Friday, May 1, 2020

Capitol physician says Senate lacks capacity to test all senators








The Senate returns Monday amid mounting anxiety from lawmakers that the coronavirus could spread quickly through the chamber.


The Capitol’s attending physician said Thursday that coronavirus tests will be available for staffers and senators who are ill, but not enough to proactively test all 100 senators as the chamber comes back in session, according to two people familiar with the matter.
In a conference call with top GOP officials, Dr. Brian Monahan said there is not sufficient capacity to quickly test senators for coronavirus — a contrast with the White House, where any people meeting with President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence are tested for the disease. Monahan said test results in the Senate will take two or more days, while the White House has rapid testing.

The Senate is scheduled to reconvene on Monday after more than a month away, bringing as many as 100 senators from across the country. Roughly half the senators are 65 or older and at increased risk for the coronavirus, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has repeatedly vowed that the Senate can operate safely amid the pandemic with proper social distancing and masks. 

Though House Democrats originally planned to come back next week, they decided against returning after consulting with Monahan. On Thursday, he did not address whether he thought it was safe for the Senate to return, one of the people familiar with the call said.

The Office of Attending Physician also sent out guidance late Thursday afternoon for committee meetings. The guidance recommends that senators and other attendees use a face covering and avoid getting out of their seats for the duration of the meeting. In addition, senators are advised to either attend meetings on their own or with at most one staffer per lawmaker.

Democrats have repeatedly raised concerns about the safety of Capitol employees next week and several have pressed McConnell for a plan. 

“I have not yet seen, personally … a safety plan to protect those people who have to come back to the Capitol in order for us to do anything. Nor a plan to make sure that we are not spreading the virus ourselves or to the employees,” said Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, the No. 3 Senate Democrat, on Wednesday.

Some Democrats also have indicated they might not return next week if the Senate is not taking up coronavirus relief legislation or doing oversight on the aid effort. McConnell is focused on confirming judicial and executive nominees in the coming days.

"I don't begrudge a senator expressing their personal concerns, but that shouldn't mean that the entire Senate ceases to function,” said Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) on Thursday. “We're going to try really very hard to make sure everybody is safe. And not exposed.”

Top Senate officials are already sketching out how the Senate will operate next week. Monahan, McConnell chief of staff Sharon Soderstrom and Rules Committee staff director Fitzhugh Elder briefed Republican chiefs of staff about the Senate’s return on Thursday.
The officials encouraged staff to telework as much as possible, and told Senate offices to screen staffers who have to come to the Hill. Senators and aides are being asked to wear masks at all times, unless a senator is giving a speech.
Staffers were also informed that office buildings have been disinfected and sanitizer and masks will be distributed. The number of senators on the floor during votes will be limited. Hearings will take place only in large committee rooms where senators and staff can be appropriately spaced out.
Republicans will hold their party lunches in a cavernous room in the Hart Office Building, allowing three senators per table to promote social distance. Democrats say they will conduct all their party business by conference call.


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Image may contain: 1 person, standing, possible text that says 'When the police force wouldn't take you, and you're re too scared to join the military.... op There's always make believe'




Image may contain: possible text that says 'Middle Age Riot @middleageriot Donald Trump says facts are fake, science is a hoax, votes are illegal, windmills cause cancer, Clorox cures viruses, Obama is Kenyan, Hillary founded ISIS, and Russia is our friend, but we're supposed to take his word when it's safe to reopen the country.'

FAIR: Jim Naureckas on Coronavirus False Choices, Peter Maybarduk on Pharmaceutical Price-Gouging






FAIR

Jim Naureckas on Coronavirus False Choices, Peter Maybarduk on Pharmaceutical Price-Gouging

NYT: U.S. Coronavirus Death Toll Is Far Higher Than Reported, C.D.C. Data Suggests
New York Times (4/28/20)

