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Trump official decries 'inexcusable' COVID-19 testing failures after his son had to wait a week for results

Mick Mulvaney, the United States’ special envoy for Northern Ireland who previously served as President Donald Trump's chief of staff, believes that America's testing capabilities for the novel coronavirus are still way short of where they should be.

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Kayleigh McEnany: Fauci only 'represents one viewpoint' whose advice 'gets to the president' indirectly

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany on Monday declined to deny reports that the White House has sidelined Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top U.S. infection disease expert, as the coronavirus pandemic continues.

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Health officials have to rely on 1990s technology to gather coronavirus data — and they're overwhelmed

On Monday, The New York Times reported that many public health officials around the country are overwhelmed — because they have had to rely on fax machines to distribute and collect data on the coronavirus pandemic, all coming in real-time from over half a million tests performed every day.

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Trump whines about Fox News -- and says 'the radical left has scared them' into giving him negative coverage

President Donald Trump on Monday continued airing his grievances against Fox News, which he accused of caving to pressure from "the radical left" by not covering him as favorably as it once had.

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Medical experts slam Trump for promoting game show host’s COVID-19 conspiracy theories

President Donald Trump kicked off the week with an early Monday morning storm of retweets, beginning with promoting a conspiracy theory from veteran game show host, conservative Chuck Woolery. Physicians and medical experts quickly stepped in to correct the record and to criticize the president for spreading false information about the deadly pandemic that has killed 140,000 Americans.

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These Wisconsin voters sat out 2016 — now they're itching to send Trump packing

President Donald Trump's support is waning in Wisconsin, and his growing unpopularity is also firing up voters who stayed home and helped him win in 2016.

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'House of absolute horrors': New book reveals how Trump family gave rise to a 'sociopath'

In a new book, Mary Trump — the president’s niece — describes Donald Trump as a “sociopath” who grew up in a dysfunctional family that fostered his greed and cruelty. Donald Trump’s younger brother, Robert, is seeking to block the sale of the book on the grounds that it violates a confidentiality agreement, but publisher Simon & Schuster says 600,000 copies of the book have already been distributed ahead of its July 14 publishing date. Investigative journalist David Cay Johnston, who has reported on Trump for three decades, says the book is “very, very important” and helps to answer how Trump got to the White House.

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Trump's Chief of Staff Meadows floundering and viewing exit after less than four months: White House sources

According to a report from Politico, White House sources claim that Donald Trump's latest chief of staff, Mark Meadows, has found the job of policing the activities of the president not as easy as he had anticipated and stated he will only stay on for one more year at best should Trump be re-elected.

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REVEALED: Trump regulator quietly shelved discrimination investigations into Bank of America and other banks

In the spring of 2018, bank regulators trained to spot discriminatory lending detected something alarming at Bank of America.

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Trump whines about privately funded border wall as his administration showers the wall's builder in cash

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

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A singular figure in Texas’ coronavirus collapse: Greg Abbott leads his state in alarming direction

One evening last week, after making one of his most consequential decisions yet in Texas' response to the coronavirus, Gov. Greg Abbott settled in for his pandemic routine: a rapid-fire round of local TV interviews from his campaign's satellite studio in Austin.

In the hours since he'd issued a statewide mask mandate, Abbott had taken a familiar shellacking from both sides of the aisle: the Democrats who had wanted the mask requirement weeks earlier, and some Republicans who had not wanted it at all.

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5 ways higher education can be seen as hostile to women of color

Editor’s note: In 2019, Amy Bonomi, a women’s studies scholar, co-edited “Women Leading Change: Breaking the Glass Ceiling, Cliff, and Slipper.” The book examines the perspectives of 23 female leaders on issues of leadership and the challenges of confronting structural racism, bias and discrimination at colleges and universities. Here are five takeaways that Bonomi offers from her book about how higher education can be hostile toward the women of color who serve as college and university leaders.

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