Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Republican Strategists Worry GOP's Stance Against Mail-In-Voting Gives Democrats A Head Start
Coronavirus has campaigns rushing to put voting by mail at the center of their general election strategies 鈥 and some Republicans worry they鈥檝e already fallen behind, as President Donald Trump dismisses the method and drives doubt about mail voting among the GOP base. Multimillion dollar programs urging mail voting in November are already coming together, as both parties envision a social-distancing election featuring a spike in absentee ballots, according to interviews with more than a dozen campaign strategists, party committees and outside groups. (Schneider and Arkin, 4/28)
The first major test of an almost completely vote-by-mail election during a pandemic is about to unfold in Ohio, offering lessons to other states about how to conduct one of the most basic acts of democracy amid a health crisis. The process hasn鈥檛 been smooth as state officials have navigated election laws and the need to protect citizens and poll workers from the coronavirus. Ohio鈥檚 in-person primary was delayed just hours before polls were supposed to open last month, prompting legal challenges and confusion. (Weissert and Carry Smyth, 4/28)
Sen. Bernie Sanders鈥檚 campaign excoriated New York election officials Monday for canceling the state鈥檚 Democratic presidential primary, opening a new rift in a party trying to mend its divisions following a competitive fight for the nomination. Although Sanders (I-Vt.) has suspended his campaign and endorsed former vice president Joe Biden, he has expressed a desire to remain on ballots in states with upcoming nominating contests. He hopes to continue amassing delegates to the party鈥檚 national convention to gain influence over the platform and other decisions. (Sullivan, 4/27)
The Covid-19 pandemic is changing a lot of things, fast鈥攁nd one of them is American politics. Everything from campaigning to the way we vote is suddenly up in the air. And that鈥檚 on top of a primary season that was already one of the strangest in memory. What does it mean for President Donald Trump, for Joe Biden鈥檚 chances in November, and for the country? Should Biden hide, or come out swinging鈥攁nd which VP choice would give the Republicans the most to worry about? (Alberta, 4/28)
Joe Biden鈥檚 U.S. presidential campaign and his Democratic Party allies have gone on an all-out offensive against President Donald Trump鈥檚 coronavirus response, betting it will be a winning issue with American voters in November. (Hunnicutt, 4/27)
Republicans are trying to pull off a high-wire act over the next three months: Reopen the economy enough to get most jobless Americans back to work and off the public dole, while resisting another giant stimulus package. If they fail, they鈥檒l face a coronavirus cliff 鈥 an even deeper collapse in spending and sky-high unemployment in the months before Election Day. That could both damage President Donald Trump鈥檚 reelection prospects and put the party鈥檚 Senate majority at serious risk. (White, 4/28)
Earlier this month, the Senate Republican campaign arm circulated a memo with shocking advice to GOP candidates on responding to coronavirus: 鈥淒on鈥檛 defend Trump, other than the China Travel Ban 鈥 attack China.鈥 The Trump campaign was furious. (Isenstadt, 4/27)
Trump has repeated this fiery claim dozens of times in campaign rallies, speeches and tweets. The wording never changes. The verb is always 鈥渞ip.鈥 The womb is always mentioned. He never leaves out the 鈥渕oment of birth.鈥 We keep adding it to our database of everything false or misleading from Trump, but the claim is so visceral and deceptive that it deserves its own fact check. (Rizzo, 4/28)