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Subject: [MARKETING] The Daily 202: America is in the middle of a child-care crisis
Date: The, 07 Jul 2020 13:53:50 +0000
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By Mariana Alfaro
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America is in the middle of a child-care crisis
Note to readers: James Hohmann is on vacation until July 20. We have
an all-star lineup of guest hosts from The Post to ensure you stay
informed during his absence.
Last week, when a little girl crashed her mom's BBC interview, the world
laughed, excusing the mischief as part of our new stay-at-home reality. In
response to the video, parents shared similar experiences of their young
children joining their work calls, photobombing the background of their
Zoom meetings or simply being kids as the adults in the room try to push
through an hour of work during the novel coronavirus pandemic.
The video, however, also highlights a pressing reality for parents trying to
balance caring for their children and the pressures of their full-time
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jobs while staying at home: It feels nearly impossible to juggle both. And
that's the case even if you're lucky enough to be healthy, have a full-time
job and a partner to help manage the parenting.
It's not too soon to say the pandemic has sparked a child-care crisis in
America, as schools and child-care centers nationwide dosed and the
burden of managing kids has fallen disproportionately on women,
leading some to quit their jobs.
Part of the problem for families juggling everything during the pandemic is
the lack of options: some people have none. Others rely on nannies or
members of their extended family like grandparents who are more
vulnerable to infection and thus not allowed inside their childrens' homes.
And many child-care centers across the nation have shut down.
aTianna Chapman, a San Francisco Recreation and Parks employee, helps a child
with an art project while maintaining social distancing as part of emergency child-
care offered to health-care workers in the city during the pandemic. (Max Whittaker
for The Washington Post)
Tianna Chapman, a San Francisco Recreation and Parks employee, helps a child with an art project
while maintaining social distancing as part of emergency child-care offered to health-care workers in the
city during the pandemic. (Max Whittaker for The Washington Post)
Child-care providers across the nation are experiencing
outbreaks that forced them to close.
At least 1,335 people have tested positive for the coronavirus in Texas
child-care facilities. Of those, 441 were children, CNN reports. There have
been 13 coronavirus outbreaks at child-care facilities across Utah, per the
Salt Lake Tribune, leading to 61 infections. Closures occurred after cases
were connected to three day-care centers in Indiana and Kentucky. And in
Arizona, a preschool made headlines after a former employee said the
school failed to notify staff and parents of three coronavirus cases.
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A quarter of child-care workers — 258,000 people — have lost their jobs
amid the pandemic, my colleague Heather Long reported. According to
the liberal think tank Center for American Progress, the coronavirus could
lead to the permanent loss of nearly 4.5 million child-care slots in day cares
if Congress doesn't take action to ensure that these facilities have the
resources they need to safely open and offer their services to overworked
parents.
Still, the federal government hasn't met calls for increased
child-care funding.
So far, Congress has allotted just $3.5 billion in child-care aid as part of its
coronavirus relief packages. That isn't enough, said Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-
Conn.), who, along with Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.), introduced a measure
that would create a $50 billion fund to help stabilize the child-care sector.
The National Women's Law Center estimates that it would cost at least
$9.6 billion a month to keep current child-care providers in business.
The legislation would support the safe reopening of child-care centers
across the nation, a sector of the economy DeLauro said deserves as much
attention as the airline industry, which received billions more in relief aid.
The pandemic, DeLauro said, has exposed "how backwards" the United
States is in terms of prioritizing affordable, accessible child care for
families "who cannot afford to be at work if their kids are not in a safe
environment."
"What is the plan for getting people back to work? Part of that plan has to
do with how you deal with how they take care of their children," she said,
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dismissing the notion that accessibility to child care is a "women's issue."
"They're family issues and, above all, they're economic survival issues not
just for families but for our economy going forward."
DeLauro's bill would provide grants to help child-care businesses pay for
staff, sanitation, personal protective equipment and training related to
health and safety practices, as well as other costs associated with reopening
a child-care facility amid a pandemic. Other members of Congress,
including Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) and Elizabeth Warren (D-
Mass.), have joined the calls to bail out child-care businesses across the
country. Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) is sponsoring the Senate's version of
DeLauro's bill.
