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Morning Briefing

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Friday, May 15 2020

Full Issue

Key Battleground States Offer Snapshot Of Bitter Political Divide Over Reopening Country

Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania are all electoral battleground states that voted for President Donald Trump in 2016 and will again be crucial in the 2020 presidential election. The fight over reopening in those particular states, which can swing both blue and red, is particularly heated because of those underlying politics. But leaders across the country are struggling to strike a balance as they start to lift restrictions.

In Wisconsin, residents woke up to a state of confusion on Thursday after the conservative majority on the State Supreme Court sided with the Republican majority in the Legislature on Wednesday night, overturning a statewide stay-at-home order by Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat. In Michigan, hundreds of protesters, many of them armed, turned out at the State Capitol in a drenching rainstorm. The state closed the building in advance and canceled the legislative session, rather than risk a repeat of an April protest in which angry protesters carrying long guns crowded inside. (Nolan, Bosman and Robertson, 5/14)

Urged on by President Trump, Republican officials in several battleground states, including Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania, are ramping up pressure on Democratic governors to move faster on reopening their economies, despite experts鈥 warnings of a surge in infections and deaths. The mounting pressure comes as the number of jobless Americans continues to grow across the nation. Nearly 3 million Americans filed for unemployment benefits last week, according to new figures released Thursday by the Labor Department, bringing the total number of claims to 36 million since the economic shutdowns in response to the coronavirus outbreak began. (Etehad, 5/14)

It was a stunning rebuke by a governor. As resistance to lockdown orders flares around the country, often with a partisan overtone, Gov. Tom Wolf of Pennsylvania, a Democrat, reached for a military metaphor to accuse Republican officials of desertion in the battle against the pandemic. 鈥淭o those politicians who decide to cave in to this coronavirus,鈥 Mr. Wolf said on Monday, addressing county lawmakers who have defied his stay-at-home directives, 鈥渢hey need to understand the consequences of their cowardly act.鈥 (Gabriel, 5/14)

The Industrial Midwest was always going to be a battleground in November. The region is now becoming a new front line for Americans鈥 lives and livelihoods as coronavirus hot spots proliferate and jobless rates spiral. The confluence of a ferocious pandemic, deepening economic turmoil and rising political tensions is more pronounced here than anywhere else in the country. And it sets the stage for a combustible campaign season that is testing President Donald Trump鈥檚 efforts to move on and insulate himself from the crisis鈥攁nd Joe Biden鈥檚 ability to blame him for the fallout. (Cadelago, Cassella and McCaskill, 5/14)

Two weeks into the reopening of Texas, coronavirus cases are climbing. New outbreaks still crop up. And at Guero鈥檚 Taco Bar in Austin, which offers the occasional celebrity sighting, a log of every diner and where they sat is begrudgingly in the works. 鈥淚t seems like a huge invasion of privacy,鈥 said owner Cathy Lipincott, who is nonetheless trying to comply with Austin鈥檚 local public health guidelines by asking, but not requiring, customers to give their information. (Weber and Vertuno, 5/15)

Hundreds gathered to protest Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer鈥檚 stay-at-home order on Thursday in Lansing, the third but smallest major demonstration at the state鈥檚 Capitol since businesses were shuttered in March due to the coronavirus. (Martina and Herald, 5/14)

As Mayor Bill de Blasio was resisting calls in March to cancel large gatherings and slow the spread of the coronavirus in New York City, he found behind-the-scenes support from a trusted voice: the head of his public hospital system, Dr. Mitchell Katz. There was 鈥渘o proof that closures will help stop the spread,鈥 Dr. Katz wrote in an email to the mayor鈥檚 closest aides. He believed that banning large events would hurt the economy and sow fear. 鈥淚f it is not safe to go to a conference, why is it safe to go to the hospital or ride in the subway?鈥 he wrote. And, he said, many New Yorkers were going to get infected anyway. (Rashbaum, Goodman, Mays and Goldstein, 5/14)

Florida has begun reopening for business, but this tourist mecca faces a grinding road to recovery. The coronavirus pandemic has pummeled the economy of the Orlando metro area, where legions of theme-park attendants, waiters, maids and bellhops rely on the 75 million visitors a year who produce $75 billion in revenue. The tourists are gone, and the prospect of their return uncertain. (Leary and Campo-Flores, 5/15)

They arrived at the beach by car, skateboard and on bare feet. They carried Frisbees, cameras and surfboards. They wore running shorts, yoga pants and wetsuits. Many wore masks. That was the starkest difference this week apart from a moment in time in March that seems hard to conjure now 鈥 before beaches closed and face masks seemed like an extreme and maybe even ineffective protection from coronavirus. (Melley, 5/15)

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy this week said the state was on track to test around 20,000 people a day for coronavirus by the end of May, roughly double the number it was testing at the end of April. Data presented to state health officials, however, showed the numbers going in the opposite direction. (Sutton, 5/15)

The annual Blueberry Festival is the high point of the year here. Thousands of people visit the grounds of the Wellborn Baptist Church on the first Saturday in June, where they can get blueberry pancakes, blueberry muffins, blueberry preserves, and cartons of freshly picked blueberries from nearby farms. For nearly 30 years, the festival has ushered in the warm season and showcased a major industry in this rural county 40 miles south of the Georgia state line. (Rozsa, 5/14)

The U.S. government largely shut down international travel to the United States in March with a series of rapid-fire moves, but restarting it will likely be a longer, more piecemeal process that could be complicated by rising tensions with China. (Hesson, 5/14)

Defying a wave of layoffs that has sent the U.S. job market into its worst catastrophe on record, at least one major industry is making a comeback: Tens of thousands of auto workers are returning to factories that have been shuttered since mid-March due to fears of spreading the coronavirus. Until now, it was mostly hair salons, restaurants, tattoo parlors and other small businesses reopening in some parts of the country. But the auto industry is among the first major sectors of the economy to restart its engine. (Krisher, 5/15)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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