US COVID-19 cases reach past 13 million

The number of coronavirus infections in the United States surpassed 13 million on Friday, just six days after the country hit the 12 million threshold. 

According to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University, the U.S. has had at least 13,047,202 infections, with at least 264,624 people dead as a result of the virus. 

The U.S. maintains the lead for the country with the most total coronavirus infections, followed by India at approximately 9.3 million, Brazil with 6.2 million and France with 2.2 million. 

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On Nov. 21, Johns Hopkins University recorded that the U.S. had topped 12 million cases, just another six days after the country reached a total of 11 million. 

The U.S. on Friday also reached a new high of more than 90,000 people currently hospitalized for COVID-19 — a record-breaking number for the 17th day in a row, according to the COVID Tracking Project

Out of those hospitalized, 17,802 people are in the intensive care unit, which is the highest amount documented during the pandemic. A total of 5,979 people are on ventilators. 

The rapid increase in infections across the country come as experts warn of more spikes as we head into the winter months, forcing many Americans inside where the virus is able to more easily spread. 

Anthony FauciAnthony FauciUS COVID-19 cases reach past 13 million Fauci: Pandemic likely won’t improve by Christmas, New Year’s Vaccine skepticism emerges as early test for Biden MORE, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, has said that cases are likely to remain high or continue to increase through December, January and February. 

“If the surge takes a turn of continuing to go up and you have the sustained greater than 100,000 infections a day and 1,300 deaths per day and the count keeps going up and up … I don’t see it being any different during the Christmas and New Year’s holidays than during Thanksgiving,” Fauci told USA Today. 

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With the Thanksgiving holiday this week, public health experts and elected officials had warned citizens against traveling and gathering with people outside their immediate household. 

Earlier this month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advised against attending crowded parades, large indoor gatherings and crowded stores in an effort to slow the outbreak. The agency also advised against traveling last week as cases rose nationwide.

However, a Hill-HarrisX poll released Tuesday found that 57 percent of registered voters surveyed planned on attending a gathering for Thanksgiving, although just 23 percent said they would meet with family and friends “as normal.” 

In his Thanksgiving proclamation issued Wednesday, President TrumpDonald John TrumpBiden adds to vote margin over Trump after Milwaukee County recount Krebs says allegations of foreign interference in 2020 election ‘farcical’  Republicans ready to become deficit hawks again under a President Biden MORE challenged the advice of public health experts by calling on Americans to gather “in homes and places of worship” for the holiday.

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Overnight Health Care: Biden team to begin getting COVID briefings | Fauci says he would 'absolutely' serve on Biden's COVID task force | Major glove factories close after thousands test positive for COVID-19

Welcome to Wednesday’s Overnight Health Care. Programming note: We will not be publishing a newsletter Thursday or Friday. We will return as usual Monday, Nov. 30.

In today’s news, the House Overnight and Reform Committee has invited the Sackler family to testify about their role in the opioid crisis. President-elect Joe BidenJoe BidenHarris says she has ‘not yet’ spoken to Pence Kamala Harris, Stacey Abrams among nominees for Time magazine’s 2020 Person of the Year Obama: Republican Party members believe ‘white males are victims’ MORE’s transition team received its first COVID-19 briefing today from federal agencies. And the largest rubber glove manufacturer in the world said this week it will temporarily close down factories, a bad sign for an already stressed supply chain.

Let’s start with Biden:

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Biden team to begin getting COVID briefings

The Biden transition team will begin receiving briefings from federal agencies Wednesday on the COVID-19 response, Biden officials said Wednesday. 

The transition team has requested briefings on the COVID-19 vaccine distribution, Operation Warp Speed, testing and the supply chain for personal protective equipment. 

“They are moving forward expeditiously,” said Kate Bedingfield, a spokesperson for Biden.

“Obviously our teams have had a lot of time to work through the core questions that they need to pose and the pieces of information that they most want to have clear visibility into,” she added. 

Agencies were not allowed to coordinate with the Biden team until a key Trump official officially approved the transition process this week. 

Why it matters: Biden and his team will now be able to access information from federal agencies like the Department of Health and Human Services on its COVID-19 response thus far, better preparing his administration to take over in January.

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Read more here. 

Biden also gave remarks Wednesday on Thanksgiving…

Biden empathized with families who have lost loved ones to COVID-19 this year. He also noted he would follow public health recommendations and have a small Thanksgiving at home this year.

“For our family, we’ve had a 40 plus year tradition of traveling over Thanksgiving, a tradition we’ve kept every year save one — the year after our son Beau died,” Biden said.

