mardi 31 mars 2020

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Syria: Air defenses down missiles from Israeli warplanes

Posted: 31 Mar 2020 02:04 PM PDT

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Coronavirus: Anger as migrants sprayed with disinfectant in India

Posted: 31 Mar 2020 08:05 AM PDT

Coronavirus: Anger as migrants sprayed with disinfectant in IndiaFootage shared thousands of times shows a group of workers in India being sprayed with chemicals.


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Former CDC head on coronavirus testing: What went wrong and how we proceed

Posted: 31 Mar 2020 02:07 AM PDT

Former CDC head on coronavirus testing: What went wrong and how we proceedWho should seek a test? Should we test everyone? How much will that even help? Let's clear a few things up.


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lundi 30 mars 2020

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Coronavirus signals we must shift from terrorism to new bipartisan intelligence priorities

Posted: 30 Mar 2020 02:04 PM PDT

Coronavirus signals we must shift from terrorism to new bipartisan intelligence prioritiesUS intelligence agencies started warning the Trump administration in January about the coronavirus outbreak. We need a new agenda for this new world.


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Dr. Birx predicts up to 200,000 coronavirus deaths 'if we do things almost perfectly'

Posted: 30 Mar 2020 08:04 AM PDT

Dr. Birx predicts up to 200,000 coronavirus deaths 'if we do things almost perfectly'"I think in some of the metro areas we were late in getting people to follow the 15-day guidelines," the White House coronavirus response coordinator said on "TODAY."


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Coronavirus: Oil price collapses to lowest level for 18 years

Posted: 30 Mar 2020 02:05 AM PDT

Coronavirus: Oil price collapses to lowest level for 18 yearsThe price of crude sinks to $23 a barrel as demand plummets due to the coronavirus pandemic.


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dimanche 29 mars 2020

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Yahoo! News - Latest News & Headlines


Jeanine Pirro responds to critics of appearance on Fox News show

Posted: 29 Mar 2020 02:02 PM PDT

Jeanine Pirro responds to critics of appearance on Fox News showPro-Trump anchor appeared late and apparently disheveled on Saturday night, leading to social media speculationPresenting from home has become a new normal for TV hosts during the coronavirus outbreak, but for one of Donald Trump's favorite personalities, things did not go so well on Saturday night.Jeanine Pirro missed the entire first segment of her show Justice with Judge Jeanine on Fox News and appeared disheveled when she did finally appear, her hair noticeably and uncharacteristically non-coiffured.Fox News issued a statement on Sunday blaming "technical difficulties" for the spectacle and seeking to excuse the mishaps by pointing out that it, like others in such challenging times, was operating "with a reduced staff working remotely to ensure the health and safety of our employees".Pirro defended herself in a lunchtime tweet that claimed her hair was out of place because of an audio device in her ear with "no staff around to notice"."I was in a truck that was not prepared to broadcast [because] we had no connection, no visual and no teleprompter," she wrote.The explanations cut little ice with social media users, however, several of whom suggested alternative reasons for what they saw.Aaron Rupar, a Vox journalist, questioned the wisdom of allowing Pirro to appear at all."OMG. What is Fox doing putting someone on the air in [that] condition?," he wrote.Pirro, 68, told another Twitter user: "Keep hating. U wear it well."The former New York state district attorney has often won praise from Trump for her supportive rightwing commentary and analysis and her aggressive pursuit of "liberals".Despite her weekend show, regularly attracting impressive prime-time ratings, the outspoken host has had a somewhat rocky relationship with her employers.In 2019 Pirro was suspended for two weeks for on-air comments she made questioning the patriotism of the US congresswoman Ilhan Omar and criticizing her for wearing a hijab.Throughout that controversy she retained Trump's support, the president falsely blaming Pirro's absence on "radical left Democrats working closely with their beloved partner, the fake news media" in using "every trick in the book to silence a majority of our country".Despite the president's remarks, Fox released its own statement strongly condemning what Pirro said.


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Coronavirus: India's PM Modi seeks 'forgiveness' over lockdown

Posted: 29 Mar 2020 08:01 AM PDT

Coronavirus: India's PM Modi seeks 'forgiveness' over lockdownNarendra Modi apologises for sweeping restrictions that have left many jobless and hungry.