2Children stay distant while riding scooters indoors as part of emergency child-
care provided to health-care workers in San Francisco in March. (Max Whittaker for
The Washington Post)
Children stay distant while riding scooters indoors as part of emergency child-care provided to health-
care workers in San Francisco in March. (Max Whittaker for The Washington Post)
Economists agree a $50 billion boost could be enough to
save child-care businesses and prevent a greater shortage
of care.
And while Congress is also debating whether it should extend
supplemental unemployment benefits beyond July 31, many economists
argue that child care is a more pressing issue.
Lti
And because women are often the primary caregivers at home, a relief
package for child-care facilities could also avoid setting back American
women's job prospects for years.
Eliza Navarro, a Texas nurse, told Heather that she had to quit her job in
April when she couldn't find child care for her two children. That same
month, women accounted for 55 percent of job losses in the nation, per the
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National Women's Law Center. Navarro, a single mom, was forced to
choose between her job and her children. "I had no choice but to quit. I
want to work, but because of everything that happened with schools and
day cares closed, I wasn't able to," Navarro, 33, said.
Navarro is part of the 13 percent of U.S. parents who've had to quit their
job or reduce their hours due to a lack of child care, according to a
Northeastern University survey. An analysis by the University of Chicago's
Becker Friedman Institute found that 5o million Americans are having to
think about how to care for their kids before returning to their workplaces.
About 11 percent of the U.S. workforce — 17.5 million workers — is taking
care of young kids on their own and will be unlikely to return to work full-
time until schools and day cares fully reopen, the institute found. And
because many people of color have jobs that are deemed essential, the lack
of child-care access becomes yet another side effect of the pandemic
that has disproportionately affected American minorities.
Murray, the lead sponsor behind the Senate's child-care aid bill, told me
that if the country were to lose the millions of child-care slots, "parents —
especially women and in particular women of color — are going to struggle
even more to handle both work and family care."
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"Sometimes I hear people discussing a vaccine like it's some
guaranteed silver bullet that should be ready to arrive on demand.
We're all starved for hope. I get it. But this isn't magic. It's science,
which means protocols and phases and data to collect. There has to be
room for trial and error," said Ian Haydon, who was one of the first
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I
people in the clinical trial for a Moderna covid-19 vaccine. (Eli
Saslow)
More on the coronavirus
PA health-care worker at a testing site in Homestead, Fla., on Monday. (Lynne
Sladky/AP)
A health-care worker at a testing site in Homestead, Fla., on Monday. (Lynne Sladky/AP)
States are mandating masks and have begun shutting
down again as cases soar and hospitalizations rise.
"The pandemic map of the United States burned bright red Monday, with
the number of new coronavirus infections during the first six days of July
nearing 300,000 as more states and cities moved to reimpose shutdown
orders," Joshua Partlow and Nick Miroff report. "The United States is `still
knee deep in the first wave' of the pandemic, Anthony S. Fauci, the director
of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said... Fauci
noted that while Europe managed to drive infections down — and now is
dealing with little blips as it reopens — U.S. communities `never came
down to baseline and now are surging back up.' ... The country's rolling
seven-day average of daily new cases hit a record high Monday —
the 28th record-setting day in a row.
"In Arizona, 89 percent of the state's intensive care unit beds were full
Monday morning, the state's Department of Health announced, as the
recently hard-hit state surpassed 100,000 cases. In Miami-Dade County,
authorities reversed course on a reopening plan, issuing an emergency
order that shut down gyms, party venues and restaurants, with exceptions
for takeout and delivery. ... Despite the steep new rise in infections, the
House and Senate have adjourned for a two-week recess, setting up a
potential battle when they return over another pandemic relief package.
And more politicians continue to contract the virus. In Mississippi,
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where cases are rising, several lawmakers have tested positive, including
the speaker of the State House of Representatives. Gov. Tate Reeves (R)
wrote on Twitter he was `briefly in contact' with one of them, so he plans to
isolate himself until he gets his own test results back. Atlanta Mayor Keisha
Lance Bottoms (D) tweeted Monday evening that `COVID-19 has literally
hit home. I have had NO symptoms and have tested positive.'