“This year, because we care so much for each other, we’re going to be having separate Thanksgivings.”

Biden is reinforcing public health guidance that isn’t really coming from the White House right now — that Americans should avoid traveling and holding large gatherings to prevent an explosion of cases after the holiday weekend. 

Meanwhile, Fauci says he would ‘absolutely’ serve on Biden’s COVID task force

Anthony FauciAnthony FauciKamala Harris, Stacey Abrams among nominees for Time magazine’s 2020 Person of the Year Overnight Health Care: Biden team to begin getting COVID briefings | Fauci says he would ‘absolutely’ serve on Biden’s COVID task force | Major glove factories close after thousands test positive for COVID-19 Fauci says he would ‘absolutely’ serve on a Biden coronavirus task force MORE, the nation’s top infectious diseases expert, said he would “absolutely” serve on President-elect Joe Biden’s COVID-19 task force if asked.

“Of course, yes. The answer is absolutely,” Fauci said in response to a question during a C-SPAN interview Wednesday.

Fauci, who’s a member of the White House coronavirus task force, said he has been in contact with Biden chief of staff Ron Klain, but added they have not discussed the “nuts and bolts” of the COVID-19 response.

“Obviously, soon, we will be getting the transition team and the task force to give them the information that would make their assuming the responsibilities easier and more efficient,” Fauci said.

Why it matters: Biden is expected to elevate career civil servants like Fauci who have largely been sidelined under the Trump administration. It’s unsurprising that Fauci would join a Biden task force — he’s advised every president on public health matters since Reagan — but we’ll likely be seeing more of him in the new year.  

Read more here.

House Oversight panel asks Purdue Pharma’s Sackler family to testify on opioid crisis

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The House Oversight and Reform Committee has invited Purdue Pharma’s Sackler family to testify at a hearing next month on what the panel described as “their role in fueling the opioid epidemic.” 

The invitation comes one day after the OxyContin manufacturer pleaded guilty to three federal criminal charges related to some of its sales and marketing practices related to the powerful painkiller. The deal was first announced in October as part of a larger $8 billion settlement. 

Committee Chair Carolyn MaloneyCarolyn Bosher MaloneyHouse Democrats subpoena private prison operator in forced hysterectomy case Overnight Health Care: Biden team to begin getting COVID briefings | Fauci says he would ‘absolutely’ serve on Biden’s COVID task force | Major glove factories close after thousands test positive for COVID-19 House Oversight panel asks Purdue Pharma’s Sackler family to testify over opioid crisis MORE (D-N.Y.) invited Richard Sackler, David Sackler, Kathe Sackler, and Mortimer Sackler to testify. She also invited Purdue Pharma CEO Craig Landau to appear before the committee. 

Maloney noted that Purdue Pharma pleaded guilty in federal court in 2007 to understating the risk of addiction to OxyContin, including failing to alert doctors that it was a stronger painkiller than morphine, and agreed to pay $600 million in fines and penalties. 

Read more here.

Major glove factories close after thousands test positive for COVID-19

The largest rubber glove manufacturer in the world said this week that orders would be delayed by weeks and some of its factories would be shut down after thousands of its workers tested positive for COVID-19.

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“To minimise the impact on our customers, we are allocating sales orders to unaffected factories and rescheduling deliveries where possible,” Top Glove Corp of Malaysia said in a statement.

According to the company, deliveries could be delayed by up to four weeks and new orders could take even longer.

As Reuters notes in its report, shares of the company have shot up in value this year due to the high demand for personal protective equipment. The company commands a quarter of the global latex glove market.

Top Glove operates 47 factories across Asia, 36 of which produce gloves. It previously had to shut down 16 factories and reduce the capacity of 12 others. In its statement the company did not say how many factories would be affected by the new order.

Top Glove’s production capacity will likely be reduced to 50 percent of what it normally produces, according to Malaysian Industrial Development Finance research analyst Ng Bei Shan.

Read more here.

What we’re reading:

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After admitting mistake, AstraZeneca faces difficult questions about its vaccine (The New York Times)

Operation Warp Speed leader says he may step down soon (Politico

COVID-19 outbreaks in nursing homes hit record high (NBC News)

State by state

State health department will allow heath care workers with COVID-19 to keep working (tulsaworld.com)

Illinois authorities investigate outbreak at veterans’ home that killed 27 (NPR)

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First doses of Pfizer coronavirus vaccine have flown to US from Belgium: report

The first doses of Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine candidate have been flown over to the U.S. from Belgium, a source familiar with United Airlines’ COVID Vaccine Readiness Task Team planning confirmed to NBC on Saturday. 

