Saturday, May 16, 2026

Peter Navarro: Trump’s Call To Slow COVID-19 Testing Was ‘Tongue In Cheek’

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White House trade adviser Peter Navarro insisted on CNN Sunday that President Donald Trump used “tongue-in-cheek” humor when he said he ordered officials to slow coronavirus testing to suppress the number of reported COVID-19 cases.

“When you do testing to that extent, you’re going to find … more cases,” Trump said at his campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Saturday. “So I said to my people, ’Slow the testing down, please.’”

CNN host Jake Tapper played the clip for Navarro on “State of the Union” and asked him about it.

Navarro laughed. “C’mon now, Jake, you know that was tongue in cheek,” he said, adding, “That’s news for ya, tongue in cheek.”

Tapper responded: “I don’t know that it was tongue in cheek. He’s said similar things for months.”

Navarro called it a “light moment for Donald Trump at his rally.”

Tapper pressed on. “I’m not sure that a deadly pandemic where almost 120,000 Americans [lost their lives] are really a good subject for a light moment.”

Trump and his aides have frequently walked back embarrassing Trump statements by calling them attempts at humor.

Navarro tried to steer the interview to jobs and the effects of what he called the “China Wuhan virus,” a racist term administration officials have used for the COVID-19 virus. Navarro also tried to discuss former national security adviser John Bolton’s new book.

Navarro argued without evidence that COVID-19 was a “product of the Chinese Communist Party.” They “sent over hundreds of thousands of Chinese citizens here to spread that around and around the world,” he added, again without substantiation. “Whether they did that on purpose, that’s an open question.”

But, he added, they’re “guilty until proven innocent.”

There is no evidence that the novel coronavirus was engineered by the Chinese government; rather, there is ample evidence that the virus emerged naturally.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) blasted Trump’s latest testing statements. “The President’s efforts to slow down desperately needed testing to hide the true extent of the virus mean more Americans will lose their lives,” she said in a statement. “The American people are owed answers about why President Trump wants less testing when experts say much more is needed.”

Dr. Atul Gawande, a surgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School, said in a tweet that Trump’s outlandish comment “acknowledges what we’ve seen — active obstruction of testing in a pandemic which claimed 120K lives so far.”

He added: “If I did this for 10 people at my hospital, it’d be a crime.”

Trump has discussed taking a similar approach to coronavirus testing in the past, implying that the best way to keep down the numbers of COVID-19 is simply not to test for cases, even as cases continue to rise. On Monday, Trump complained that testing was making the country look bad — and that “if we stop testing right now, we’d have very few cases, if any.”

New daily cases of COVID-19 have hit records in several states.

A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus



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US coronavirus deaths near 120,000: Live updates

  • A former US Food and Drug Administration commissioner has warned that some US states, including Texas, Florida and Arizona, could start to see an “exponential” rise in coronavirus cases this coming week. Commissioner Scott Gottlieb sounded the alarm as the US death toll hit 119,959, according to the Johns Hopkins University tally.

  • The World Health Organization reported a record increase in global coronavirus cases, with the total rising by 183,020 in a 24-hour period. The biggest increase was from North and South America with over 116,000 new cases, according to a daily WHO report on Sunday.

  • Brazil, the world’s No 2 coronavirus hot spot after the United States, officially passed 50,000 coronavirus deaths, with 50,617 death toll as of the end of Sunday. It has 1,085,038 total number of cases, according to the country’s health ministry.

  • Worldwide, at least 8.9 million people have been confirmed to have the coronavirus, At least 4.4 million have recovered, while more than 466,000 people have died, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Here are the latest updates:

Monday, June 22

00:51 GMT – Report: 40 US baseball players, staff positive for COVID-19

As a vote by Major League Baseball players on whether to accept the owners’ latest proposal to play the 2020 season continues to be delayed, a USA Today report surfaced that a large of positive COVID-19 tests is main reason for the delay.

Citing two sources close to the situation, USA Today’s Bob Nightengale reported that 40 MLB players and staff members tested positive for COVID-19 in the last week.

According to Nightengale, the recent uptick in COVID-19 infections will push the start of the season back to July 26 at the earliest, with spring training resuming no earlier than June 29. The owners and players had previously agreed to restart the season on July 19, according to Reuters News Agency.

00:32 GMT – Mexico reports 5,343 new coronavirus infections, 1,044 deaths

Mexico has reported 5,343 new infections and 1,044 additional deaths from the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, the health ministry said, bringing the totals for the country to 180,545 cases and 21,825 deaths.