This week on CounterSpin: CDC data suggests that US deaths from the coronavirus are far higher than reported, according to a recent New York Times story. Upending the notion that the virus is only killing people who would've died from other causes anyway, the new data shows coronavirus has brought "a pattern of deaths unlike anything seen in recent years."
The problem is, that data-driven story has to compete with others, in that paper and elsewhere, that suggest that we're moving quite smartly toward "reopening the economy," and pushing to make that happen soon is an equally legitimate "position" to hold. Corporate media are constitutionally committed to leaving unchallenged the notion that our choice is between sending folks back to workplaces and public spaces that might be unsafe, and letting them stay home and give up paychecks and health insurance. That worldview undercuts their ability to bring us the basic information we need. We'll get an update on pandemic coverage with Jim Naureckas, editor of FAIR.org.
Intercept: Big Pharma Prepares to Profit From the Coronavirus
Intercept (3/13/20)
Also on the show: Author Gerald Posner told the Intercept last month, “Pharmaceutical companies view Covid-19 as a once-in-a-lifetime business opportunity.” And it isn't a matter of a handful of outlier, especially greedy companies: This is The System. But as real as drug companies' imperative—to take advantage of people being sick and scared so they can make a bigger profit—is the growing recognition that this is unacceptable, pandemic or no pandemic. Peter Maybarduk, director of Public Citizen's Global Access to Medicines Program, joins us to talk about that piece of the problem.






RSN: FOCUS: Biden Denies He Sexually Assaulted Former Senate Aide









Reader Supported News
01 May 20

It's Live on the HomePage Now:
Reader Supported News



FOCUS: Biden Denies He Sexually Assaulted Former Senate Aide
Former vice president Joe Biden. (photo: Reuters)
Sean Sullivan and Matt Viser, The Washington Post
Excerpt: "Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden on Friday denied that he sexually assaulted a former Senate aide, addressing the allegation publicly for the first time under increasing pressure from his party to speak about it."

