Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/politics/exit-polls-2020-south-carolina-primary/

In the days before the primary, Mr. Steyer’s South Carolina staff had swelled to more than 100 workers, many of them young and black South Carolinians.

In appearances around the state, Mr. Steyer focused his appeal on the economic and environmental injustices affecting African-Americans, as well as an unequivocal pledge that the federal government would pay reparations to the descendants of slaves if he were elected.

“We should have a formal commission on race to retell the story of the last 400-plus years in America of systematic legal injustice, discrimination and cruelty,” he said in Tuesday’s debate.

Mr. Steyer repeated the pledge at a fish fry sponsored by his campaign in North Charleston on Thursday, where he also had recruited the black radio personality Sheryl Underwood to speak on his behalf.

“I support his ability to speak to issues that our community needs somebody to speak to,” Ms. Underwood said of Mr. Steyer. “I support the coalescing of his resources with our resources to get more people into the process.”

In the end, though, it was not enough, and, despite the onslaught of spending, many South Carolinians viewed Mr. Steyer’s campaign as more of a novelty than anything. Democratic political activists had coined a new term to describe his foray into the state: South Carolina had been “Steyered,” they said.

Stephanie Saul reported from Columbia, S.C., and Matt Stevens reported from New York. Alexander Burns contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/29/us/politics/tom-steyer-drops-out.html

Should the virus continue to spread, it may become impossible for the Democratic presidential campaigns in the United States to avoid changing their event schedules. As companies cancel events and limit travel in the name of caution, candidates are taking a risk by carrying on as normal.

“I think we’ll see, pretty soon, decisions by the campaigns to limit rope line and scale back events to small-town halls and use technology like streaming to reach voters,” said Scott Gottlieb, former head of the Food and Drug Administration under Trump.

“Even if the risk doesn’t merit these steps right now, it’s important they consider the examples they set.” —Hirsch

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/03/01/coronavirus-live-updates-china-reports-573-new-cases.html

The Fix’s Amber Phillips previews the South Carolina primary, Super Tuesday and what to watch for as the 2020 Democratic presidential primary continues. Read more: https://wapo.st/2Pzc6Rv. Subscribe to The Washington Post on YouTube: https://wapo.st/2QOdcqK

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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=izGd0frF50I

The government of United States has announced additional travel restrictions affecting Iran, Italy and South Korea, which have emerged as major hotspots of the new coronavirus outbreak, following the first death from the virus in the country.

Vice President Mike Pence said on Saturday the existing travel ban on Iran would extend to foreign nationals who had been in that country the past 14 days. He also urged US citizens not to travel to affected areas of Italy and South Korea. The US has already imposed restriction on entry from China, where the virus originated late last year.

“We want to lower the amount of travel to and from the most impacted areas, this is a basic containment strategy,” said Health Secretary Alex Azar at a joint news conference with President Donald Trump.

More:

Shortly before the news conference, the Washington state Department of Health confirmed that one person had died of the disease officially known as COVID-19, marking the first death linked to the new coronavirus in the US. 

The death in the western state comes amid a slowly growing number of cases of community transmission in the US. There are some 62 cases in the country, mostly evacuees from a cruise ship. Of the 22 cases in the US directly, around 15 are in recovery, while several remain ill.

Trump told reporters at the White House that the deceased person was a “medically high-risk” woman in her late 50s, although a health official in Washington state later said it was a man.

The victim appears to have become ill through local transmission, said Robert Redfield, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“The investigation at this time shows no evidence of link to travel or a known contact,” Redfield said at the news conference.

Redfield stressed that “the risk to the American public remains low,” echoing comments by Trump, who urged the media to exercise restraint.

“If you are healthy, you will probably go through a process and you will be fine,” the president said. “There is no reason to panic at all. This is something that is being handled professionally.”

Trump also announced he will meet on Monday heads of top pharmaceutical companies to discuss the novel coronavirus.

Global spread

The virus has now hit 61 countries worldwide, with more than 2,900 people killed and nearly 86,000 infected since it was first detected in the central Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.

Its rapid spread beyond China’s borders in the past week has caused stock markets to sink to their lowest levels since the 2008 global financial crisis over fears the disease could wreak havoc on the world economy.

Although the vast majority of infections have been in China, more daily cases are now logged outside the country.  

South Korea, which has the most infected people outside China, reported its biggest surge in new cases on Saturday with 813 more patients confirmed, bringing its total to 3,150. Italy, the epicentre of the outbreak in Europe, also reported a jump in new cases on Saturday, its number of infections exceeding 1,000 and the death toll jumping by eight to 29. Iran, meanwhile reported 205 new cases, with the overall number of infections now standing at 593 and the death toll at 43.

France on Saturday cancelled all gatherings of 5,000 people or more in a bid to contain the coronavirus outbreak which has infected 100 people throughout the country.

The virus has also spread to previously untouched areas in recent days, reaching new countries including Azerbaijan, Mexico and New Zealand, as well as the first case in sub-Saharan Africa with Nigeria reporting a case. Qatar and Ecuador both confirmed their first cases on Saturday.

Source Article from https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/02/reports-death-due-coronavirus-200229183250291.html

America should give the peace agreement with the Taliban a chance, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said Saturday.

In an interview on “Fox & Friends Weekend” with hosts Dean Cain, Pete Hegseth and Jedidiah Bila, Graham said he will believe there is peace when he sees it, but he wants to applaud President Trump for getting the Taliban to the table.

“Let’s give it a try,” he urged. “Eighteen years is a long time, but you’ve gotta remember why we still talk about Afghanistan… That’s the place where the Al Qaeda was invited in by the Taliban as their honored guests to attack us. Without a safe haven in Afghanistan, there would be no 9/11.”

JIM HANSON: TRUMP’S TALIBAN PEACE DEAL IS RIGHT MOVE — AFTER ALMOST 20 YEARS IT’S TIME TO EXIT AFGHANISTAN

After nearly two decades of conflict, the United States and the Taliban signed a peace agreement Saturday that is aimed at ending America’s longest war and will bring U.S. troops home more than 18 years after they invaded in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

The deal, which was signed by chief negotiators and witnessed by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in Doha, Qatar, could see the withdrawal of all American and allied forces in the next 14 months and allow the president to keep one of his key 2016 campaign pledges to extract the U.S. from an “endless war.”

