New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said new projections from health officials suggest instead of flattening, "the curve is increasing" and lambasted the federal government for its lack of action on distributing ventilators and for refraining from using the Defense Production Act.
The governor said the apex of the disease is approaching faster than anticipated and could come as soon as 14-21 days from now. He raised the number of hospital beds needed in the state to 140,000 beds and 40,000 ICU beds. New York currently has 3,000 ICU beds and 53,000 hospital beds. A few days ago, he said the state had projected it would need 110,000 beds.
Cuomo had previously included more hopeful notes of encouragement in his press conferences but on Tuesday delivered concerning news. "The apex is higher than we thought and the apex is sooner than we thought," he said.
Nearly half of the nationwide coronavirus cases are in New York state. Overnight, the case count rose by 5,000, bringing the total to more than 25,000 statewide.
"No one is testing more than we are testing," Cuomo said. "In many ways, we have exhausted every option available to us."
The governor noted that 23 percent of hospitalizations so far have needed ventilators and that 13 percent of positive diagnoses have required hospitalization as of Tuesday.
"We haven't flattened the curve, and the curve is actually increasing," Cuomo said from the Javits Center in Manhattan, which is being turned into a 1,000-bed emergency hospital by the Army Corps of Engineers.
On Monday, Dr. Deborah Birx, who is in charge of the White House response, said the attack rate in New York and New Jersey is five times higher than for the rest of the United States. The attack rate is the percentage of a population that catches the disease.
Cuomo was pointed in his criticism of the federal government for so far sending only a small fraction of needed ventilators to New York. "You want a pat on the back for sending 400 ventilators?" the governor demanded of the White House. "What are we going to do with 400 ventilators when we need 30,000 ventilators? You're missing the magnitude of the problem, and the problem is defined by the magnitude."
Cuomo said the state has so far procured 7,000 ventilators but needs 30,000 and, without more options for ventilators available, will start attempting the unusual plan to split them between people.
"If we don't have ventilators in 14 days, it does us no good," Cuomo assessed, again lamenting what he expressed was the lack of aid. "Not to exercise [the Defense Production Act] is inexplicable to me."
President Trump, during a Coronavirus Task Force town hall on Fox News Tuesday, struck back at the New York governor saying "I watch him on this show complaining."
"I'm not blaming him, but he shouldn't be talking about us," Trump said, referring to a claim that Gov. Cuomo neglected to purchase additional ventilators for the state in 2015. "He should be buying his own ventilators."
Still, citing New York's current 25,665 cases of the novel coronavirus, the governor called on Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar to release 20,000 ventilators in the federal stockpile.
"The problem is the volume," he said. He asked the federal government to deploy ventilators around the country as needed as different states approach their own curve rates of infection while noting that New York has the greater need at the moment.
After passing its critical period, he said that the state would then move the ventilators to the next region addressing a crisis.
"I will take personal responsibility for transporting the 20,000 ventilators anywhere in this country that they want once we are past our apex," he said. "But don't leave them sitting in a stockpile."
Many U.S. consumers say they’ve noticed higher than usual prices for holiday gifts in recent months, according to a a December poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. A contributing factor is the unusually high import taxes the Trump administration put on foreign goods. While the worst-case consumer impact that many economists foresaw from the administration’s trade policies hasn’t materialized, some popular gift items have been affected more than others. Most toys and electronics sold in the U.S. come from China. So do most holiday decorations. Jewelry prices have risen due to the cost of gold.
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The New York Times and President Donald Trump are fighting again. The news outlet said Wednesday it won't be deterred by Trump's “false and inflammatory language” from writing about the 79-year-old president's health. The Times has done a handful of stories on that topic recently, including an opinion column that said Trump is “starting to give President Joe Biden vibes.” In a Truth Social post, Trump said it might be treasonous for outlets like the Times to do “FAKE” reports about his health and "we should do something about it.” The Republican president already has a pending lawsuit against the newspaper for its past reports on his finances.
President Donald Trump says he will allow Nvidia to sell its H200 computer chip used in the development of artificial intelligence to “approved customers” in China. Trump said Monday on his social media site that he had informed China’s leader Xi Jinping and “President Xi responded positively!” There had been concerns about allowing advanced computer chips into China as it could help them to compete against the U.S. in building out AI capabilities. But there has also been a desire to develop the AI ecosystem with American companies such as chipmaker Nvidia.
House Republicans in key battleground districts are working to contain the political fallout expected when thousands of their constituents face higher bills for health insurance coverage obtained through the Affordable Care Act. For a critical sliver of the GOP majority, the impending expiration of the enhanced premium tax credits after Dec. 31 could be a major political liability as they potentially face midterm headwinds in a 2026 election critical to President Donald Trump’s agenda. For Democrats, the party’s strategy for capturing the House majority revolves around pinning higher bills for groceries, health insurance and utilities on Republicans.
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