Xi Jinping made a rare public appearance amid coronavirus outbreak

Xi Jinping made a rare public appearance amid coronavirus outbreakChina's President Xi Jinping was out and about in Beijing on Monday as part of an effort to show he's taking active role in the country's response to the coronavirus outbreak.Xi doesn't often mingle with the public, per The New York Times, but his absence during the virus' spread has been particularly noticeable. So on Monday, he was seen making stops at various spots in the capital, including a community center, hospital, and center for disease control. The president was wearing a surgical mask and had his temperature taken. He also spoke with medical workers in Wuhan, the epicenter of the outbreak, via video conferencing.Wu Qiang, an independent political analyst in Beijing, said the virus has put "pressure" on Xi to show both the public and Chinese Communist Party insiders that he was at the heart of the government's response. "It has become a matter of political security," Wu said. "Political security does not mean in the sense of popular resistance but rather that the epidemic may spread to Beijing and Shanghai, endangering the political operations of the so-called capital areas." Read more at The New York Times.More stories from theweek.com For better pasta sauce, throw away your garlic Trump slams 7-9 year prison proposal for Roger Stone, claims he 'cannot allow this miscarriage of justice!' Late night hosts find an orange circle of mirth amid Trump's retaliatory post-impeachment purge


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Trump, Manchin trading barbs as impeachment feud boils over

Trump, Manchin trading barbs as impeachment feud boils overA post-impeachment spat between President Donald Trump and U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin has sunk to name-calling and insults. The moderate Democrat took to cable news Monday to hurl barbs at the president after a weekend of back-and-forth that ignited when Trump criticized Manchin for voting to impeach him from office. “I expect every American, and myself, would like my president and our president to act like a responsible adult, and he's not,” Manchin told CNN.


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Conservative activist says he wishes Romney ‘no harm’ after comments cause alarm

Conservative activist says he wishes Romney ‘no harm’ after comments cause alarmMatt Schlapp, CPAC chair, said he would be ‘afraid’ for senator’s safety if he attended major conservative conferenceA prominent conservative activist and Trump supporter has insisted he wishes “no harm” to Mitt Romney, despite saying the Utah senator would be “afraid for his physical safety” if he attended a major conservative conference near Washington later this month.Last week, Romney cast the sole Republican vote to convict and remove the president during Donald Trump’s impeachment trial.“I am sure to hear abuse from the president and his supporters,” the 2012 Republican nominee for president said in his speech on the Senate floor, outlining a decision he said was made according to his religious faith and sense of duty to the US constitution.Praised in the media and in liberal circles, Romney was attacked by Trump, vilified by the president’s family members and allies and criticized by leaders of his own party, which is run by his niece Ronna McDaniel.Matt Schlapp is chair of the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) and husband of Mercedes Schlapp, a former White House communications aide now working for Trump’s re-election campaign.On Sunday, Schlapp told Gray Television’s Full Court Press he would not “credential [Romney] as a conservative” at CPAC, which takes place later this month, but “if he wants to come as a nonconservative and debate an issue with us, maybe in the future we would have him come”.He added: “This year, I would actually be afraid for his physical safety, people are so mad at him.”That prompted rebuke from media figures and politicians.On Monday morning, the West Virginia Democratic senator Joe Manchin told CNN: “I have not met a more honorable person than Mitt Romney … that has the interests of our country … [at heart]. It’s hard to believe that he have stooped this low.”Schlapp sought to play down the prospect of violence, tweeting that he took his “little girls and my 80-year-old mom to CPAC and we have never had a problem with any of our attendees ever …He wrote: “I wish … Romney no harm. I just want him to find a new hobby away from destroying GOP momentum.”At the White House, meanwhile, Trump addressed a gathering of state governors. When Utah’s Republican governor, Gary Herbert, asked a question, Trump said: “How’s Mitt Romney? You keep him. We don’t want him.”Herbert did not respond.


