Saturday, April 25, 2026

Trump Doubles Down On Fact-Free Fraud Theory About Mail-In Voting

President Donald Trump on Sunday posted on Twitter alleging that mail-in ballots allow for widespread election fraud, despite widespread evidence to the contrary.

Trump — who has previously voted by mail employing the very process he now decries — has railed against states offering mail-in voting leading up to this year’s national elections at the same time millions of Americans worry about voting in person during the coronavirus pandemic. 

“The United States cannot have all Mail In Ballots,” Trump tweeted Sunday before making the unsubstantiated claim that people steal the ballots from mailboxes in order to print thousands of forgeries and “force” others to sign them.

Meanwhile, National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien told CBS’s “Face the Nation” Sunday that U.S. national security agencies have a “very strong infrastructure” to combat election interference and to “make sure we have a free and fair election” in November.

Several states with both Republican and Democratic leadership already allow voting by mail. Others have sought to expand voter access to mail-in ballots as public health officials continue to discourage large gatherings to prevent the spread of coronavirus.

Trump has openly mused that higher “levels of voting” would mean “you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again.” He argued Sunday that efforts to make voting easier during the pandemic were part of a scam to rig the election, again without offering any evidence or substantiation.   

Trump on Wednesday threatened to withhold funding from the state of Michigan because the state sent voters applications to vote by mail. He issued a similar threat to Nevada. Both Michigan and Nevada are widely considered swing states heading into this year’s presidential election. 

The Republican Party has previously supported efforts to restrict access to mail-in voting, including recent efforts in Wisconsin and Florida.

But a number of Republican lawmakers have publicly distanced themselves from Trump’s and the party’s unfounded arguments that mail-in voting is ripe for corruption.

Republican Sen. Rick Scott of Florida told CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday that absentee voting should be allowed “as long as you can do it safely, as long as you can make sure there’s no fraud.” 

“We ought to be able to do absentee ballots like we do it in Florida,” Scott said.  

Earlier this week, GOP Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah told HuffPost he expects “90%” of Utahns to submit mail-in ballots, rebutting Trump’s claim that voting by mail hurts Republicans. 

“It works very, very well. And it’s a very Republican state,” Romney added.



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Arkansas Gov. Defends Easing COVID Rules After Largest Single-Day Case Rise

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R) defended his state’s easing of social distancing restrictions despite its largest single-day increase in confirmed COVID-19 cases coming just a few days ago. 

“We take the virus very seriously. It’s a risk, it causes death, but you can’t cloister yourself at home, that is just contrary to the American spirit,” he said on “Fox News Sunday.”

Hutchinson, who has encouraged Arkansas residents to wear face masks in public, compared mask wearing and social distancing to buckling up while driving.



Asa Hutchinson said people staying at home is “contrary to the American spirit.”

“You can be in an automobile and that is very risky, but you can manage the risk by wearing a seatbelt,” he said.

The governor’s assurance follows his state reporting 455 new cases of COVID-19 on Thursday, marking the single biggest increase that the state has seen thus far. It also follows reports of dozens of Arkansas residents spreading the virus at a church and at a high school pool party. Three people died as a result of the church infections.

By allowing the state to reopen despite the recent rise in cases, Arkansas is not following the White House’s guidelines that advise against easing restrictions until there has been a two-week decline in new reported cases, Fox News host Chris Wallace noted.

“Which raises the question, do you really have the virus under control in Arkansas?” Wallace asked him.

“You manage the risk by increasing the testing,” Hutchinson said, while arguing that the recent rise in cases is not because of lifted restrictions but instead due to an increase in testing capabilities.

The other solution, he said, is to educate the public about how to avoid infection.

“To me it’s a matter of self-discipline and that’s why I talk about the swim party and the fact that you can pass the virus at a swim party. I don’t think we’re going to say you can’t invite anyone over to a pool in the backyard of your home. I think you have to exercise discipline and have the right restrictions in place,” he said.

Hutchinson said earlier this month that his state expected to receive 90,000 coronavirus test kits from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in hopes of increasing testing to an average of 2,000 a day.



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‘He acted legally and with integrity’: Johnson straps himself to embattled aide Cummings

Furious Tory MPs publicly called on Cummings to resign or be fired on the basis the saga has undermined public confidence in strict social distancing rules and distracted Downing Street from managing the coronavirus outbreak, which has so far killed at least 37,000 people in the United Kingdom.