From left, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets with Qatar’s Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani before a peace signing ceremony between the U.S. and the Taliban in Doha on Saturday, Feb. 29, 2020. The U.S. is poised to sign a peace agreement with Taliban militants on Saturday aimed at bringing an end to 18 years of bloodshed in Afghanistan and allowing U.S. troops to return home from America’s longest war. (Giuseppe Cacace/Pool photo via AP)

Under the deal, the U.S. would draw its forces down to 8,600 from 13,000 in the next three to four months — a number Graham told the “Friends Weekend” hosts was “enough.” A complete retraction would depend on the Taliban’s ability to meet its promises.

Another condition of the agreement calls for the release of 5,000 Taliban members from Afghan-run jails, although it was not clear if the Afghan government will comply with that.

Additionally, a senior administration official told reporters earlier this week that the deal “explicitly mentions al Qaeda” and calls for the Taliban to cut all ties.

“Today, we are realistic,” Pompeo told reporters. “We are seizing the best opportunity for peace in a generation.”

To date, according to The Associated Press, the United States has spent nearly $1 trillion in Afghanistan and more than 3,500 U.S. and coalition soldiers have died there. More than 2,400 of them were Americans.

Saturday’s agreement sets the stage for March 10 intra-Afghan talks in Oslo, with the aim of forming a power-sharing agreement between rival Afghan groups.

Pompeo said that while “the chapter of American history on the Taliban is written in blood,” the pact represented “the best opportunity for peace in a generation.”

Simultaneously, U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani signed a joint statement committing the Afghan government to support the U.S.-Taliban deal.

However, not everyone was on board with the move.

Former National Security Adviser John Bolton attacked his former boss’s historic treaty, arguing it posed an “unacceptable risk to American civilians.”

“Signing this agreement with Taliban is an unacceptable risk to America’s civilian population,” Bolton tweeted on Saturday.

“This is an Obama-style deal,” he wrote, referring to Trump’s predecessor. “Legitimizing Taliban sends the wrong signal to ISIS and al Qaeda terrorists, and to America’s enemies generally.”

President Donald Trump speaks about the coronavirus in the press briefing room at the White House, Saturday, Feb. 29, 2020, in Washington as Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Dr. Anthony Fauci, Vice President Mike Pence, Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams listen. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

In a news conference Saturday afternoon, the president hailed the deal and said he would be personally meeting leaders of the Taliban in the near future.

In addition, Trump said that Afghanistan’s neighbors should help maintain stability following the agreement.

Many expect the forthcoming intra-Afghan talks to be more complicated than the initial deal, but the president said he thought the negotiations would be a success because “everyone is tired of war.”

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

“The Taliban are part of Afghanistan. The Taliban didn’t attack us on 9/11, but they set the conditions for us to be attacked. They are very radical in their philosophy, but they don’t want to govern the world — they just want to take over Afghanistan,” Graham remarked.

“So, here’s what’s going to happen,” he said, “We’re going to have a negotiation with the Taliban who is at 15 percent approval, with the rest of Afghanistan. I’m looking for reconciliation that protects the rights of women and I’m looking for residual American force to stay in Afghanistan for a long time to make sure that ISIS-K and Al Qaeda never come back.”

“So, it is in our interests to have a footprint,” he concluded.

Fox News’ Paulina Dedaj, Sam Dorman, and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/lindsey-graham-us-taliban-peace-deal-pompeo-trump

America should give the peace agreement with the Taliban a chance, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said Saturday.

In an interview on “Fox & Friends Weekend” with hosts Dean Cain, Pete Hegseth and Jedidiah Bila, Graham said he will believe there is peace when he sees it, but he wants to applaud President Trump for getting the Taliban to the table.

“Let’s give it a try,” he urged. “Eighteen years is a long time, but you’ve gotta remember why we still talk about Afghanistan… That’s the place where the Al Qaeda was invited in by the Taliban as their honored guests to attack us. Without a safe haven in Afghanistan, there would be no 9/11.”

JIM HANSON: TRUMP’S TALIBAN PEACE DEAL IS RIGHT MOVE — AFTER ALMOST 20 YEARS IT’S TIME TO EXIT AFGHANISTAN

After nearly two decades of conflict, the United States and the Taliban signed a peace agreement Saturday that is aimed at ending America’s longest war and will bring U.S. troops home more than 18 years after they invaded in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

The deal, which was signed by chief negotiators and witnessed by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in Doha, Qatar, could see the withdrawal of all American and allied forces in the next 14 months and allow the president to keep one of his key 2016 campaign pledges to extract the U.S. from an “endless war.”

From left, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets with Qatar’s Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani before a peace signing ceremony between the U.S. and the Taliban in Doha on Saturday, Feb. 29, 2020. The U.S. is poised to sign a peace agreement with Taliban militants on Saturday aimed at bringing an end to 18 years of bloodshed in Afghanistan and allowing U.S. troops to return home from America’s longest war. (Giuseppe Cacace/Pool photo via AP)

Under the deal, the U.S. would draw its forces down to 8,600 from 13,000 in the next three to four months — a number Graham told the “Friends Weekend” hosts was “enough.” A complete retraction would depend on the Taliban’s ability to meet its promises.

Another condition of the agreement calls for the release of 5,000 Taliban members from Afghan-run jails, although it was not clear if the Afghan government will comply with that.

Additionally, a senior administration official told reporters earlier this week that the deal “explicitly mentions al Qaeda” and calls for the Taliban to cut all ties.

“Today, we are realistic,” Pompeo told reporters. “We are seizing the best opportunity for peace in a generation.”

To date, according to The Associated Press, the United States has spent nearly $1 trillion in Afghanistan and more than 3,500 U.S. and coalition soldiers have died there. More than 2,400 of them were Americans.

Saturday’s agreement sets the stage for March 10 intra-Afghan talks in Oslo, with the aim of forming a power-sharing agreement between rival Afghan groups.

Pompeo said that while “the chapter of American history on the Taliban is written in blood,” the pact represented “the best opportunity for peace in a generation.”

Simultaneously, U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani signed a joint statement committing the Afghan government to support the U.S.-Taliban deal.

However, not everyone was on board with the move.

Former National Security Adviser John Bolton attacked his former boss’s historic treaty, arguing it posed an “unacceptable risk to American civilians.”

“Signing this agreement with Taliban is an unacceptable risk to America’s civilian population,” Bolton tweeted on Saturday.

“This is an Obama-style deal,” he wrote, referring to Trump’s predecessor. “Legitimizing Taliban sends the wrong signal to ISIS and al Qaeda terrorists, and to America’s enemies generally.”

President Donald Trump speaks about the coronavirus in the press briefing room at the White House, Saturday, Feb. 29, 2020, in Washington as Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Dr. Anthony Fauci, Vice President Mike Pence, Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams listen. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

In a news conference Saturday afternoon, the president hailed the deal and said he would be personally meeting leaders of the Taliban in the near future.

