Donald Trump has declared a national emergency while under intense pressure from Democrats and health officials over his administration's handling of the global coronavirus pandemic, as his approval ratings fall and the stock market has plunged throughout the week.
Flanked by business executives and top health officials in his administration, the market saw an uptick as the president outlined plans for a federal response to the outbreak.
House Democrats also announced they had reached a deal with the administration to provide free testing to patients, including uninsured people, as well as paid sick leave, which Democrats and presidential candidates have urged the White House consider as workers brace for impact.
The global death toll surpassed 5,000 on Friday, with new confirmed cases of Covid-19 surging in the US and throughout Europe.
Louisiana announced it was delaying its state primaries due to the pandemic, as countless campaign events were cancelled and candidate like Bernie Sanders said their bids for the presidency had been “radically changed” due to the outbreak.
Meanwhile, South Carolina GOP senator and Trump ally Lindsey Graham has announced he is going into self-quarantine after coming into contact with a Brazilian official who has since tested positive for Covid-19 at Trump’s Florida resort Mar-a-Lago. On Friday, a second person who stayed at the president's Florida estate has been confirmed to have the virus.
The president himself continues to insist he is “not concerned”.
The FDA is also providing an emergency approval for a new coronavirus test that promises to increase the speed and rate of testing tenfold across the country.
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Donald Trump has seen his approval rating fall as he remains under intense pressure over the US response to the global coronavirus pandemic, with MSNBC anchor Rachel Maddow telling the nation: “At the top of the federal government right now, it is a fountain of nonsense.”
In the latest YouGovUS/Yahoo News poll, a huge 52 per cent of respondents said they did not approve of his handling of the crisis.
As House speaker Nancy Pelosi says Congress is close to agreeing a deal on a comprehensive aid package with the White House, covering mandatory sick pay and ensuring testing remains to citizens, representatives on Capitol Hill are continuing to express concerns about the messaging being put out by the Trump administration on testing.
"It's fair to say we're close to an agreement, subject to the exchange of paper, and hope to have an agreement tomorrow," the speaker told reporters just outside her office in the Capitol.
“One way or another,” she said, there will be a vote Friday.
Pelosi has been locked in talks with Trump's Treasury secretary Steve Mnuchin over the formulation of a bipartisan stimulus bill assured of safe passage through the House and Senate, with pressure mounting as countries around the world enter shutdown mode, closing schools, restaurants, small businesses and entire sports leagues in a bid to contain the contagion.
“We’ve resolved most of our differences, and those we haven’t we’ll continue the conversation, because there will obviously be other bills,” she said.
Meanwhile, her colleagues in DC have been expressing their frustration about the Trump administration's communication on the crisis.
North Carolina Republican Mark Walker told CNN there is "a growing frustration among members as a whole to get more definitive answers".
"I don't think anyone is going to leave that briefing satisfied with what's going on with testing right now... bottom line, you leave that briefing and we are not where we need to be and not sure when we are going to get there. We are flying blind,” added Democrat Mike Quigley.
South Carolina GOP senator and Trump ally Lindsey Graham has announced he is going into self-quarantine after coming into contact with a Brazilian official who has since tested positive for Covid-19 at Trump’s Florida resort Mar-a-Lago, as the president himself continues to insist he is “not concerned”.
Here he is just one earlier talking down the seriousness of the outbreak on Fox with Sean Hannity.
The official in question, Fabio Wajngarten, is being treated while his boss, Jair Bolsonaro, is being "monitored".
Conrad Duncan has this report.
The Democratic front-runner unveiled his own plan to combat the coronavirus spread following Trump's dramatic announcement of a ban on all travel from Europe despite warnings from public health officials that a surge of community infections within the US is inevitable.
He said the president's recently announced plans to combat the virus shouldn't "fall back on xenophobia" after Trump called the flu-like respiratory illness a "foreign virus" in his Wednesday night address to the nation.
"Neither should we panic or fall back on xenophobia. Labelling it a 'foreign virus' does not displace accountability for the misjudgements that have been taken thus far from the Trump administration."
"Public fears are being compounded by a pervasive lack of trust in this president, fueled by the adversarial relationship with the truth he continues to have," he added.
Here's Alex Woodward's report.
Trump's suggestion the Tokyo Olympics should be postponed for a year because of the spreading coronavirus was immediately shot down by Japan's Olympic minister.
“I just can't see having no people there. In other words, not allowing people,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Thursday. “Maybe, and this is just my idea, maybe they postpone it for a year.”
