As New York City’s death toll from coronavirus hits 3,845, officials are considering using Hart Island in Long Island Sound off the Bronx as a temporary grave site at a time when morgues are overrun.
Dr Anthony Fauci, the top US infectious diseases expert, has meanwhile broken with Donald Trump to warn that the world may never “go back to normal” after the outbreak because the threat will linger, issuing the caution as America approaches 400,000 cases and 12,300 deaths in total.
In other news, the president has ousted his White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham on the same day Democratic challenger Joe Biden resumes his fight against Bernie Sanders to win the party’s nomination to challenge for the presidency in November, with the Wisconsin primary controversially given the go-ahead in spite of stay-at-home rules and social distancing concerns.
Taking Ms Grisham's places as the press secretary was Kayleigh McEnany, a campaign spokesperson for the president. But she faced criticism on Tuesday over previous comments in February stating Mr Trump would prevent the coronavirus from spreading across America.
The president has also attacked the World Health Organisation (WHO) for its response to the coronavirus pandemic, claming the organisation made "missed calls". He is now threatening to withhold US funding from the WHO. His threat first came in a tweet on Tuesday before repeating it again during the White House's daily press briefing.
"They seem to be very China-centric. And we have to look into that so we'll look into it we pay for a majority of the money that they get," the president said. He accused the WHO of not supporting his January travel ban on China.
Mr Trump also buckled down on denouncing mail-in ballots during the briefing, claiming it was "cheating".
But the president also recently applied to vote out-of-state for Florida, which would entail him mailing in his own ballot. When asked about this, Mr Trump said he was allowed to do this while other forms of mail-in ballots were allegedly corrupt.
In order to help small businesses during the pandemic, the president added he would ask Congress to provide an additional $250bn in funding to help companies cope. "I will protect you if your governor fails," Mr Trump said.
Donald Trump has persuaded India to lift an export ban on the anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine, which his administration believes could be used to treat coronavirus but others regard with scepticism, after threatening the country he visited in February with “retaliation” if it did not.
Here's Colin Drury's report.
With the US now approaching 368,000 cases of coronavirus and 11,000 deaths as the pandemic zeroes in on its peak, it is understandable that the Trump administration might be tempted by a quick fix for the crisis like hydroxychloroquine but ignoring the science is, quite frankly, breathtakingly reckless and places lives at risk.
New York governor Andrew Cuomo did say yesterday that early responses to the antimalarial drug “anecdotally” suggest its use in the coronavirus fight has been “effective", but others have dimissed it outright as a "quack cure".
Take this guest on Trump's beloved Fox News, for instance.
Biotech CEO William Haseltine, a former Harvard Medical School professor and HIV/AIDs specialist, says it is "complete and utter nonsense" for the White House to be pushing it, as well as "irresponsible".
The American Medical Association's president, Dr Patrice Harris, meanwhile says she personally would not prescribe the drug for a coronavirus patient, saying the risks of severe side effects were "great and too significant to downplay" without large studies showing the drug is safe and effective for such use.
Dr Harris pointed to the drug's high risk of causing heart rhythm problems. "People have their health to lose," she said. "Your heart could stop."
Trump himself of course prefers to strike a more optimistic note, whatever the evidence to the contrary, telling his Twitter followers yesterday there is...
Combare that with the warning his surgeon general Dr Jerome Adams served up on Fox News Sunday: "The next week is going to be our Pearl Harbour moment. It's going to be our 9/11 moment. It's going to be the hardest moment for many Americans in their entire lives."
There are even deep divisions within the White House over the merits of hydroxychloroquine, with Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro muscling his way into the debate and even disputing the expertise of Dr Anthony Fauci and other members of the coronavirus task force during a heated debate in the Situation Room, according to CNN.
Subsequently asked about the feud on New Day, Navarro commented: "Doctors disagree about things all the time. My qualifications in terms of looking at the science is that I'm a social scientist.
"I have a PhD. And I understand how to read statistical studies, whether it's in medicine, the law, economics or whatever."
Hmmm.
Navarro was seen last week being given a dressing down by the same network's anchor Briana Kielar, who asked him: “Peter, why are you wasting your time on this and not solving the problem you have?"
Here's John T Bennett on a dubious new voice on the matter.
Back to the man himself, who has been wishing British prime minister Boris Johnson a speedy recovery over his own fight with Covid-19.
"We have contacted all of Boris's doctors and we'll see what's going to take place but they are ready to go," he added.
Phil Thomas has this report.
The president also revealed in Monday's session that he had discussed the federal response to the coronavirus crisis with Democratic front-runner Joe Biden in an otherwise bad-tempered Q&A in which he duelled with more reporters for having the audacity to ask him questions.
