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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
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Richard Luscombe

Florida judge voids national mask mandate for public transportation – as it happened

Travelers walk through Seattle-Tacoma international airport in April, in Seattle.
Travelers walk through Seattle-Tacoma international airport in April, in Seattle. Photograph: Ted Warren/AP

Closing summary

We’re closing the US politics blog for today, thanks for joining us. We’ll update my colleague Jessica Glenza’s story here on the striking down of the federal mask mandate with comments from White House press secretary Jen Psaki following her upcoming afternoon briefing.

The ruling by a district court judge in Florida, a Donald Trump appointee, to overturn the mandate was the day’s main development, but there was plenty else going on to look at:

  • The Pentagon says Ukraine fighters will be trained on heavy howitzer artillery cannons to defend the country against Russia’s invasion. Follow developments in the conflict on our live blog here.
  • Democratic congressman Jamie Raskin, speaking about the climate crisis, says “We’ve got to save democracy in order to save our species.”
  • Joe and Jill Biden hosted the first White House Easter Egg roll in two years, welcoming thousands of families to the south lawn after a two-year Covid absence.
  • The White House announced that a second global Covid-19 summit would take place virtually on 12 May, as concern rises about a new surge of infections and low vaccination rates internationally.

CNN has an interesting look at this afternoon’s federal court ruling in Florida striking down the Biden administration’s mask mandate.

As of mid-afternoon, none of the White House, centers for disease control and prevention (CDC), food and drug administration (FDA), or transportation security administration (TSA) that enforces the mandate have commented on the ruling by Florida district court judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle voiding the mandate, which was last week extended to 3 May.

But CNN notes that every prior attempt to reverse the law in a courtroom has failed, including at the US supreme court, raising questions if Judge Mizelle’s ruling would stand if the administration or agencies were to appeal.

The network cites a justice department court filing from a case in Texas last week, in which efforts to secure a restraining order against the mandate were unsuccessful:

Many other individuals have sought time-sensitive injunctive relief from the CDC or TSA orders that require masks during commercial air travel. The Supreme Court has thrice rejected that relief, and so has every Court of Appeals to consider the issue, the Fourth, Eighth, Eleventh, and DC Circuits, as well as the US District Court for the Middle District of Florida.

No court has granted such relief, and not a single Judge or Justice has noted their dissent from any of these orders.

Pentagon says Ukraine to get artillery training

The Pentagon is confirming that Ukrainian fighters are to be trained how to use howitzer artillery cannons sent to the country from the US to defend against the Russian invasion.

John Kirby.
John Kirby. Photograph: Andrew Harnik/AP

John Kirby, the Pentagon press secretary said in an afternoon briefing that the training was taking place “outside of Ukraine” and would probably begin in “the next several days,” but would not confirm if US military personnel would be involved.

“It’ll be small number of Ukrainians that will be trained on the howitzers and then they will be reintroduced back into their country to train their colleagues,” Kirby said.

He added that 18 howitzers and 40,000 rounds of artillery were on the way following Joe Biden’s announcement last week of a further $800m in military aid ahead of an expected Russian onslaught in the disputed Donbass region:

Artillery is a specific item that the Ukrainians asked for, because of the fighting that they expect is going to occur in the Donbass. There has been fighting there for eight years. There’s fighting there today.

The terrain lends itself to the use of artillery, to long range fires, as we call it. And we know that the Russians also believe the same thing because we’re seeing them move artillery units into the Donbass as well. We want to give the Ukrainians every bit of advantage that we can.

Are there three words in the English language that can strike quite as much trepidation into the hearts of the sane and rational person as “Tucker Carlson original”? Yes, the documentary strand that brought you such titles as Hungary vs Soros: The Fight for Civilization and Patriot Purge, a BS-laden fantasy about the January 6 riots that contained so many bonkers claims about false-flag operations that it forced a tranche of Fox News veterans to quit the network, has returned.

The latest addition to the Carlson oeuvre is called The End of Men and its Magic Mike-style trailer just dropped.

It begins with a familiar Make America Great Again-style montage, centering on a John F Kennedy speech in which he extols the virtues of strength and exercise and berates America’s “soft, chubby fat-looking children”. Quickly, Kennedy’s reasonable-for-the-time approach to childhood obesity is equated with a precipitous decline in sperm counts and testosterone over the last 50 years.

