E3: US coronavirus: Trump briefs nation as negotiations over stimulus bill teeter – live
- Rand Paul becomes first senator to test positive for Covid-19
- Cuomo issues scathing indictment of government delays and missteps
- Bill de Blasio warns hospital supplies will run out in a week
- Follow global updates live
- See all our coronavirus coverage
Trump has moved away from figures to tell the country that he has very high poll ratings among military veterans.
The President appears to be less freewheeling than usual, and is unrolling a long list of figures of the relief effort. He goes on to add that he wants to make sure that military veterans are protected during the coronavirus outbreak.
Donald Trump says the US economy will “skyrocket” once the “war” against Covid-19 is won. He says the national guard has been ordered to help with the fight against the virus in New York, California and Washington, where the outbreak has hit hard. He says he spoke to the governors of all three states and they will have control of the national guard in their respective states. He says additional supplies will go the three states, including extra beds and facemasks. He says the supplies will be delivered in the next 48 hours. He also says Major Disaster Declarations have been approved for New York and Washington with approval for California to come.
Trump announces he has approved major disaster declarations for New York and Washington. A declaration for California, he adds, will be approved "very quickly."
The Coronavirus Task Force’s press briefing at the White House is about to start, nearly 90 minutes late but better late than never. Donald Trump starts the conference by saying the country is trying to repatriate two groups of young Americans in Peru and Honduras. Trump once again pretty much goes against the language of everyone else in the country by calling Covid-19 “the China virus”. The president reminds Anericans to wash their hands and practice social distancing. He also confirms Senator Rand Paul has Coronavirus.
The US ambassador to the West African country of Burkina Faso, Andrew Young, has tested positive for Covid-19. Italy’s ambassador to the country, along with several of the nation’s government ministers, have also tested positive for the virus.
The announcement of a statewide shelter-in-place order by the Louisiana governor, John Bel Edwards, is a marker of the growing concern that the state, and specifically the New Orleans metro area, could become a major Covid-19 hotspot.
There are now 837 confirmed coronavirus cases in Louisiana, compared with 15,168 in the state of New York and 1,536 in California – both states with millions more residents. The state, in the deep south of the America, now ranks third in per capita confirmed test results, in states across the US, behind New York and Washington.
Mitt Romney has said he will self-quarantine after his fellow Republican senator, Rand Paul, tested positive for Covid-19. Romney said he had sat next to Paul for “extended periods” in recent days.
Senator Romney’s office issued the following statement: pic.twitter.com/tBSx03ZlTr
The Coronavirus Task Force’s briefing from the White House, which was due to start at 4.30pm then 5pm ET, is now scheduled for 5.30pm. It’s perhaps not encouraging that the people charged with protecting the US from a pandemic can’t get a press conference started on time.
It’s fair to say Arizona’s Kyrsten Sinema is not pleased about unconfirmed reports her fellow senator Rand Paul went to the gym while waiting for the results of his (positive) coronavirus test:
I’ve never commented about a fellow Senator’s choices/actions. Never once.
This, America, is absolutely irresponsible. You cannot be near other people while waiting for coronavirus test results. It endangers others & likely increases the spread of the virus. https://t.co/651TJf8mWf
On Sunday police in Washington DC shut down streets in the nation’s capital that are popular with sightseers out to look at the capital’s cherry blossoms. There were fears that the crowds would help spread Covid-19.
Perhaps no surprise Louisiana has decided to issue a stay at home order – the virus is spreading incredibly fast in the state. Faster than anywhere in the world according to one source:
BREAKING: @LouisianaGov says, by comparison, Louisiana's growth rate of #COVID19 cases has been faster than any state or country in the world, based on analysis from the @ULLafayette.
*2 weeks ago, Louisiana had no known cases
*As of last Sunday: 91
*As of today: 837 as of today
Reports are emerging that Utah senator Mike Lee is in self-quarantine under advice from medical staff, although there has been no confirmation that he has Covid-19. Still, with the news that his fellow senator Rand Paul has the virus it’s not encouraging news for some of the most powerful people in the US that the Senate gym is still open. It should also be noted that Kansas senator Jerry Moran said he saw Paul in the swimming pool this morning, which would be an odd choice seeing as Paul had earlier been tested for the virus. He is also a qualified ophthalmologist, so it’s not like he is unaware of the basics of medicine.