The government has said the actual number of infected people is likely significantly higher than the confirmed cases, Reuters News Agency said.

Mexico’s President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador attended a coronavirus hospital simulation at a new medical fatacility in Cuernavaca on Friday [Mexico’s Presidency/Handout via Reuters]

00:01 GMT – Mexico to resume sending farm workers to Canada after safety deal

Mexico will resume sending temporary farm workers to Canada after the two countries reached a deal on improved safety protections for labourers on Canadian farms during the coronavirus pandemic, Reuters News Agency reported.

Mexico’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement that the Temporary Agricultural Workers Program (PTAT) had “entered into operation once again after a temporary pause.”

Mexico said last Tuesday it would pause sending workers to farms with coronavirus infections after at least two of its nationals died from COVID-19 after outbreaks on 17 Canadian farms.

Canadian farmers rely on 60,000 short-term foreign workers, predominantly from Latin America and the Caribbean, to plant and harvest crops.

___________________________________________________________________

Hello and welcome to Al Jazeera’s continuing coverage of the coronavirus pandemic. I’m Ted Regencia in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. 

You can find all the key developments from yesterday, June 21, here. 


SOURCE:
Al Jazeera and news agencies

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Serbian ruling party wins by landslide in Europe’s first Covid-19 election

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Serbia ended its state of emergency restrictions on May 6, and while the government has recommended certain safety measures, public events such as football matches with audiences of around 20,000 have resumed.

The win offers Vučić a familiar victory as he heads off to Washington next weekend for talks hosted by the White House with the leader of Kosovo, Serbia’s breakaway province whose independence Belgrade does not recognize. The two states have been locked in a frozen conflict since 1999, when NATO bombing ended Serbian control of Kosovo in the last of the wars that tore Yugoslavia apart.

But the opposition also felt vindicated in the election’s low turnout after campaigning for voters to boycott the ballot to push for reforms: Turnout is thought to be around 49 percent. Although there is no legal requirement for a 50-percent turnout for elections to be valid, opposition parties argue that failing to reach that threshold delegitimizes the vote.

Dragan Đilas, the leader of the Union for Serbia, said he considered the boycott a success. “People were bussed in to vote, pressured, threatened, telephone calls, all of that was not enough for them to achieve over 50 percent turnout today,” Đilas said in a press conference.

Vučić and his right-wing populist party have fared well in elections since first forming a government in 2012, due both to the president’s individual popularity and his projected image as a defender of Serbian interests in the region and abroad, as well as a nationwide system of patronage that employs loyalists in public institutions and key industries.

For voters who work in public institutions, support for the party means maintaining the relative level of stability to which they have grown accustomed. “I live as well as I can in this part of the world, so I’m voting for those who enabled that for me. I work in a public institution and I want my daughter to work there too, so I’m not boycotting the elections,” said Marija Petrovic, 41, who voted in the Zvezdara region in Belgrade.

But opposition parties and movements have decried the ruling party’s hold on power within the country, organizing near-weekly protests for the past year and a half before the pandemic, and vowing to boycott elections.

The Progressive Party ultimately made some concessions, including lowering the threshold for parties to enter parliament to 3 percent from 5 percent of the vote. But the opposition bloc then split and some parties, such as the Movement of Free Citizens (PSG), led by one of the key figures of the protest movement, Sergej Trifunović, decided to run. PSG received around 1.8 percent of the vote and did not pass the threshold, according to the exit poll.

Serbia has plunged in democracy rankings compiled by NGO Freedom House in recent years. The organization’s annual Nations in Transit report cited “years of increasing state capture, abuse of power, and strongman tactics employed by Aleksandar Vučić.”

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán was one of the first international leaders to congratulate Vučić on his victory on Instagram, posting a photo of the pair shaking hands.

European Commissioner for Neighborhood and Enlargement Olivér Várhelyi — also from Serbia’s northern neighbor Hungary — called the results an “important day for Serbia,” tweeting that he looked forward to helping Serbia “move forward quickly towards EU accession.”



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Report: MLB sees 40 positive COVID-19 tests among players, staff in last week – Sportsnet.ca

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Serbian ruling party wins by landslide in Europe’s first COVID-19 election

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Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić celebrates his party’s victory | ALEKSANDAR DIMITRIJEVIC/AFP via Getty Images

Exit polls show comfortable victory for President Aleksandar Vučić ahead of a trip to Washington.