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Bloomberg creeps into 3rd place in new national poll

Bloomberg creeps into 3rd place in new national pollQuinnipiac University released a new national poll Monday and it's a doozy.Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) took his first lead among Democratic presidential candidates in the poll, grabbing 25 percent support from those surveyed, while the usual frontrunner, former Vice President Joe Biden, dropped 9 percentage points. He's still in second place, but billionaire and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg looks like he's encroaching on Biden's turf, jumping up 8 points to put him in third place and just 2 points behind the former vice president. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) comes right behind Bloomberg.> New Quinnipiac poll of Dems nationally shows Sanders overtaking Biden big time:> > Sanders 25 > Biden 17 > Bloomberg 15 (!) > Warren 14 > Buttigieg 10 > Klobuchar 4https://t.co/gltmlDDstw> > — Greg Sargent (@ThePlumLineGS) February 10, 2020One of the keys to Bloomberg's rise and Biden's dip appears to be their standing among those surveyed who identify as a moderate or conservative Democrat. Biden generally held a wide lead in the category, per Quinnipiac, but Bloomberg trails him by just 1 percentage point now, 22 to 21.In other news, Quinnipiac has Sanders, Biden, Bloomberg, Warren, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), and former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg all leading President Trump head to head, despite only Klobuchar and Buttigieg carrying favorable ratings.Quinnipiac University surveyed 1,519 registered voters, including 665 Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents, across the United States over the phone between Feb. 5-9. The margin of error is 2.5 percentage points overall and 3.8 percentage points among Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents. Check out the full poll here.More stories from theweek.com For better pasta sauce, throw away your garlic Trump slams 7-9 year prison proposal for Roger Stone, claims he 'cannot allow this miscarriage of justice!' Late night hosts find an orange circle of mirth amid Trump's retaliatory post-impeachment purge


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Mitt Romney Is a 'Judas' to Many Republicans. But Not in Utah.

