‘Rules Don’t Apply To Us’: Ex-Ethics Chief Blasts Real Message Of Ivanka’s Goya Stunt

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The former head of the federal Office of Government Ethics on Thursday blasted Ivanka Trump’s stunt posing on Twitter with a can of beans as a pointed message to the public that the “rules don’t apply” to the Trump family.

“If it’s Goya, it’s got to be good,” the first daughter tweeted Tuesday in English and Spanish. The message was sparked by calls to boycott Goya products last week after company CEO Robert Unanue gushed that the nation was “blessed” to have Donald Trump as president.

Trump followed his daughter’s message the next day with his own tweet posing with several Goya products lined up on the Oval Office’s Resolute desk while he grinned and gave two thumbs-up.

Ivanka Trump’s post flat-out “violated an executive branch ethics regulation prohibiting employees from misusing their official positions to endorse commercial products,” former OGE Director Walter Shaub declared in a Washington Post op-ed. But even more troubling, Shaub noted, was that the father-and-daughter messages were part of a drumbeat theme that rules don’t apply to the Trumps — or to the Republican administration.

“As a pictorial representation of the Trump administration’s war on government ethics, both photos are perfectly clear,” Shaub said. “They scream ‘the rules don’t apply to us,’ a central message of the Trump administration from the start.”

Just three weeks after Trump took office, White House counselor Kellyanne Conway stomped on ethics rules when she told the public to “go buy” Ivanka Trump’s products in a televised interview. 

Shaub recalled: “As the OGE’s director, I asked the White House to address this violation of the misuse of position regulation. The White House shrugged off the violation, responding that Conway had uttered her endorsement in a ‘light offhand manner’ and was ‘highly unlikely to do so again.’” 

But she did break ethics regulations again and again — “dozens of times” — so much so that Henry Kerner, Trump’s appointee to head the U.S. Office of Special Counsel, later recommended that the serial-regulation buster be terminated, Shaub pointed out. Trump refused.

“The tone taken by those at the top is everything in government ethics, and the tone from the top of the Trump administration consistently undermines the principles of government ethics,” Shaub said.

The message from the Trumps is as clear as Ivanka Trump’s bean tweet, added Shaub: “Lawlessness is not just tolerated in the Trump administration; it’s virtually required.”

Read Walter Shaub’s entire Washington Post article here.



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UK sees spike in IT job advertisements as lockdown eases

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Despite rising unemployment numbers, some sectors are still seeing a demand for new workers.

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UN Yemen envoy calls for investigation after strikes kill civilians

Jul 16, 2020

The United Nations envoy for Yemen called for a full investigation into airstrikes that killed at least 11 civilians in northern Yemen this week. 

“We deplore yesterday’s air strikes in #AlJawf,” UN envoy Martin Griffiths tweeted. “A thorough [and] transparent investigation is required.”

The UN’s humanitarian affairs office said 11 civilians were killed in airstrikes Wednesday in the al-Hazm district of al-Jawf province. The Houthi health ministry put the death toll at 24.  

The air raids, which the Houthi rebels blamed on the Saudi-led military coalition, were the third such strikes since June. Days earlier, an airstrike in the northwestern province of Hajjah left seven children and two women dead, the humanitarian affairs office said. 

Coalition spokesman Col. Turki al-Malki told Reuters the incidents would be investigated.

“We take this report very seriously and it will be fully investigated as all reports of this nature are, using an internationally approved, independent process,” Malki said.

The reports come as the coalition said it had intercepted a number of cross-border missiles launched by the Houthis in recent weeks. The Houthis claimed to have struck a large oil facility overnight Sunday in the southern Saudi Arabian city of Jizan. 

A civil war pitting the Iran-aligned Houthis against the Saudi coalition has killed thousands of civilians since 2014 and left nearly 80% of the population in need of some form of humanitarian assistance, the UN estimates. 

With the coronavirus poised to exacerbate what is already considered the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, the UN has repeatedly warned Yemen can’t fight both a war and a pandemic. A unilateral cease-fire designed to stave off the virus expired in late May. 

“What we’re seeing is horrible,” said Lise Grande, the UN humanitarian coordinator for Yemen. “The only way civilians will be safe in Yemen is when the parties finally decide to stop fighting.”