In addition, Trump said that Afghanistan’s neighbors should help maintain stability following the agreement.

Many expect the forthcoming intra-Afghan talks to be more complicated than the initial deal, but the president said he thought the negotiations would be a success because “everyone is tired of war.”

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

“The Taliban are part of Afghanistan. The Taliban didn’t attack us on 9/11, but they set the conditions for us to be attacked. They are very radical in their philosophy, but they don’t want to govern the world — they just want to take over Afghanistan,” Graham remarked.

“So, here’s what’s going to happen,” he said, “We’re going to have a negotiation with the Taliban who is at 15 percent approval, with the rest of Afghanistan. I’m looking for reconciliation that protects the rights of women and I’m looking for residual American force to stay in Afghanistan for a long time to make sure that ISIS-K and Al Qaeda never come back.”

“So, it is in our interests to have a footprint,” he concluded.

Fox News’ Paulina Dedaj, Sam Dorman, and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/lindsey-graham-us-taliban-peace-deal-pompeo-trump

For the twice-married Mr. Johnson, whose private life is as untidy as his appearance, news that he is again becoming a father inspired a fit of good-natured humor on social media. With four children from his second marriage and possibly at least one from an extramarital relationship, the exact number of Mr. Johnson’s progeny remains somewhat mysterious.

“Congratulations Boris Johnson on your 5th or 6th kid,” said one wit on Twitter. “Congratulations to Boris Johnson on his 4th, 8th or 17th child,” another chimed in.

During a radio interview in 2019, Mr. Johnson declined to say how many children he had. He also deflected a question about whether he and Ms. Symonds, with whom he had been romantically linked since last year, planned to start a family.

But he waxed enthusiastically in another interview about the beneficial effects that leaving the European Union would have on Britain’s birthrate. He predicted that Brexit would bring a surge in births similar to what he claimed happened when London hosted the Olympics in 2012, when he was the city’s mayor.

“Cupid’s darts will fly once we get Brexit done,” he said in an interview with the Sunday Times of London last year. “Romance will bloom across the whole nation. There was one after the Olympics, as I correctly prophesied in a speech in 2012.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/29/world/europe/boris-johnson-baby.html

BOSTON – Four miles from the Cambridge home of Elizabeth Warren, more than 10,000 people turned out in freezing temperatures Saturday for an outdoor Bernie Sanders rally at Boston Common, three days before Massachusetts’ 91 delegates are up for grabs on Super Tuesday.

With former Vice President Joe Biden the favorite to win Saturday’s South Carolina Democratic presidential primary, Sanders looked ahead to Super Tuesday, where he has an opportunity to build a significant overall delegate lead. He was in Springfield, Massachusetts, Friday night and will be in Virginia on Saturday evening before heading to Los Angeles on Sunday.

“As some of you may know, the establishment is getting very nervous about our campaign,” said Sanders, an independent U.S. senator from Vermont, taking the stage after musician Béla Fleck warmed up the crowd with the banjo. “And tonight, they’re going to turn on the TV and they’re going to find that 10,000 people came out to the Boston Common, and they’re going to become even more nervous.”

The Sanders campaign later said more than 13,000 people attended.

South Carolina primary:Pivotal South Carolina could reshape the Democratic race heading into Super Tuesday

In Massachusetts, Sanders is going for a knockout punch against Warren, a U.S. senator from the state, and delegates that once seemed improbable given her home-state advantage. But Sanders, the national Democratic frontrunner, has surged into first place in recent Massachusetts polls, topping Warren 25% to 17% in a survey released Friday by WBUR. They were followed by Pete Buttigeig, 14%; Mike Bloomberg, 13%; and Biden, 9%.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2020/02/29/bernie-sanders-boston-crowd-rally-elizabeth-warren/4914884002/

Surrounded by officials, including Vice President Mike Pence, President Trump speaks Saturday afternoon from the White Hosue about the administration’s coronavirus response.

Alex Wong/Getty Images


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Alex Wong/Getty Images

Surrounded by officials, including Vice President Mike Pence, President Trump speaks Saturday afternoon from the White Hosue about the administration’s coronavirus response.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Democratic presidential hopefuls have stepped up their criticism of President Trump’s handling of the coronavirus, accusing his administration of “incompetence.”

The president has noticed. Speaking to supporters Friday night in South Carolina, he accused his Democratic rivals of using the virus for political ends.

“The Democrats are politicizing the coronavirus,” Trump said. “One of my people came up to me and said, ‘Mr. President, they tried to beat you on Russia, Russia, Russia.’ That did not work out too well. They could not do it. They tried the impeachment hoax. … They tried anything. … And this is their new hoax.”

During the rally, Trump said “the best professionals in the world” were working on the nation’s response to the virus.

Trump then held a news conference Saturday, after the first U.S. coronavirus death was confirmed in Washington state. Trump said a woman in her late 50s has died from a coronavirus infection. (Washington state public health officials later said the person who died was a man.) At the news conference, the Trump administration announced new travel restrictions and advisories for Iran, Italy and South Korea; and that the U.S. government has contracted with the company 3M to produce 35 million more face masks per month.

Responding to a reporter’s question about his use of the word “hoax” the night before, Trump said: ” ‘hoax’ referring to the action that [Democrats] take to try and pin this on somebody because we’ve done such a good job. The hoax is on them.”

What the Democrats have said

The South Carolina primary is Saturday. At a campaign event Saturday morning in Greensville, S.C., former Vice President Joe Biden said it was “bizarre” and “dangerous” for Trump to have used the word “hoax” at all.

In an interview Friday with CNN, Biden said the Trump administration should defer to the experts. “Let the experts take this over,” Biden said. “Everyone will have more confidence.” One reason stock prices are falling, Biden said, “is not just the pandemic concern, but the way in which the president is handling this.”

At every stop in South Carolina on Friday, Vermont Sen Bernie Sanders blasted Trump for focusing on politics instead of the growing coronavirus threat.

“Everybody knows there is a coronavirus spreading all over the world,” Sanders said at his first stop of the day, at a church in St. George.

“You would think that you’d have a president of the United States leading, working with scientists all over the world, bringing people together to figure out how we’re gonna deal with this crisis. He is here in South Carolina,” said Sanders, ahead of the Trump campaign rally later that night in Charleston. “He doesn’t even have any opposition in the Republican primary. Why is he here? He’s here to try and disrupt the Democratic primary.”

The Sanders campaign has also released statements criticizing the Trump administration’s response to the growing public health and economic threat as “inadequate, misleading, and dangerous.”