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Cambodia reports one new virus case, tightens border restrictions

Posted: 29 Mar 2020 02:02 AM PDT

Cambodia reports one new virus case, tightens border restrictionsCambodia reported one new case of the coronavirus on Sunday, bringing tally to 103 as the country prepares to tighten entry requirements for foreign nationals to try to curb the spread of the virus. The new case is a 30-year-old woman who worked in a karaoke club in Cambodia's northwestern Banteay Meanchey province, the Ministry of Health said in a statement. Cambodia's Foreign Affairs Ministry said on Friday it cancel visas on arrival for foreign nationals for one month, effective midnight of March 30, to curb the spread of the coronavirus.


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samedi 28 mars 2020

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S.African police fire rubber bullets at shoppers during lockdown

Posted: 28 Mar 2020 01:57 PM PDT

S.African police fire rubber bullets at shoppers during lockdownSouth African police fired rubber bullets towards hundreds of shoppers queueing outside a supermarket in Johannesburg as authorities battled to keep people at home in a bid to halt the spread of the coronavirus. President Cyril Ramaphosa has ordered a 21-day lockdown for the country's 57 million inhabitants, deploying police and the military to enforce the restrictions. Police arrived in 10 patrol vehicles and started firing rubber bullets towards the shoppers.


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More Americans Should Probably Wear Masks for Protection

Posted: 28 Mar 2020 07:58 AM PDT

More Americans Should Probably Wear Masks for ProtectionAs the coronavirus pandemic rages on, experts have started to question official guidance about whether ordinary, healthy people should protect themselves with a regular surgical mask, or even a scarf.The World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention continue to state that masks don't necessarily protect healthy individuals from getting infected as they go about their daily lives.The official guidance continues to recommend that masks should be reserved for people who are already sick, as well as for the health workers and caregivers who must interact with infected individuals on a regular basis. Everyone else, they say, should stick to frequent hand-washing and maintaining a distance of at least 6 feet from other people to protect themselves.But the recent surge in infections in the United States, which has put the country at the center of the epidemic, with more confirmed cases than China, Italy or any other country, means that more Americans are now at risk of getting sick. And healthy individuals, especially those with essential jobs who cannot avoid public transportation or close interaction with others, may need to start wearing masks more regularly."The swift increase in cases to these levels in the U.S. highlights to an even greater degree the importance of implementing and adhering to public health measures," said Dr. Robert Atmar, an infectious disease specialist at Baylor College of Medicine.While wearing a mask may not necessarily prevent healthy people from getting sick, and it certainly doesn't replace important measures such as hand-washing or social distancing, it may be better than nothing, Atmar said.There is very little data showing that flat surgical masks, in particular, have a protective effect for the general public. Masks work by stopping infected droplets spewing from the wearer's nose or mouth, rather than stopping the acquisition of virus from others. That is why the WHO and CDC recommend that people already infected with the coronavirus wear masks, to protect others who may come into close contact with them. Health workers wear masks because they interact with sick patients regularly and often have to lean close for important medical procedures, exposing themselves to higher amounts of viral particles. And if healthy individuals start stockpiling surgical masks and high-grade N95 masks, they can also make it harder for health workers to get the resources they need to help on the front lines.But studies of influenza pandemics have shown that when high-grade N95 masks are not available, surgical masks do protect people a bit more than not wearing masks at all. And when masks are combined with hand hygiene, they help reduce the transmission of infections.When researchers conducted systematic review of a variety of interventions used during the SARS outbreak in 2003, they found that washing hands more than 10 times daily was 55% effective in stopping virus transmission, while wearing a mask was actually more effective -- at about 68%. Wearing gloves offered about the same amount of protection as frequent hand-washing, and combining all measures -- hand-washing, masks, gloves and a protective gown -- increased the intervention effectiveness to 91%.With the current coronavirus, researchers are also finding that there are more asymptomatic cases than were known early on in the pandemic. Classified data from the Chinese government that was reported in the South China Morning Post indicated that up to a third of all people who tested positive for the coronavirus could have been silent carriers. Widespread testing on the Diamond Princess showed that half of the positive cases on board the cruise ship had no symptoms. And officials in Iceland, who have tested a high proportion of citizens in the country, have found similarly high percentages of asymptomatic infection.A new report from the CDC, published Friday, also suggests that several residents of a nursing facility in King County, Washington, either did not have any symptoms or developed very mild symptoms only after they had been confirmed to have a coronavirus infection.Since identifying and isolating people with infections plays a major role in breaking the chain of transmissions, people who do not have any symptoms or do not develop symptoms until later may continue to inadvertently spread the disease."It's still hard to tell what percentage of people are truly asymptomatic because many go on to develop symptoms a few days later," said Dr. Neil Fishman, the chief medical officer of the University of Pennsylvania Health System. "What we do know is that individuals can shed virus about 48 hours before they develop symptoms and masking can prevent transmission from those individuals."Wearing a mask can also reduce the likelihood that people will touch their face, which is another mode of transmission of the virus from contaminated surfaces to unsuspecting individuals, Fishman said."For individuals working in certain essential industries, where they still have to go out every day, I think wearing a mask makes sense," Fishman said.In many Asian countries, everyone is encouraged to wear masks, and the approach is about crowd psychology and protection. If everyone wears a mask, individuals protect each other, reducing overall community transmission. The sick automatically have one on and are also more likely to adhere to keeping their mask on because the stigma of wearing one is removed.Masks are also an important signal that it's not business as usual during a pandemic. They serve as a visual reminder to improve hand hygiene and social distancing. They may also serve as an act of solidarity, showing that all citizens are on board with the precautionary measures needed to bring infections under control. And places like Hong Kong and Taiwan that jumped to action early with social distancing and universal mask wearing have gotten their cases under much greater control."If everyone in the community wears a mask, it could decrease transmission," Fishman said. "But unfortunately I think that we don't have enough masks to make that effective policy in the U.S."This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2020 The New York Times Company