 

 



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Iran claims Israeli ‘propaganda’ on nuclear facility attack

Jul 16, 2020

Iranian armed forces spokesman Brig. Gen. Abolfazl Shekarchi said July 16 that the Israeli media is exaggerating attacks on Iranians inside Syria, adding that Iran will not remain silent on reported Israeli attacks.

Shekarchi said, “We warn the lying Zionists that with continued mischief you will see the upper hand of the resistance and the Islamic Republic of Iran in action.”

Israel has not publicly taken credit for any of the bombings inside Syria, though many analysts and experts believe Israel is responsible.

Israel has instead been silent about the attacks in what some see as a suggestion it is conducting the attacks. Shekarchi said claims that “hundreds or thousands” of Iranians died in the attacks are untrue and baseless claims by “Western Zionist media empire saber-rattling.”

Shekarchi said Iranian “advisers have been in Syria for nine years completely legally and at the request of the Syrian government.” He said despite what Western media claims, in total eight Iranians “have been martyred” in these alleged Israeli attacks. He also listed the names of the individuals who have been killed. Shekarchi said Iran had responded with a missile strike on an Israeli base in the Golan Heights. This attack was reported to have occurred in May 2018.

It is not clear what prompted these comments by Shekarchi. It could be related to recent fires and explosions happening across Iran.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi spoke July 16 about an attack that reportedly had Israeli involvement. Mousavi said claims that Israel was behind the recent explosion at Natanz nuclear facility were a “propaganda war by foreign media and especially Zionist media.” Mousavi added that if Israel is indeed behind the attack, then Iran would respond, and that as Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei once said, “The era of hit and run is over.”

Regardless of who is responsible, Iran has experienced a high number of explosions and fires across the country, including a medical facility, an explosion near a base in east Tehran and fires on seven ships. It is also possible that the United States is behind such attacks. According to former US officials, the CIA was given permission by the Trump administration to conduct secret attacks inside Iran.

 Iran also is still dealing with the coronavirus. According to Health Ministry spokesperson Sima Sadat Lari, Iran had 198 deaths due to the coronavirus in the previous 24 hours, bringing the total number of deaths to over 13,000. Lari said 11 provinces are labeled “red zones,” meaning the provinces must take extra measures in following health guidelines. There are also 13 provinces at a “warning level,” meaning they would be soon labeled red zones, including the capital city of Tehran.



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Georgia Governor Sues Atlanta Mayor To Block Citywide Mask Mandate

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ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp is suing Atlanta’s mayor and city council to block the city from enforcing its mandate to wear a mask in public and other rules related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Kemp and Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, in a suit filed in state court late Thursday in Atlanta, argue that Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms has overstepped her authority and must obey Kemp’s executive orders under state law.

“Governor Kemp must be allowed, as the chief executive of this state, to manage the public health emergency without Mayor Bottoms issuing void and unenforceable orders which only serve to confuse the public,” the lawsuit states.

Kemp on Wednesday clarified his executive orders to expressly block Atlanta and at least 14 other local governments across the state from requiring people to wear face coverings.

Kemp’s order was met with defiance Thursday by Bottoms and some other mayors, who said they would continue enforcing the order. The lawsuit forces that showdown, resolving an ambiguous situation with Kemp denying local governments could order masks, but local governments arguing it was within their power.

Bottoms said Thursday during a video news conference that the city’s order is still in effect.

“As of today, 3,104 Georgians have died and I and my family are amongst the 106,000 who have tested positive for COVID-19,” Bottoms said in a statement after the lawsuit was filed. “A better use of taxpayer money would be to expand testing and contact tracing. If being sued by the state is what it takes to save lives in Atlanta, then we will see them in court.”

The state asks a judge to overturn Bottoms’ orders that are more restrictive than Kemp’s, block her from issuing any more such orders, instruct the City Council not to ratify Bottoms’ actions or adopt any ordinances inconsistent with Kemp, to force Bottoms not to make any public statements claiming she has authority that exceeds Kemp’s, and to require city officials to enforce “all provisions” of Kemp’s existing orders.

In filing the lawsuit, Kemp combined a previous dispute with Bottoms over policing in the city with coronavirus control. He said he was suing to protect business owners and employees in the same way he called out the National Guard last week to protect state office buildings and the governor’s mansion after an 8-year-old girl was fatally shot July 4 by armed men at a site where a white Atlanta police officer shot and killed a Black man who had grabbed a stun gun and ran.