The concerns appeared to be shared by some voters. A handful of Sanders supporters at rallies Friday were spotted wearing protective face masks.

At campaign stops across Tennessee on Friday, billionaire and former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg repeatedly attacked Trump’s management and blamed the president for the upheaval in the stock market.

“The coronavirus has already arrived here in America, and make no mistake: The incompetence in the White House is endangering lives and hurting our economy,” Bloomberg said, accusing Trump of “burying his head in the sand” when he was first briefed on the issue two months ago.

For Bloomberg, who took office three months after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, it’s also a way to remind primary voters concerned about a possible pandemic, or economic unrest, that he was a competent manager in times of crisis.

“In times like this we need strong, proven leadership in the White House,” he said. Bloomberg plans to air a three-minute-long video on CBS and NBC during commercial airtime Sunday night to discuss the virus, and the importance of having a president who can respond appropriately to such crises.

“This can’t be about politics. We’ve got to have leadership that puts the input of public health experts first,” former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg told CNN Friday.”I don’t know where the president got the idea that this is something that could just take care of itself when it got warmer. This is going to take sustained coordination, both within and across the federal government and the interagency; between the federal government and the private sector as there is a race to find new therapies and perhaps a vaccine; and internationally, among all of the different authorities and countries, that must be tightly coordinating the response to this issue.”

Billionaire hedge fund investor and climate activist Tom Steyer has been making increasingly dire warnings about the threat posed by the coronavirus, during his final sprint across the state of South Carolina ahead of the primary.

Steyer has repeatedly said that Trump’s response is an indicator of his “incompetence in a neon sign” and said that Trump is “months late to do anything.” He also faulted Trump for “clearing out the Centers for Disease Control [and Protection].”

But at a packed event in Myrtle Beach, S.C., his warning was more dire.

“He’s just discovering two months later, ‘Whoa, this could hurt my reelection attempts,’ ” Steyer said. “That’s how superficial a man he really is. He is incompetent. This is his Katrina event, where it’s like ‘Whoa, I have to do a job?’ Who knew?”

Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar has also faulted Trump for proposing to cut funding for the CDC.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., on Thursday introduced legislation that would redirect $10 billion of border wall funding to fight the coronavirus.

“Rather than use taxpayer dollars to pay for a monument to hate and division, my bill will help ensure that the federal government has the resources it needs to adequately respond to this emergency,” Warren said in a statement.

Warren accused Trump of failing to direct “significant financial resources” to the coronavirus response. The administration has asked Congress for $2.5 billion to combat the virus; many lawmakers feel that’s not enough, and have proposed doubling or even tripling that amount.

The White House acting chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, accused the press on Friday of playing up the coronavirus story because “they think this is going to be the thing that brings down the president.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/02/29/810713730/democratic-candidates-step-up-criticism-of-trumps-handling-of-coronavirus

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump said Friday he will nominate Rep. John Ratcliffe to become Director of National Intelligence, just six months after the Texas congressman took his name out of the running for the job.

“I am pleased to announce the nomination of @RepRatcliffe(Congressman John Ratcliffe) to be Director of National Intelligence (DNI),” Trump wrote on Twitter while en route to South Carolina for a political rally.

Trump said the nomination process would have been completed earlier, but Ratcliffe wanted to wait until an inspector general’s report was completed on how the FBI handled an investigation into whether Trump’s presidential campaign coordinated with Russia.

“John is an outstanding man of great talent!” Trump wrote.

Trump’s announcement that he had settled on Ratcliffe for the top spy job comes just two weeks after he tapped Richard Grenell to serve as acting director. That decision stirred concern because Grenell, a Trump loyalist who has been serving as U.S. ambassador to Germany, has no intelligence experience.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/02/28/trump-picks-rep-john-ratcliffe-director-national-intelligence/4908127002/

During a rally in South Carolina on Friday evening, Trump accused Democrats of using the deadly virus as a means to harm him politically, likening it to the Russia investigation and impeachment probes that have consumed his presidency.

“The Democrats are politicizing the coronavirus. They’re politicizing it,” Trump told his supporters. “One of my people came up to me and said, ‘Mr. President, they tried to beat you on Russia, Russia, Russia.’ That did not work out too well. They could not do it. They tried the impeachment hoax.”

Biden, who has previously been critical of the Trump administration’s handling of the virus, added that the government’s scientists should have more control in responding to the crisis.

The New York Times reported on Thursday that health officials would have to coordinate all of their statements and appearances through Mike Pence’s office after the vice president was tapped by Trump to oversee the government’s response to the outbreak.

“Look, this is a serious, serious, serious problem. It’s able to be solved, but it requires us to be absolutely levelheaded and let the scientists have the lead in all of this,” the former vice president said Saturday. “But for him to stop and start talking about being a hoax is absolutely dangerous. It’s just not a decent way to act.”

The coronavirus has infected nearly 85,000 people worldwide, mostly in China. The death toll stands at more than 2,900.

Marc Caputo contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/02/29/joe-biden-trump-coronavirus-118302

President Donald Trump on Saturday said his administration was also considering travel restrictions at the U.S.-Mexico border, after his administration announced new restrictions on travel to Iran and heightened advisories for areas in South Korea and Italy as the coronavirus spreads. 

“We are thinking about the southern border, ” Trump said, speaking during a press conference at the White House. “We are looking at that very strongly.”

Trump’s comments come after the news agency Reuters reported the White House was considering shutting the border with Mexico to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, although there are only 3 confirmed cases there.  The United States, on the other hand, has confirmed 66 cases of the illness. 

Trump appeared to roll back his previous statement when asked why he was considering taking action on the southern border given how few cases of the coronavirus there are in Mexico at the moment. 

“We’re thinking about all borders, we have to think about that border,” Trump said. “This is not a border that seems to be much of a problem right now, we hope we will not have to do that.” 

This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/02/29/trump-considering-travel-restrictions-at-us-southern-border-over-coronavirus.html

Members of the Taliban delegation gather ahead of Saturday’s signing ceremony with the United States in the Qatari capital of Doha.

Giuseppe Cacace/AFP via Getty Images


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Giuseppe Cacace/AFP via Getty Images

Members of the Taliban delegation gather ahead of Saturday’s signing ceremony with the United States in the Qatari capital of Doha.

Giuseppe Cacace/AFP via Getty Images

Updated at 10:22 a.m. ET

The U.S. and the Taliban have struck a deal that paves the way for eventual peace in Afghanistan. U.S. Special Representative Zalmay Khalilzad and the head of the militant Islamist group, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, signed the potentially historic agreement Saturday in Doha, Qatar, where the two sides spent months hashing out its details.

