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- May 30, 2020 at 03:55PM
Supreme Court allows California virus restrictions on churches in 5-4 split
Click on this headline to read the full story at Jamie Dupree - Washington Insider
A divided U.S. Supreme Court late Friday upheld Coronavirus restrictions placed on church gatherings by the state of California, as Chief Justice John Roberts joined with the four more liberal justices in backing the power of states to enforce measures for public health. 'Although California’s guidelines place restrictions on places of worship, those restrictions appear consistent with the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment,' the Chief Justice wrote in an unusual late night ruling. 'The notion that it is “indisputably clear” that the Government’s limitations are unconstitutional seems quite improbable,' Roberts added in a three page 5-4 opinion. The ruling came on a request from a California church to dispense with limits on church gatherings imposed by Gov. Gavin Newsom and the Golden State. The decision came just over a week after President Trump had very publicly pressured states to drop Coronavirus restrictions on houses of worship. The South Bay United Pentecostal Church in San Diego argued the health requirements put in place by the Governor were far too restrictive, and violated their constitutional rights. 'Although curbing the pandemic is a laudable goal, those orders arbitrarily discriminate against places of worship in violation of their right to the Free Exercise of Religion under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution,' lawyers for the church argued. That agreement resonated with the High Court's four more conservative justices. 'I would grant the Church’s requested temporary injunction because California’s latest safety guidelines discriminate against places of worship and in favor of comparable secular businesses,' wrote Justice Brett Kavanaugh in his dissent. 'Such discrimination violates the First Amendment.' The decision quickly struck a nerve with more conservative Republicans and supporters of the President, many of whom have long harbored doubts about Roberts, who was put on the Supreme Court by President George W. Bush. 'Chief Justice Roberts sides with the Left again,' said Fox News host Laura Ingraham, as the head of the Conservative Political Action Committee called for Roberts to be impeached. In Congress, there was anger as well. 'SHAMEFUL failure by SCOTUS to defend 1st & 5th amendments,' tweeted Rep. Warren Davidson (R-OH).
(Feed generated with FetchRSS) - May 30, 2020 at 03:55PM Supreme Court allows California virus restrictions on churches in 5-4 split Click on this headline to read the full story at Jamie Dupree - Washington Insider
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The feud between Twitter and President Donald Trump escalated on Friday after the President used the social media platform to threaten the use of force against rioters in Minneapolis, as Twitter slapped a warning label on the President's tweet, saying Mr. Trump had violated rules on 'glorifying violence.' 'These THUGS are dishonoring the memory of George Floyd,' the President wrote, referring to the black man who was suffocated to death when a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his head and neck for an extended period of time earlier this week. The President then spoke of sending in National Guard troops to restore order, warning that 'when the looting starts, the shooting starts.' That was evidently too much for Twitter, which placed a warning on the President's tweet. In the President's mind, the warning label from Twitter was the latest indignity against him by the social media giant, as Mr. Trump tore into Twitter early on Friday morning. 'Twitter is doing nothing about all of the lies & propaganda being put out by China or the Radical Left Democrat Party,' the President tweeted soon after 7 am. 'They have targeted Republicans, Conservatives & the President of the United States.' Earlier this week, Twitter added a link to a couple of the President's tweets about mail-in voting, giving a link for more information about the issue. The President was incensed, leading to his executive order on Thursday, and a direct threat to close down the company, which experts said he had no power to do. On Capitol Hill, the two parties saw the developing events on Twitter much differently. 'Twitter is censoring the President of the United States,' said Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ). Democrats in Congress said the President was overreacting, and acting like an authoritarian. “Trump’s behavior is growing increasingly unhinged, authoritarian, and outright violent and is designed to inflame and divide America further,” said Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-NJ). “This is vile behavior,” said Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ). “The President should not be encouraging violence.” “(T)he President’s executive order is a shameless attempt to use the power of his office to silence his critics and intimidate his perceived enemies,” said Rep. Alan Lowenthal (D-CA).