The shooting of Rayshard Brooks prompted unrest, including the burning of the fast food restaurant at the site, and complaints that armed people were blocking traffic with no police intervention. The city struggled at times to provide officers after many called in sick when a prosecutor, over Bottoms’ objection, criminally charged the officers involved.

Kemp also alleged in his lawsuit that Bottoms has forbidden police from enforcing Kemp’s earlier orders against gatherings of more than 50 people.

Officials in at least 15 Georgia cities and counties had ordered masks during the coronavirus pandemic, and many were angry at Kemp for swatting down their efforts.

“How can we take care of our local needs when our state ties our hands behind our back and then says ‘Ignore the advice of experts?’” Savannah Mayor Van Johnson asked in a news conference.

Bottoms last week made statements that people had to return to sheltering at home and forcing restaurants to return to only offering takeout and delivery. Kemp quickly swatted those claims down, and Bottoms on Thursday described them as guidelines. But Kemp’s lawsuit says the court should set Bottoms straight on those statements as well, and forbid her from making more claims about her power to reporters.

Kemp says he strongly supports mask-wearing to combat the spread of COVID-19 infections. He traveled the state this month to encourage face coverings. But he has maintained for weeks that cities and counties can’t require masks in public places, saying local actions can’t be more or less restrictive than his statewide orders.

Wednesday, in an otherwise routine renewal of rules governing business operations and ordering medically vulnerably people to stay home, Kemp made that prohibition explicit. He also said local governments could not order masks on their own property, which would include Atlanta’s massive airport.

Although national health officials have called on people to use masks, President Donald Trump’s administration has not issued any nationwide guidance. Twenty-six states and the District of Columbia now require masks.

Kemp’s stance — not only shying away from a statewide order but trying to bar local governments from instituting their own — leaves him standing virtually alone. In the South, Republican governors in Tennessee, South Carolina and Florida have resisted statewide mandates but allow local jurisdictions to implement them. Republican governors in Alabama, Arkansas and Texas and Democrats in Kentucky, Louisiana and North Carolina have issued statewide mask requirements.

Thursday’s numbers showed more than 2,800 people hospitalized statewide with the COVID-19 respiratory illness, the highest on record. The state reported that 84% of hospitals’ critical beds were filled.

Georgia overall had more than 131,000 confirmed infections and more than 3,100 deaths overall as of Thursday.

Some business groups are supporting Kemp. Georgia Restaurant Association Executive Director Kelly Bremer said Thursday that a statewide mandate isn’t appropriate considering Georgia’s size and diversity. But she also said local rules would be confusing and businesses should make their own decisions about requiring customers to wear masks.

“For businesses to grapple with 535 different municipal ordinances and 159 different county ordinances is madness,” Bremer said. “Having one set of guidelines is very important.”

Nadler reported from Marietta, Georgia. Associated Press writer Haleluya Hadero contributed to this report.

Experts are still learning about the novel coronavirus. The information in this story is what was known or available as of press time, but it’s possible guidance around COVID-19 could change as scientists discover more about the virus. Please check the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for the most updated recommendations.

A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus



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Fauci: US needs to ‘regroup’ amid virus surge

During an interview Thursday with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Dr. Anthony Fauci said the U.S. needs to “regroup” as it relates to its handling of COVID-19 amid surging cases across the Southern states including California, Arizona and Florida. (July 16)

AP

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JioMart shakes up online grocery picture despite being late to party

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The pecking order in the $2-billion online grocery market in India has been shaken up by newcomer JioMart. Based on orders per day, JioMart, the two-month-old e-commerce venture of Reliance Industries (RIL), is ahead of rivals BigBasket and Amazon, numbers shared by these firms and sourced from the industry indicate.

While JioMart is doing 250,000 orders per day, as disclosed by RIL Chairman and Managing Director Mukesh Ambani on Wednesday, BigBasket is doing 220,000 orders per day. Amazon, on the other hand, is doing 150,000 orders per day, persons in the know said, via its grocery …





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Early COVID-19 Vaccine Results Look ‘Really Encouraging,’ Says NIH Boss Dr. Francis Collins

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It isn’t often that one hears the word “pandemic” and “inspired” in the same sentence. But the director of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, Dr. Francis Collins, says that, for all the suffering and grief that COVID-19 has wrought around the world, he has at least witnessed an unprecedented level of cooperation between private industry and the alphabet soup of government agencies who are urgently seeking a vaccine for the devastating virus.