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Updated

BELGRADE — Serbia’s ruling Progressive Party won a resounding victory in a parliamentary election on Sunday, exit polls show, in Europe’s first national election as coronavirus lockdowns start to ease.

“We won everywhere,” said Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić, a co-founder and the leader of the party, at a press conference. “Tonight, we gained the huge trust of the people, the greatest ever in Serbia.”

The Progressive Party is projected to have won about 63 percent of the vote, according to exit polls by the Center for Free Elections and Democracy (CeSID), and over 180 seats in the 250-strong parliament — an increase from the 131 seats it had in the previous legislature.

Serbia ended its state of emergency restrictions on May 6, and while the government has recommended certain safety measures, public events such as football matches with audiences of around 20,000 have resumed.

The win offers Vučić a familiar victory as he heads off to Washington next weekend for talks hosted by the White House with the leader of Kosovo, Serbia’s breakaway province whose independence Belgrade does not recognize. The two states have been locked in a frozen conflict since 1999, when NATO bombing ended Serbian control of Kosovo in the last of the wars that tore Yugoslavia apart.

But the opposition also felt vindicated in the election’s low turnout after campaigning for voters to boycott the ballot to push for reforms: Turnout is thought to be around 49 percent. Although there is no legal requirement for a 50-percent turnout for elections to be valid, opposition parties argue that failing to reach that threshold delegitimizes the vote.

Dragan Đilas, the leader of the Union for Serbia, said he considered the boycott a success. “People were bussed in to vote, pressured, threatened, telephone calls, all of that was not enough for them to achieve over 50 percent turnout today,” Đilas said in a press conference.

Vučić and his right-wing populist party have fared well in elections since first forming a government in 2012, due both to the president’s individual popularity and his projected image as a defender of Serbian interests in the region and abroad, as well as a nationwide system of patronage that employs loyalists in public institutions and key industries.

For voters who work in public institutions, support for the party means maintaining the relative level of stability to which they have grown accustomed. “I live as well as I can in this part of the world, so I’m voting for those who enabled that for me. I work in a public institution and I want my daughter to work there too, so I’m not boycotting the elections,” said Marija Petrovic, 41, who voted in the Zvezdara region in Belgrade.

But opposition parties and movements have decried the ruling party’s hold on power within the country, organizing near-weekly protests for the past year and a half before the pandemic, and vowing to boycott elections.

The Progressive Party ultimately made some concessions, including lowering the threshold for parties to enter parliament to 3 percent from 5 percent of the vote. But the opposition bloc then split and some parties, such as the Movement of Free Citizens (PSG), led by one of the key figures of the protest movement, Sergej Trifunović, decided to run. PSG received around 1.8 percent of the vote and did not pass the threshold, according to the exit poll.

Serbia has plunged in democracy rankings compiled by NGO Freedom House in recent years. The organization’s annual Nations in Transit report cited “years of increasing state capture, abuse of power, and strongman tactics employed by Aleksandar Vučić.”

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán was one of the first international leaders to congratulate Vučić on his victory on Instagram, posting a photo of the pair shaking hands.

European Commissioner for Neighborhood and Enlargement Olivér Várhelyi — also from Serbia’s northern neighbor Hungary — called the results an “important day for Serbia,” tweeting that he looked forward to helping Serbia “move forward quickly towards EU accession.”



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TikTok Users, K-Pop Fans Say They Sabotaged Trump Rally By Inflating Registrations

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(Reuters) – TikTok users and fans of Korean pop music took partial credit for inflating attendance expectations at a less-than-full arena at President Donald Trump’s first political rally in months, held in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on Saturday.

Social media users on platforms including the popular video-sharing app have said they completed the free online registration for the rally with no intention of going.

Prior to the event, Trump’s campaign manager Brad Parscale said there had been more than one million requests to attend. However, the 19,000-seat BOK Center arena had many empty seats on Saturday evening and Trump and Vice President Mike Pence canceled speeches to an expected “overflow” area outside.

The Tulsa Fire Department tallied the crowd at about 6,200 people.

Trump’s campaign advisers had seen the rally as a way to rejuvenate his base and demonstrate support when opinion polls have shown him trailing his Democratic rival, former vice president Joe Biden.

Oklahoma has reported a surge in new coronavirus cases, and the state’s department of health had warned those planning on attending the event that they faced an increased risk of catching the virus.