But in a testy exchange with reporters on Sunday, Johnson said Cummings had followed his “instincts” and would keep his job.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson defends Cummings during a press conference at Downing Street on Sunday.Credit:10 Downing Street via AP

“I want to begin by answering the big question that people have been asking in the last 48 hours: is this government asking you, the people, the public, to do one thing while senior people here in government do something else?” Johnson said.

“I take this matter so seriously and, frankly, it is so serious that I can tell you today I’ve had extensive face-to-face conversations with Dominic Cummings.

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“And I conclude that in travelling to find the right kind of childcare at the moment when both he and his wife were about to be incapacitated by coronavirus and when he had no alternative, I think he followed the instincts of every father and parent, and I do not mark him down for that.

“I believe in every respect he has acted responsibly, legally and with integrity.”

The unequivocal defence has stunned even Johnson’s own allies. Some had expected the Prime Minister might try to take the heat out of the affair by announcing an inquiry into Cummings’ behaviour.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said the Cabinet Office should launch an inquiry, but stopped short of demanding Cummings resign or be sacked.

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“This was a test of the Prime Minister and he has failed it. It is an insult to sacrifices made by the British people that Boris Johnson has chosen to take no action against Dominic Cummings,” he said.

“The public will be forgiven for thinking there is one rule for the Prime Minister’s closest adviser and another for the British people.”

Cummings is the co-architect of Johnson’s rise to power and was a key figure in the campaign for Britain to leave the European Union.

He wields huge influence over Downing Street and has irritated senior cabinet ministers who believe he has too much power for an unelected official.

Eight backbench MPs went public on Sunday to criticise Cummings and urge him to resign.

“Today’s newspapers are a disaster,” said former Conservative minister Steve Baker.

“Enormous political capital is being expended saving someone who has boasted of making decisions beyond his competence and who clearly broke at the very least the guidance which kept mums and dads at home, without childcare from their parents, and instead risked spreading the virus by travelling.”

Johnson’s wife, journalist Mary Wakefield, had coronavirus symptoms when the couple drove to Durham in late March, but Cummings did not. However he developed symptoms within days and was bedridden for more than a week. It is not known whether the couple stopped for petrol.

The rules at the time said anyone with symptoms must not leave their home under any circumstances and should not visit family members for any reason.

A witness has claimed they also saw Cummings at Barnard Castle, a small market town about 40 kilometres from his parents’ home in Durham. Johnson was asked about this claim on Sunday but did not answer the question.

He also hit out at false reporting about the Cummings matter, but did not identify what was actually false.

A senior member of the government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies, Professor Neil Ferguson, resigned earlier this month after he was caught breaking the lockdown rules to meet a woman he was in a relationship with.

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US is ahead of China in vaccine race, former FDA chief says

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Donald Trump is pushing for a vaccine by the end of the year | Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

Data on Chinese vaccines in clinical development ‘didn’t look overwhelmingly strong,’ Scott Gottlieb said.

WASHINGTON — The United States will have a “better” vaccine than China — and it will have it sooner, former U.S. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb predicted Sunday.

Data on the potential vaccines in clinical development in China “didn’t look overwhelmingly strong,” Gottlieb told Margaret Brennan on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

“Those vaccines, if they do work, probably are going to provide lower levels of immunity than the platforms that the U.S. and Europeans are working with,” he said.

“So I think we’re going to have a better vaccine, and I think we’re probably going to have it sooner based on where we are in clinical development, some of the early progress that we’ve shown.”

Asked which potential U.S. vaccines are “most promising at this point,” Gottlieb cited one by the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca, as well as another by Moderna Therapeutics and Lonza.

Moderna’s showed promise in its first round of human trials earlier this month, fueling executives’ hopes that it could be ready in 2020.

“There’s a number of manufacturers that are either equidistant to them or not far behind,” Gottlieb said. “All look promising based on public statements they made and some of the preliminary evidence that they put out.”

President Donald Trump is pushing for a vaccine by the end of the year. Public health experts caution that while a vaccine that soon is possible, it is far from guaranteed.

“I would say that’s probably more likely a 2021 event that we’re going to have the vaccine available in sufficient quantities to mass inoculate the population,” Gottlieb said earlier this month.

David Cohen contributed to this report.



