Covid-19 pandemic breaches White House walls as massive job losses continue

Registered nurses Beth Andrews, top, and Erin Beauchemin work with a patient in the Covid-19 Intensive Care Unit at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. File picture: Elaine Thompson/AP

Registered nurses Beth Andrews, top, and Erin Beauchemin work with a patient in the Covid-19 Intensive Care Unit at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. File picture: Elaine Thompson/AP

Published May 9, 2020

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Washington - The US government

reported more catastrophic economic fallout from the coronavirus

crisis on Friday as the pandemic pierced the very walls of the

White House and California gave the green light for its

factories to restart after a seven-week lockdown.

A day after the White House confirmed that President Donald

Trump's personal valet had tested positive for the virus, Trump

told reporters that Katie Miller, press secretary to Vice

President Mike Pence, had also been infected. She is married to

senior Trump aide and immigration policy hard-liner Stephen

Miller and travels frequently with Pence.

The back-to-back diagnoses of individuals close to Trump,

Pence and the White House inner circle raised questions about

whether the highest levels of government are adequately

safeguarded from infection.

"We've taken every single precaution to protect the

president," White House spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany told

reporters.

President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with Republican lawmakers, in the State Dining Room of the White House. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin listens at left. Picture: Evan Vucci/AP

Earlier in the day, the Labor Department reported the US unemployment rate rose to 14.7% last month, up from 3.5% in

February, demonstrating the speed with which the workforce

collapsed after stay-at-home orders meant to curb the outbreak

were imposed across most of the country.

Worse economic news may be yet to come. White House economic

adviser Kevin Hassett said the unemployment rate was likely to

climb to around 20% this month. The jobless rate for April

already shattered the post-World War Two record of 10.8% set in

November 1982.

The economic devastation has heightened the urgency of

governors' efforts to get their states' economies moving again,

even though infection rates and deaths are still rising in parts

of the country.

California, the first state to issue stay-at-home orders on

March 19, partially reopened shuttered commerce on Friday.

Retailers such as bookstores, jewelers, clothing merchants,

sporting goods shops and florists were permitted to begin

offering curbside pickup and deliveries, while manufacturing and

warehouse facilities were allowed to resume operations if they

met infection-control requirements.

Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, said California had

managed to flatten its infection curve in recent weeks, allowing

the state to safely proceed with gradually restarting the

economy.

     

CHILD VICTIM

More than 77,000 Americans have died from Covid-19, the

respiratory illness caused by the novel coronavirus, out of more

than 1.29 million confirmed cases, according to a Reuters tally.

Elderly individuals and people with underlying chronic

health conditions have been the most vulnerable.

But New York Governor Andrew Cuomo on Friday reported the

death of a 5-year old boy from a rare inflammatory syndrome

believed to be linked to the coronavirus, highlighting a

potential new pandemic risk for children.

Just as minorities have been especially hard hit by the

virus itself relative to their population size, African

Americans and Hispanics also suffered disproportionately greater

job losses in April - at 16.7% and 18.9%, respectively, the

Labor Department data showed. The jobless rate was also higher

among women, at 15.5%, compared with 13% for men.

Rita Trivedi, 63, of Hudson, Florida, was furloughed as an

analyst at Nielsen Media Research on April 23 and has struggled

to secure benefits from the state's troubled unemployment

system. She fears running short of money to cover her husband's

medical bills and other expenses.

"I'm more than anxious, I'm more than worried - it's 'can't

sleep' kind of anxious," Trivedi said. "I'm just so tense

thinking about these things and how to manage."

Trump, seeking re-election in November, initially played

down the threat posed by the coronavirus, and has given

inconsistent messages about the expected duration of the

economic shutdown and its consequences.

"Those jobs will all be back, and they'll be back very

soon," he told Fox News on Friday.

CALIFORNIA

Newsom said California, home to 40 million residents with an

economy ranking among the top five or six in the world, was

doing worse than the nation as a whole, with unemployment

running over 20 percent.

But he said roughly 70% of California's economy was

eligible to reopen "with modifications" under his plan, though

it remained to be seen how many businesses would jump at the

chance, and how many customers would immediately return.

In Los Angeles, few retail businesses appeared to be open in

the downtown area. It also was unclear how much, if any,

assembly line production in California had yet resumed.

A dog walker passes a social distancing sign while wearing a protective mask at Domino Park in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Picture: John Minchillo/AP

Electric car manufacturer Tesla Inc was aiming to

restart its factory in Fremont, California, on Friday, Chief

Executive Officer Elon Musk wrote in an email to staff.

But a health official in Alameda County, where the plant is

located, said local lockdown measures remained in effect and

supersede Newsom's relaxation of statewide restrictions.

"We've been working with them, but we have not given the

green light," health officer Erica Pan said of Tesla.

At least 40 of the 50 US states are taking steps to lift

restrictions affecting all but essential businesses - including

Arizona, Mississippi and South Dakota, which on Friday all

reported record numbers of cases.

Public health experts warn that reopening prematurely,

without vastly expanded virus testing and other safeguards,

risks fueling renewed outbreaks. They also say the

state-by-state hodgepodge of differing policies may confuse the

public and undermines social distancing efforts.

Reuters