The Trump campaign said entry was on a ‘first-come-first-served’ basis and no one was issued an actual ticket.

“Leftists always fool themselves into thinking they’re being clever. Registering for a rally only means you’ve RSVPed with a cellphone number,” Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh said in a statement. “But we thank them for their contact information.”



President Donald Trump supporters attend a campaign rally at the BOK Center, Saturday, June 20, 2020, in Tulsa, Okla. 

Parscale said in a statement the campaign weeds out bogus phone numbers and did this with “tens of thousands” at the Tulsa event in calculating possible attendance.

Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a Democrat, responded with derision to a Twitter post by Parscale that blamed the media for discouraging attendees and cited bad behavior by demonstrators outside.

“Actually you just got ROCKED by teens on TikTok who flooded the Trump campaign w/ fake ticket reservations & tricked you into believing a million people wanted your white supremacist open mic enough to pack an arena during COVID,” she tweeted on Saturday. “KPop allies, we see and appreciate your contributions in the fight for justice too,” she added.

CNN had reported Tuesday that a TikTok video posted by Mary Jo Laupp, who uses the hashtag #TikTokGrandma, was helping lead the charge. The video now has more than 700,000 likes.

Two K-pop fans who spoke to Reuters in Skype and phone interviews on Sunday said they had each registered for two spots, not using their real names and numbers.

Raq, a 22-year-old student and Democratic voter in Minnesota who only wanted to be identified by her nickname, said a key reason she took part was that the rally was in Tulsa, the site of the country’s bloodiest outbreaks of racist violence against Black Americans some 100 years ago.

“I heard it first from just BTS fans and then once I saw that it got to TikTok, I was like, oh yeah, this is going to blow up,” she said, referring to a popular South Korean boy-band.

Em, a 17-year-old student in Kansas who only wanted to be identified by her username, said she had first heard about the effort on TikTok. She said many of the original tweets sharing information about the rally had been deleted.

“I think it was partially the TikTokers and the K-pop fans but also people are not as interested in Trump as he thinks they are,” she said.

Fans of K-pop have rallied around the Black Lives Matter movement on social media in recent weeks, taking over hashtags that opposed the movement and spamming a Dallas police department app that asked for evidence of illegal activity during the protests.

On Saturday, there were some shouting matches and scuffles outside the event between around 30 Black Lives Matter demonstrators and some Trump supporters waiting to enter.

A Reuters reporter said police did temporarily close the access gates after protesters arrived at the rally perimeter, but state troopers helped clear the area and the gates were reopened some three hours before the rally began.

The Biden campaign denied having any role in the social media registration effort.

“Donald Trump has abdicated leadership and it is no surprise that his supporters have responded by abandoning him,” said a campaign spokesman, Andrew Bates.



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NYPD officer suspended after video appears to show him put man in chokehold

A New York City police officer was suspended without pay Sunday after he was captured on video appearing to put a Black man in a chokehold.

The suspension came days after the New York City Council passed a measure imposing criminal penalties on officers who use the banned maneuver. New York City Police Commissioner Dermot Shea called the incident “disturbing” and said “immediate action” was necessary while authorities investigate.

Cell phone video of the incident shows several officers restraining the man on his stomach, and one of the officers appears to have his arm wrapped around the man’s neck.

“Stop choking him,” a bystander can be heard shouting at the officers.

A New York Police Department spokesperson said the man was in good condition. He was taken into custody, but it wasn’t immediately clear what he had been arrested for. Neither the man nor the officer have been identified.

Body camera footage from the incident, which occurred in the Rockaway section of Queens, shows three men arguing with police before the apparent chokehold is used. One of them can be seen approaching the officers and saying, “You scared?” before one of the officers appears to tackle the man.

A law enforcement source said the incident occurred after a 911 report that three men were harassing people and throwing objects at them. The officers tried to detain the man after he approached them with a bag, the source said.

The incident came three days after the New York City Council passed an anti-chokehold law criminalizing the the use of the maneuver, which the NYPD banned in 1993, NBC New York reported. The measure adds to a state law signed earlier this month that requires officers be criminally charged if a chokehold results in injury or death.

That bill was named for Eric Garner, the Staten Island man killed on July 17, 2014, while being arrested for selling loose cigarettes. In a video of Garner’s arrest, former officer Daniel Pantaleo could be seen putting Garner in a chokehold while he repeatedly says he can’t breathe.

New York City’s law requires officers be charged with a misdemeanor regardless of whether there’s an injury, NBC New York reported.