"The United States has reported 2.9 million coronavirus cases to
date, and at least 127,000 people have died of the virus
nationwide.... Some states imposed fresh restrictions on Monday in an
attempt to tamp down rising case numbers and preserve hospital capacity.
West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice (R) announced that face coverings will be
mandatory inside buildings, and he asked residents to comply voluntarily.
... Trump has played down the rise in cases, attributing it to expanded
testing, and has recently emphasized that U.S. deaths have not spiked with
new cases. ... Other Republicans have struck a more serious tone. Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Monday said: 'This is not
over.'"
Businesses tied to members of Congress got emergency
loans from the Small Business Administration.
"Data released Monday by the SBA shows that businesses owned by
members of Congress and the law practice that represented Trump were
among the hundreds of thousands of firms that received aid from the
agency," Jonathan O'Connell, Aaron Gregg, Steven Rich, Anu
Narayanswamy and Peter Whoriskey report. "While it buttressed a swath
of industries and entities, including restaurants, medical offices, car
dealerships, law firms and nonprofits, the agency did not filter out
companies that have potential conflicts of interest among influential
Washington figures ...
"Among some of those receiving relief were Transportation Secretary
Elaine Chao's family's shipping business. In addition, at least seven
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members of Congress or their spouses received loans, including lawmakers
who were directly involved in shaping regulations and also benefited from
a blanket waiver of ethics concerns. ... Rep. Mike Kelly (R-Pa.) benefited
when three of his car dealerships, located outside of Pittsburgh, received a
combined total of between $450,000 and $1.05 million to retain 97 jobs,
according to the data.... Several plumbing businesses affiliated with Rep.
Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.), all based in Broken Arrow, Okla., each
received between $350,000 and $1 million. ...
"The lawyer who represented Trump in the Mueller
investigation, as well as dozens of tenants of Trump's real estate
company, also received money ... At 4o Wall Street, an office building
Trump owns in Lower Manhattan, 22 companies received loans, for a
combined total of at least $16.6 million ... Triomphe Restaurant Corp,
which operates the Jean-Georges restaurant at the Trump International
Hotel on Central Park West, got between $2 million and $5 million. ...
Another politically connected loan recipient was New York law firm
Kasowitz, Benson & Tones, headed by longtime Trump attorney Marc
Kasowitz, which received between $5 million and $10 million in PPP funds
to support about 400 employees....
"As part of its $660 billion small-business relief program, the SBA also
handed out loans to private schools catering to elite clientele, firms owned
by foreign companies and large chains backed by well-heeled Wall Street
firms. Nearly 90,00o companies in the program took the aid without
promising on their applications they would rehire workers or create jobs...
"The data shows the government issued $521 billion in loans in all, with an
average loan size of $107,000. ... Among the loan recipients, 48,922
reported zero as the number of jobs they would retain with the money, and
40,506 applicants appeared to leave that section blank. ... About half of
the money went to five industries. The health-care and social
assistance industry received 12.9 percent of the money; 12.7 percent went
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to professional and technical services; 12.4 percent went to construction;
10.3 percent went to manufacturing; and 8.1 percent went to hotels,
restaurants and other food service employers."
Other SBA beneficiaries include:
• Observer Holdings LLC, the parent company of Observer Media — the
publishing company formerly owned by Jared Kushner that is now
listed as a holding of Joseph Meyer, Kushner's brother-in-law. Two of
the Kushner family's hotels also received a loan. (Daily Beast)
• The Daily Caller, the conservative online media outlet founded by
Trump ally Tucker Carlson received as much as $1 million. (Daily
Beast)
• Albright Stonebridge Group, a consulting firm run by former
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, received between $2 million
and $5 million. (Daily Beast)
• A wing of Grover Norquist's Americans for Tax Reform also received a
loan. The firm is known for its work to not raise taxes and has decried
the fiscal scale of the government's coronavirus response. (Daily
Beast)
• Monzack Mersky McLaughlin and Browder, a law firm originally
founded by Joe Biden, also received a loan. Biden currently has no
financial interest in the firm. (Fox News)
• The Girl Scouts, sculptor Jeff Koons and TGI Fridays all got loans.
(AP)
• Even Kanye West's company got a multimillion-dollar loan, despite
the rapper's sneaker empire reportedly making $1.5 billion in 2019.