Under the terms of the deal, the U.S. commits to withdrawing all of its military forces and supporting civilian personnel, as well as those of its allies, within 14 months. The drawdown process will begin with the U.S. reducing its troop levels to 8,600 in the first 135 days and pulling its forces from five bases.

The rest of its forces, according to the agreement, will leave “within the remaining nine and a half months.”

The Afghan government also will release up to 5,000 Taliban prisoners as a gesture of goodwill, in exchange for 1,000 Afghan security forces held by the Taliban.

“We owe a debt of gratitude to America’s sons and daughters who paid the ultimate sacrifice in Afghanistan, and to the many thousands who served over the past nearly 19 years,” Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in a statement celebrating the deal, which comes on the heels of a seven-day “Reduction in Violence” agreement in Afghanistan.

“The only responsible way to end the war in Afghanistan is through a negotiated political settlement. Today is a reflection of the hard work of our Nation’s military, the U.S. Department of State, intelligence professionals, and our valued partners,” he added. “The United States is committed to the Afghan people, and to ensuring that Afghanistan never becomes a safe haven for terrorists to threaten our homeland and our Allies.”

The U.S. intends, along with members of the United Nations Security Council, to “remove members of the Taliban from the sanctions list with the aim of achieving this objective by May 29, 2020” — and Washington, in particular, aims to remove the group from U.S. sanctions by Aug 27, 2020.

The U.S. has pledged to seek the Security Council’s recognition and endorsement of the plan.

The Afghan government will also begin negotiations with the Taliban to map out a political settlement which would establish the role the Taliban would play in a future Afghanistan. These negotiations are expected to start next month. One of the first tasks in these intra-Afghan talks will be to achieve a lasting ceasefire in Afghanistan.

Separately, in Kabul, Afghanistan, U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper and NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg signed a joint declaration with the Afghan government — represented by President Ashraf Ghani — that commits the Afghans to these up-coming negotiations with the Taliban and to provide Afghanistan with security guarantees as this process unfolds.

The deal signed Saturday has been 18 months in the making.

There were nine rounds of on-again, off-again talks in Doha — the Qatari capital where the Taliban maintains an office — which began in 2018. The U.S. and Taliban had reached an agreement last summer, but President Trump walked away from those talks after a U.S. service member was killed in a September car bombing in the Afghan capital, Kabul.

Only the U.S., led by its chief representative, Khalilzad, and the Taliban have taken part in the negotiations, an arrangement that New York University’s Barnett Rubin says was designed by the Taliban and resisted until recently by the U.S.

“Since 2010 [the Taliban] always insisted there would be two stages: international and then intra-Afghan,” says Rubin, who served from 2009-2013 as special advisor to the State Department’s Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan and now directs the Afghanistan Pakistan Regional Program at NYU’s Center on International Cooperation.

The Taliban’s rule in Afghanistan, which lasted just five years, ended abruptly with the invasion of a U.S.-led military coalition shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Their overthrow was a reprisal for having harbored Osama bin Laden, the leader of al-Qaida, whose militants hijacked and crashed four American airliners in those attacks.

President Trump has repeatedly vowed to end America’s involvement in the war in Afghanistan, the most prolonged of all U.S. conflicts. Within months of assuming the presidency, though, Trump added 4,000 U.S. troops to the 8,900 American forces already deployed there.

More than 2,400 Americans have died in Afghanistan during nearly 18 years of fighting, at an estimated cost to the U.S. Treasury of nearly $1 trillion. In recent years, despite the surge in troop levels, the Taliban have fought U.S. and Afghan forces to what Milley has called “a state of strategic stalemate.”

This past month has seen less bloodshed than usual in the country, as Taliban fighters promised to suspend major attacks and U.S. forces agreed to suspend offensive operations — except attacks against Islamic State insurgents — during the recent weeklong “reduction in violence” period.

“We have seen just these last six days a significant reduction in violence in Afghanistan,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told the House Committee on Foreign Affairs on Friday, shortly before flying to the Doha signing ceremony. Earlier in the week, Pompeo called the partial truce “imperfect,” but said “it’s working.”

Here are some of the key elements in that political resolution:

1. A withdrawal of U.S. troops

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, left, meets with Qatari Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani ahead of Saturday’s signing ceremony between the U.S. and the Taliban in Qatar’s capital, Doha.

Giuseppe Cacace/AFP via Getty Images


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Giuseppe Cacace/AFP via Getty Images

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, left, meets with Qatari Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani ahead of Saturday’s signing ceremony between the U.S. and the Taliban in Qatar’s capital, Doha.

Giuseppe Cacace/AFP via Getty Images

The success of February’s seven-day partial truce has been seen as a crucial first step to the eventual withdrawal of U.S. troops, with aspirations for a full pullout contingent on the Taliban’s “performance” over the coming months, according to a senior State Department official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

“Part of the process of making peace is to begin to take down the edifice [of sanctions], but the language is carefully constructed to be conditional, depending on Taliban performance,” says the official. “If the Taliban don’t do what we hope they’ll do, our requirements to begin to take down that edifice are vitiated.”

Michael O’Hanlon, a Brookings Institution scholar and longtime supporter of the U.S. intervention in Afghanistan, points out that the initial drawdown brings the troop levels back to roughly the same number that were in the country under President Obama.

“So, it’s not a huge change,” O’Hanlon tells NPR. “It’s just a reduction from the sort of mini-Trump buildup.”

He warns this agreement cannot repeat what the U.S. signed with the North Vietnamese in the 1973 Paris peace talks, “where we basically take on faith that the enemy is going to behave itself once we’re gone.”

A senior Afghan official tells NPR that the U.S. forces that do remain would focus on the three missions they are currently carrying out: counter-terrorism operations, training of Afghan forces and air support for Afghan ground forces.

A drawdown of the approximately 7,000 forces from other NATO member states in Afghanistan would take place in tandem with the departure of U.S. troops.

2. A commitment by the Taliban to end support for U.S.-deemed “terrorist organizations”

U.S. officials insist the troop withdrawal timeline will depend primarily on one condition: the degree to which the Taliban fulfills its commitment in the peace deal not to allow Afghanistan to be used as a base of operations by insurgencies such as al-Qaida and the Islamic State.

“The Taliban must respect the agreement, specifically regarding their promises of severing ties with terrorists,” Pompeo said earlier this week at the State Department. “We have our deep counterterrorism interest there, making sure that the homeland is never attacked. It’s one of the central underpinnings of what President Trump has laid before us.”

