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12 votes
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US President Donald Trump removes independent watchdog for coronavirus funds, upending oversight panel
14 votes -
Will the American economy/coronavirus affect Donald Trump's chances in November?
8 votes -
New US face mask guidance comes after battle between White House and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
10 votes -
Republicans rage as Florida becomes a nightmare for Trump
19 votes -
How Donald Trump plans on spinning 200,000 coronavirus deaths as a win
6 votes -
Exective branch non-compliance with law
5 votes -
The Trump administration is leaving the nation’s emergency backup hospital system on the sidelines
6 votes -
The pyramid scheme that collapsed a nation
5 votes -
Remarks by US President Donald Trump, Vice-President Mike Pence, and members of the coronavirus task force
5 votes -
Top story on Fox News right now: "His denial..... was deadly"
6 votes -
The lost month: How a failure to test blinded the US to Covid-19
8 votes -
Trump says he will not allow federal inspection over bailout funds
17 votes -
Desperate for medical equipment, US states encounter a beleaguered national stockpile
4 votes -
US President Donald Trump has signed a $2,000,000,000,000 stimulus bill, along with many other leaders in their respective nations
This thread is a follow-up to the oil prices thread we had less than a month ago. Australia has signed a stimulus package So has the US (title) (link) And Canada And Brazil (in portuguese) So how...
This thread is a follow-up to the oil prices thread we had less than a month ago.
Australia has signed a stimulus package
So has the US (title) (link)
And Brazil (in portuguese)
So how are we feeling about this? Will the packages do their jobs and bandage the economy together until we stop the virus, are we headed towards a new great recession/depression, is this the nail in the coffin for the US as a political power (China has the virus under control in their nation and they're selling/giving out tons of masks so if the US economy is nuked and the Chinese only feel the trade effects then they can further empower themselves)
9 votes -
GM’s ventilator effort goes haywire with US President Donald Trump turning on CEO Mary Barra
15 votes -
US House of Representatives passes stimulus bill, signed by President Trump
11 votes -
The coronavirus is the worst intelligence failure in US history
6 votes -
The Trump-Fox & Friends feedback loop explained
3 votes -
How might the economy and coronavirus affect Trump's re-election chances?
3 votes -
White House, US Senate agree to $2 trillion coronavirus rescue package
25 votes -
Democratic voters underestimate just how many voters are coming to them this election
6 votes -
A majority of Americans approve of Donald Trump's handling of the coronavirus
13 votes -
Trump hopes country will be reopened by Easter amid outbreak
21 votes -
2020 elections: an expert on why you should be worried about your vote in 2020
4 votes -
Nigeria has Chloroquine poisonings after Trump praised drug
9 votes -
Trump outlines National Guard activations for New York, California and Washington
9 votes -
Americans' opinions on the coronavirus are changing fast
19 votes -
Why Donald Trump's presidency is first and foremost about being white
8 votes -
Trump’s call with governors shows confusion in US virus fight
8 votes -
The Donald Trump administration drove him back to China, where he invented a fast coronavirus test
4 votes -
"What should Bernie do when he drops out? Are there any potential drawbacks to doing so now?"
From the NY times Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont was reassessing the future of his presidential bid on Wednesday after a crushing round of primary losses left him with no realistic path to the...
Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont was reassessing the future of his presidential bid on Wednesday after a crushing round of primary losses left him with no realistic path to the Democratic nomination and the 2020 race itself looked increasingly dormant because of the coronavirus outbreak.
Mr. Sanders’s campaign has stopped actively advertising on Facebook and its campaign manager sent an email to supporters without asking for donations — the kind of steps that other candidates have taken before ending their campaigns. Mr. Sanders’s aides said he is not suspending his campaign at this point, even as some Democrats have become increasingly vocal that he should consider leaving the race.
Even among Democrats who view Mr. Biden’s eventual triumph as inevitable, there is a belief that contested primaries are good for the party, making some of them reluctant to call for Mr. Sanders to withdraw. In Wisconsin, Democratic officials worry that if Mr. Sanders drops out before the state’s planned April 7 primary, it could dampen his supporters’ enthusiasm, depress turnout and hurt progressive candidates for state and local offices.