Jonathan Dienst and Tom Winter contributed.

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Children ‘traumatised’ by coronavirus pandemic

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Children of those who work in the NHS are fearing for their parents’ health

Children are developing serious mental health conditions, including post-traumatic stress, because of the coronavirus pandemic, a charity has warned.

In a report, the Childhood Trust says disadvantage is leaving children extremely vulnerable.

As well as anxiety about their loved ones’ health, many children are facing social isolation and hunger.

Lack of internet access is also setting disadvantaged children back.

With many classrooms still closed for lockdown, children unable to access the internet at home have been effectively shut out of online lessons. Teachers warn this will lead to entrenched inequalities between them and classmates from more affluent families.

Children in this position are also unable to access online therapy or other healthcare appointments they need.

A lack of contact with teachers and GPs, who are trained to spot the signs of abuse and neglect, is also leaving kids who are experiencing abuse at home hidden and in danger.

‘Mum’s going to die, she’s not coming back’

Laurence Guinness, chief executive of the Childhood Trust, told BBC News many children it had spoken to were experiencing “vivid nightmares” about the coronavirus and death – a possible side-effect of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

These children had been particularly affected by the global death tolls, he said, which had made them worried their parents and friends would die of coronavirus.

“The rising death tolls being reported every day – these kids have seen all of that and internalised it,” he said.

The report also quotes Dr Maria Loades, a clinical psychologist from the University of Bath, saying lockdown measures are “likely to increase the risk of depression and probable anxiety, as well as possible post-traumatic stress”.

Galiema Amien-Cloete, a primary school headteacher in London, told the BBC she’d also seen parents’ anxieties around the coronavirus “transferred to their children”.

For children, she added, the loss of routine, contact with friends and regular education is often experienced “like a bereavement”.

Children in low-income households are also likely to develop anxiety when one or both parents is a key worker – hundreds of thousands of whom earn below the Living Wage Foundation’s recommended living wage, according to BBC analysis. The anxiety is not only because of food shortages and poverty, but also because their parents are in high-risk professions.

One primary-school-age girl from London, quoted in the report, said she feels “anxious because my mum works for the NHS, and I don’t know if she’s going to catch it or not”. Another young girl said every time her mother left the house to go to work she thought, “mum’s going to die, she’s not coming back”.

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Children with special educational needs are particularly hard hit

The trust, which works with about 200 charities, also spoke to children with existing histories of mental health problems, to find out whether they were able to access the support they need. Of the 2,000 children with mental health conditions it spoke to, 83% said the coronavirus outbreak had made their mental health worse.

Under lockdown, community centres and support groups have adapted by moving their services online. However, these are not accessible to children without internet access – for example, those who are homeless and living in temporary accommodation, or in overcrowded housing without broadband.

These inequalities are interconnected, too. Children from black and other ethnic minority backgrounds, are more likely to live in overcrowded housing, making access to mental health help harder. At the same time, their parents are more likely to become seriously ill and to die of the coronavirus, making trauma in the kids more likely.

Mr Guinness told the BBC that children with special educational needs are also particularly hard-hit. For those with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), for example, the loss of extra tuition and their set routines has been “catastrophic”. Some parents said their children’s development had already slipped back by as much as a year.

‘There is no “when this is over”‘

Victims of child abuse and child sexual exploitation are also particularly at risk under lockdown, the report states. Former Home Secretary Sajid Javid warned of a “surge” in cases of child abuse earlier this month.

The Childhood Trust also points to a 21% rise in alcohol sales during the lockdown period, and quotes a statistic saying there are 2.6 million children living with a parent drinking hazardously, and 705,000 living with a dependent drinker.

“Children and young people caring for family members with substance abuse and/or alcohol problems may find their physical and mental health, relationships, and educational outcomes significantly more impacted than prior to the Covid-19 restrictions,” the report says. This is particularly because of a lack of contact with teachers and health professionals who are trained to spot the signs of abuse.

Headteacher Ms Amien-Cloete told the BBC she believes these issues will continue to affect this entire generation of children well after the coronavirus crisis has passed.

“People keep saying ‘when the coronavirus is over’,” she said. “But there is no ‘when this is over’.

“I think we need to be mindful that this won’t be over for a long time, because we will have to cope with the impact of this on children. It’s like grief – they say you never get over someone’s passing, you only learn how to live with it. We shouldn’t think it’s all going to go back to normal when there are no more cases.”