I can't think of a worse place to keep open than the gym used by a bunch of old senators who travel back and forth from all 50 states every week.
Further afield , it appears likely that the 2020 Olympics will be postponed (making them possibly the 2021 Olympics). The IOC has dithered on the matter while sports leagues around the world have postponed or suspended seasons. Here’s our story:
The International Olympic Committee has paved the way for the Tokyo Games to be postponed after giving itself a four-week deadline to consider its options. While the IOC has emphatically ruled out cancelling the Olympics, it will consider a scaled down Games as well as delaying them for a few months or, more likely, a year.
Only last week the IOC president, Thomas Bach, insisted that there was “No Plan B”, but it has since softened its stance amid mounting criticism by athletes amid the coronavirus crisis. The IOC will now examine several scenarios over the next month, but it is thought that deferring to the summer of 2021 is the most likely option.
Related: Olympics postponement on the cards as IOC gives itself four-week deadline
Donald Trump is scheduled to speak at 5pm ET but it looks like the $1tn package to help the battered US economy is in trouble. The Republican-majority Senate is looking to vote despite disagreement from Democrats in Congress. Speaker Nancy Pelosi even said on Sunday that House Democrats may look to pursue their own legislation. “It’s on the Senate side now because that’s their deadline for a vote,” Pelosi said. “But we’ll be introducing our own bill and hopefully, it will be compatible with what they discussed in the Senate.”
Utah has reported its first death from Covid-19. Health officials said the man had been at Lakeview Hospital in Bountiful for two days and tested positive for the virus on Saturday. He has not been named but was over 60 and had existing health problems.
Ohio and Louisiana have now joined states such as Illinois, New York and California in telling residents to stay at home. The orders will come into effect in both states from Monday evening. All non-essential businesses will close but residents will be allowed to leave their homes for activities such as exercise, grocery shopping and medical emergencies.
We are now at a new stage. .@DrAmyActon just signed a statewide #StayHome order for Ohioans.
The Washington Post reports that New York-Presbyterian hospitals have banned visitors - including partners -for women giving birth, due to fears they could help spread Covid-19 among patients and medical staff. “For the time being, we really do need to exclude all visitors, including partners for women admitted in labor. This is intended to protect all of us,” Dena Goffman, the quality and patient-safety leader for obstetrics across the New York-Presbyterian Weill Cornell enterprise, told the Post.
It was hoped drive-thru sites would increase the number of Americans getting access to tests for Covid-19. But the system as a whole appears to be struggling with long delays reported at many sites - for tests and the results of those tests. As of Saturday, around 195,000 people in the US had been tested, although that number does not include private facilities.
“We need to be testing more broadly to fully understand the scope of the public health situation we are facing,” said Joseph Wendelken, a spokesman for the Rhode Island Department of Health.
Hopes of a package being agreed today to stimulate the embattled US economy are fading. Here’s the latest from the Associated Press:
Top-level negotiations between Congress and the White House teetered Sunday on a ballooning nearly $1.4tn economic rescue package, as the coronavirus crisis deepened and Donald Trump called for a deal to steady a shuttered nation.
Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin indicated an agreement is within reach, but congressional Republican and Democratic leaders said there was no deal yet after an hour-long meeting at the otherwise empty US Capitol.
Just a reminder, you can follow the wider effect of Covid-19 on our global liveblog, including the news that German Chancellor Angela Merkel is in quarantine after a doctor who gave her a vaccine tested positive for coronavirus. You can follow the full story here:
Related: Coronavirus live news: Angela Merkel in quarantine; Spain set to extend state of emergency
New York governor Andrew Cuomo is on CNN and says he thinks 40-80% of people in his state, which has a population of just under 20 million, will get Covid-19. He wants to “slow that rate so it doesn’t overwhelm the hospital system”. He says slowing the rate of infection is crucial to prevent spikes from putting too much strain on hospitals. New York now has 15,168 confirmed cases - or 5% of cases worldwide. That’s a rise of 4,812 since Saturday, although some of that number is due to more widespread testing. 114 people in the state have died from Covid-19.
On a wider level, he thinks the federal government should nationalize the medical supply system as states are competing against each other to buy equipment like facemasks, which drives up prices for everyone. Peter T Gaynor, of Fema, said earlier in the day that the scramble for equipment would mean some states would have to wait in line. “There’s hundreds of requests – virtually every state in the union looking for the same thing, and it’s not just the demand nationally, it’s a demand globally for these items,” said Gaynor.