US forces have carried out airstrikes near Baghdad in retaliation for a rocket attack that killed two Americans and a Briton on Wednesday, the Pentagon has confirmed.
In a statement, the Defence Department said the targets had been five weapon storage facilities run by Kataib Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed Shia militia, and that the weapons would have been used to target US and coalition troops.
On Thursday the Pentagon said it believed that groups backed by Tehran were behind this week's rocket attack on Camp Taji, near the Iraqi capital, which also wounded 14 people.
Phil Thomas has this report.
Speaking at a House hearing concerning Covid-19 on Thursday, Dr Anthony Fauci said that the country’s health system had hindered widespread tests.
“The system is not really geared to what we need right now,” said Dr Fauci, “that is a failing. Let’s admit it.”
Answering questions from congresowman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, he said that the country was not prepared for the level of testing needed.
Dr Fauci's testimony came as California governor Gavin Newsom complained that his state had been given incomplete testing kits.
“I continue to reinforce the tests are not complete, kits all do not include re-agents, chemicals, solutions that are components,” Newsom said yesterday, adding that it was “imperative” that labs get access to “all ingredients that are components of the test.”
“I’m surprised this is not more of the national conversation.”
James Crump has more on this.
These were the president's latest thoughts on the virus early this morning, which, naturally, saw him blaming Obama and suggesting all of the current international chaos has nothing on the swine flu pandemic of 2009.
But what a damning headline the above is, arriving with the US having still only tested fewer than 12,000 people out of a population of 327.2m.
Here's Chris Baynes with the details.
More criticism of the American and British response to the coronavirus below from an Italian doctor who wrote anonymously for Newsweek and compared the collective blundering to watching characters in a horror film who naively “decide to take a tour of a dark basement” and fail to anticipate the danger lurking in the shadows.
Given that the list of people connected to the president who have been in contact with someone who has tested positive grows ever longer (see Ivanka and Bill Barr meeting Australian politician Peter Hutton, now confirmed to have it, only last week below), this feels like a highly pertinent question.
"Investor panic and memes" is the short answer, says Clark Mindock.
Here's Andrew Feinberg on Joe Biden's decidedly presidential speech on the coronavirus last night.
He says even die-hard Republicans are breaking with Trump on the issue.
Let's not count out Bernie just yet though.
Although the chips are down after Slightly Less Super Tuesday - where supporter Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez says he lost Michigan due to "rampant voter suppression - and with an uphill battle to win the Florida primary next week on the cards, the Vermont senator has nevertheless mustered some equally uncompromising rhetoric on the coronavirus of his own.
Here's the latest from the president, who continues to prefer to dwell on the economy rather than the practicalities of actually containing the new plague.
He remains as dogged as ever in his determination to scapegoat Jay Powell, it seems, after yesterday saw the markets plummet and the Dow Jones have its worst day since 1987.
This is the latest from the markets incidentally, which followed yesterday's Black Monday-esque horror by boucing back a little in response to the word from Congress.
Trump will no doubt be taking all the credit for himself.
Republican Doug Collins has ended his short bout of self-quarantine and is returning to DC, while teammate Ted Cruz is staying on in Texas.
Virginia Democrat Don Beyer is also in isolation and believes Trump should be too.
Given that Jair Bolsonaro has just tested positive, Representative Beyer might well have a point...
Be there or be square.
He's not going to say he's got it - is he??
Tom Bossert, a former Homeland Security adviser to the administration, has reportedly tried several times in recent days to reach the president or vice president to warn them just how dire the coronavirus pandemic really is but is getting fobbed off by the White House.
Harry Cockburn picks up the story.
FDA issues emergency approval for new Covid-19 test that works 10 times faster
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted emergency approval for a new coronavirus test that promises to promises to vastly increase both the speed and rate of testing across the country, according to officials.
The new tests run on the pharmaceutical company Roche Holding AG’s cobas 6800/8800 systems, which, according to Bloomberg News, are capable of performing 4,128 and 1,440 tests daily, respectively.
Thomas Schinecker, who leads the company’s diagnostics unit, told the news outlet in an interview: “We are increasing the speed definitely by a factor of 10.”
Story to come...
Miami mayor tests positive for coronavirus after meeting Brazilian president
Francis Suarez has tested positive for COVID-19, according to reports. He was in attendance at the Florida event with Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro.










