Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Covid-19

US airlines to end year with 90,000 fewer workers

Hit with a collapse of demand, US airlines will end the year with the lowest number of workers since at least 1987, 90,000 fewer than when Covid-19 hit, an industry federation said Thursday.

Keep reading... Show less

Newark becomes symbol of COVID's resurgence in northeastern US

With a coronavirus test positivity rate of 19 percent, the city of Newark embodies the battle against Covid-19 in America's northeast, a region that has so far avoided the second wave of infections that has been hitting the rest of the US and Europe for several weeks.

Keep reading... Show less

The enraging deja vu of a third coronavirus wave

There’s a joke I’ve seen circulating online, over and over during this pandemic, that goes along the lines of, “Months this year: January, February, March, March, March, March, March…”

Keep reading... Show less

‘Angry’ Trump has ‘publicly disengaged from the battle against coronavirus’ — as cases surge: AP

Bitter over his election defeat to President-elect Joe Biden, the leader of the free world has stopped bothering with the COVID-19 pandemic.

Keep reading... Show less

At least eight Republican Party staffers have contracted COVID-19 after election events

The election was called on Saturday morning, Nov. 7, and six days later at least eight Republican National Committee staffers have come up positive for COVID-19.

Keep reading... Show less

Biden health adviser has a plan to get pandemic under control and revive economy: Pay people to stay home for 4-6 weeks

A nationwide lockdown of four to six weeks would help contain the coronavirus pandemic and need not cause economic hardship, according to Dr. Michael Osterholm, a top health adviser to President-elect Joe Biden, who said that paying people to stay home would limit the spread of Covid-19 in the United States and put the country on track for a smoother recovery.

Keep reading... Show less

Another Trump adviser tests positive for COVID after White House superspreader event: Corey Lewandowski

Corey Lewandowski, President Donald J. Trump's adviser who's been issuing baseless lawsuits regarding illegal election activity in specific states, tested positive for COVID-19 Wednesday, making him the latest person in Trump's inner circle to contract the virus.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump megadonors who fought COVID-19 restrictions test positive after White House event

A pair of Republican megadonors who funded efforts against Wisconsin's stay-at-home orders have tested positive for the deadly coronavirus.

Keep reading... Show less

Conspiracies could jeopardize COVID-19 vaccine, warn experts

Conspiracy theories about Covid-19 vaccines play an "outsized role" on social media, driven in part by a lack of reliable information which could threaten their efficacy, an NGO specializing in misinformation warned Thursday.

Keep reading... Show less

Pelosi scolds Republicans: Stop the election ‘circus’ and ‘start focusing on COVID’

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) addressed reporters at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. Thursday amid growing tension in the chasm between President Donald J. Trump's White House and President-elect Joe Biden's winning of the presidential contest by over 5.1 million popular votes.

Keep reading... Show less

The View’s Joy Behar speculates ‘evil’ Trump wants to make COVID-19 crisis worse to leave in Biden’s lap

On Thursday, the co-hosts of "The View" debated the next steps to control the coronavirus pandemic.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump shamed for 'hate-watching cable news' while America enters 'COVID hell'

CNN host John Berman on Thursday shamed President Donald Trump for doing nothing even while infections and hospitalizations from the novel coronavirus hit record highs.

Keep reading... Show less

Workers who lost jobs due to Covid may need help getting healthcare coverage this fall

Michelina Moen lost her job and health insurance in April. Only weeks earlier she had begun to feel ill and not her usual energetic self — in what she describes as a textbook case of “really bad timing.”

Keep reading... Show less