Covid-19

Americans reject GOP for fighting back against the stimulus bill: report

Americans overwhelmingly supported the COVID-19 stimulus bill that was passed in the Senate with no Republican support over the weekend. It's now headed to the House for a vote and then President Joe Biden's desk for his signature. A whopping 77 percent of Americans wanted the bill to pass according to a March 3 Morning Consult Poll.

The response to the GOP's opposition to the bill is rolling in as Americans reveal they don't view efforts from Republicans to negotiate the bill to have been done in good faith.

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Pollen can raise your risk of getting COVID-19 -- even if you don't have allergies

Exposure to pollen can raise your risk of developing COVID-19, and it isn't just a problem for people with allergies, new research released March 9 shows. Plant physiologist Lewis Ziska, a co-author of the new peer-reviewed study and other recent research on pollen and climate change, explains the findings and why pollen seasons are getting longer and more intense.

What does pollen have to do with a virus?

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New York, Florida lower vaccination age threshold to 60

The American states of New York and Florida are preparing to make Covid-19 vaccines available to people aged 60 and over, as the vaccination campaign in the United States -- the world's worst-hit country in the pandemic -- accelerates.

As of March 10, New York state residents aged 60 and older will be able to be vaccinated, Governor Andrew Cuomo said at a press briefing on Tuesday, though appointments continue to be difficult to obtain on government websites.

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Leaked texts contradict DeSantis's claims about vaccine scandal

Ron DeSantis, the Trump-loving governor of Florida, is getting into more hot water over claims that his office steered vaccines toward wealthy communities filled with Republican donors.

The Tampa Bay Times reports that leaked text messages between donors and public officials indicate that DeSantis's office was involved with directing which areas got special access to vaccines, despite the governor's denials of favoritism.

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Trucker thought COVID would 'disappear' after the election – now he will be on oxygen the rest of his life

In an interview with the Idaho Statesman's Audrey Dutton, 63-year-old long-haul trucker Paul Russell admitted his career is over because he didn't take the COVID-19 pandemic seriously, believing it would simply disappear after the November election.

After contracting the virus and nearly dying, he now admits he was a "jackass" who will have to spend the rest of his life on oxygen due to the damage inflicted on his body by the novel coronavirus.

According to Russell, he wasn't taking precautions on a trip from Florida back to Boise -- with a stop in Houston -- when he thinks he was infected and felt ill before he got home.

Speaking with Dutton he recalled, "I didn't know if I was infected with COVID or what. My buddy was about an hour behind me. He caught up with me in Twin Falls. … He told me I didn't look very good at all."Russell explained that he holed up in a trailer to protect his wife, adding that he felt "really, extremely miserable" before he had to be taken to a hospital in Boise where he spent 16 days, including four or five days -- he described the time as a "blur" in intensive care receiving oxygen.

Now he claims, "I'm gonna be on oxygen the rest of my life, according to my doctor."

The Idaho man faults himself for getting sick one week after the election, saying he bought into conspiracy theories about the coronavirus.

"Before I came down with the virus, I was one of those jackasses who thought the virus would disappear the day after the election. I was one of those conspiracy theorists. All these people that are saying that it's fake, blah blah blah, they're lying to themselves," he said.

Prior to the election, then-President Donald Trump wrote on Twitter that "you won't be hearing so much about" COVID-19 after November.

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House readies final vote on Biden's $1.9 trillion COVID-19 package

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives could approve the Biden administration's $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill as early as Tuesday, with a vote allowing the Democratic president to sign the legislation into law later this week. Approval of the package, which is one of the biggest U.S. anti-poverty measures since the 1960s, would give Biden and the Democrats who control Congress a major legislative victory less than two months into his presidency. "It's really just a matter of paperwork. But we are going to have a vote as soon as we can," Democratic Representative Katherin...

GOP attacks on Dems' big rescue package is a massive flop with voters: pollster

Republican lawmakers have tried to undermine the popularity of the American Rescue Plan that passed the United States Senate over the weekend, but the progressive pollsters at Data for Progress show their attacks have been a massive flop with voters.

In terms of topline numbers, Data for Progress finds that the package is popular even among GOP voters, despite the fact that no Republicans voted for the final bill.

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'He cares about his poll numbers': Houston police chief shreds Greg Abbott for ending mask mandate

Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo had some harsh words for Texas Gov. Greg Abbott after he rescinded his state's mask mandate earlier this month.

Appearing on CNN Tuesday, Acevedo said that ending the mandate would make his officers' jobs more difficult because he expected them to have to respond to a flood of incidents in which citizens refuse to comply with stores' individual mask mandates because the statewide mandate had been lifted.

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Gov. DeSantis pulled a disappearing act last November to hide having COVID: Florida Democrat

In an interview on the Daily Beast's " New Abnormal" podcast, a top Florida Democrat speculated that Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) was infected with COVID-19 late last year and hid it from the public.

DeSantis, who is currently being accused of funneling vaccines for the coronavirus to wealthy donors has been at the forefront of keeping his state open despite high infection rates and is believed to be maneuvering to set himself up for a 2024 presidential run.

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Social Security and Medicare may experience their own COVID-19 side effects: experts

Over the last year, COVID-19 has been especially devastating for people of retirement age. As of mid-February, those 65 and over accounted for 81% of the pandemic’s deaths in the United States. More than 373,000 older adults succumbed to the new virus, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Counterintuitive as it might seem, however, the pandemic could actually put even more pressure on Social Security and Medicare — the two giant, financially challenged federal programs that provide retirement and medical benefits to older and disabled Americans. Workers contribute ...

US can deliver COVID-19 aid checks quickly -- but child tax credit is hurdle

By David Lawder WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With plenty of practice sending out coronavirus relief payments, the U.S. government should be able to start delivering $1,400 checks almost immediately once Congress finalizes a new aid bill and President Joe Biden signs it, tax experts say. Some Americans might receive direct payments as soon as this week if the House of Representatives, as expected, passes the $1.9 trillion bill on Tuesday, compared with the lag of several weeks experienced in April 2020. Nearly 160 million households are expected to get payments, the White House estimates. The Treasur...

The lost year: What the pandemic cost teenagers

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

Everything looks the same on either side of the Texas-New Mexico border in the great oil patch of the Permian Basin. There are the pump jacks scattered across the plains, nodding up and down with metronomic regularity. There are the brown highway signs alerting travelers to historical markers tucked away in the nearby scrub. There are the frequent memorials of another sort, to the victims of vehicle accidents. And there are the astonishingly deluxe high school football stadiums. This is, after all, the region that produced “Friday Night Lights."

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New U.S. COVID-19 cases fall 12% last week, vaccinations top 2 million a day

(Reuters) - The United States reported a 12% decline in new cases of COVID-19 last week, while vaccinations accelerated to a record 2.2 million shots per day, according to a Reuters analysis of state, county and CDC data. New infections have dropped for eight weeks in a row, averaging 60,000 new cases per day for the week ended March 7. Deaths linked to COVID-19 fell 18% last week to 11,800, the lowest since late November and averaging 1,686 per day. (Open https://tmsnrt.rs/2WTOZDR in an external browser to see state-by-state details.) Despite the positive trends, health officials have warned ...