(Feed generated with FetchRSS) - May 29, 2020 at 02:55PM After threat to shoot looters, Twitter slaps warning on Trump tweet Click on this headline to read the full story at Jamie Dupree - Washington Insider
With a series of studies raising questions about the side effects and the efficacy of a drug pushed by President Donald Trump for use against the Coronavirus, the VA has curtailed its use of the anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroqine in Veterans Affairs medical facilities. 'Last week, we only used it three times,' VA Secretary Robert Wilkie told a House Appropriations Committee hearing, a very small number compared to the over 1,300 vets who have received the drug for Coronavirus treatment. 'We started ratcheting it down as we went more to remdesivir and we went more to the convalescent plasma,' Wilkie said, as he took fire from Democrats over using the drug in the first place. 'It's very disappointing to me that the VA was using that drug,' said Rep. Nita Lowey (D-NY), the chair of the panel, as she slammed the President's embrace of hydroxychloroquine as 'wishful thinking' by someone who is not a medical expert. 'What is astounding to me is the VA is still insisting on providing this drug to veterans,' said Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL). “We have ratcheted down as we've brought more treatments online,” Wilkie said at another point. “And I expect that to continue.” Wilkie said he spoken this week with the government's top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, who told reporters in recent days that hydroxychloroquine should no longer be used by doctors. The VA chief though couched Fauci's advice as one which would leave the door open to possible use of the malaria drug as more evidence comes in. 'The rest of the world is all over the map,' Wilkie said of the use of hydroxychloroquine against the Coronavirus. 'France banned it, and then the government of India said it absolutely essential for them.' The message from the White House continued to be much more upbeat than Dr. Fauci. “It's important to note that this drug has been safely used by millions of people for a long time,” said White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany on Thursday.
(Feed generated with FetchRSS) - May 29, 2020 at 02:55PM VA drastically slows use of hydroxychloroquine to fight virus Click on this headline to read the full story at Jamie Dupree - Washington Insider
A day after the United States topped 100,000 deaths from the Coronavirus outbreak, President Donald Trump joined the expression of grief for the families of those who have died in the pandemic which has swept around the globe. 'We have just reached a very sad milestone with the coronavirus pandemic deaths reaching 100,000,' the President wrote on Twitter, as he expressed his 'heartfelt sympathy' to family and friends of the dead. As the numbers hit 100,000 on Wednesday, the President made no statement about death toll, as leading Democrats took on that role instead. 'God Bless each and every one of you and the blessed memory of the one you lost,' former Vice President Biden said in a video message from his home in Delaware. 'One hundred thousand,' said Rep. Val Demings (D-FL). Those we have lost can’t just be a number. A statistic. A line in a history book. They were our friends, our loved ones, our children and grandparents.' While calling the 100,000 deaths 'tragic,' Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) said all sides need to be paying more attention to the large number of deaths in nursing homes and assisted living facilities around the nation. 'Seniors in these settings should be a top focus of our prevention efforts,' Rubio said on Thursday. In some states, the nursing home deaths represent an overwhelming share of Coronavirus losses, over 80 percent in Minnesota, 70 percent in Ohio, and near 50 percent in Florida and Georgia. Democrats continued to blame the President and his administration for not being better prepared, as an old tweet from October 2019 by Joe Biden became a focal point on Twitter. 'We are not prepared for a pandemic,' Biden said that day. 'Trump has rolled back progress President Obama and I made to strengthen global health security. We need leadership that builds public trust, focuses on real threats, and mobilizes the world to stop outbreaks before they reach our shores.
