Donald Trump travelled to Michigan to tour a Ford factory making ventilators for the coronavirus pandemic. He said he wore a mask in the back room, but didn't want to give the press the pleasure of seeing him wear it, even though it looked very nice on him. Even better than without a mask.
Michigan's attorney general Dana Nessel says Trump is not welcome back to the state after refusing to wear the mask, and she threatened Ford with legal action for allowing him to do so.
Trump may hold back federal funding from the state, which has suffered catastrophic flooding after two dams broke. He has tied unspecified funding to mail-in voting, which he says leads to mass voter fraud.
Trump has said he would have done "nothing" differently to stop the spread of the coronavirus - even as a new Columbia University model indicates that going into lockdown two weeks earlier would have saved 36,000 American lives. The country's death toll is currently approaching 94,000.
Internationally and interplanetary, Trump confirmed that the US has pulled out of the Open Skies weapons treaty with Russia while saying he might attend the NASA SpaceX launch of two Americans to the International Space Station next week.
He also revealed that he will stop taking the controversial anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine "in two days", which he has been heavily criticised for by his usual cheerleaders over at Fox News.
The president's day ended with a Twitter rant lamenting that Fox News was littered with garbage because they were doing nothing to help him get re-elected in November, while his former fixer Michael Cohen was released from prison early with the ominous comment that "there is so much I want to say".
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Donald Trump has said he would have done “nothing” differently to stop the coronavirus - even as a new Columbia University model indicates that going into lockdown two weeks earlier - on 1 March - would have saved 36,000 American lives by making it much harder for the disease to spread.
The country’s death toll is currently approaching 94,000 and the president's comments follow him saying a day earlier that it is a "badge of honour" for the US to lead the world in the number of total coronavirus cases (currently around 1.58m) as it is an indication that itthe country is doing more testing for the virus than any other.
Yesterday, despite widespread criticism at home and abroad, Trump insisted his administration was doing "amazingly well" and continued his campaign to pressure states to reopen for business and kickstart the stagnating economy, despite evidence that doing so prematurely could prove disastrous.
Here's a little more on the Columbia study.
"As WHO, we would advise that for COVID-19 these drugs be reserved for use within trials," Dr Ryan concluded.
Here’s John T Bennett’s report.
Earlier on Twitter, the president had panned Michigan secretary of state Jocelyn Benson while falsely contending that absentee ballots had been sent out to 7.7m voters in the state, which Trump is visiting later today and needs to keep in his column to win a second term.
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany later told reporters the president's dispatch was "meant to alert" Mnuchin and Vought that any voter fraud would cause him to try withholding aid, a gesture she said was typical of his “unprecedented transparency”.
Trump also renewed his war of words with Beijing on Twitter overnight, accusing it of engaging in a “massive disinformation campaign” over Covid-19 and causing “panic and carnage” around the world, his remarks coinciding with the release of a new White House report reaching similar conclusions.
Here's the latest from the late night host, offering a rare midweek edition of his "Closer Look" segment to examine the president's worrisome habit of ignoring the experts - even when it comes to his own health.
Touting his visit to a Ford vehicle components plant in Ypsilanti, Michigan, today, the president yesterday repeated one of his favourite claims: that the people of the state once named him their "Man of the Year".
He's said this at least six times before but, according to CNN's ace fact-checker Daniel Dale, it is completely untrue - and appears to stem from Trump being invited to give an after-dinner speech in the state in 2013 by then-congressman Dave Trott, at which no such honour was given out.
Senate Republicans escalated their spurious investigations into Trump's political rivals on Wednesday when the Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee voted along party lines, 8-6, to subpoena a company that retained Ukrainian energy giant Burisma as a client when Joe Biden's son Hunter was serving on its board.
But the company in question, Blue Star Strategies, wrote in a letter to Homeland Security chairman Ron Johnson that it has already "eagerly cooperated to date" with the panel's probe into whether the former vice president wielded his political influence in Ukraine to help his son's financial position within Burisma, a theory that so far has not been substantiated despite intense right-wing media and political scrutiny.
Griffin Connolly has this report.
Alex Woodward this on another hammer blow to Kayleigh McEnany's contention that the administration is devoted to "transparency".
We've still never seen the full version of Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian election hacking and the Trump camp's alleged efforts to collude in it, only attorney general William Barr's redacted cut.
Well that's all right then.
Andrew Naughtie has this report on the social media giant's plans for preventinga repeat of 2016, which saw widespread disinformation and Russian bots running amok.
In case you missed this extraordinary turn of phrase from the House speaker yesterday, Pelosi has been at it again.
Having called the president "morbidly obese" earlier this week and then rather wryly claimed that she "didn't know he was so sensitive" when he reacted angrily to it, she has since explained that she's just "giving him a dose of his own medicine".
What, Clorox?
The president's ex-attorney -currently serving a three-year prison stretch for lying to Congress and campaign finance violations involving the paying out of hush money to Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal over their claims to have had affairs with Trump - will serve the remainder of his sentence at home during the coronavirus pandemic.
He is among the non-violent offenders being released by federal corrections agencies as prisons become vulnerable to the spread of the virus and is expected to be allowed home today.
Oh what tales he could tell...
Here's Alex Woodward on his early release.
Good grief.
That takes the nine-week total since the US entered its coronavirus lockdown to a almost 39m.
And this is what happened the last time someone attempted to ask Trump what he intended to do about it.
Here's Chris Riotta's report.
The A-lister is one of a gaggle of celebrities - also including Millie Bobby Brown, Penelope Cruz, Sarah Jessica Parker, James McEvoy, Hugh Jackman, Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson - who are handing over their social media platforms to the popular director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to get the word out about Covid-19.
Gino Spocchia has this report on the #PassTheMic project.
Here's Andrew Naughtie on Pelosi and Chuck Schumer's request that the president honour the dead on upcoming Memorial Day.
Texas congressman and MAGA loyalist John Ratcliffe has already had his nomination for national intelligence director pulled once and was given a fair old grilling at his confirmation hearing recently, as reports emerged he followed QAnon conspiracy accounts on Twitter.
Here's Andrew Naughtie on his prospects in Mitch McConnell's Republican-dominated chamber.
Gino Spocchia has this report on the sad passing of an extraordinary servant of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, a man who really saw it all.
I'm just going to leave this here in light of the president's thoughts on mail voting being "ripe for fraud".