“I want to address allegations by a former staffer that I engaged in misconduct 27 years ago,” Biden said in a statement released by his campaign. “They aren’t true. This never happened.”
Biden echoed his denial on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” shortly after the statement was released. “No, it is not true,” he said. “It never, never happened.”
Biden also called on the National Archives to release any record of a complaint that the former aide, Tara Reade, says she filed. “If there was ever any such complaint, the record will be there,” he said.
Reade has said that she filed a complaint with a congressional human resources or personnel office but did not remember the exact name. Her complaint dealt only with the alleged harassment, not the assault, she said.
The Post could find no record of the complaint, and Reade said she didn’t have a copy.
In his MSNBC interview, Biden, who appeared from his makeshift home television studio in Delaware, faced questions from host Mika Brzezinski.
The former vice president said he had not reached out to Reade. “When she first made the claim, we made it clear it never happened,” he said. He also said that he had not seen any complaint filed by her, nor was he aware of anyone who had. “I’ve never seen it,” he said.
Biden declined to comment on Reade’s motivations for her claims.
“I’m not going to question her motive,” Biden said of Reade, adding, “I don’t understand it.”
The presumptive nominee said he has never asked anyone to sign a nondisclosure agreement. And Biden said that “women have a right to be heard,” but that “in the end in every case, the truth is what matters.”
In a tense exchange late in the interview, Biden repeatedly resisted the idea of querying his Senate papers at the University of Delaware, saying they do not contain personnel records.
“Why not just do a search for Tara Reade’s name?” Brzezinski asked.
“Who does that search?” Biden replied. Brzezinski suggested the university or a commission could conduct it. Biden then returned to his initial point — that any complaint would be contained in the archives, not his papers.
He said that the papers contained “confidential conversations” with the president and heads of state and that he did not want them to be made public while he was still actively pursuing public office.
Asked what he would say to Reade directly if he could talk to her, Biden responded: “This never ever happened. I don’t know what is motivating her.”
In his earlier statement, Biden attempted to show solidarity with the #MeToo movement even as he firmly repudiated the accusations from Reade, who claims he reached under her skirt and penetrated her 27 years ago.
“While the details of these allegations of sexual harassment and sexual assault are complicated, two things are not complicated,” he said in his statement. “One is that women deserve to be treated with dignity and respect, and when they step forward they should be heard, not silenced. The second is that their stories should be subject to appropriate inquiry and scrutiny.”
Biden also attacked President Trump, saying, “We have lived long enough with a President who doesn’t think he is accountable to anyone, and takes responsibility for nothing. That’s not me. I believe being accountable means having the difficult conversations, even when they are uncomfortable. People need to hear the truth.”
Biden’s campaign had previously denied the allegations by Reade, who worked in Biden’s Senate office for nine months ending in 1993. But for weeks, the former vice president had been silent about her accusation. This week, demands from within his party to address it grew louder, and with each public appearance came scrutiny that began to eclipse the ideas and themes he was trying to promote.
Democratic and Republican leaders also came under intensifying calls to weigh in, triggering an explosive and often partisan debate. For many Democrats, the allegation was an uncomfortable topic that forced them to try to reconcile their support for Biden with advocacy for many women who come forward with claims of sexual assault against powerful men. For some top Republicans, it was occasion to accuse Democrats of a double standard.
Trump, Biden’s expected general election opponent, said Thursday that Biden “should respond” to the accusation, which Trump said he “didn’t know anything about.” The president suggested that Reade’s account could be a “false accusation,” a topic he said he knew well. More than 20 women have accused the president of sexual misconduct over the years, prompting a series of denials.
Trump said Supreme Court Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh was “falsely charged” during his nomination hearings of sexually assaulting a woman when they were both teenagers in high school and said that what Kavanaugh endured was a “disgrace to the country.”
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has accused Democrats of abandoning the criticism and skepticism they applied to Kavanaugh when it comes to Biden.
“I think what most Americans would like is sort of a symmetrical evaluation of these allegations rather than what we have seen at least so far,” McConnell said on Fox News Radio this week.
Some Democrats have reached a similar conclusion and have expressed frustration that their party leaders have not been more vocal. Many top Democrats have been reluctant to weigh in publicly at length but have defended Biden when asked about the accusations.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said Thursday that she has “a great comfort level” with how Biden had addressed the allegation — although at that point he had not spoken about it — and called him “a person of great integrity.” Other Democrats have demanded more details from Biden.
Biden has declined a request for an interview with The Washington Post. His campaign has repeatedly said that Reade’s claims are not true.
Reade’s accusation that Biden reached under her skirt and penetrated her in 1993 was the first allegation of sexual assault made against him. In 2019, several women said Biden had been overly affectionate in a way that made them uncomfortable in previous interactions.
Reade said last year in interviews with The Post and with other news outlets that Biden had put his hands on her shoulders and neck when she was working in his Senate office. She said that she had complained about it to senior aides in the office, but those aides told The Post that they had no recollection of Reade’s claim.
Last month, in a podcast interview, she alleged that the then-senator had assaulted her after pushing her against a wall somewhere on Capitol Hill.
The Post published a detailed examination of her account two weeks ago in which one of her friends confirmed that Reade had told her of an incident shortly after she said it had occurred. Reade’s brother, Collin Moulton, also told The Post that she had told him in 1993 that Biden had touched her neck and shoulders. Several days after the interview, he said in a text message to The Post that he recalled her telling him that Biden had put his hand “under her clothes.”
In an interview published by Business Insider on Monday, Lynda LaCasse, a former acquaintance of Reade, said Reade had told her of an alleged assault in the mid-1990s, when they lived in the same California housing complex. LaCasse on Wednesday confirmed those details to The Post.
“She told me that Joe Biden sexually assaulted her,” she wrote in a text message. “She said that he had put her up against a wall, put his hand up her skirt and his fingers inside her.”
She added that she is “a very strong Democrat” and was supporting Biden for president.
“I believed Tara at the time she told me that Mr. Biden assaulted her, and I continue to support her now,” she wrote. “I feel that the truth needs to be told.”
Lorraine Sanchez, who worked with Reade in California after her tenure in Washington, told Business Insider that Reade had told her she “had been sexually harassed by her former boss while she was in DC and as a result of her voicing her concerns to her supervisors, she was let go, fired.” But Reade herself has given various reasons for her departure.
The corroboration from the women came several days after a 1993 call to Larry King’s CNN talk show surfaced.
In the clip, a woman whom Reade identified as her ­now-deceased mother called to report unspecified “problems” her daughter was having with her employer, whom she called “a prominent senator.” The caller said her daughter did not want to go public with her account “out of respect for” the unnamed senator.


















BREAKING: Elon Musk’s gamble BLOWS UP in his face PAY ATTENTION! ELECT CLOWNS EXPECT A CIRCUS!

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