Here he goes having another pot shot, telling a renowned journalist reporting on a White House crisis briefing that he "will never make it" in his chosen profession.
Amazingly, he got through his entire discussion of Biden without once calling him "Sleepy Joe" or otherwise insulting him.
Instead, he suprisied everyone by describing their 15-minute exchange as "a really wonderful, warm conversation".
Here's more from John T Bennett.
The president also got angry yesterday about a federal survey that found hospitals faced severe shortages of coronavirus test supplies, questioning whether its conclusions were skewed by politics.
The non-partisan Health and Human Services (HHS) inspector general's office reported on Monday morning that a shortage of tests and long waits for results were at the root of mounting problems faced by hospitals.
You can read it in full right here, should you so wish.
"Hospitals reported that severe shortages of testing supplies and extended waits for test results limited (their) ability to monitor the health of patients and staff," the report said.
Three out of four American hospitals told the inspector general's office they are already treating patients with confirmed or suspected Covid-19 and they expect to be overwhelmed.
Asked by a reporter about the report's finding on testing, Trump responded, "It is wrong."
"So, give me the name of the inspector general?" he asked before suggesting without evidence, "Could politics be entered into that?"
Acting in the role of HHS inspector general is Christi A Grimm, a career government manager who took over the position early this year in an interim capacity. "When was she appointed?" Trump asked.
Trump's comments carried an edge because last Friday he announced the firing of the inspector general of the intelligence community, Michael Atkinson, for reporting to Congress the whistleblower complaint that the president tried to enlist Ukraine in investigating Joe Biden's son.
Grimm's title is principal deputy inspector general. She began her career with the agency more than 20 years ago.
"They did serve in the previous admin - you mean the Obama administration?" Trump asked a reporter who pressed on with questions. "Thank you for telling me that... there's a typical fake news deal."
The HHS inspector general's report was based on a telephone survey of 323 hospitals around the country, from 23-27 March. With hundreds of new coronavirus cases daily, the situation is becoming more dire for many the nation's 6,000 hospitals.
Trump maintains that virus testing has been a success story for his administration. Although testing is now ramping up, it's been a major source of complaints for weeks.
Finally from that press conference, Trump also indicated yesterday that he could step into an internal US Navy dispute about a fired aircraft carrier commander who was fired by the service's top civilian official for raising concerns about coronavirus spreading through his crew.
"I don't want to destroy somebody for having a bad day," the commander-in-chief said of Captain Brett Crozier, sounding a more concilliatory note on the issue than he has in recent days.
JTB has a little more on this.
A quick word on Doc Fauci, the top US infectious diseases expert, who broke with Trump yesterday to warn that the world may never “go back to normal” after the coronavirus outbreak is reined in and vaccines developed because the threat posed by the disease will linger.
"When we say 'getting back to normal' we mean something very different from what we're going through right now, because right now we are in a very intense mitigation."
The aforementioned Joe Biden will continue his fight against Bernie Sanders to win their party’s nomination to challenge President Trump in November today after the Supreme Court of Wisconsin ruled the state’s primary election could go ahead in defiance of stay-at-home orders intended to limit contact and thwart the further spread of the outbreak.
The state now finds itself a test case for dozens of others struggling to balance public health concerns with a core pillar of democracy.
The National Guard will help run voting sites across the state after thousands of election workers stepped down fearing for their safety. Dozens of polling places will be closed, but those that are active will open at 7am CDT. Results are not expected to be released on election night. In the wake of a legal battle over whether to conduct the election as scheduled, a court ruling appeared to prevent results from being made public earlier than 13 April.
Now that it is going ahead, Biden hopes the state will help deliver a knockout blow against Sanders, but the winner of Tuesday's contest may be less significant than Wisconsin's decision to allow voting at all. Its ability to host an election under the lash of a growing pandemic could have significant implications for upcoming primaries and even the fall general election.
"This is a warning sign for November and a problem that states need to take all steps to avoid," said Wendy Weiser, director of the Brennan Center for Justice's democracy programme. "Americans should not have to choose between their health and their right to vote."
Democrats in and out of Wisconsin screamed for the low-profile contest to be postponed, yet Republicans - and the conservative-majority state Supreme Court - would not give in. The partisan split was coloured by a state Supreme Court election in which a lower turnout was thought to benefit the conservative candidate.
While Trump's health advisers encouraged all Americans to stay home, Wisconsin Republican Party chairman Andrew Hitt downplayed the heath concerns. The state had reported nearly 2,500 coronavirus infections and 77 related deaths as of Monday night.