On Friday, the Wall Street Journal reported that United commenced chartering flights to send doses of the vaccine to the United States.  In a statement to The Hill on Friday, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) also confirmed that it was “supporting the first mass air shipment of a vaccine.”

A source told the network the FAA is allowing United to carry 15,000 pounds of dry ice per flight, which is five times over the permitted limit.

Pfizer’s vaccine must be kept at below-freezing temperatures to maintain efficacy of the dosages.

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United would not confirm details of the flight to The Hill but said it would “support a vaccine distribution effort on a global scale,” noting its shipment run is through the United Cargo division of the airline.

Pfizer’s vaccine candidate is developed in partnership with the German biotechnology company BioNTech, and last week, Pfizer applied for emergency use authorization (EUA) with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The vaccine will be distributed once it is approved.

According to a Financial Times Saturday report, the United Kingdom is slated to approve Pfizer’s vaccine as early as next week.

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Five things to know about Antony Blinken, Biden's pick for State

President-elect Biden this week picked Antony Blinken, a longtime aide and one of his closest foreign policy advisers, for secretary of State. 

Blinken has an extensive background in foreign policy matters, and if confirmed, he will face a series of arising and persisting challenges, all amid a dangerous pandemic.

Here are five things to know about Blinken.

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Blinken has a years-long working relationship with Biden

Blinken and Biden’s relationship dates back decades. 

When Biden served as chair and ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Blinken served as his Democratic staff director for six years. He then followed Biden to the White House when the senator was elected vice president, serving as Biden’s national security adviser. 

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Blinken later went on to serve in various capacities in the Obama administration including as an assistant to President Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaFive things to know about Antony Blinken, Biden’s pick for State Obama: Republican Party members believe ‘white males are victims’ Texas warehouse where migrants housed in ‘cages’ closed for humane renovation MORE and as the president’s principal deputy national security advisor.

He was again at Biden’s side after he launched his presidential bid, serving as a key foreign policy adviser for the campaign. 

Blinken in Tuesday remarks accepting his nomination said his relationship with the president-elect has been the highlight of his professional career.

“Mr. President-elect, working for you — and having you as mentor and friend — has been the greatest privilege of my professional life,” Blinken said.  

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And Biden, in announcing Blinken as his foreign policy chief pick, called him one of his “closest and most trusted advisors.”

Blinken has had hyperfocus on Middle East

Blinken has acknowledged that he became hyperfocused on foreign policy in the Middle East after the 9/11 terrorist attacks and again during the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

When Biden was in the Senate, Blinken helped him craft a plan to address divisions in Iraq. He advocated for trying to divide Iraqis by their ethnic or sectarian identities in order to create three zones that would have the ability to govern themselves. The idea, however, was widely rejected, including by Iraq’s prime minister at the time.

Still, Blinken did shape U.S. policy in the Middle East. 

During the Obama administration, he was responsible for building a coalition of dozens of countries that worked to counter ISIS in the region. Blinken also chaired the administration’s efforts for deciding foreign policy, which addressed matters like Afghanistan and Iran’s nuclear program.

Blinken wants to raise State’s morale

As deputy secretary of State during the Obama administration, one of Blinken’s final – and more memorable moments depending on who you ask – was held out of public view at the agency’s holiday party, where he took up the guitar in the State Department’s band to play a riff on a Bob Dylan tune, with the lyrics changed in a tribute to staff. 

“He’s been playing with his colleagues in government for some time,” said Halie Soifer, who served at the State Department under Blinken.

Also in the band was Rep. Tom MalinowskiThomas (Tom) MalinowskiFive things to know about Antony Blinken, Biden’s pick for State Malinowski beats back GOP challenge in New Jersey House race Phil Murphy says no coronavirus outbreaks in New Jersey linked to Trump fundraiser MORE (D-N.J.), who at the time was serving as Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor.

Blinken, when accepting his nomination for secretary of State in Delaware on Tuesday, thanked his “bandmates” alongside his colleagues in the Obama and Clinton administrations, the Senate and the State Department. 

“That’s really what it symbolized. He wasn’t just a leader as deputy secretary, in terms of making decisions at the top, he was a leader in terms of supporting the entire building,” Soifer said.  