(Daily Beast)
Mitch McConnell called for a possible round of stimulus
checks in the next coronavirus relief bill.
The new round of checks would be aimed at workers making $40,000 a
year and less. "McConnell said he intends to release a new bill as the
starting point for talks that will take place with coronavirus cases surging
anew and economic pain still racking the nation," Erica Werner, Jeff Stein
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and Rachael Bade report. "McConnell has consistently said the next bill
will include liability protections for businesses, health-care providers,
universities and schools. He offered a time period for these protections on
Monday, saying he envisioned a 'narrowly crafted liability protection' for
activities related to the novel coronavirus that would kick in December
2019 and last through 2024....
"With some Republican senators resistant to spending any more money at
all, McConnell will face a challenge finding consensus among Senate
Republicans and with a Trump administration that is itself divided, even
before starting negotiations with Democrats, who are pushing for much
more new spending than Republicans support. He said that in addition to
liability protections, the new bill will focus on getting kids back to school,
restoring jobs and boosting the health-care system, but he did not offer
details on those issues. ... Already, thorny disputes are shaping over what
to do about enhanced unemployment benefits that expire July 31,
additional aid that Democrats are demanding for state and local
governments, and the possible new round of stimulus checks."
Meanwhile, evictions are likely to skyrocket as jobs remain
scarce.
"A backlog of eviction cases is beginning to move through the court system
as millions of Americans who had counted on federal aid and eviction
moratoriums to stay in their homes now fear being thrown out. A crisis
among renters is expected to deepen this month as the enhanced
unemployment benefits that have kept many afloat run out at the end of
July and the $1,200-per-adult stimulus payment that had supported
households earlier in the crisis becomes a distant memory," Renae Merle
reports. "Of the 110 million Americans living in rental households, 20
percent are at risk of eviction by Sept. 30, according to an analysis by the
Covid-19 Eviction Defense Project, a Colorado-based community group.
African American and Hispanic renters are expected to be hardest hit."
EFTA00162681
International students must take classes in person to stay
in the country legally, ICE said.
"University officials scrambled Monday to adapt to new federal guidance
that does not allow international students to stay in the country if they are
taking classes online only. It also left some students expressing fears on
social media that they risked being suddenly deported," Susan Svrluga
reports. "On Monday, the federal Student and Exchange Visitor Program
announced, `The U.S. Department of State will not issue visas to students
enrolled in schools and/or programs that are fully online for the fall
semester nor will U.S. Customs and Border Protection permit these
students to enter the United States. ... Active students currently in the
United States enrolled in such programs must depart the country or take
other measures, such as transferring to a school with in-person instruction
to remain in lawful status.' ... Monday's announcement requires
universities to certify by July 15 whether they will be fully open, operate on
a hybrid model or offer online-only classes."
Top colleges started announcing their fall plans. All involve
remote learning. "Princeton University announced Monday it will cut
tuition 10 percent in the coming school year and bring no more than half
its undergraduates to the campus in New Jersey," Nick Anderson reports.
"Harvard University said it will bring about 4o percent of its
undergraduates to its campus in Massachusetts, most of them freshmen.
All undergrad classes in the fall will be delivered remotely, no matter where
the students live, but Harvard's tuition will remain the same ... Georgetown
University, meanwhile, will invite freshmen to its D.C. campus and bar
most others from living there in an effort to protect public health."
Virginia reported no daily covid-19 deaths for the first time
in three months.
"The District, Maryland and Virginia reported 659 new known coronavirus
cases Monday, bringing the regional total to more than 146,000 since the
EFTA00162682
start of the pandemic. The daily increase is the smallest number in the
three jurisdictions since April 3," Dana Hedpgeth and Fenit Nirappil
report. "The region recorded five new fatalities Monday, with no daily
deaths reported in Virginia for the first time since March 28. It is also the
lowest regional number of deaths since that date.... The District on
Monday reported 33 new cases and two deaths. In Maryland, 272 new
cases and three fatalities were reported. Virginia had 354 new cases.
Several key measures of the virus have been improving in the Washington
region, experts say, and the daily average caseload has plateaued after
weeks of decline. ... Officials also cautioned that the region could have an
increase in cases after celebrations tied to the Fourth of July holiday."
• Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) became the first congressional
Republican to announce he'll skip the Republican National
Convention because of the virus. Grassley, 86, is the second-oldest
member of the Senate. (Felicia Sonmez)
• Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner (D) urged the Texas GOP to cancel
its in-person convention scheduled to be held in the city next week.
Turner warned that if the event continues, health inspectors would
have the authority to shut it down if guidelines aren't followed. (Texas
Tribune)
• Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker (R) signed a vote-by-mail bill into
law, making it the first time in state history that all eligible residents
will have the opportunity to vote early and by mail in the primary and
general election. (CBS Local)
Divided America
PA ground mural depicting a portrait of Breonna Taylor is seen at Chambers Park
in Annapolis, Md. (Julio Cortez/AP)
A ground mural depicting a portrait of Breonna Taylor is seen at Chambers Park in Annapolis, Md. (Julio
Cortez/AP)
Breonna Taylor's family claims that she was alive after
being shot but was not given aid.
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"For up to six minutes after she was shot by police officers during a drug
raid, Breonna Taylor, an emergency room technician, lay dying in her
apartment but received no medical aid, her family claims in a new court
filing. The document also contends that the post-midnight raid on March
13 was motivated by the mayor's desire to clear a block in one of
Louisville's most blighted neighborhoods for redevelopment," the Times
reports. "City officials called the claims a `gross mischaracterization,' while
the coroner who performed the autopsy said the young woman's injuries
would have been lethal even with intervention. ... The shooting had taken
place in near darkness, and officials say they didn't know initially that Ms.
Taylor was injured."
A spike in gun violence has alarmed New York City.
"A young father crossing a Bronx street, holding hands with his 6-year-old
daughter. A 15-year-old who refused to talk to the police in Manhattan. A
man in a Staten Island public housing complex, found prone in his
apartment. They were among 64 people shot in a surge of shootings over
the weekend in New York City, the police said," the Times reports. "The
city surpassed 400 shootings in the first half of the year for the first time
since 2016, with 528 by the end of last month; the 205 shootings in June
were the highest for that month since 1996, the police said. Other cities
have seen similar spikes in shootings, most notably Chicago, where the
current pace of homicides has the city poised to near its record high of 778
set in 2016."
The Pentagon is considering a base-wide ban on
Confederate flags.
"[An] official said the draft policy being considered at the Pentagon's
highest levels would build on recent moves by military services to bar
Confederate symbols on facilities they control and, if approved, would
represent the first Defense Department-wide prohibition of such
iconography," Missy Ryan and Alex Horton report. "Military bases
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generally are not swathed in Confederate flags. Many barracks and homes
on post carry the U.S. flag, service-specific banners, the colors of service
academies or sports teams and college teams. The Confederate flag can
more often be found on T-shirts, service members' tattoos, bumper stickers
or banners hanging inside a barracks."
Trump said the noose found in NASCAR racer Bubba
Wallace's garage was a "hoax."
Trump said "Wallace should apologize to those who stood beside him after
his racing team discovered a noose in his garage stall at Talladega
Superspeedway on June 21, describing the incident as a `hoax.' Trump
added an assertion that the Wallace incident and NASCAR's ban on the
Confederate flag at its races have led to historically low television ratings
for the stock-car circuit," Matt Bonesteel and John Wagner report. Many,
including Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said Wallace had nothing to
apologize for. And NASCAR's viewership on Fox's networks is up more
than 8 percent since the sport returned from a hiatus.
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany defended
Trump's view on the flag by claiming he doesn't have one. "The
president has made clear he was not taking a position one way or the other
in that tweet," McEnany said when asked for an unequivocal stance on the
Confederate flag. In his tweet about Wallace, she said, he was trying to
make a point about the importance of letting "facts come out."
Virginia schools are dropping their Confederate names,
ignoring calls to preserve "history." "Prince William County is
renaming Stonewall Middle School, named after Confederate Gen.
Stonewall Jackson, for a local black couple," Hannah Natanson reports.
"Loudoun County voted last month to remove the mascot for Loudoun
County High School: the Raiders, named for Confederate Col. John S.
Mosby's troops."