Mitt Romney Is a 'Judas' to Many Republicans. But Not in Utah.SALT LAKE CITY -- Phil Lyman wanted to do something swift and stern.Within hours of Sen. Mitt Romney's vote to remove President Donald Trump from office Wednesday, Lyman, a freshman state representative from southern Utah who keeps an autographed "Make America Great Again" hat in a plexiglass case in his office, was at work drafting a resolution to censure the senator."I mean, I respect a guy that will stand up for his opinion, but it's not without some repercussions," Lyman said. "His action warrants an additional action on the part of the state Legislature."But just as swiftly came the pushback to Lyman from Utah's Republican leadership."Censuring Sen. Romney for voting his conscience is a tricky place to be," the speaker of the state House, Brad Wilson, said in an interview.The governor, Gary Herbert, told The Salt Lake Tribune, "I think that would be just a mistake to go down that road."The president of the state Senate, J. Stuart Adams, pleaded for reconciliation. "What I don't want to do is move into the negative rhetoric I think is coming from Washington, D.C.," he said at a news conference Friday.Barely eight years ago, Romney was the Republican nominee for president and putative leader of the party. Today, the way many Republicans accept and even encourage the attacks on him from Trump, who last week accused him of using "religion as a crutch" to justify the impeachment vote, vividly illustrates the turn the party has taken.Utah Republicans never quite fell for Trump as hard as the rest of their party did. The state's political sensibilities, heavily influenced by its Mormon culture, are more agree to disagree than salt the earth. The president's coarse language, belittling nicknames and aversion to humility help explain why his approval ratings overall in Utah have been below 50% for most of the last three years.And while they support Trump as their president -- very few Republicans here say they would have voted to convict him as Romney did -- they have refused to join the pile on they see happening back east on Fox News sets and in social media feeds of the president's followers, where their junior senator is being vilified as a "coward" and "Judas" who should be expelled from the Republican Party.Not only does Lyman's censure resolution appear to be dead on arrival, but the leader of the state Senate, Adams, also said last week that he would rather not vote on or debate any action related to Romney at all. He stressed that anything his chamber took up should be "positive" -- a word he used repeatedly as he spoke to reporters at the state Capitol on Friday. He said he preferred something like a unanimously agreed-to statement that affirmed Trump's strengths as president."It may feel right -- you want to swing at someone -- but I think it's better off to do what's right," Adams said in an interview. Though he disagreed with how Romney voted, he added, "I have respect for what he did."Utah is one of the rare places where the few Romney-style Republicans who remain are relatively safe from a challenge from their right, where speaking out against the president can be an act to admire, not an apostasy.With the most vitriolic condemnation of Romney coming from outside Utah, there has been something of a rallying effect around the senator."Not everyone hates Romney," read the headline on an opinion article in The Salt Lake Tribune this weekend. "In spite of the loud voices who are busy calling him names, there are many of us out here who are cheering for him," wrote the author, Holly Richardson, a former Republican legislator.Salt Lake City's other major paper, The Deseret News, which is owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, published an editorial arguing against a censure of the senator and has run numerous other supportive pieces, including one declaring that his vote was "what a Christian conscience demands."Chris Karpowitz, a professor of political science at Brigham Young University, said the disputes between Romney and Trump illustrated two different visions about what it means to be a Republican."Sometimes they line up on policy," Karpowitz added. "But in terms of style and rhetoric and commitment to what in previous years were thought of as core values, they couldn't be more different."No state as heavily Republican has been so chilly to the president. Though active registered Republicans outnumber Democrats in Utah by more than 3-to-1, Trump won only 45% of the vote in Utah in 2016. Hillary Clinton and Evan McMullin, a former intelligence officer who ran as a third-party candidate, split up the rest of the vote.Last week, national conservative activists promoted a "Recall Romney" effort online and shared stories about a proposal circulating in the legislature that aimed to give voters the ability to recall their U.S. senators.Aimee Winder Newton, a Republican candidate for governor, said that such a move would have worrisome repercussions. "I get that many state legislators are disappointed," she wrote on Twitter. "But creating a culture of censuring could come back their way."In reality, the recall bill was drafted months ago and has little support in Salt Lake City. Its sponsor has said that it has nothing to do with Romney or impeachment, and is instead meant to bolster the rights of Utahans to hold all senators accountable.Lawmakers and constitutional experts said the measure would probably not survive a court challenge anyway."My strong impression," said Edward Foley, director of election law at Ohio State University, "is that this kind of recall would be clearly unconstitutional. After all, the Constitution itself specifies six-year terms for senators, and has no mechanism -- other than expulsion by the Senate itself -- for a state to end a U.S. senator's service before the six years are up."Romney is by no means infallible among Utahans. And Trump is more popular here now than he was four years ago, thanks to a strong economy and his dedication to filling the courts with conservative judges.Though Romney is often associated with Utah because of his role in leading Salt Lake City's effort to prepare for the 2002 Winter Olympics, he had spent most of his life living elsewhere before deciding to run for Senate in 2018 -- a liability in a state where many families can trace their lineage back to the mid-19th century, when Mormons arrived in the Salt Lake Valley. His campaign ran into trouble early on with activist Republicans when he lost to a little-known legislator at the state convention, which forced a primary he later won. In the general election he won with almost 63% of the vote statewide.But the objections of grassroots conservatives who have outsize influence in state conventions had little to do with Romney's history of feuding with Trump. Instead, they bristled at an attempt by Romney to gather enough signatures to circumvent the convention.Romney has worked diligently to cultivate relationships with Republicans in Salt Lake City. After he left Washington the day of his vote on the president, one of his first stops was at the state Capitol to meet Republican lawmakers to explain himself. He spoke at two different meetings, one with House members and another with the Senate leadership.He delivered a version of the speech he gave on the Senate floor Wednesday in which he said his oath to God and faith guided him toward "the most difficult decision I have ever faced." Some legislators questioned his motives, asking why they should believe that he wasn't just trying to get even with the president. Others worried about Utah suddenly finding itself in the president's crosshairs and whether it would damage its relationship with the federal government, which controls about two-thirds of the state's land."For a lot of us," Wilson said, "the question was: 'What does this decision mean for your effectiveness as our senator?' "The meeting was intended primarily for legislative leaders, but Lyman, author of the censure resolution, was invited as well. In an interview, he said that Romney had earned his respect for showing up but not for his vote.He had only a few seconds to address Romney as the senator was leaving and used the opportunity to defend Trump for reducing the size of protected federal land in Utah so it could be used for commercial purposes."There's a lot of talk in politics," Lyman recalled telling the senator. "And President Trump actually came out here and did something."But even Lyman's disappointment with Romney has its limits. Next to the bookcase in his office at the Capitol where he has his autographed MAGA hat stands another political memento he is proud of: a life-size cutout of Romney.This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2020 The New York Times Company