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What’s Facebook’s Deal With Donald Trump?

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Mr. Trump’s administration has reciprocated. The Justice Department is currently conducting antitrust investigations of the tech giants. But while Google and Amazon face “mature investigations,” the Facebook inquiry is “not real at all,” a person who has been briefed on the investigation said. And Facebook has acted like a company with no worries in Washington. It has continued to acquire companies, as Mr. Isaac reported last week, and moved to allow users to send messages between Messenger, WhatsApp and Instagram — a merging of the services that could further fuel monopoly concerns. (Facebook’s view is that it’s far less dominant in any market than the other big tech companies and has less to worry about than Google or Amazon.)

The summer of 2020 is one of those moments when corporate Washington starts to panic. What had looked like deft Trump-era politics now looks like exposure and risk. Top Democrats, including Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Nancy Pelosi — who was infuriated when a distorted video of her went viral — have singled out Facebook as a bad actor. Mr. Trump is, at the moment, viewed by Washington’s insider class as likely to lose in November, though Mr. Biden poses less of a threat to Facebook than Senator Warren would have.

While executives across Facebook insist that Mr. Zuckerberg’s position on free speech on the platform is a matter of long-term planning and principle, not political expediency, his political team also recognizes that they are badly out of position for a Democratic administration. And in recent days, Facebook has been eager to show its independence from the White House. The company has been unhesitatingly enforcing existing policy against Mr. Trump’s posts, and has been quick to point it out to the media, as it did last Thursday, when a Trump ad used a symbol associated with Nazi Germany.

Mr. Zuckerberg has not budged, however, on his core insistence that Mr. Trump should be able to say what he wants on the platform, and most of what he wants in ads — including false statements, as long as they aren’t misleading on specific, narrow topics, like the census. But he did reportedly tell Mr. Trump that he objected, personally, to Mr. Trump’s warning that “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.” And he and Ms. Chan wrote to scientists funded by their nonprofit organization that they were “deeply shaken and disgusted by President Trump’s divisive and incendiary rhetoric.”

Those gestures may have appeased Facebook’s work force, but they’ve gone largely unnoticed in Washington.

“All the big companies tacked to the right after Trump won, and Facebook probably moved farther than the others,” said Nu Wexler, a Democrat who worked in policy communications for Facebook in Washington. “But the politics of tech are changing, and companies should be worried about Democrats as well. The days of just keeping the president happy are over.”

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US Homeland Security Secretary: Trump’s Threats To ‘Bomb’ Bolton Were A Joke

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Chad Wolf, the acting secretary of homeland security, said President Donald Trump was likely only joking when he tweeted about having “bombs dropped” on former White House national security adviser John Bolton in response to the publication of Bolton’s upcoming memoir.

“A lot of, some of his comments are taking from a humor standpoint, a joking standpoint,” Wolf told CBS’ “Face the Nation” when asked about the seriousness of Trump’s remark, which host Margaret Brennan said could spark security concerns had they been said by a private citizen. 

“He likes dropping bombs on people, and killing them. Now he will have bombs dropped on him!” Trump tweeted Saturday, without elaborating on what kind of action he was suggesting.

Wolf argued that Trump was likely expressing frustration over Bolton’s tell-all book, “The Room Where It Happened,” which is set to be released Tuesday. The book details what appear to be acts of corruption and failures that Bolton said he witnessed during his time in the White House. 

A federal judge on Saturday ruled against the Trump administration’s attempt to block the book’s release over claims that it contains classified information.

“I think the frustration is there, which is as an individual that had every ability to resign if he didn’t like the way the president was operating. But in this case, he did not do that. Instead, he’s writing a book for profit,” Wolf said.

Trump spun the judge’s ruling allowing the publication of Bolton’s book as a win, arguing that the judge found that Bolton published it before securing final approval from national intelligence authorities. The judge also suggested that Bolton may be at risk of being prosecuted and could lose his $2 million advance, which the Justice Department has separately requested.

“In taking it upon himself to publish his book without securing final approval from national intelligence authorities, Bolton may indeed have caused the country irreparable harm,” US District Judge Royce Lamberth wrote.

“But in the internet age, even a handful of copies in circulation could irrevocably destroy confidentiality. A single dedicated individual with a book in hand could publish its contents far and wide from his local coffee shop. With hundreds of thousands of copies around the globe — many in newsrooms — the damage is done. There is no restoring the status quo.”



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