Mr. Sanders also views the coronavirus crisis as a moment when the progressive agenda he has championed for years is especially vital, and he is eager to leverage his influence for good at a time when issues like health care and economic inequity are so resonant, some allies say.
And top advisers see potential for him to continue to shape the narrative around how the country should be responding to the crisis and are holding out hope that they can harness existing virtual infrastructure to allow him to get his message out and keep his supporters engaged — a tacit admission that the campaign is no longer trying to win.
The above paragraphs show that yes, Sanders knows his electoral situation is done for, despite never clearly indicating if he is dropping out.
Some suggested Mr. Sanders should declare a moral victory — Democrats have moved broadly toward his progressive policy platform since he began his first presidential campaign — and throw his support to Mr. Biden.
“It’s time to throw in the towel knowing that he has won the battle of issues,” said Wilbur Colom, a D.N.C. member from Mississippi. “The Democratic Party has moved within inches of his revolution on all major issues. We all are feeling the Bern.”
From the Star
Charles Chamberlain, chairman of the progressive group Democracy for America, said Sanders can play a potentially “critical” role in unifying the party by continuing his campaign.
“Bernie has already made it clear that he will 100% support the Democratic nominee and that he’s going to campaign for Joe Biden if that’s who it is,” Chamberlain said. “The reality is, that’s not 100% true for all Bernie Sanders supporters. So there is a real value to Bernie staying in the race as long as possible to bring those people into the party deeper.“
That underscores the sensitivity of how Sanders proceeds. Justin Bamberg, a South Carolina state representative and Sanders supporter, said it’s wrong to assume that, if the senator quickly drops out, his backers would unite behind Biden.
“It’s a mistake for the party, regardless of whether the nominee is Biden or Bernie, to think that beating Donald Trump in and of itself will be enough motivation for the average person living their day-to-day life to come out and be excited about voting in November,” Bamberg said.
I agree. Biden needs to emphasize that he can be trusted to keep his promises of endorsing and then carrying out Warren's plan despite their controversies and that the bernie or bust folks won't gain nothing from a Biden presidency.
13 votes -
China bans journalists from the New York Times, Washington Post and Wall Street Journal in retaliation for state media restrictions by the Donald Trump administration
16 votes -
White House pushes for quick, direct payments to Americans in response to coronavirus
12 votes -
The alarming scope of Presidential power during an emergency
4 votes -
US President Donald Trump says he could demote Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, risking more market turmoil
6 votes -
Trump 'offers large sums' for exclusive access to coronavirus vaccine
36 votes -
Trump’s Google testing announcement mixed up several real projects
5 votes -
The most critical fight against Donald Trump's US border wall you've never heard of
4 votes -
Google says it's not publishing a national-scale coronavirus site anytime soon after Trump announcement
8 votes -
US President Donald Trump's mismanagement helped fuel coronavirus crisis
9 votes -
The Trump presidency is over
20 votes -
The world is experiencing a new form of autocracy
6 votes -
Why are we so slow today?
3 votes -
"Do us a favor" - A letter from the Editor-in-Chief of Science journals regarding the coronavirus response by President Trump and his administration
17 votes -
"Can Biden beat Trump?"
What the polls say about a Biden v Trump matchup (The polls say yeah so... yeah. Admittedly this is a repeat of 2016 and Ukraine will basically be the same thing as Clinton's emails and nothing is...
What the polls say about a Biden v Trump matchup
(The polls say yeah so... yeah. Admittedly this is a repeat of 2016 and Ukraine will basically be the same thing as Clinton's emails and nothing is truly guaranteed.)Can Biden beat Trump? The truth is he's just as risky as Bernie
(Neither of them is a guaranteed win. If there was a safe choice, it wasn't one of these 2.)Stop saying Biden is the 'most electable'. Trump will run rings around him. (No. And not because of his record or gaffes, but because he is an establishment politician and Ukraine will leave the same impression on Biden as Clinton's emails. Are you people insane? Have you forgotten 2016?)
15 votes -
Rupert Murdoch actually tried to stop Donald Trump, and he won't try to again
7 votes -
Official: White House didn't want to tell seniors not to fly
12 votes -
Major bank economist says the coronavirus market reaction ‘boggles the mind’
12 votes -
Trump faces his 'Chernobyl moment' after slashing pandemic defences to the bone
12 votes