(Feed generated with FetchRSS) - May 28, 2020 at 01:55PM Trump: 100,000 virus deaths is 'very sad milestone' Click on this headline to read the full story at Jamie Dupree - Washington Insider ![]()
As the nation marked the grim milestone of 100,000 deaths from the Coronavirus in just over three months, President Donald Trump spent Wednesday talking about almost any other subject, attacking Twitter, jabbing at the news media, questioning the Russia investigation, denouncing expanded mail-in voting, and again pressing a conspiracy theory that an ex-GOP Congressman was involved in the death of a female aide almost 19 years ago. 'He is arguably the greatest president in our history,' the President quoted Fox Business host Lou Dobbs saying about him. President Trump's only official comment related to the virus outbreak came in a single tweet early on Wednesday morning, in which he highlighted the growing number of virus tests nationwide. 'We pass 15,000,000 Tests Today, by far the most in the World,' Mr. Trump tweeted, adding, 'Open Safely!' But there was no mention by the President, no tweet, no written statement in his name honoring those who have died, or who remain hospitalized by the Coronavirus. Democrats moved to fill the void. 'Would you have ever thought that we would be observing 100,000 people?' asked House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in a Capitol Hill news conference. From his home in Delaware, former Vice President Joe Biden took aim at the President as well. 'I'm so sorry for your loss,' Biden said, marking the 100,000 death toll. 'They were not numbers. They were our neighbors. Our friends. Our family,' said Sen. Michael Bennet (D-CO). The President met with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the Oval Office on Wednesday morning, and then flew to Florida, only to have the launch of a SpaceX crew vehicle scrubbed by bad weather. Over 1,400 deaths were reported in the U.S. on Wednesday, with over 300 combined from Illinois and New Jersey, two states which continue to struggle with virus cases. 'This is a tragic day. My heart aches for those we have lost,' said Rep. Jim McGovern (D-MA). 'The day the United States hit 100,000 deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic Trump shares a messages calling himself “the greatest President in our history,' said Rep. Don Beyer (D-VA). 'His vanity is nauseating.' On Capitol Hill, Democrats pressed for more money to conduct virus testing and tracing, but Senate Republicans have refused to bring up a House-passed bill with $75 billion more in funding. 'Are we going to do what we need to do to prevent the next 100,000 deaths?' asked former CDC Chief Dr. Tom Frieden.
(Feed generated with FetchRSS) - May 28, 2020 at 01:55PM Trump focuses on other subjects as U.S. virus deaths top 100,000 Click on this headline to read the full story at Jamie Dupree - Washington Insider
With Republicans already in court challenging new House rules allowing remote voting by proxy, the House took a historic step Wednesday afternoon, with lawmakers casting floor votes for their colleagues who were not on Capitol Hill because of the Coronavirus outbreak. Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-PA) was the first to exercise the new House rules approved earlier this month, stepping up during a vote to tell the chair he would cast a vote for Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA). The announcements were an unusual interruption during a House vote, as various members notified the chair of their remote votes. 'Madam Speaker, as the member designated by Ms. Bass of California, pursuant to House Resolution 965, I inform the House that Ms. Bass will vote yea,' said Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI), as those were repeated by Democratic lawmakers who were designated to cast votes for those not in the House Chamber. No Republicans took advantage of the change, which only will last for 45 days, unless extended for another 45 day period by Speaker Nancy Pelosi. As of Wednesday afternoon, 75 Democrats in the House had authorized other members to cast their votes under these floor proxy rules - with all of the letters publicly available on the website of the House Clerk. Republicans expressed their indignation at the change, which they said would have the Founding Fathers rolling in their graves. 'This challenges the Constitution,' said House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), who has led a legal challenge against the new House rules. 'It violates the Constitution as a dereliction of duty by its members,' McCarthy told reporters outside the Capitol on Wednesday. The 38-page lawsuit filed by the GOP seeks to have a court 'permanently enjoin the use of proxy voting in the United States House of Representatives.' But as with most procedural matters in the House during the 116th Congress, the GOP is outnumbered, unable to block the rules change by Democrats. Democrats said the Constitution clearly states that the House and Senate can set their own rules, as they argued this change had the backing of numerous legal experts. Republicans said every bill which passes the House using these remote rules should be declared unconstitutional. Proxy voting was used in committees in the House as recently as 1994, but never on the floor.