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UK's Johnson virus positive as new outbreaks appear in US

Posted: 28 Mar 2020 01:54 AM PDT

UK's Johnson virus positive as new outbreaks appear in USBritish Prime Minister Boris Johnson became the first leader of a major country to test positive for the coronavirus while disturbing new outbreaks appeared in the United States, deaths surged in Italy and Spain and the world warily trudged through the pandemic that has sickened more than a half-million people. While the U.S. now leads the world in reported infections, five countries exceed its roughly 1,700 deaths: Italy, Spain, China, Iran and France.


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vendredi 27 mars 2020

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Fact check: Did Gates Foundation fund, does Pirbright Institute own coronavirus patent?

Posted: 27 Mar 2020 01:52 PM PDT

Fact check: Did Gates Foundation fund, does Pirbright Institute own coronavirus patent?Multiple posts on Facebook claim that Pirbright Institute, with ties to the Gates Foundation, owns the patent on the coronavirus. This is false.


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Auschwitz: Women used different survival and sabotage strategies than men at Nazi death camp

Posted: 27 Mar 2020 07:56 AM PDT

Auschwitz: Women used different survival and sabotage strategies than men at Nazi death campNearly all the 1.3 million people sent to Auschwitz, the Nazi death camp in occupied Poland, were murdered – either sent to the gas chambers or worked to death. Life expectancy in many of these camps was between six weeks and three months. Over a million of the Auschwitz dead were Jews, and scholars have concluded that more than half of them were women.While male and female slave laborers in Auschwitz faced the same ultimate fate, my research on gender and the Holocaust finds that some of their behaviors and responses to captivity differed. Methods of sabotageGender has been long overlooked in Holocaust research. Writing in the late 1970s and early 1980s, early scholars such as Joan Ringelheim and Sybil Milton had to fight for their legitimacy in a field that insisted that separating stories of Jewish men and women under the Nazi regime was a blow to their joint fate or to Jewish solidarity.Today, however, the topic is being explored in depth, allowing us to better understand not only how Jews died during the Holocaust, but also how they lived.During the late 1980s, I conducted a study of Jewish men and women who had been part of Auschwitz's "Canada Commando," the forced labor detail responsible for sorting through the possessions inmates had brought with them to the camp and preparing those items for reshipment back to Germany for civilian use. Since the barracks were the only place in the camp where one could find almost unlimited food and clothing, this forced labor troop was named after Canada – a country seen as a symbol of wealth.Examining the behavior of the men and women of the Canada Commando, I noted an interesting difference. Among the items of clothing sorted there were fur coats. While both male and female prisoners in the Canada Commando tried to sabotage this work, acts punishable by death, their methods differed. Male prisoners would usually rip the lining and seams of the coat to shreds, keeping only the outer shell intact. At first use, the coat would come apart, leaving the German who wore it coatless in the winter.The few surviving women in the commando whom I interviewed did not use this tactic. Rather, they told me, they decided together to insert handwritten notes into the coat's pockets that read something along the lines of: "German women, know that you are wearing a coat that belonged to a woman who has been gassed to death in Auschwitz." The women, in other words, chose psychological sabotage. The men, physical. Coping with hungerOne of the most central experiences of all camp prisoners during the Holocaust was hunger. While both men and women suffered from hunger during incarceration, male and female prisoners used disparate coping methods.While men would regale each other with tales of the fantastic meals they would enjoy once liberated, women would often discuss how they had cooked they various dishes they loved before the war, from baking fluffy cakes to preparing traditional Jewish blintzes. Cara de Silva's 1996 book, "In Memory's Kitchen," movingly documents how this phenomenon played out among women prisoners in the Terezin camp. The differences between men's and women's coping methods may have derived from the gendered behavior in their lives before the war, in which men ate and women cooked – at least in the middle and lower classes. In the case of women, this may also have been a female socialization