retailers, restaurants and movie theaters, to reopen at the end of the week, but at only 25 percent capacity.

After several weeks of a comprehensive economic pause, companies, workers and consumers are returning to a changed landscape. The steady growth and low unemployment that Americans enjoyed just two months ago have vanished. Hanging over plans to restart the nation’s economic engine are unprecedented health concerns, as individuals balance each shopping trip, airplane flight and restaurant meal against the risk of catching a sometimes-fatal illness.

April 7, 2020

UPDATES: NY Deaths relatively flat across the region.


Elmhurst Hospital Center in Queens on Sunday.

For days, officials in and around New York sought indications that the coronavirus was nearing a peak in the region — the U.S. epicenter of the pandemic — and might start leveling off. And for days, the death toll climbed faster and faster.  In New York State, for instance, it rose by more than 200, then more than 400, then 630 people in a single day.
But on Monday, for the second day in a row, officials found reasons for hope even as hundreds of people continued to die and thousands clung to life on ventilators. On both Sunday and Monday, fewer than 600 deaths from the virus were reported in New York: 594 on Sunday, 599 on Monday, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said. Mr. Cuomo said the data suggested that the spread of the virus in New York was nearing its apex, but he emphasized that the state remained in a dire, unsustainable state of emergency. “If we are plateauing, we are plateauing at a very high level and there is tremendous stress on the health care system,” he said.

Here were the latest numbers from the day:

Deaths in New York State: 4,758, up 599 from 4,159 on Sunday morning.

Confirmed cases: 130,689, up from 122,031 in New York.

Hospitalized in New York State: 16,837, up 2 percent from 16,479 on Sunday. It was the third straight day of single-digit percentage growth, after a long period when hospitalizations were growing 20 to 30 percent a day.

In intensive care: 4,504, up 2 percent from 4,376 on Sunday. The day-over-day increase, 128, was the smallest in at least two weeks. Last week, the number of people in intensive care beds, which have ventilators, was growing by more than 300 people a day.

In New York City, officials said later on Monday that the number of virus cases had reached 68,766, that an estimated 15,333 virus patients were hospitalized and that the death toll was 2,738.

Even if the  infection curve is flattening, the virus’s daily toll remains horrific.
New York City reported a one-day total of 219 deaths on Monday morning, bringing the city’s death toll to 2,475.

In a notable shift from previous weeks, when he pleaded for more ventilators from the federal government and other states, he said New York was now adequately stocked.

Later in the day, Mr. Cuomo said in an interview on MSNBC that President Trump had approved his request for the U.S.N.S. Comfort, a 1,000-bed Navy hospital ship that arrived in New York last week, to begin treating virus patients.

In New Jersey, Gov. Philip D. Murphy reported 71 reported deaths on Monday, and 86 on Sunday, after a three-day streak when deaths had broken triple digits. And in Connecticut, Gov. Ned Lamont on Monday reported a one-day death toll of 17, the smallest number since last Wednesday.

Donald Trump's top economic adviser Peter Navarro warned White House officials in January and February that coronavirus could kill up to two million Americans and cost the economy $5.7 Trillion
Top Trump official warned in January that coronavirus could kill 2M Americans and cost

 President Donald Trump's trade adviser Peter Navarro issued his first grim warning in a memo dated January 29 - just days after the first COVID-19 cases were reported in the US. At the time, Trump was publicly downplaying the risk that the novel coronavirus posed to Americans - though weeks later he would assert that no one could have predicted the devastation seen today. Navarro penned a second memo about a month later on February 23, in which he warned that as many as two million Americans could die from the virus as it tightened its grip on the nation. The memos were obtained by the New York Times and Axios on Monday, as the number of COVID-19 cases nationwide surpassed 368,200 with at least 11,000 deaths.

 British Prime Minister Boris Johnson pictured before he went to the hospital; he was transfered to the ICU Monday night - 11 days after testing positive for the coronavirus

Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain has been moved to intensive care.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson was moved into intensive care on Monday, a worrisome turn in his 10-day battle with the coronavirus and the starkest evidence yet of how the virus has threatened the British political establishment and thrown its new government into upheaval.

In a sign of how grave the situation had become, Downing Street said in a statement on Monday that Mr. Johnson had asked the foreign secretary, Dominic Raab, to deputize for him “where necessary.” The pound fell against the dollar after investors reacted to the news.

After noting earlier in the day that the prime minister was still getting official papers, Mr. Johnson’s aides said he had been moved to the intensive care unit in case he needed a ventilator to help his recovery. Not every patient in critical care is ventilated, medical experts said, but many are — or are at least given oxygen. Mr. Johnson remains conscious, officials said.

Nancy Pelosi

Worried that $2 trillion law wasn’t enough, Trump and congressional leaders converge on need for new coronavirus economic package
Political leaders say more aid is needed to confront mounting economic problems

Congressional leaders and the White House are converging on the need for a new assistance package to try to contain the coronavirus pandemic’s economic devastation, fearful that a $2 trillion bailout law enacted last month will have only a limited effect.