(Feed generated with FetchRSS) - May 28, 2020 at 01:55PM House makes history with first floor proxy votes Click on this headline to read the full story at Jamie Dupree - Washington Insider
Putting a Coronavirus squeeze on the Democratic Governor of North Carolina, President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that he would give state officials one week to offer up assurances that Charlotte could host the GOP convention in August without unnecessary restrictions, or move it to another state. 'I'd love to have it in North Carolina,' the President told reporters in the White House Rose Garden on Tuesday, as he pressed Gov. Roy Cooper (D) to make a decision on the convention, scheduled for August 24-27. 'I don't want to have it where we get there, and then they announce after all the money was spent, all the work was done, all the people traveled in, guess what, you can't put anybody in the arena, or you can put a tiny number of people in the arena,' President Trump said. 'All he has to do is tell us, and then we'll have to pick another location, and I'll tell you, a lot of locations want it,' Mr. Trump added. In Raleigh, Gov. Cooper gave no indication of any imminent decision, confirming reports that state officials had been in contact already with GOP officials about possible ways the virus might impact the convention. 'We're talking about something that is going to happen three months from now, and we don't know what our situation is going to be,' Cooper told reporters on Tuesday. Unlike other states, North Carolina has been struggling to get the virus outbreak under control, with elevated numbers of new cases and deaths in recent weeks. In Mecklenburg County, which includes the city of Charlotte where the GOP convention would be staged, the rate of positive tests for the virus has been increasing, and hospitalizations have been increasing. In the meantime, the Governors of Florida and Georgia quickly made clear they would be more than happy to help President Trump and the GOP by hosting the convention - instead of Charlotte. 'With world-class facilities, restaurants, hotels, and workforce, Georgia would be honored to safely host the Republican National Convention,' said Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia. 'We hope you will consider the Peach State.' 'Florida would love to have the RNC,' said Gov. Ron DeSantis (R).
(Feed generated with FetchRSS) - May 27, 2020 at 12:55PM Trump gives North Carolina one week to decide on GOP convention Click on this headline to read the full story at Jamie Dupree - Washington Insider ![]()
As President Donald Trump on Tuesday continued to use his bully pulpit to criticize the use of mail-in ballots in the 2020 elections, election officials in his home state of Florida are sending a much different message than the President, openly encouraging voters to cast their vote by mail. 'Consider requesting a vote-by-mail ballot,' the Sarasota County, Florida Supervisor of Elections office tweeted on Tuesday just a few minutes after the President again denounced mail-in voting. 'If you haven't requested #VoteByMail for the upcoming elections yet, we're making it really easy!' tweeted Craig Latimer, the Supervisor of Elections in Hillsborough County, Florida. 'Vote from home this fall!' the Orange County, Florida Supervisor of Elections office tweeted last Friday. 'Request your vote-by-mail ballot today.' 'Do something patriotic to honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice,' tweeted Jennifer Edwards, the Supervisor of Elections in Collier County, Florida. 'Request your Vote-by-Mail ballot.' Vote-by-Mail in Florida - which is the same as Absentee-by-mail in other states - accounted for 2.7 million of the over 9 million votes cast in the 2016 elections by Florida voters, and has been highly encouraged by leaders of both parties in the state. 'We figured out how to do it in a safe manner,' said Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL) Sunday on CNN's State of the Union. But while President Trump uses Vote-by-Mail in Florida, he has repeatedly charged using the mail for voting is susceptible to election fraud. 'There is NO WAY (ZERO!) that Mail-In Ballots will be anything less than substantially fraudulent,' the President tweeted on Tuesday. The most recent high profile example of fraud involving mail-in absentee ballots was in 2018 in North Carolina, where a Republican victory for the U.S. House was overturned after evidence of fraud involving a man hired by the GOP candidate. In 2018, Republicans - led by President Trump - made repeated claims of possible election fraud in Florida as the votes were counted after Election Day - but a recent investigation found no evidence of vote tampering. Only five states have all vote-by-mail elections - Colorado, Hawaii, Utah, Oregon and Washington State - but most states have expanded their absentee-by-mail voting options in 2020 because of the Coronavirus outbreak. President Trump signed into law a bill which included $400 million to help states prepare for increased numbers of mail-in ballots, but he has said he would block any additional funding for that purpose. A federal government report said that in 2016, 23.7 percent were cast using by mail absentee voting - that should increase dramatically this year.