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George Conway condemns wife Kellyanne's 'gaslighting' for Trump

George Conway condemns wife Kellyanne's 'gaslighting' for TrumpRepublican George Conway has condemned “gaslighting” by his wife Kellyanne Conway, over her defence of Donald Trump’s decision to fire a national security official who testified at his impeachment trial.Last week, the White House announced it was firing the US’s EU ambassador George Sondland, and that Lt Col Alexander Vindman and his twin brother, were being removed from the national security council


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CPAC Chairman Says He Couldn’t Guarantee Romney’s ‘Physical Safety’ at Conference

CPAC Chairman Says He Couldn’t Guarantee Romney’s ‘Physical Safety’ at ConferenceThe chairman of the Conservative Political Action Conference raised eyebrows over the weekend when he remarked that he would fear for Senator Mitt Romney's "physical safety" if he attended the conference.“This year, I would actually be afraid for his physical safety, people are so mad at him,” CPAC chairman Matt Schlapp told Greta Van Susteren on Fox News's Full Court Press.Romney, a Utah Republican, angered members of his party earlier this month when he became the sole Republican to vote to convict President Trump in his impeachment trial.“We won’t credential him as a conservative,” Schlapp said Sunday of Romney's potential presence at CPAC. “I suppose if he wants to come as a non-conservative and debate an issue with us, maybe in the future we would have him come.”For some critics, Schlapp's remarks edged too close to a threat."I have not met a more honorable person than Mitt Romney," said Senator Joe Manchin, one of the Senate's most moderate Democrats. "It’s hard to believe that we have stooped this low."Schlapp denied his comments contained any threatening intention, saying he has "no beef" with Romney's family and hopes they "have happy healthy lives away from politics.""I wish Gov Romney no harm I just want him to find a new hobby away from destroying GOP momentum," the conference head wrote in a tweet.The newfound distaste of many conservatives and Republicans for Romney is a far cry from just eight years ago when the party elected him as its standard-bearer to take on President Barack Obama in the presidential election.Romney said his vote in favor of removing Trump from office was based on his integrity and his faith."I’m aware that there are people in my party and in my own state who will strenuously disapprove of my decision and in some quarters I will be vehemently denounced," Romney said during his Senate floor speech explaining his vote. "Does anyone seriously believe that I would consent to these consequences other than from an inescapable conviction that my oath before God demanded of me?"Schlapp, however, slammed Romney as a disloyal political opportunist.“He said he was going to be an extreme conservative, that he was the most conservative guy in the world, and when he came to CPAC, after 2012, he doesn’t want to have anything to do with us,” Schlapp said.


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Barr confirms Justice Department is reviewing Giuliani's Ukraine info

Barr confirms Justice Department is reviewing Giuliani's Ukraine infoThe dirt President Trump's personal lawyer is digging up in Ukraine is making its way to the Justice Department, Attorney General William Barr confirmed Monday.Rudy Giuliani's operation, which has targeted Trump's domestic political rivals like former Vice President Joe Biden, was at the center of the impeachment saga, and it doesn't sound like it's going anywhere. Barr said Giuliani, or anyone else for that matter, is free to provide the department with relevant information, and he and his staff have "an obligation" to leave the door open.That said, the attorney general appears to be looking at the info skeptically. "There are a lot of agendas in Ukraine, there are a lot of cross currents, and we can't take anything we receive from Ukraine at face value," Barr said, per CNN. "For that reason we had established an intake process in the field so that any information coming in about Ukraine could be carefully scrutinized by the department and its intelligence community partners."There have been past reports that the department has tried to distance itself from Giuliani since he became the subject of a separate investigation, but that seemingly hasn't held up in this case. > In the past, Justice officials have sought to distance the department and Barr from Giuliani since it became clear in recent months that the former mayor is the subject of an investigation by Manhattan federal prosecutors. https://t.co/kKrDu45jNy> > -- Kaitlan Collins (@kaitlancollins) February 10, 2020More stories from theweek.com For better pasta sauce, throw away your garlic Why Amy Klobuchar would win by subtraction Vindman dismissal spurs Chuck Schumer to request all 74 inspectors general look into potential whistleblower retaliation


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