Lew Lukens, who served as deputy chief of mission to the U.S. embassy in London in the Obama administration until 2018, described Blinken as “humble and understated” but said he would bring a deep understanding and appreciation for the State Department and is “knowledgeable and thoughtful about Biden’s priorities.”

“I think it is clear that this will be a team that recognizes the importance of working with allies and partners to address global, transnational threats,” Lukens said. “They understand that we can best address terrorism, pandemics, climate change, and other threats by working collaboratively with like-minded nations instead of pursuing an ‘American first/alone’ approach.”

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Blinken is stepson of a Holocaust survivor

Blinken has credited his view of the U.S. as being shaped by both his father, who served in the Air Force during World War II and was an ambassador to Hungary, as well as his stepfather, a Holocaust survivor who saw the U.S. as a beacon of freedom and liberty. 

He highlighted both their stories in his Tuesday remarks accepting his nomination, calling his father Donald Blinken his role model and hero. 

Blinken also told the story of how his step-father, Samuel Pisar, came to America. Pisar, one of the few surviving members of his family, was hiding in the woods in Bavaria to escape one of the final death marches at the end of World War II, when he saw a tank with a white, five-pointed star painted on it. 

“He ran to the tank. The hatch opened. An African American G.I. looked down at him. He fell to his knees and said the only three words he knew in English that his mother had taught him: ‘God Bless America.’ The G.I. lifted him into the tank, into America, into freedom,” Blinken said. 

Dan Fried, a former US ambassador and veteran of the Foreign Service who has known Blinken for decades, said he believes this story illustrates Blinken’s foreign policy view. 

“I’ve never told him this, but I suspect his foreign-policy thinking is derived from his sense of America’s identity as a country of values,” he said in an interview with The Atlantic Council, “a country that could lift his refugee stepfather right into America, and a country that knew that the advance of its values and interests were somehow linked.”

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Blinken has two young children

Blinken will be stepping into the demanding job at a time when he and his wife have two young children at home, making him the first secretary of State in modern times to have young toddlers, including a one-year old.

Blinken is married to Evan Maureen Ryan, who has also been active in U.S politics. The two met while serving in the Clinton administration. 

During his time in government, Blinken also showed an interest in early education. In September 2016, Blinken appeared on the famed children’s show Sesame Street as part of an effort to raise awareness about the plight of refugees and the work of the United Nations.

“It will be inspiring for working parents everywhere to see America’s top diplomat in action as he also helps raise two toddlers,” tweeted Samantha PowerSamantha Jane PowerFive things to know about Antony Blinken, Biden’s pick for State Biden, Harris briefed by national security experts amid transition obstacles Support swells for renaming Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma to honor John Lewis after his death MORE, his former colleague who served as Obama’s U.N. ambassador. “Thanks to Tony & the incomparable Evan Ryan for their family sacrifice.”

EPA won't require industry to guarantee funding for toxic waste cleanups

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is declining to require oil and gas, coal, chemical and mining companies to have insurance to cover major spills and accidents.

Critics say the final rule, announced by the agency Wednesday, poses the greatest risk to communities of color and low-income communities that most often live in the shadow of polluting industries.

“EPA has found that existing environmental regulations and modern industry practices are sufficient to mitigate any risks inherent in these industries,” EPA Administrator Andrew WheelerAndrew WheelerOVERNIGHT ENERGY: Trump administration denies permit for controversial Pebble Mine | Progressives see red flags in regulatory official on Biden transition team | EPA won’t require industry to guarantee funding for toxic waste cleanups EPA won’t require industry to guarantee funding for toxic waste cleanups OVERNIGHT ENERGY: Kerry says Paris climate deal alone ‘is not enough’ | EPA halts planned Taiwan trip for Wheeler| EPA sued over rule extending life of toxic coal ash ponds MORE said in a release announcing the rule, adding that “the financial risks from facilities in these industries are addressed by existing state and federal requirements.”

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The rule targets the financial assurances the Obama administration argued should be required by major polluters, ensuring companies have sufficient means to cover any costs related to accidents in order to avoid dipping into Superfund hazardous waste cleanup coffers.

The U.S. has more than 1,300 Superfund sites on its cleanup list, but many have become “orphaned” by companies that go bankrupt and can no longer fund the cleanup.

“This is all so basic. It would just require that those companies have proof that if there is a release or spill of hazardous substances that there would be funds to clean it up so it’s not left on the taxpayers,” said Lisa Evans, an attorney with Earthjustice, who added that the Obama-era rules targeted “polluters that had most likelihood of creating releases.”