The Taliban’s renunciation of ties with al-Qaida, though, may be more easily said than done.

“This is a complex issue because the Haqqani network is often seen as a strong affiliate of al-Qaida and it’s also part of the Taliban leadership,” says O’Hanlon. “So we don’t really quite know what that means, but presumably, core al-Qaida and the Taliban would not be allowed to speak [to each other] and we would be listening with all of our electronic capabilities to make sure that was the case.”

The Haqqani network is one of Afghanistan’s most experienced insurgent groups, long thought to be responsible for some of the more sophisticated and large scale attacks, especially in Kabul. Its leader, Sirajuddin Haqqani, is the Taliban’s current deputy and recently penned an op-ed in the The New York Times.

The State Department recognizes there are concerns about the Taliban’s historical bonds with al-Qaida.

“We think this is a decisive and historic first step in terms of their public acknowledgment that they are breaking ties with al-Qaida,” says one official. “That’s going to be a work in progress.”

Just as the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan is the Taliban’s main demand in this agreement, the U.S. has made the Taliban’s forswearing of ties to other insurgencies its top ask.

“We went into Afghanistan with NATO after 9/11 because of the threat to the United States and our allies,” the State Department official says. “We are still there because we are concerned about the terrorist threat.”

But one former senior U.S. official suggests the Trump administration may be exaggerating that threat.

“In my estimation, we have largely achieved our counter-terrorism objective today. Al-Qaida is much diminished in Afghanistan and Pakistan, with most of its senior leaders killed and those who remain marginalized,” retired Army Gen. Douglas Lute, who served as point man for the Afghan war effort in both the Bush and Obama White Houses, recently wrote in prepared Congressional testimony.

“There is a branch of the so-called Islamic State in Afghanistan, but I have seen no evidence that it presents a threat to the U.S. and it is under pressure from the Afghans, including from the Taliban.”

3. Maintaining a communications channel

Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, the Taliban’s former ambassador to Pakistan, speaks to the press ahead of Saturday’s signing ceremony with the United States in Qatar.

Giuseppe Cacace/AFP via Getty Images


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Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, the Taliban’s former ambassador to Pakistan, speaks to the press ahead of Saturday’s signing ceremony with the United States in Qatar.

Giuseppe Cacace/AFP via Getty Images

The U.S. and the Taliban are expected to continue the lines of communications they have already established during the talks in Doha, both to support implementation of the agreement and to de-conflict their respective military operations against ISIS in eastern Afghanistan.

Suspicions that there was a secret annex to the deal that also involved sharing intelligence with the Taliban prompted a cautionary letter to Pompeo and Defense Secretary Mark Esper this week from 22 House Republicans. They demanded that any deal between the U.S. and the Taliban be made public with no secret annexes or side deals, including one for intelligence sharing or a joint counterterrorism center with the Taliban.

“This would be a farce,” the lawmakers wrote, “and put American lives at risk.”

A State Department official on Thursday denied the U.S. was entering into any kind of “cooperative partnership” with the Taliban.

4. Prisoner swaps

The exchange of prisoners between the Afghan government and the Taliban is intended as a way of building trust between the two sides.

A State Department official expressed admiration for the care Taliban leaders have shown for freeing their fighters, adding: “The agreement makes explicit that those who are released need to make commitments that they won’t go back to the battlefield and that they will support the agreement.”

While noting the need for early action on releasing prisoners to build confidence among the Taliban in the peace process, the official said both the numbers of prisoners and the timeline for their release are “aspirational” and will depend on “Taliban performance.”

5. Intra-party talks among Afghans

A second phase of the peace process would bring together Afghan government officials, opposition figures, civil society representatives and the Taliban to discuss a political road map for bringing an end to the war.

The talks are expected to take place in Oslo, Norway, to begin around mid-March. The U.S. will be present along with others, including Germany, Indonesia and the U.N., but only in the role of supporting and facilitating the talks.

“It’s not like the Taliban are endlessly evil or that this will bring flowers and roses and doves overnight,” says one U.S. official. “We’ve reached a point where there’s a critical mass on all sides where people want to change, want a better future, want a better option, and our job is to continue to create the incentives, continue to create the momentum for people to move forward and change the negative trajectory.”

A host of difficult issues are to be addressed in the intra-Afghan talks, including:

a. A long-term cease-fire

The reduction in violence of the past week is intended to be a step toward an overall cessation of hostilities to be worked out in Oslo.

“The agreement explicitly calls on the Taliban to sit down with the other Afghans in the intra-Afghan negotiations, where they will discuss the modalities and the timing of a comprehensive and permanent cease-fire,” says a State Department official. “There’s a lot of mistrust, decades of fighting, so it’s not going to be easy.”

This would likely entail a dismantling of the Taliban’s military force with the aim of either demobilizing or integrating its members into the Afghan security forces — a goal O’Hanlon considers daunting.

“I think the only realistic way to handle the security forces is that you keep all the different forces more or less in place,” he says. “The Taliban continue to hold the parts of the country where they’re most influential in certain rural areas, the Afghan army and police control the cities and major highways, and maybe there’s a U.N. observation force making sure they don’t fight each other.”

b. Power sharing

Yet to be determined is the role the Taliban might play in Afghanistan’s political future.

The nation continues to roil over results of the disputed September presidential election. Ghani was declared the winner in mid-February. But that result is not recognized by his challenger, Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah, and a planned swearing-in of Ghani for a second term has been postponed until March 10, at the request of the U.S.

“You have a very fragmented country right now within Afghanistan, even apart from the Taliban and the central government who are clearly at war,” says Bahar Jalali, who directs the women’s mentoring program at the American University of Afghanistan.

“There’s a lot of consternation with the Taliban coming back and re-emerging as viable political actors. What’s going to happen with that?”

c. Women’s rights

After women were prohibited under Taliban rule from attending school, working or appearing in public without a male relative as escort, they’ve won back those rights and gained others in areas no longer dominated by the Taliban.

In his opinion piece last week, Haqqani, the deputy Taliban leader, appeared to play down concerns that women would lose their restored freedoms.

“I am confident that, liberated from foreign domination and interference, we together will find a way to build an Islamic system in which all Afghans have equal rights,” Haqqani wrote, “where the rights of women that are granted by Islam — from the right to education to the right to work — are protected, and where merit is the basis for equal opportunity.”

But many are skeptical of the Taliban’s intentions and doubt such assurances.

“We saw what the Taliban’s version of Islam looked like in the late 1990s and early 2000s, right before the U.S. military intervention,” says Jalali. “That gives nobody any good sense of comfort about the Taliban upholding the rights of women under Islamic law.”