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Boris Johnson Refuses To Fire Top Aide Despite Allegations He Defied Lockdown Restrictions

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This was originally published on HuffPost UK

Coronavirus has changed everything. Make sense of it all with the Waugh Zone, our evening politics briefing. Sign up now.

Dominic Cummings will keep his job as Boris Johnson’s top aide, the prime minister has confirmed. 

The PM says he had “extensive face to face” discussions with the former Vote Leave boss and that Cummings acted “responsibly, legally and with integrity”. 

The decision to keep Cummings in Downing Street comes despite claims he twice defied the PM’s Covid-19 “stay at home” restrictions. 

The PM is likely to face anger from the public, Labour and his own Tory backbenchers, who broke ranks on Sunday to demand Cummings go. 

But Johnson gave a full-throated public show of support to his embattled aide, telling the Downing Street press conference on Sunday he “had extensive face-to-face conversations” with Cummings.

He added “I have concluded that in travelling to find the right kind of childcare, at the moment when both he and his wife were about to be incapacitated by coronavirus – and when he had no alternative – I think he followed the instincts of every father and every parent”.

“And I do not mark him down for that.”

It emerged on Friday that Cummings travelled 260 miles to Durham to self-isolate at his parents’ home in March. 



Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s senior aide Dominic Cummings leaves his home, in London

Number 10 had initially defended him, saying the trip was justified as Cummings, who later tested positive for Covid-19, needed help with childcare for his four-year-old son.

Reports in the Sunday Mirror and Observer today, however, claimed that Cummings returned to County Durham on April 19 and witnesses saw him in a town called Barnard Castle. 

Johnson also sought to defend his adviser, by saying “some” of the allegations about Cummings’ behaviour during self-isolation were “palpably false”.

He said: “Though there have been many other allegations about what happened when he was in self-isolation and thereafter, some of them palpably false, I believe that in every respect he has acted responsibly and legally and with integrity and with the overwhelming aim of stopping the spread of the virus and saving lives.”

He went on: “I can totally get why people might feel so confused and so offended by the idea that it is one thing for people here and another thing for others. 

“But really having looked at what happened, having looked at his intentions and what he was trying to do for the good of his family, I really think most people will understand what he was doing and, above all, what he did – if you look at the measures that he took – they were designed to stop the spread of the virus.

“I think that he, at all times, behaved responsibly and legally.”

He did acknowledge, however, the damage the allegations may have done to the government. 

He said the “big question” that was being asked was “is this government asking you – the people, the public – to do one thing, while senior people here in Government do something else?”

“Have we been asking you to make sacrifices, to obey social distancing – stay at home – while some people have been basically flouting those rules and endangering lives.”

He said his conversations with Cummings today were “because I take this matter so seriously”.

Opposition MPs gave their verdict on Johnson’s call on Twitter. 

Former Lib Dem leader said Johnson had “just caused colossal, possibly fatal, damage to his Conservative administration […] but he has also undone any attempt to save lives by effective public health messaging”.

Green MP Caroline Lucas, meanwhile, tweeted: “Unbelievable – PM says Cummings has acted ‘responsibly, legally and with integrity’.

“In fact he’s acted arrogantly, illegally and with gross irresponsibility.

“Even by PM’s own abysmal standards, this must surely be the lowest point.”



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Austrian president apologizes after breaking coronavirus curfew

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Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen | Alexander Koerner/Getty Images

Alexander Van der Bellen and his wife were found by police at a restaurant after cut-off time.

Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen apologized Sunday after he and his wife were caught by police breaking curfew rules at a restaurant.

The country has mandated that restaurants and bars shut down by 11 p.m. as a coronavirus prevention measure, but police told the Kronen Zeitung that the couple still had drinks at their table after midnight on Saturday night. The restaurant — which was officially shut down at the time, according to the newspaper — could face a fine of up to €30,000 for breaking the rules.

Van der Bellen said in a statement on Twitter that he had gone out to eat for the first time since lockdown began with his wife and two friends.

“We lost track of the time while chatting and unfortunately overlooked the hour,” he wrote. “I am sincerely sorry. It was a mistake. If the restaurant host suffers any damage from this, I will take responsibility for it.”

Municipal authorities must now decide whether the restaurant faces a penalty.