House Democrats are eyeing a package of spending increases that would “easily” cost more than $1 trillion, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) told lawmakers Monday, according to two officials on the conference call who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss it. Democrats are looking to extend unemployment aid and small-business assistance for additional months, as well as authorize another round of direct checks to taxpayers.

Trump has signaled support for some of the ideas that Democrats back, such as expanded help for small-business owners and new bailout checks for households. Republican leaders, meanwhile, have also called for more corporate aid and money to boost the overwhelmed health-care system.

Although there is some overlap in the political ideas, significant differences remain, and it’s unclear whether the sides will be able to reach a deal in the coming weeks. In a sign that lawmakers might be preparing to cut a deal, Pelosi has backed away from some of her recent proposals that Republicans found most objectionable, including a multi-trillion-dollar infrastructure plan. And Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has said he believes that Congress will have to act again to address health-care needs, among other things, opening the door to a pact. The two leaders spoke Thursday.

Their work to mobilize new legislation came amid growing signs that the economy is deteriorating much faster than expected and that the initial $2 trillion law is proving insufficient. Former Federal Reserve chair Janet L. Yellen told Pelosi and House Democrats on their conference call that the actual unemployment rate is probably 13 percent, not the 4.4 percent the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday.

Households and businesses are confronting so much turmoil that the new assistance programs are overwhelmed. State unemployment offices have been bombarded with people seeking help. And Bank of America said Monday that it had received 178,000 applications from firms seeking $32.9 billion in loans as companies clamor to qualify for the $349 billion Small Business Administration program.

The Senate has tentatively scheduled votes for the week of April 20, and the House leadership has also targeted that week for potential votes. But aides say the legislative schedule is entirely dependent on the course of the pandemic and whether the two chambers and Trump can come together on workable legislation.

A shopper in Flushing, Queens, on Monday, walking past closed stores. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said he would not risk people’s safety by allowing nonessential shops to open too soon.

As the virus spreads, crime plunges across New York
.
Crime has plummeted in New York City and across the state since the governor announced a stay-at-home order more than three weeks ago, data released on Monday shows.

In New York City, the number of felony and misdemeanor cases dropped a collective 43.3 percent from March 18 to March 24, compared with the same period in 2019, according to the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services.

All other regions in the state experienced an even greater decline over the same period: a drop of nearly 69 percent in misdemeanors and felonies.

Saudi Arabia locks down more cities amid steep increase in infections

Saudi Arabia announced late Monday that nine more cities would be added to the list of those on 24-hour lockdown, including the the capital, Riyadh, and the Red Sea port city of Jeddah.
Previously just the holy cities of Mecca and Medina, international pilgrimage destinations that had seen large numbers of cases, were subjected to these 24-hour curfews, along with some Jeddah neighborhoods. The rest of the country just had to stay inside at night.

December 13, 2019

Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain during a campaign event in London on Wednesday.

Conservatives Headed for Landslide in U.K. Vote: ‘Brexit Will Happen.’ Labour Faces Worst Defeat Since 1935.

The strong showing is vindication for Boris Johnson, who now has a chance to put his personal stamp on Britain, beginning with Brexit.
NY TIMES
LONDON — Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his Conservative Party appeared on course Thursday to win a commanding majority in the British Parliament, a striking victory that redraws the lines in British politics and paves the way for the country’s exit from the European Union early next year.
The Conservatives were projected to win 368 seats in the House of Commons, versus 191 for the Labour Party, according to an official exit poll. That would give the Conservatives an 86-seat majority, their largest since that amassed by Margaret Thatcher in 1987.
As the results began flowing in from individual districts, they pointed to a radical reconfiguration of Britain’s political map. The Conservative Party was projected to win dozens of Labour seats in the industrial north and Midlands, shattering the so-called red wall that has undergirded the Labour Party for generations.
Image
Credit...Tolga Akmen/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
For Mr. Johnson, whose brief tenure has been marked by serial defeats in Parliamentlegal reversals and ceaseless upheaval, it was a resounding vindication. Defying predictions that he would be tossed out of his job, the prime minister now seems assured of leading Britain through its most momentous transition since World War II.
For Britain, which has lurched from crisis to crisis since the 2016 Brexit referendum, its future seemingly shrouded in perpetual uncertainty, the election provided a rare moment of piercing clarity.