Jalali fears the U.S. is simply looking for a way out of Afghanistan before November’s election.

“That really speaks to Trump’s burning desire to exit from Afghanistan and to say, hey, I ended the Forever War, you know, I can claim credit for that,” she says. “I keep saying [it’s a] low threshold for peace and a low threshold for ending the war.”

For O’Hanlon, the Doha peace agreement is only a start.

“It’s a tiny step forward,” he says. “It’s a good step forward, but it doesn’t really mean that phase two or round two is going to follow naturally.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/02/29/810537586/u-s-signs-peace-deal-with-taliban-after-nearly-2-decades-of-war-in-afghanistan

When former Vice President Joe Biden proclaimed “I will win South Carolina,” at Tuesday’s Democratic debate in Charleston, it wasn’t just braggadocio — all of the most recent South Carolina polls suggest he’s right.

In fact, nearly every poll taken in February found Biden to have a sizable lead on his fellow candidates.

For instance, in a Monmouth University telephone poll of 454 likely Democratic primary voters taken just ahead of that debate — from February 23 to 25 — Biden had a 20 percentage-point lead on his nearest rival in the state, Sen. Bernie Sanders. (Sanders is still considered the frontrunner in the race nationally.)

Overall, that poll found Biden to have 36 percent support in the state; Sanders nearly tied with entrepreneur Tom Steyer, with 16 and 15 percent support, respectively; Sen. Elizabeth Warren in fourth with 8 percent support; and former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg and Sen. Amy Klobuchar with 6 and 4 percent support, respectively. The only other candidate on the Democratic ballot Saturday, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, had 1 percent support.

The Monmouth poll does have a 4.6 percentage point margin of error, but that margin is small enough to protect Biden’s lead. It could, however, mean that the race for second is even closer than it appears, with either Steyer, Sanders, or Warren occupying the number two spot.

While a number of other recent polls found similar results — a February 17-25 poll from Clemson University found the former vice president to have an 18 percentage point lead and a February 26-27 Emerson College survey a 16 percentage-point lead — Biden’s lead isn’t quite that strong across the board.

A Post and Courier poll of 543 likely primary voters taken February 23-27, for example, saw Biden only 4 percentage points ahead of Sanders, at 28 percent support to the senator’s 24 (with Steyer and Warren again in third and fourth). Unlike the Monmouth results, Biden’s lead in this poll is within its 5.1 percentage point margin of error.

All these polls suggest Biden will likely win the South Carolina primary, and that the only question is what his margin of victory will be.

That’s good news for Biden, who has had disappointing finishes in 2020 Democratic primary contests thus far. Once the national frontrunner, he finished fourth in the Iowa caucuses, fifth in the New Hampshire primary, and a distant second in the Nevada caucuses.

He is counting on South Carolina to reverse that trend, allowing him to pick up much-needed pledged delegates (Sanders currently has a 30 delegate lead on him), and — ahead of Super Tuesday’s 14 primaries and one caucus — change the narrative around his campaign. A big win in South Carolina would be the most powerful argument the Biden campaign could make that he’s the candidate best suited to unite Democrats’ diverse base as the party prepares to take on President Donald Trump in the fall.

South Carolina is seen as a test of candidates’ ability to win over black voters

South Carolina is the first state in the Democratic primary calendar in which the majority of the electorate is black, and as such is typically seen as a test of candidates’ black support. It is a particularly important test for Biden, who has long said this key Democratic demographic makes up an important part of his base.

“All I know is, I am leading everybody, combined, with black voters,” Biden said at Vice News presidential forum in late January. “Name me anybody who has remotely close to the support I have in the African American community nationally.”

Joe Biden takes a selfie with black supporters in Columbia, South Carolina.
Sean Rayford/Getty Images

It is true that Biden’s black national support seemed unassailable in January, but that has changed in recent weeks according to a FiveThirtyEight analysis, with his average advantage over Sanders among that demographic now less than 10 percentage points. And as Vox’s Li Zhou reports, there’s a generational divide in Biden’s support — older black voters are much more likely to back him.

Still, in South Carolina, the former vice president is leading among black voters as a whole — an East Carolina University (ECU) poll taken February 23-24, for instance, found 34 percent of likely African American primary voters supported Biden, compared to the 24 percent who supported Steyer, and the 22 percent who supported Sanders. (The poll has a margin of error of 3.37 percentage points.)

Buttigieg and Klobuchar have struggled to win black support so far — and it would appear they continue to do so in South Carolina. ECU found Buttigieg to have just over 2 percent support from black voters, while Klobuchar received 0.4 percent.

Given that South Carolina’s electorate is 60 percent black, these numbers present serious challenges for both candidates. (They also present strategic and narrative concerns for both campaigns down the road — more on that later.)

Warren, whose base of support also tends to be less diverse, is doing slightly better than Klobuchar or Buttigieg among black South Carolina Democrats — her black support in the ECU poll was about 6 percent. Again, however, such a level of support means it will be difficult for her to compete with Biden, Sanders, and Steyer for delegates.

The frontrunners in South Carolina are Biden, Sanders, and Steyer

The vice president’s confidence about his chances Saturday is in marked contrast to how he described some of the previous races. He admitted during the New Hampshire primary debate that he fully expected to lose that state’s primary, saying, “I took a hit in Iowa, and I’ll probably take a hit here,” and didn’t bother to stick around to watch the results come in with his supporters. Instead, he left — for South Carolina.

It was a signal of just how important the state is to Biden’s campaign — in fact, Anton Gunn, Barack Obama’s 2008 South Carolina political director, told Vox’s Li Zhou that South Carolina is literally make-or-break for the former vice president.

“If Joe Biden wins by a small margin, then I think his campaign is on life support,” Gunn said. “If he comes in second or worse, I think he’s done.”

How large a margin Biden might win by depends on the poll one is looking at, but polling averages suggest a Biden victory could be the largest percentage-point win of the 2020 primary cycle so far — RealClearPolitics’ polling average puts him 12.6 percentage points ahead of Sanders.

RealClearPolitics’ 2020 South Carolina Democratic primary polling average, which shows a sizable Biden lead.
RealClearPolitics

The polls are clear — Biden is the state race’s frontrunner. And he received an important boost Wednesday: an endorsement from Rep. James Clyburn, one of Congress’s most powerful black Democrats — and a man seen as a kingmaker in the state.

Sanders has nevertheless gained ground in the state in recent weeks — his RealClearPolitics polling average spiked on February 12, the day after he won the New Hampshire primary.