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Boris Johnson refuses to sack Dominic Cummings, as a growing scandal threatens to wreck Britain’s lockdown

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The Prime Minister said that Cummings had “no alternative” but to drive 260 miles across England to stay with his parents while his wife was sick with Covid-19 symptoms, insisting he acted “responsibly, legally and with integrity.”

“I think he followed the instincts of every father and every parent, and I do not mark him down for that,” Johnson added at the government’s daily coronavirus briefing on Sunday.

Cummings’ movements during lockdown have sparked a scandal in Britain, quickly becoming a defining moment in the country’s much-scrutinized response to the coronavirus pandemic and threatening to undermine the restrictions Johnson has spent eight weeks pleading with Britons to follow.

But Johnson resisted growing political pressure to sack Cummings, batting back accusations from across the political spectrum that he has allowed his aides to disobey the rules.

He sidestepped reports that Cummings subsequently returned to the north of England on multiple other occasions, saying only that he has “looked at them carefully” and was “content that (Cummings) behaved responsibly” and with the intention of stopping the spread of the virus.

Johnson left many questions unanswered — including whether Cummings visited a town 30 miles away from his parents’ home, as witnesses have said he did, and whether he knew that Cummings was leaving London.

Ministers have spent much of the weekend loyally defending Cummings, the enigmatic aide often portrayed as the mastermind behind Johnson’s premiership, after reports of the first journey emerged.

But Cummings’ position became more perilous still on Sunday, after fresh claims emerged that he had in fact broken the UK’s coronavirus lockdown on multiple occasions throughout April.

Johnson’s refusal to let Cummings go ensures the controversy will continue to overshadow the country’s coronavirus response in the coming days.

‘Enough is enough’

Johnson’s response will do little to appease critics, who have been asking why Cummings needed to drive across England to find childcare despite being healthy and free of Covid-19 symptoms.

“Boris Johnson just insulted every person in this country who has made sacrifices to follow the rules he implemented to save lives in this pandemic,” the Labour Party’s shadow justice minister David Lammy said during Johnson’s briefing.

The Prime Minister said he has had “extensive” conversations with Cummings on Sunday, insisting that “Mr Cummings did isolate for 14 days or more,” even if it was not at his London home.

The uproar over Cummings’ behavior began on Friday evening when two newspapers, The Guardian and the Daily Mirror, revealed he had traveled from London to Durham to stay at his parents’ property at the end of March while his wife had coronavirus symptoms.
The journey appeared a clear breach of the UK’s lockdown, with Cummings’ boss Johnson repeatedly urging the public to “stay at home” and “save lives,” and has dominated front pages in the country throughout the weekend.

But ministers have stood by the aide, insisting he needed his parents to care for his child in case Cummings also became sick with symptoms, which he later did. “Caring for your wife and child is not a crime,” minister Michael Gove tweeted, one of a number of leading government figures to claim the lockdown allowed for such trips.

It marked a notable shift from previous episodes regarding the lockdown. When leading epidemiologist Neil Ferguson was forced to resign from the scientific body advising the government for breaching lockdown, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said he was left speechless by the “extraordinary” breach. On Saturday, Hancock said Cummings’ trip was “entirely right.”

That defense was bruised on Sunday, after the same papers dropped new details alleging Cummings had been seen in the Durham area on multiple occasions after his initial trip. Downing Street has rebutted the subsequent claims, saying in a statement that they “will not waste our time answering a stream of false allegations about Mr. Cummings from campaigning newspapers.”

Cummings’ influence over ministers is well documented in the British political press, but Downing Street’s approach is no longer being followed by several of Johnson’s own backbenchers, who one by one began to call on Cummings to go on Sunday.

“Enough is enough,” Conservative lawmaker Steve Baker wrote in an opinion piece for The Critic website. “Dominic Cummings must go before he does any more harm to the UK, the Government, the Prime Minister, our institutions or the Conservative Party.”

And concerns have been raised that the government’s defense of Cummings’ behavior has given implicit permission to the public to interpret the lockdown rules however they see fit.

“There cannot be one rule for Dominic Cummings and another for the British people,” the opposition Labour Party said in a statement.

A scandal at the end of a torrid week

The timing of the controversy is particularly unfortunate for the Prime Minister, who has overseen the deadliest Covid-19 outbreak in Europe and who was forced into an embarrassing U-turn on a controversial fee for immigrant health care workers just days earlier.