(Feed generated with FetchRSS) - May 26, 2020 at 11:55AM Florida officials encourage voting by mail while Trump denounces it Click on this headline to read the full story at Jamie Dupree - Washington Insider
The White House on Sunday added Brazil to the list of nations where foreign nationals are not allowed entry into the United States, in another bid to use travel restrictions to slow the spread of the Coronavirus. 'As of May 23, 2020, Brazil had 310,087 confirmed cases of COVID-19, which is the third highest number of confirmed cases in the world,' said White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany in a statement. 'Today’s action will help ensure foreign nationals who have been in Brazil do not become a source of additional infections in our country,' she added. The new rules apply not only to Brazilians, but also any other non-U.S. citizen who has been in the South American nation. The changes will take place late this week. The decision comes as the virus outbreak has been spreading in Brazil, which is now seen as the third worst in the world, behind the U.S. and Russia. Last week, President Trump had hinted at such a move. 'I don't want people coming in here and infecting our people,' the President told reporters when asked about a possible move to slow travel with Brazil. 'Brazil is having some trouble. No question about it,' Mr. Trump added on May 19. The designation of Brazil adds that nation to a list of travel restrictions because of the Coronavirus which includes the United Kingdom, most countries in mainland Europe, and China.
(Feed generated with FetchRSS) - May 25, 2020 at 10:55AM U.S. extends Coronavirus travel restrictions to Brazil Click on this headline to read the full story at Jamie Dupree - Washington Insider ![]()
Pressing states to swiftly drop their restrictions related to the Coronavirus, President Donald Trump on Friday declared that houses of worship were 'essential' to communities, calling on governors to immediately allow religious gatherings this weekend, ending weeks of restrictions due to the threat of the Coronavirus. In a hastily called statement in the White House Briefing Room, the President said religious services are needed to 'help hold our society together.' 'Many millions of Americans embrace worship as an essential part of life,' President Trump told reporters. 'We want our places of faith, our synagogues, we want them open,' Mr. Trump declared. “Today I am identifying houses of worship - churches, synagogues and mosques - as essential places that provide essential services,” the President told reporters. “Some governors have deemed liquor stores and abortion clinics as essential, but have left out churches and other houses of worship,” Mr. Trump added. GOP lawmakers in Congress praised the President's call. 'This is the correct decision,' said Rep. Bill Flores (R-TX), 'churches and other houses of worship are an important part of the fabric of American life.' 'Churches and other houses of worship are an essential part of any free and healthy democracy,' said Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA). But churches and religious meetings have been a stubborn source of Coronavirus infections all across the nation, prompting states to bar such gatherings. Earlier this month on Mother's Day, a church in northern California defied authorities and held a gathering for 180 people. The next day, one attendee tested positive for the virus. In another California case, several people came down with the virus, after working as part of skeleton crew to live stream Mother's Day church services.
(Feed generated with FetchRSS) - May 23, 2020 at 08:55AM Trump demands states let churches re-open immediately Click on this headline to read the full story at Jamie Dupree - Washington Insider |
Jamie DupreeJamie Dupree is the Washington Bureau Chief for Cox Communications. He writes and produces radio reports with the aid of digital reconstructions of the voice he lost in 2012.. Archives
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