"Wisconsin voters are pretty determined," Hitt said, noting that local residents are still going to the grocery store, the liquor store and even boating stores classified as essential businesses. "I can't really think of something more essential than voting."
Congressional leaders are jolting ahead with another coronavirus rescue package after Trump indicated that Americans will need more aid during the stark pandemic and economic shutdown.
House speaker Nancy Pelosi said another $1trn (£813bn) is needed, beyond the just-passed $2.2trn (£1.8trn) effort. She wants another round of direct payments to Americans and more money for companies to keep making payroll. Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell has said in recent days that health care should top the list, signaling his intent to get to work on a new bill.
"We're going to take good care of our people," Trump said Monday at his daily White House briefing. "It was not their fault."
It's a rare sign of emerging consensus as Washington responds to the public health emergency and severe economic fallout that is ransacking communities nationwide, a crisis on par with a war effort or the Great Depression.
The contours of the package are still being debated and any votes in Congress remain a logistical conundrum. The House and Senate adjourned for most of the month, as part of strict stay-at-home orders from public health officials to prevent the spread of the highly contagious virus.
On an afternoon conference call with House Democrats, Pelosi told lawmakers at least another $1trn would be needed. The California Democrat has vowed to put the next package together in time for a House vote this month.
Former Federal Reserve chief Janet Yellen joined the private call and warned Democrats the economic fallout will depend on the public health response to the pandemic, the person said. As businesses shutter to stop the virus' spread, it has hurled the US economy toward a recession.
Yellen said it was impossible to know how deep and long the recession would be, and added that it would depend on the health response.
The former Fed chair also told them the nation's unemployment rate is now at least 13 per cent and this week's jobless report will show higher numbers than last week's.
Yellen said she expects a 30 per cent contraction of GDP this year, but has seen models as high as 50 percent, according to a Democratic aide unauthorized to discuss the call and granted anonymity.
The earlier relief package, approved in late March, included one-time $1,200 (£975) direct payments to Americans, along with forgivable small business loans for companies to keep making payroll. It also included a boost of unemployment pay, money for hospitals and a $500bn (£407bn) fund for bigger corporations and industries.
Pelosi told Democrats said the $1,200 direct payments to Americans and the paycheque protection programme for small businesses are not enough and more needs to be done, the person said.
She also said there needs to be more aid through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as food stamps.
Trump has favoured direct cheques to Americans and gave a nod to another round in the next package.
"It is absolutely under serious consideration," he said.
Just as New York's Andrew Cuomo offered some rare good news by saying the latest data from the sticken state indicates "a possible flattening of the curve," the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia all saw their biggest single-day increases in fatalities related to the coronavirus on Monday.
Deaths in DC were up to 169 as officials warned the region could become one of the country's next hot spots and hospitals prepared for a surge.
The daughter of the latet Arizona senator and war hero John McCain is now a presenter on ABC's The View and, broadcasting from home, she had a few characteristically forthright things to say about the Trump administration's response to the coronavirus crisis.
Here's her vitriolic attack on the president, as she argues the real benefit of the White House daily briefings is exposing how inadequate and misleading his statements are:
Greg Evans has the latest insight on the US criminal justice system from the intellectual titan of our times for Indy100.
That's the question asked by Hannah Selinger for Indy Voices as the Trump administration engages in the undignified business of stealing masks bound for other nations and stockpiling hydroxychloroquine.
“We need his leadership now more than ever before," the Georgia congressman and Bloody Sunday marcher says, delivering another key endorsement to the front-runner on another primary day.
"He has been a friend, a dear friend. He's a man of courage, a man with a great conscience, a man of faith," Lewis said in a call with reporters.
"He will be a great president. He will lead our country to a better place. He would inspire another generation to stand up, to speak up and to speak out, to be brave and to be bold."
Biden himself appeared on NBC's Today show this morning, discussing his call with Trump and hinting at future co-operation with Bernie Sanders.
Oliver O'Connell has the latest from the USNS Comfort in Manhattan.
The aforementioned Peter Navarro (also known by the bogus academic pseudonym "Ron Vara") actually did try to warn the president about the coming storm two months ago, writing to the National Security Council on the threat posed by Covid-19 only to see his alarm go unheeded.
Alex Woodward has this report.
So farewell then Stephanie Grishman, we hardly knew ye.
We'll always have that time you inexplicably turned green on Fox and Friends though.
Here's Griffin Connolly with the latest.
Even Fox Business had an infectious disease expert on this morning - Dr Amesh Adalja of Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security - to remind Americans of the importance of social distancing.
Which makes the early scenes of mass queuing to vote in today's primaries in Wisconsin all the more troubling...