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Amy Cooper, the white woman who called the police on a black
birdwatcher, was charged with filing a false report. The
misdemeanor carries a maximum penalty of one year in jail or three years'
probation and a fine of up to $1,000, Michael Brice-Saddler reports.
Robert Barnes, a California-based attorney who said he's representing
Cooper, told NBC that "the rush to judgment by some in the public, in this
cancel culture epidemic, will be proven as wrong as cancel culture itself."
The Trump White House finally invoked the Armenian
genocide, if by accident.
"Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, may not be happy about this
one. After decades of the United States government declining to
acknowledge the Armenian genocide because it would alienate Turkey, the
White House on Monday invoked the term — albeit indirectly," Aaron
Blake reports. "In the course of decrying protesters desecrating memorials
across the country, [McEnany] referred to a memorial to the genocide by
its proper name. `There seems to be a lack of understanding and historical
knowledge when the Armenian Genocide Memorial, remembering victims
of all crimes against humanity, including slavery, is vandalized,' McEnany
said. ... The inclusion by McEnany was meant to reinforce the haphazard
nature of the protesters' alleged disregard for history. But it also trod into
uneasy waters for an administration that, like its predecessors, has
conspicuously avoided using the g-word."
Other news that should be on your radar
IA
RPolice vehicles idle on the outskirts of the opposition camp against the Dakota
ccess oil pipeline near Cannon Ball, N.D., in 2O17. (Terray Sylvester/Reuters)
Police vehicles idle on the outskirts of the opposition camp against the Dakota Access oil pipeline near
Cannon Ball, N.D.. in 2017. (Terray Sylvester/Reuters)
• A federal judge, in a surprise decision, ruled that the Dakota Access
pipeline — which Trump approved within a month of taking office —
EFTA00162686
must be shut down by Aug. 5, saying federal officials failed to carry
out a complete analysis of its environmental impacts. (Juliet Eilperin,
Steven Mufson and Brady Dennis)
• The Supreme Court said a state may require presidential electors to
support the winner of its popular vote and may punish or replace
those who don't. The case — which was a unanimous decision — is the
first time the issue of "faithless electors" is considered by the court, as
well as the issue of whether the constitution sees members of the
electoral college as representatives of the intent of their state's voters
or as independent thinkers. (Robert Barnes)
• Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez-Obrador is traveling to
Washington this week to meet Trump to celebrate the new North
American trade agreement. The visit has angered politicians in both
countries. In the U.S., Democratic members of the Congressional
Hispanic Caucus said the meeting is "a blatant attempt to politicize
the important U.S.-Mexico relationship," while Mexican leaders said
they're worried that the presidents' first face-to-face meeting will
imply support for Trump's reelection bid. (Mary Beth Sheridan and
Kevin Sieff)
• Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime companion of sex offender Jeffrey
Epstein accused of facilitating his sexual abuse of teenage girls, was
transferred to a federal detention center in Brooklyn ahead of a bail
hearing that may come next week. (Shayna Jacobs)
• A tell-all book by Trump's niece Mary will be published two weeks
earlier, on July 14, after a court allowed publisher Simon & Schuster
to continue distributing copies. While the publisher last week was
released from a temporary restraining order, Mary Trump is still
under the order and is contesting it. A news release about the book
says it deals with how Trump "acquired twisted behaviors and values"
such as that "cheating is a way of life." (Michael Kranish)
• Stephanie Winston Wolkoff, a former confidante to first lady Melania
Trump, will release an "explosive" tell-all book on their relationship
before the election. (Daily Beast)
Social media speed read
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NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace shared this message after Trump called on
him to "apologize":
Trump, who has called out "cancel culture," has historically been a fan of
canceling things:
And the Trump campaign promised to protect a massive statue in a
different country:
Videos of the day
Sports reporter Gene Wang talks about the five biggest changes to baseball
this season:
D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) talked to actor Anthony Anderson about the
city's Black Lives Matter mural and the D.C. statehood push:
Trevor Noah pointed out the many ways in which growing up in the time of
coronavirus can't be easy:
Gr
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| Filename | EFTA00162672.pdf |
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| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
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| Indexed | 2026-02-11T11:01:20.022007 |