“We’ve never had that before. In this case, I guess the global pandemic has inspired us to do things that maybe we should have done before,” said Collins. “I hope we don’t let that crumble when we get through this.”

Collins has had a first-hand view of how this gargantuan coalition came together to expedite what is normally a glacial pace in the development of any new treatment. As the head of the largest medical research center in the world, he both closely monitors the detailed scientific progress of the effort and, as one of the highest-ranking health officials in the country, frequently communicates with the Trump Administration and Congress as the federal government tries to eliminate all the usual administrative speed bumps that can delay a vaccine. To put his role in perspective, he is Dr. Anthony Fauci’s boss.

In a conversation this week with TIME national health correspondent Alice Park (as part of the TIME 100 Talks: Finding Hope), Collins said he shares Fauci’s “cautious optimism” that a vaccine could be available by the end of the year. “The Phase I data…looks really encouraging that these are vaccines that generate strong antibody responses,” he said, referring to the first of what are typically three trials in vaccine development, wherein a small number of people receive a trial treatment.

To make that goal feasible, the NIH convened an unprecedented alliance called Accelerating COVID-19 Therapeutic Interventions and Vaccines, or ACTIV, which brings together seven governmental agencies, 20 pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, and four major non-profits—far more collective brainpower than has ever come together under one umbrella under similar circumstances. As co-chair of ACTIV, Collins said that, by his own estimate, he is working 100-hour weeks—a notch up from his normal metabolism of 90—to sift through dozens of lines of research and focus the government’s resources on the safest and most promising efforts.

When the coalition first assembled, Collins says, “we made a list of all the ideas that were out there. There were more than 400 of them. You can’t possibly run clinical trials on 400 different compounds. So you have to decide which ones are most important.”

This included 50 candidate vaccines that had to be pared down to the most promising efforts that posed the least risk to patients. For example, ACTIV is not considering what are known as “killed virus” vaccines, which introduce weakened “inactivated” versions of the virus that the body’s immune system can learn to combat—but at the non-negligible risk of infecting the patient.

Collins also addressed concerns that the rapidity of the vaccine production process could compromise the safety of the final product. “The way in which this is going so fast is not about compromising the rigor of those definitive trials that are going to tell you if a vaccine works or it doesn’t,” he said. “It’s about skipping some of those bureaucratic steps and the long delays” between the trial phases.

One looming question, from a high altitude, is how the U.S. government could have been better prepared to rapidly respond to the pandemic, and, on the flip side, whether the lessons learned from COVID-19 can be consecrated for future health crises.

“This comes up every time there is a pandemic…and always there is this sense when they start to get a little better, ‘okay, this time we’re going to maintain our readiness and we’re going to be prepared for the next one.’”

Which is not to say that NIH and its many allies were starting from scratch. “Take for instance the vaccine that is furthest along right now for COVID-19: It was built upon experience trying to make a similar vaccine for SARS and MERS,” he says, which both fall under the broad definition of a “coronavirus”–hence the common description of COVID-19 as “novel.”

“Now with a different coronavirus, knowing exactly what steps to take is why it got going so quickly,” Collins said. “But I think it’s also fair to say that we could have been in a better place if we’d been fully expecting this time a global pandemic. Maybe we’ll learn the lessons a little better and avoid sinking back into complacency in ‘21 and ‘22.”

Collins is arguably in a unique position to straddle the inevitable clashes between political leaders and medicine. He has both a Ph.D in chemistry and a medical doctorate, but has also served in government for 27 years—most notably, before being appointed to head the NIH by President Barack Obama as the leader of the Human Genome Project, which “had its own moments of being contentious and controversial,” in his words.

This article is part of #TIME100Talks: Finding Hope, a special series featuring leaders across different fields encouraging action toward a better world. Want more? Sign up for access to more virtual events, including live conversations with influential newsmakers.

Write to Chris Wilson at chris.wilson@time.com.

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What the papers say – July 17

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Accusations the Russian state is attempting to hack into research on a potential vaccine for Covid-19 are splashed across the nation’s front pages.

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