process meant to solve two dilemmas simultaneously: the psychological need to engage – at least verbally – with food, and the educational need to prepare the young girls in the camp for culinary and household tasks after the war. Under normal circumstances, mothers would have taught their daughters by example – not story. Motherhood under Nazi ruleVarious historical studies make mention of motherly sacrifices during the Holocaust, such as women who chose to accompany their children to death so that they would not be alone during their last moments on Earth. Some mothers, however, acted otherwise, as documented by the Polish non-Jewish Auschwitz survivor Tadeusz Borowsky in his book "This Way to the Gas Ladies and Gentlemen." During the "selections" at Auschwitz – when prisoners were sent either to live or die – prisoners arriving were usually divided by sex, with the elderly, mothers and small children being separated from men and older boys. The mothers with small children, along with the elderly, were automatically sent to death.Borowsky writes about a number of young mothers who hid from their children during the selection, in an attempt to buy themselves a few additional days or possible hours of life.If a German soldier found a small child alone at a "selection," Borowsky writes, he would take the child up and down the rows of prisoners while screaming, "This is how a mother abandons her child?" until he tracked down the hapless woman and condemned them both to the gas chambers. At first, the female Auschwitz survivors I've interviewed said they'd never heard of any such thing. Eventually, however, after I returned to the question several times via different topics, a few women admitted to hearing that a handful mothers who arrived in Auschwitz with small children did indeed try to hide to save their own lives.Historians are not judges. I do not mention the actions made in mortal fear to condemn these women but rather to contribute, 75 years later, to our understanding of Jewish life and death under Nazi terror. Doing requires relinquishing preconceived notions about both men and women, mapping out a broader canvas of the grim reality at Auschwitz. [You're smart and curious about the world. So are The Conversation's authors and editors. You can get our highlights each weekend.]This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts.Read more: * How will generations that didn't experience the Holocaust remember it? * How women wage war – a short history of IS brides, Nazi guards and FARC insurgentsJudy Baumel-Schwartz does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.


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'Printing money': booming mask producers in China meet global demand

Posted: 27 Mar 2020 01:53 AM PDT

'Printing money': booming mask producers in China meet global demandAs the coronavirus pandemic that originated in a central Chinese city has gone global, thousands of factories in China have nimbly turned to a new and very profitable market –- face masks for export. At the height of China's outbreak in early February, Guan Xunze's company created a new mask factory in just eleven days. The factory, with five production lines in northeastern China, made the much-needed N95 face masks which were in huge demand as infection numbers surged.


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jeudi 26 mars 2020

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Coronavirus lockdowns: These states are ordering residents to stay home or shelter in place

Posted: 26 Mar 2020 01:51 PM PDT

Coronavirus lockdowns: These states are ordering residents to stay home or shelter in placeCalifornia, Illinois, New York and New Jersey are among the states cracking down on residents' movements amid continued spread of novel coronavirus.


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Florida man whose 'game changer' coronavirus treatment was touted by Trump is a believer, but warns: Don't try this at home

Posted: 26 Mar 2020 07:53 AM PDT

Florida man whose 'game changer' coronavirus treatment was touted by Trump is a believer, but warns: Don't try this at homeDespite warnings from experts that existing evidence of hydroxychloroquine's effect on coronavirus symptoms is limited and largely anecdotal, President Trump's promotion of the prospective treatment has prompted stockpiling and fatally misinformed attempts to self-medicate. 


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Senate passes massive $2 trillion coronavirus spending bill

Posted: 26 Mar 2020 01:49 AM PDT

Senate passes massive $2 trillion coronavirus spending billAmong other things, the legislation would boost unemployment insurance, send checks to many Americans and bar President Donald Trump from receiving any aid.


