Covid-19

Ron Johnson likely to keep promise to retire after holding up COVID relief: 'I'm happy to go home'

Beginning on Thursday, Senate clerks spent 10 hours and 34 minutes reading all 628 pages of the coronavirus relief legislation before Congress.

The reading of the bill was forced by Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) and received harsh criticism for its pointlessness, as it is not expected to have any impact other than wasting time.

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More Americans planning to get vaccinated against COVID: Pew survey

A growing number of Americans plan to get vaccinated against Covid-19 with confidence increasing particularly among African Americans, according to a Pew Research Center survey published on Friday.

Sixty-nine percent of the adults polled last month by Pew said they have already been vaccinated or plan to get dosed, up from 60 percent who said they planned to get vaccinated in November.

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Amid pandemic, Americans are saving more -- especially the wealthy

The coronavirus pandemic has wiped out millions of jobs in the United States, but it's had the unexpected effect of increasing savings rates among Americans, especially wealthy people stuck at home and forced to give up travel and entertainment.

Along with the dramatic reduction in leisure spending, things like government stimulus checks, unemployment benefits and the suspension of monthly loan repayments for more modest earners have swelled the bank accounts of Americans who are usually known to be crumbling under debt.

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‘Not true’: MSNBC host refuses to let GOP senator off the hook after he attacks COVID relief bill

As the Senate debated President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion COVID relief plan this Friday, Indiana GOP Sen. Mike Braun (R) appeared on MSNBC and was asked by host Hallie Jackson why Senate Republicans won't be voting for the bill despite the fact that almost 60 percent of GOP voters support it.

According to Braun, states like Indiana simply don't need the bill since their economy wasn't as devastated by the pandemic as other states. "My constituents don't want to borrow more money ... the only thing we have to replenish is our unemployment fund," Braun said. "Everything else is done well because we had a good business climate, great economy."

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Anti-maskers are making life hell for Disney World workers: ‘It’s not a good time at all’

Disney World workers are subjected to daily harassment -- or worse -- from visitors who refuse to abide by the amusement park's mask mandate.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis hasn't issued a mask order to protect against the deadly coronavirus, but the Orlando resort and theme park does -- and many guests become angry when employees tell them they can't wear a gaiter or go without a mask, reported the Orlando Sentinel.

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'They should be ashamed': With jobless benefits to expire in 9 days, Republicans pull out all stops to obstruct relief bill

Republican lawmakers, led by Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, are attempting to grind the Senate chamber to a halt to delay passage of a sprawling $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package as Democrats race to get the legislation to President Joe Biden's desk before March 14, when millions of jobless Americans will begin losing their unemployment lifelines.

After the Senate on Thursday afternoon approved a procedural motion to begin consideration of the aid bill—with all 50 Republicans voting no—Johnson objected to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer's (D-N.Y.) request for unanimous consent to dispense with the reading of the bill in order to start debate, forcing the Senate staff to read aloud all 628 pages (pdf) of legislative text.

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US won't reach 'maximum employment' this year: Jerome Powell

The US labor market faces a lengthy recovery and the economy will not see maximum employment this year, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Thursday.

While he expressed hope about the restoration of jobs lost during the pandemic, Powell noted that millions of workers have left the labor force.

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Amid virus, a 'shadow' pandemic for domestic abuse sufferers

In New Jersey, at a timber farm turned shelter for women who have suffered domestic violence, Gloria's struggles, like those of many abuse victims, have worsened with the coronavirus pandemic.

From Argentina to Singapore, virus-induced confinement has caused an increase in violence cases and their severity and made it more difficult to report abuses and help victims, activists say.

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US workers may see light at end of employment tunnel

The US workforce continues to reel nearly a year into the Covid-19 pandemic, but the first signs of a sustained recovery fueled by government aid and coronavirus vaccines may come in the government employment report set for release on Friday.

The Labor Department data is expected to show the unemployment rate remained unchanged in February at 6.3 percent with the economy adding 200,000 jobs, an improvement from the 49,000 positions added the month prior.

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World no closer to answer on COVID origins despite WHO probe: expert

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Despite a high-profile visit to China by a team of international experts in January, the world is no closer to knowing the origins of COVID-19, according to one of the authors of an open letter calling for a new investigation into the pandemic. "At this point we are no further advanced than we were a year ago," said Nikolai Petrovsky, an expert in vaccines at Flinders University in Adelaide, Australia, and one of 26 global experts who signed the open letter, published on Thursday. In January, a team of scientists picked by the World Health Organization (WHO) visited hospit...

Italy blocks EU vaccine delivery to Australia

Australian Prime Miniser Scott Morrison told his Cabinet on Friday that he understood why the European Union blocked 250,000 doses of the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine from being sent to Australia, but nonetheless asked the bloc to rethink the move.

He told lawmakers that some 300 people were dying every day in Italy. "And so I can certainly understand the high level of anxiety that would exist in Italy and in many countries across Europe."

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San Diego Zoo vaccinates apes against COVID-19

Nine great apes at the San Diego Zoo are the first non-human primates to receive an experimental COVID-19 vaccine, zoo officials said Thursday. Four orangutans and five bonobos have been vaccinated so far, with the zoo planning to immunize another three bonobos and a gorilla soon. These species, along with chimpanzees, are the closest cousins to humans, placing them at risk of contracting a virus that has spread rapidly from person to person. Case in point: In mid-January, the zoo's Safari Park reported that its troop of eight gorillas developed COVID-19 after exposure to a keeper who had the ...

US Senate begins debating -- and reading -- COVID relief package

The US Senate, whipsawed over the $1.9 trillion Covid rescue package, finally took up the sweeping bill Thursday, with multiple hurdles ahead as President Joe Biden seeks to push his top legislative priority through Congress.

Republicans already appeared united in opposing the proposal over its high cost, and lawmakers braced for marathon days that will include up to 20 hours of debate and a lengthy list of amendments that will force contentious votes before the bill's final passage.

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