On Thursday the Prime Minister was forced into his first major policy U-turn since winning a sizable majority in December’s general election, agreeing to scrap a heavily criticized fee that overseas NHS and health care workers were forced to pay while simultaneously working on the front lines of the country’s coronavirus battle.

“We cannot clap our carers one day and then charge them to use our NHS the next,” said Labour leader Keir Starmer, who is proving a formidable opponent to Johnson as he settles into the position he took over in April. Starmer was referring to the weekly round of applause for health workers that Britons have been taking part in.

Remember Brexit? Why Britain could really struggle to dig itself out of recession

Johnson had defended the surcharge as late as Wednesday, telling MPs “we must look at the realities” and insisting the fee was “the right way forward” to provide the NHS with funding.

But by Thursday the policy was gone, amid growing discontent among Tory backbenchers. The change in tone added to the criticism Johnson has faced over the NHS, with opponents pointing to a lack in personal protective equipment (PPE) and a slow rate of testing.

Throughout the controversies, Britain’s death toll has continued to climb. Though it is well past its peak of cases and deaths, the country has seen more fatalities from Covid-19 than any other country in Europe, with more than 36,000 in total.

The country is entering its final week under the current phase of lockdown. From June 1, the government will look to lift certain restrictions as it paves a way back towards normality.

CNN’s Simon Cullen and Sarah Dean contributed reporting.

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Netanyahu defiant as he arrives for start of trial

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In the most serious case, Netanyahu is accused of advancing regulatory benefits worth more than 1 billion shekels (more than $283 million) in favor a telecommunications company controlled by a millionaire friend, prosecutors say. In exchange, Netanyahu received favorable coverage from a news site, even influencing wording and story selection, prosecutors allege.

Sunday’s proceedings were finished in under an hour, as they were mostly procedural.

“I read the indictment and I understand its content,” Netanyahu told the court.

He did not enter a plea, but he has repeatedly proclaimed his innocence.

Before taking his place in the courtroom, he made a statement with senior members of his Likud Party standing behind him.

He described his indictments as a “stitch-up” — an effort by Israel’s liberal and media elites to topple him and his right-wing bloc.

The media was looking only to film him sitting on the bench in court, Netanyahu said, adding that he would ask the court to transmit the entire trial live.

“I am here as your Prime Minister, with straight back and proud,” he told those watching at home. “When the public is exposed to the whole truth, the cases will crumble.”

Participants in the small district courtroom wore masks, even while speaking. As the three judges entered, Netanyahu remained standing. He sat only after a cameraman had been ushered out of the room, per an earlier agreement on court procedures.

In discussions about the timetable, defense lawyer Micha Fetman said he was new to the team and needed time to read all the material, which prosecutor Liat Ben-Ari Shweky said would take about three months.

Fetman requested all defendants — Netanyahu, along with two businessmen and one of the businessmen’s wives — be excused from attending every court session, procedural hearings in particular, and the prosecution did not oppose the move.

Proceedings were adjourned until July 19, though it could be months before the prosecution opens.

Under Israeli law, Netanyahu does not have to resign because of the indictment. Instead, he has to resign only if he is convicted and that conviction is upheld through the appeals process.

In a tweet sent as the court session was coming to a close, Netanyahu’s key coalition ally, Benny Gantz, wrote Netanyahu was innocent until proved guilty and expressed confidence the legal system would provide the Prime Minister with a fair trial.

Gantz, Israel’s new alternate prime minister, previously had campaigned in three elections on a platform of never sitting in the same government as an indicted prime minster.

“I would like to reemphasize that my colleagues and I fully trust our legal system and law enforcement agencies. Now, perhaps more than ever, we must move toward unity and conciliation, as a country and as a society, for the State of Israel and all of its citizens,” Gantz’s tweeted Sunday.

CNN’s Oren Liebermann and Eliott C. McLaughlin contributed to this report.

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WHO official: ‘I cannot imagine’ US pulling out of the international body

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WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus | Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images

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WASHINGTON — The World Health Organization and United States have been “connected since the very beginning” and its departure from the international body would be unimaginable, a WHO official said Sunday.

“The United States, since at least 1902, has been the leader in global public health and I cannot imagine an environment where the United States would not be in WHO and contributing to WHO as it does today,” Stewart Simonson, WHO’s assistant director-general of general management, said in an interview on CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS.”