“It’s a remarkable victory,” said Tony Travers, a professor of politics at the London School of Economics. “Boris Johnson now has five years in power. Brexit will happen. Labour faces an existential question about its future — yet again.”
Image
Credit...Andrew Testa for The New York Times
As news of the Conservative victory began to circulate, the pound surged in trading against the dollar and euro, reflecting relief that British politics is likely to stabilize and Britain is more likely to have an orderly departure from the European Union.
The exit poll, conducted for three major British broadcasters, is not a definitive result; the numbers could shift, particularly in closely fought districts. But it has proved generally reliable, predicting, for example, that Mr. Johnson’s predecessor, Theresa May, would fail to win a majority in 2017.
The news for Conservatives on Thursday was far better, with the party projected to gain 50 seats, in excess of what most polls predicted. The Labour Party lost 71 seats, its worst showing since 1983, and one that seemed likely to lead to the resignation of the party’s leader, Jeremy Corbyn.
The results, with their seismic shift in the parliamentary power balance, indicated that Mr. Johnson had won his bet that by calling another general election and throwing the question of Brexit back to the British public, he could break the stalemate in Parliament and win a mandate for his policy of a swift withdrawal from the European Union.
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Credit...Andrew Testa for The New York Times
There were, however, some red flags for Mr. Johnson, who will lead a Britain still deeply divided over Brexit.
The Scottish National Party was projected to win 55 of Scotland’s 59 seats, a gain of about 20 seats, though analysts warned that the exit poll data there was particularly volatile and subject to revision. The party has stridently opposed Mr. Johnson’s drive for a swift Brexit, and its powerful performance could renew calls for a referendum on Scottish independence, which the prime minister opposes.
The Conservative Party’s gains among working-class voters in the Midlands and the north could also affect Mr. Johnson’s freedom to negotiate a trade agreement with the European Union. Those voters will push for a revival of Britain’s manufacturing economy and protection from imports, a vision that is at odds with the free-market, deregulatory ethos of Mr. Johnson and his aides.
One of Mr. Johnson’s top aides, Priti Patel, the home secretary, said Thursday evening that the new government would introduce legislation to complete Brexit before Christmas, a lightning fast schedule. But Britain’s departure would still not be likely to happen before Jan. 31, the date agreed upon with the European Union.
Many in Britain grumbled about having to go to the polls again so soon, especially in the weeks leading up to Christmas, when the weather is cold and the days are short.
But the stakes this time could not have been higher. Unlike the 2017 vote, this election clarified Britain’s immediate future for the first time since a narrow majority voted to leave the European Union in 2016.
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Credit...Mary Turner for The New York Times
Mr. Johnson’s victory extinguishes the possibility of Britain’s reversing that decision, a dream that has been nurtured by millions who believe that the referendum was a catastrophic error and should be rerun. Polls show a slim majority of people would now favor remaining in Europe, though campaigns for a second referendum have consistently fallen short in Parliament.
For the Labour Party, which had lagged the Conservatives in the polls throughout the campaign but seemed to be narrowing the gap in the past few days, it was a devastating defeat. The party struggled to shift the focus during the campaign from Brexit to social issues like health care, which play more to its benefit.
But one of the most senior Labor Party officials, John McDonnell, acknowledged that Brexit had dominated the campaign, keeping his party on the defensive.
Labour had promised to negotiate its own withdrawal agreement with Brussels and then put that to a popular vote. That message was less straightforward than Mr. Johnson’s rallying cry of “Get Brexit Done.”
Neither Labour’s stance on Brexit nor its hard left manifesto of nationalization, tax increases on the rich and huge public spending increases resonated with an electorate that appeared above all to to be ready to turn the page, even if the post-Brexit future is a minefield of uncertainties.
Adding to Labour’s problems was the deep personal unpopularity of Mr. Corbyn, who could never recapture the cheerful aura that seemed to surround him in 2017. Nor could he respond effectively to accusations of deep-rooted anti-Semitism in the party.
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Credit...Thanassis Stavrakis/Associated Press
Other smaller parties suffered as well, particularly the Liberal Democrats, which campaigned to reverse the results of the Brexit referendum. The party was projected to win only a single seat over what they won in 2017, and saw its total number of seats, which had grown because of defections from other parties, reduced by eight. The party’s leader, Jo Swinson, seemed in danger of losing her seat.
It is difficult to overstate the shift in Mr. Johnson’s fortunes from a year ago, when he was briefly a back bencher. As a fledgling prime minister in September, he had faced a mutiny from nearly two dozen members of his own party over his threat to leave the European Union without a deal. Britain’s Supreme Court ruled that his decision to suspend the Parliament for five weeks — to squelch its ability to debate his Brexit policy — was illegal.
He purged the party dissidents and has largely recast the Conservatives as a band of hard-line Brexiteers.
In the campaign, Mr. Johnson stuck to a disciplined strategy, forswearing the clownishness that has characterized his political career. He avoided scrutiny from the news media, declined to be drawn into debates about issues aside from Brexit and conducted his campaign largely on photo opportunities — like when he drove a backhoe through a Styrofoam wall emblazoned with the word, “Gridlock.”
Every single Conservative candidate signed a pledge to support Mr. Johnson’s withdrawal agreement, guaranteeing that if his party won even a one-seat majority, Britain would depart the bloc under the terms of that deal.
Once Parliament gives its approval to the withdrawal deal, Mr. Johnson’s first order of business will be to negotiate a trade agreement with the European Union, a task that many experts predict will be arduous and all but impossible to complete before Britain’s next deadline, Dec. 31, 2020.
That sets up another potential battle over extending the deadline — something that Mr. Johnson has sworn not to do — or leaving with no deal.