Richland County vice director Dalhi Myers, who began the primary cycle a Biden backer and now supports Sanders, told Zhou that Sanders’s successes so far (he also won in Nevada) have captured the attention of many South Carolina Democrats.

“People aren’t going to vote for someone who can’t win,” Myers said. “If you’re the most electable, you’re going to have to get elected somewhere.”

One particular difficulty for Sanders is that polling suggests he will not be able to rely on what has been a key demographic for him in past contests — young voters. In New Hampshire, for instance, Sanders received more of the youth vote than all of his rivals combined. But Monmouth’s work found 31 percent of respondents between the ages of 18 and 49 backed Biden, compared to the 18 percent of 18- to 49-year-olds who said they plan to vote for Sanders. Other polls, like ECU’s, also found Biden leading Sanders among young voters.

Closing Biden’s lead both among young voters, and South Carolina voters generally, will require Sanders to pick up last-minute support from what polls suggest is a significant number of undecided voters. Monmouth’s pollsters, for instance, found 15 percent of likely voters hadn’t yet decided on a candidate as of last Tuesday, and weren’t yet leaning towards anyone.

These undecided voters also present an opportunity for Steyer, who is battling Sanders for second place. South Carolina marks the first contest in which the entrepreneur has been considered a frontrunner, in part because he has invested heavily in the state. He’s spent more than $18 million in advertising in there. And he has been praised for his strong canvassing operation, as well as his practice of hiring black businesses for campaign work.

“If you’re black, you probably get two to three mailers from Steyer a week,” Democratic strategist and former Booker campaign adviser Clay Middleton told Zhou. “I even saw his commercial on the weather channel.”

Tom Steyer speaks with supporters following a February town hall in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

The effort has paid off in the polls for Steyer, but it is not clear it will allow him to do well enough to pick up delegates.

South Carolina’s 54 pledged delegates will be awarded both based on the results statewide and in its seven congressional districts. To get pledged delegates — either statewide or in the congressional districts— a candidate must clear a threshold of at least 15 percent, with 19 delegates available to those who meet that criteria statewide and 35 on offer to those performing well enough on the district level.

Candidates who don’t reach 15 percent support will receive nothing; those who do will split the available delegates proportionally based on their share of the vote.

Whether Steyer clears the 15 percent mark depends on the poll, and his RealClearPolitics polling average is around 14 percent, making it unclear whether he can expect to receive any delegates statewide. His polling would seem to put him in strong contention for receiving delegates on the district level, particularly in districts that play to his strengths. District 6, for instance, has more women than men, a large black population, and a large population with a median income of less than $50,000 — all groups with which Steyer has support approaching 20 percent, according to Monmouth’s work.

Any delegates Steyer receives in South Carolina would be his first. He is unlikely to receive enough to become the frontrunner, but a strong showing could give him enough delegates to surpass Warren’s current total of eight, and would put him in a competitive position for at least some of Super Tuesday’s contests.

South Carolina sets the nation up for Super Tuesday

Super Tuesday is in just three days, and candidates will be competing for 1,344 pledged delegates. Billionaire and former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg will be on the ballot for the first time, and the effect his $500-million advertising campaign will have on the race will become apparent.

But Bloomberg’s impact isn’t the only unknown — it’s also difficult to predict results in a number of primaries due to a lack of polling; Alabama’s last 2020 presidential primary poll, for instance, was taken in July 2019.

That makes South Carolina an important harbinger of contests to come. As my colleague Li Zhou has explained, “Historically, at least four Southern states — Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, and Mississippi — have voted for the same Democratic nominee as South Carolina, giving this candidate a windfall of delegates.”

Should Biden have a decisive win in South Carolina, expect his campaign to regain some of its lost steam, possibly picking up wins in not just those four southern states, but collecting a sizable delegate haul in places like Texas as well. Similarly, a strong showing from Sanders would burnish his frontrunner status, boosting his argument that his coalition is more diverse than his 2016 one. And a better-than-expected showing from Steyer could give him momentum, particularly given he has made considerable financial investments in Super Tuesday states.

While Super Tuesday following so closely on South Carolina’s heels means the state’s winners can expect benefits, it also gives the state’s losers little incentive to drop out, as they hold out hope for quick reversals of fortune.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2020/2/29/21154811/2020-south-carolina-primary-winner-polls

Media captionGreek police fire tear gas at migrants

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says 18,000 migrants have crossed Turkish borders into Europe after the country “opened the doors” for them to travel.

The number is expected to hit 25,000 to 30,000 in the coming days, he said.

Turkey could no longer deal with the amount of people fleeing Syria’s civil war, he added.

Greece says it has blocked thousands of migrants from entering “illegally” from Turkey.

Greek authorities fired tear gas to attempt to disperse the crowds.

Turkey’s decision followed a deadly attack on Turkish troops by Syrian government forces in northern Syria this week.

At least 33 Turkish soldiers were killed in a bombardment in Idlib, the last Syrian province where Syrian rebel groups hold significant territory.

Syrian government forces, supported by Russia, have been trying to retake Idlib from jihadist groups and Turkish-backed rebel factions.

Turkey is hosting 3.7 million Syrian refugees, as well as migrants from other countries such as Afghanistan – but had previously stopped them from leaving for Europe under an aid-linked deal with the EU.

But Mr Erdogan accused the EU of breaking promises.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Turkey says up to 30,000 could cross into the EU in the coming days

“We said months ago that if it goes on like this, we will have to open the doors. They did not believe us, but we opened the doors yesterday,” President Erdogan said in Istanbul on Saturday.

He said that some 18,000 refugees had “pressed on the gates and crossed” into Europe by Saturday morning. He did not provide evidence of these numbers.

“We will not close these doors in the coming period and this will continue. Why? The European Union needs to keep its promises. We don’t have to take care of this many refugees, to feed them,” he said.

Brussels had not given full financial aid agreed in the 2018 Turkey-EU refugee deal, he said.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Greece says it stopped 4,000 attempts to enter its border

Greece said it had averted more than 4,000 attempts to cross into the country. There were further clashes between migrants and Greek police on Saturday.

“The government will do whatever it takes to protect its borders,” government spokesman Stelios Petsas told reporters.

The Turkish president also said that he had asked Russian President Vladimir Putin – a close ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad – to stand aside and let Turkey “do what is necessary” with the Syrian government by itself.

Russia and Turkey are backing opposing sides in the civil war. Turkey is opposed to the government of Bashar al-Assad and supports some rebel groups.

Media captionMigrants head for Turkey’s EU borders

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-51687160

More than 500 new coronavirus cases were reported in South Korea, where authorities are considering keeping schools closed for a month. The virus has spread from China to 47 countries.
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