“WHO was founded by the United States and other member states,” Simonson added. “WHO has benefited from enormous generosity from the people of the United States and almost incalculable technical support.”

The official’s comments come nearly a week after U.S. President Donald Trump sent a letter to the WHO threatening to permanently halt funding and pull out of the international body if the agency “does not commit to major substantive improvements within the next 30 days.”

It is the latest escalation after Trump last month implemented a temporary freeze on WHO funding based on accusations that the agency mismanaged the onset of the pandemic and failed to hold China accountable on transparency.

“There is no conceivable reason WHO would sit on information. No interest of ours is served by doing so” — Stewart Simonson, WHO’s assistant director-general of general management

In response to charges that the WHO sat on information coming out of China about coronavirus and did not act quickly enough, Simonson said: “Both assertions are wrong on their face.”

“There is no conceivable reason WHO would sit on information. No interest of ours is served by doing so,” he said. “Our interest is in sounding the alarm when the evidence is indicating the alarm should be sounded and that is exactly what Dr. Tedros did.”

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has said the agency is looking into the contents of Trump’s letter. Simonson acknowledged he wouldn’t yet make conclusions on China’s transparency until an independent review by the World Health Organization occurs.

Simonson, a former aide to Wisconsin Governor Tommy Thompson, served in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in different roles during the administration of President George W. Bush.

China has repeatedly bashed the U.S. allegations as a cover-up for Trump’s own mishandling of the outbreak in the United States.

Trump’s letter has received some partial nods of support, however. Germany’s Health Minister Jens Spahn urged the U.S. not to leave the organization, but acknowledged that Trump “does have a point — the WHO needs to reform its governance and accountability.”

The U.S. contributes roughly $400 million per year to the WHO, by far the biggest donor out of 194 member countries. The organization was founded in 1948 and has since played a leading role in public health crises, from smallpox to Ebola, which Simonson argued could not be done without support from its members, notably the U.S.

Trump has frequently resorted to ending or limiting U.S. involvement internationally under his “America First” approach. Earlier in his presidency, he withdrew from the Paris Climate Agreement and the Iran nuclear agreement.

Besides the WHO, Trump also recently revealed plans to withdraw from the Open Skies Treaty, which permits open surveillance over military activities, an agreement signed by more than 30 nations. The move has drawn backlash from Democrats as well as European countries.



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UK PM stands by senior adviser who disobeyed coronavirus lockdown

“I believe that in every respect he has acted responsibly and legally,” Mr Johnson told a news conference on Sunday (local time).

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson says he is standing by Dominic Cummings over a journey that the senior adviser made during the coronavirus lockdown. (Getty)

Mr Johnson said “some” of the allegations about Mr Cummings’ behaviour during self-isolation were “palpably false”.

Mr Cummings, who masterminded the 2016 campaign to leave the European Union, travelled 400km from London to Durham in late March while his wife showed COVID-19 symptoms, when measures to combat the spread of the coronavirus were in place.

Mr Johnson had ordered Britons to mostly stay at home and shut down large parts of the economy to curb the outbreak which has left the United Kingdom with one of the world’s highest official death tolls.

Mr Johnson’s office said Mr Cummings made the journey to ensure his four-year-old son could be properly cared for as his wife was ill with COVID-19 and there was a “high likelihood” that Mr Cummings would himself become unwell.

Two police officers arrive at the home of Dominic Cummings, Chief Advisor to Prime Minister Boris Johnson in London, England. (Getty)

A number of cabinet ministers and the attorney general have also said that the journey was justified. 

Several lawmakers from Johnson’s Conservative Party however called on Sunday morning for Mr Cummings to quit.

High profile Brexit campaigner Steve Baker, was the first of a number of Conservative lawmakers who said Mr Johnson’s adviser should now quit.

“I just see this rattling on now for day after day, wasting the public’s time, consuming political capital and diverting from the real issues we need to deal with,” he told Sky News.

“No one is indispensable.”

Political campaign group Led By Donkeys transport a screen showing a prerecorded video link of Britain’s Boris Johnson delivering a statement, outside the home of his senior aide Dominic Cummings, in London. (AP)

Opposition politicians have called for Mr Cummings, who wields huge influence on the government, to go, saying his actions were hypocritical at a time when millions of Britons were staying in their homes.

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