Typically that takes the form of buying accident insurance, something environmentalists see as another layer of protection, as insurers will often require additional safety protocols from companies, like building containment areas so spills don’t travel far beyond a facility.

“They will come and look at a facility and require that industry has certain safeguards in place so they won’t have a spill,” Evans said. “Industry will have to operate more safely if it has to get and maintain financial assurance — that’s just the way the world works.”

Environmental groups are likely to pressure the incoming Biden administration to revoke the rule. 

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Fauci: Coronavirus surge 'superimposed' on current spike possible in coming weeks

Top infectious disease expert Anthony FauciAnthony FauciFauci: Restrictions likely won’t be reversed before Christmas Health officials warn of post-Thanksgiving COVID-19 case surge Year-end parties banned in South Korea MORE said on Sunday that a coronavirus surge “superimposed” on the current spike could emerge in the weeks after Thanksgiving. 

Fauci, the director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), told NBC News’s “Meet the Press” that the increase in U.S. cases would be almost vertical if shown on a graph. 

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He acknowledged that while health experts warned Americans not to travel for or spend Thanksgiving with people outside of their household, “people are not always going to do that.”

“So what we expect, unfortunately, as we go for the next couple of weeks into December, that we might see a surge superimposed upon that surge that we’re already in,” he said.

“When I give that message, I don’t want to frighten people, except to say it is not too late at all for us to do something about this, because as we travel back, to be careful when we go back to where we are, to just continue to do the things that we’ve been talking about,” he added. 

Fauci pointed to states that have instituted coronavirus restrictions involving mask wearing, social distancing and limits on gatherings, saying in those states, the COVID-19 cases curve starts to flatten.

“So we know we can do something about it particularly now as we get into the colder season and as we approach the Christmas holidays,” he said.

The prominent health expert said he plans to instruct President-elect Joe BidenJoe BidenTrump rages against ’60 Minutes’ for interview with Krebs Cornyn spox: Neera Tanden has ‘no chance’ of being confirmed as Biden’s OMB pick Five things to know about Georgia’s Senate runoffs MORE, who will be inaugurated on Jan. 20, to pursue “much broader blanket” testing across the country.

The U.S. surpassed 13 million coronavirus cases on Friday, after reaching 12 million cases only six days prior. The number of COVID-19-related hospitalizations have reached an all-time high of more than 91,000, with more than 18,000 Americans in the intensive care unit, according to the Covid Tracking Project

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cautioned people not to travel or gather with groups outside of their immediate household for Thanksgiving, but in the days before the holiday, millions of people got on flights.

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Italy fines Apple $12 million over claims about waterproof iPhones

Italy’s antitrust agency on Monday announced that it had fined Apple roughly $12 million for deceptive marketing about its iPhones.

The Italian Competition Authority, or AGCM, said that Apple had advertised the iPhone 8 through iPhone 11 as being waterproof without making clear that that was only the case under specific conditions.

Additionally, Apple’s disclaimer that phones were not covered for liquid damage tricked consumers, the agency said.

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Apple allegedly refused to provide support when phones were damaged by water.

A spokesperson for Apple declined to comment on the fine. The company has 60 days from the day it was notified of the fine to appeal the decision.

Apple has faced tougher enforcement from European agencies than their American counterparts. The AGCM fined Apple and Samsung roughly $15 million two years ago for forcing updates onto users’ phones that caused them to slow down.

France fined Apple $27 million earlier this year for capping the performance of phones with older batteries.

The company did agree to pay up to $500 million in an American class-action lawsuit this year centered on older phone models being slowed down intentionally, but regulators have been less aggressive.

That may change, however, on the heels of a report released this fall by Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee that alleges Apple stifled competition by using its App Store to discriminate against rivals.

–Updated at 11:48 a.m.

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Update on John Cena's Return, Backstage News on Plans for Brock Lesnar

  • While John Cena did tease retiring from WWE, he is not gone for good and only for about two months while filming his next movie. The plan right now is for him to be back in time for Survivor Series in November.

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  • Brock Lesnar meanwhile isn’t even scheduled for Survivor Series. His opponents were originally supposed to be Samoa Joe, Seth Rollins, Finn Balor and Braun Strowman for the rest of this year but injuries and timing changed that up.

  • Joe, Strowman and now Balor will all end up with matches against Lesnar but plans for Rollins/Lesnar are likely off since Seth is involved in the Shield storyline. The idea was for Lesnar to simply plow through everyone by pinning them with the F-5 until he met Reigns at WrestleMania.

    Source: Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Subscription information & prices available at f4wonline.com