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Ann Coulter misread my chart on the dangers of the coronavirus, then tweeted about it — and it shows how easily misinformation can spread in a crisis

Posted: 25 Mar 2020 01:48 PM PDT

Ann Coulter misread my chart on the dangers of the coronavirus, then tweeted about it — and it shows how easily misinformation can spread in a crisisWhile the chart shows that the coronavirus is deadlier than the flu for most age groups, the conservative pundit claimed it showed the exact opposite.


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Hubei residents rush to leave China virus epicentre as lockdown lifts

Posted: 25 Mar 2020 07:51 AM PDT

Hubei residents rush to leave China virus epicentre as lockdown liftsHuge crowds jammed trains and buses in Hubei province on Wednesday as people seized their first chance to travel after two months under lockdown at the epicentre of China's coronavirus outbreak. At a railway station in the city of Macheng, AFP reporters saw long lines of people lugging suitcases in the rain as they queued for trains. "I have been at home in Hubei for more than two months," he said.


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Cho Ju-bin: South Korea chatroom sex abuse suspect named after outcry

Posted: 25 Mar 2020 01:48 AM PDT

Cho Ju-bin: South Korea chatroom sex abuse suspect named after outcryAt least 10,000 people used the chatrooms, with some paying up to $1,200 (£1,000) for access.


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mardi 24 mars 2020

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Iran rejects 'foreign' help as virus death toll nears 2,000

Posted: 24 Mar 2020 01:47 PM PDT

Iran rejects 'foreign' help as virus death toll nears 2,000A senior Iranian official Tuesday ruled out "foreign" help on the ground to deal with the coronavirus epidemic after an offer from a France-based medical charity, as the country's death toll from the illness neared 2,000. "Due to Iran's national mobilisation against the virus and the full use of the medical capacity of the armed forces, it is not necessary for now for hospital beds to be set up by foreign forces, and their presence is ruled out," Alireza Vahabzadeh, advisor to Iran's health minister, said on Twitter. Health ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour earlier said a record 1,762 new cases have been confirmed in Iran over the past 24 hours and 24,811 people are now known to have been infected with the new coronavirus.


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With China gunning for aircraft carriers, US Navy says it must change how it fights

Posted: 24 Mar 2020 07:47 AM PDT

With China gunning for aircraft carriers, US Navy says it must change how it fightsThe U.S. Navy can't afford to throw up its hands when it come to the vulnerability of aircraft carriers, its new top officer says.


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UK could strengthen punishment for flouting coronavirus measures, Gove says

Posted: 24 Mar 2020 01:47 AM PDT

UK could strengthen punishment for flouting coronavirus measures, Gove saysBritain could introduce stronger measures than 30 pound fixed penalty fines for people who flout new restrictions announced on Monday to slow the spread of coronavirus, Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove said. "The legislation will be in place in order to ensure that we have appropriate penalties and appropriate punishment for those people who do not adhere to the clear advice that the government has given and that the police are ready to enforce."


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lundi 23 mars 2020

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Trump boasts of 'great early result' against coronavirus in one Florida man

Posted: 23 Mar 2020 01:45 PM PDT

Trump boasts of 'great early result' against coronavirus in one Florida manPresident Trump again touted the promise of the anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine on Monday for use treating COVID-19, retweeting a story that appeared in the New York Post.


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Hill talks continue as Trump appears to waffle on shutdown

Posted: 23 Mar 2020 07:41 AM PDT

Hill talks continue as Trump appears to waffle on shutdownTop Trump administration officials and congressional leaders struggled Monday to finalize a nearly $2 trillion economic rescue package as the coronavirus crisis deepened, even as President Donald Trump seemed to suggest he had qualms about extending the current 15-day suggested shutdown. "I didn't expect to be starting off my week with such a dire message for America," Surgeon General Jerome Adams said on "CBS This Morning," as he warned the numbers will grow get worse this week. Only hours before the surgeon general's dire warning, Trump suggested in a tweet that the remedies may be more harmful than the outbreak in a tweet that contradicted the advice of medical experts across the nation.