Rand Paul of Kentucky has become the first US senator to test positive for Covid-19. A statement on his Twitter account said the 57-year-old is asymptomatic - that may raise questions why he was tested in the first place, although the statement said he was tested due out of “an abundance of caution due to his extensive travel and events”. The statement said Paul was not aware of any direct contact with an infected person. He expects to be back in the Senate once his quarantine ends.
Senator Rand Paul has tested positive for COVID-19. He is feeling fine and is in quarantine. He is asymptomatic and was tested out of an abundance of caution due to his extensive travel and events. He was not aware of any direct contact with any infected person.
It’s been a morning of back-and-forth jabs between the President of the United States and some of the country’s 50 governors.
Check out the highlights:
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told CBS’ Face the Nation on Sunday that he has no disagreement with President Donald Trump over whether a drug used to treat COVID-19 is actually on the way.
Trump touts what "possibly" may be "very successful" medicines to help people and help people not get sick, this time not getting into details. (Again, Fauci and FDA commish Hahn have made clear there are no proven safe and effective treatments.)
President Donald Trump responded to critics of the White House’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, tweeting Sunday that they should not be “blaming the federal government for their own shortcomings.”
.@JBPritzker, Governor of Illinois, and a very small group of certain other Governors, together with Fake News @CNN & Concast (MSDNC), shouldn’t be blaming the Federal Government for their own shortcomings. We are there to back you up should you fail, and always will be!
Working very well with States and our Nation’s Governors. #TEAMWORK
As the US braces for the looming impact of the coronavirus pandemic, Americans are looking for an authoritative voice to reassure the nation it’s prepared.
They’re finding that voice in New York governor Andrew Cuomo.
Andrew Cuomo has turned his blunt, slideshow-aided daily press conferences on the Coronavirus into must watch TV for people far beyond New York. And, in doing so, the governor has set up a powerful contrast with Donald Trump.
More here w/ @GregJKrieg: https://t.co/YvS0u29u67
Can we just pretend Gov. Cuomo is President for now?
Listening to Andrew Cuomo’s press conferences are my new daily solace. And I don’t live in New York. pic.twitter.com/TFWhvf9NUu
The Trump administration lashed out at France on Sunday for releasing an Iranian man wanted for prosecution. Jalal Rohollahnejad was the subject of a extradition request on charges of violating American sanctions on Iran.
The United States and France have a shared interest in bringing those accused of serious crimes to justice, particularly in cases with national security implications. It is regrettable in this instance that France failed to uphold its treaty obligations and prevented justice from being pursued.”
Massachusetts senator Elizabeth Warren urged US Attorney General Bill Barr to close US immigration courts nationwide as the country grapples with the coronavirus outbreak.
According to the New York governor Andrew Cuomo, “18-49 year-olds represent 53%” of the total number of confirmed coronaviruses cases statewide.
Probably not lethal in young people. But you can transfer it to someone who may very well die, Cuomo says. "You can touch a surface, walk away, a day later someone can sit at this table and put their hand in the same place and contract the virus."
“It’s insensitive, it’s arrogant, it’s self destructive. It’s disrespectful to other people and it has to stop and it has to stop now. This is not a joke and I am not kidding.
Bill De Blasio, the mayor of New York City, warned on Sunday that essential hospital supplies would be exhausted in barely more than a week, leading to the deaths of many more people.
In comments sharply critical of what he sees as a botched federal response to the escalating Coronavirus crisis, De Blasio said: “It feels like we’re on our own.”
New York governor Andrew Cuomo called on US President Donald Trump and the federal government to increase its response to the coronavirus pandemic spreading throughout the US.
At his daily press conference Sunday, Governor Cuomo implored the president to enact the Defense Production Act, which would mandate firms to make essential medical supplies such as masks.
Holding a briefing with updates on #Coronavirus. WATCH LIVE: https://t.co/sq3V2qRM8e
Mr. Trump has given mixed signals about whether his administration has actually used the law at all to spur the production of scarce and necessary items like ventilators; testing kits; and protective masks, gloves, and gowns.
Good day and welcome to the Sunday US liveblog. I’m Kenya Evelyn leading off today’s coverage.
We’re following the country’s continued response to the coronavirus pandemic, which you can follow more in depth on our coronavirus live blog
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