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Virus Rescue Plan Stalls When Democrats Block McConnell’s Offer

Posted: 23 Mar 2020 01:43 AM PDT

Virus Rescue Plan Stalls When Democrats Block McConnell's Offer(Bloomberg) -- Republicans and Democrats in Congress stumbled in their attempt to engineer a quick jolt to a sinking economy with a $2 trillion stimulus despite the rising coronavirus death toll, plunging financial markets and dire predictions of a deep recession.Negotiations to break the impasse over the stimulus legislation continued into the night Sunday after Senate Democrats voted to reject Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's latest version of the plan, which had been the product of frenzied bipartisan negotiations a day earlier.Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer met several times Sunday night, including at 11:45 p.m., with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who has been conducting what amounted to shuttle diplomacy between the two sides.While many details of the plan had been hashed out, some fundamental differences hadn't been bridged. The recriminations began immediately after McConnell's bid for a procedural vote failed.An incensed McConnell cited plummeting stock futures to express the urgency to act Monday, and the Kentucky Republican ripped Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi."We're fiddling here. We're fiddling with the emotions of the American people, fiddling with the markets," McConnell said on the Senate floor. "This obstruction achieves nothing."Schumer complained that McConnell's bill was partisan. He said it amounts to "a large corporate bailout" with insufficient oversight, and shortchanges the health-care response to the pandemic. He said there should be "much more money" for hospitals for equipment that is rapidly becoming in short supply.Still, President Donald Trump sounded an optimistic note after the failed vote. "I think we'll get there," he said. "To me it's not very complicated. We have to help the worker, we have to save the companies."Financial markets have been roiled by the impact of the pandemic as it forces businesses to shutter and governments to keep people inside. S&P 500 futures dropped 5% at the opening of Asian markets, triggering a trading stop. While they recovered later, they were still down nearly 3.8% as of 3 p.m. in Tokyo.McConnell at one point threatened to use the market turmoil to force the hand of Democrats, saying he would schedule another procedural vote for 9:45 a.m. Monday, "15 minutes after the markets open, and see if there's a change of heart." The Senate later adjourned until noon.The prospect of an election-year market meltdown will revive memories for many lawmakers of the standoff over the bank rescue plan amid the 2008 financial crisis.In September of that year, the House unexpectedly rejected President George W. Bush's $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Plan to bail out banks in the wake of the subprime mortgage collapse and to restore confidence in credit markets. The defeat was the result of a revolt by rank-and-file Republicans against their own president and it sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average down almost 7 percent.McConnell and then-Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid worked to usher it through the Senate on a solid 74-25 majority two days later. Then on Oct. 3, the House reversed and narrowly cleared the legislation and sent it to Bush for his signature.Until Sunday's procedural vote on the stimulus plan, Republicans insisted that an agreement with Democrats was close to fruition.To attract Democrats, McConnell had agreed to many of their demands, adding hundreds of billions of dollars in fresh spending, including a $600 per week increase per worker in unemployment benefits, a $75 billion public health package, and tens of billions more for transit, education, nutrition and assorted other programs.But Democrats, including Schumer and Pelosi, who flew into Washington Saturday, said a $500 billion chunk of the bill that can be used to help corporations, including airlines, gave too much discretion to the Treasury secretary and that it lacked transparency and accountability. They also said the aid for state and local governments and health care providers fell far short of what is needed.Republicans and Democrats have differed from the start on how much of the money should go toward traditional aid programs like unemployment insurance, food aid and similar programs.Many of those differences appeared to be resolved during the day Saturday as four groups of senators worked out differences. But sticking points remained, particularly when it came to final details such as who would oversee the disbursement of the aid for companies and how that would be disclosed. One Democratic aide said the package could theoretically be used to bail out the president's own company without voters knowing about it for months.The total package includes about $2 trillion worth of proposals, including $350 billion for small businesses, a $500 billion chunk of the bill that can be used for loans to larger corporations including airlines or state and local governments, extensive corporate tax breaks and tax deferrals, and direct payments of $1,200 for middle-class and low-income Americans.Pelosi left a meeting in McConnell's office earlier Sunday saying they had no deal and the House would write its own package -- a move that could add days of partisan wrangling. Pelosi later told House Democrats that the Senate bill was "very different" from the package they were crafting.Even before the defeat of the Senate's procedural motion, House Democratic leaders were not planning to call the chamber's members back to Washington on Monday, or even Tuesday. House Democrats have instead scheduled a caucus-wide telephone call Tuesday afternoon, rather than bringing members back by then, senior Democratic aides said.A major package remains likely, but it now could take additional time for the two parties to work out their differences, even as the virus continues to ravage not just the nation but Congress itself.The vote came hours after the first senator, Republican Rand Paul of Kentucky, announced that he had tested positive for the coronavirus, and two other Republicans, Mitt Romney and Mike Lee, said they were self-quarantining because they had been in contact with him. Two House members, Republican Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida and Utah Democrat Ben McAdams, also have tested positive for the virus.For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2020 Bloomberg L.P.


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