And then what could only be described as a series of money shots. As the booming timpanis of a Richard Strauss piece from 2001: A Space Odyssey swell – we see huge buff topless men, cutting wood, milking cows, firing guns, barbecuing, fighting, drinking egg yolks and most strikingly, tanning their genitals. This supposed sequence of real red-blooded males is perhaps the campest thing Fox News has aired since Glenn Beck doused a handsome model in gasoline.

Carlson’s deeply homoerotic version of real men looks more xVideos than ex-mining town but the testosterone-based view of masculinity he’s pushing has been a common theme for Fox News over the past decade, and a profitable one.

The testicle tanning, or “red-light” therapy, shown in the video is explained further in an interview Carlson does with a self-proclaimed “bromeotherapy” expert. He claims that by dousing your balls in red LEDs, you can create higher levels of testosterone.

The potential for UV or red light to increase testosterone levels has been quite well documented but there are no peer-reviewed double-blind studies that are able to prove these claims. Testosterone levels also change dramatically throughout the day, and also see dramatic increases from exercise, new sexual partners and changes to diet.

Read the full story:

It’s tax day in the US, the deadline for most individuals to file and pay tax owed. But while this year’s tax season may be closing for millions of Americans who are paid through a digital payment service such as PayPal, Venmo, Zelle and Cash App, the next tax year could come with even more complications.

Under a new law buried in the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, digital payment services, or Third-Party Settlement Organizations (TPSOs), will now be required to notify federal tax collectors of payments amounting to more than $600 in total during the course of the year.

Before the change, taxpayers received a notification – known as a 1099-K – only if they processed more than 200 business transactions amounting to more than $20,000 over a year.

Now, with the payment threshold reduced to $600, US taxpayers who have never seen a 1099-K will be receiving one. No one knows how many Americans will be getting these forms, but tax lobbyists estimate the number at as high as 20 million.

According to small business consultant Gene Marks, writing in the Guardian earlier this year, “the reality is there are 30 million small businesses, freelancers, solo-preneurs and independent contractors in the US … who receive a number of small payments from many customers throughout the year may, well, forget”.

For individuals whose record keeping is sub-par, says Marks: “No worries! The IRS will now be able to find out what you earned anyway.”

Venmo says it will send out 1099-K forms to business profile owners after January next year to anyone who receives payments for the sale of goods or services through the service.

Read more here:

Florida’s Republican governor Ron DeSantis, who signed a law outlawing mask mandates in the state last year, is unsurprisingly among the first to tweet a welcome to Judge Mizelle’s ruling.

“Great to see a federal judge in Florida follow the law and reject the Biden transportation mask mandate. Both airline employees and passengers deserve to have this misery end,” wrote DeSantis, who has repeatedly referred to mask wearing as “Covid theater.”

DeSantis did not mention that last September he personally appointed Judge Mizelle’s husband Chad Mizelle, a former attorney in Donald Trump’s administration, to a key role on the nominating commission for circuit court judges in Florida.

Here’s the full 59-page ruling from federal judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle striking down the federal mask mandate for public air, rail and bus transportation across the US.

It says, in part:

The mask mandate is best understood not as sanitation, but as an exercise of the CDC’s [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] power to conditionally release individuals to travel despite concerns that they may spread a communicable disease (and to detain or partially quarantine those who refuse).

But the power to conditionally release and detain is ordinarily limited to individuals entering the United States from a foreign country.

[The mandate] applies to all travelers regardless of their origins or destinations and makes no attempt to sort based on their health.

Updated

The fact that the federal judge in Florida who has just voided the federal mask mandate is a Donald Trump appointee, confirmed after he lost the 2020 presidential election, is already coming under scrutiny.

Kathryn Kimball Mizelle, 35, was deemed “not qualified” to serve as a federal trial court judge by the American Bar Association in its letter to the Senate judiciary committee last September, which concluded: “the nominee presently does not meet the requisite minimum standard of experience necessary to perform the responsibilities required by the high office of a federal trial judge.”

Nominees to the federal bench, the association noted, “ordinarily should have at least 12 years’ experience in the practice of law.” At the time of her nomination by Trump, aged 33, Mizelle was only eight years’ removed from her law school graduation and had “not tried a case, civil or criminal, as lead or co-counsel,” the ABA recorded, noting the nomination as “a marked departure” from the norm.

Despite this, the Republican-controlled (at the time) US Senate confirmed her nomination 49-41 on a party line vote.

Her husband Chad Mizelle served as acting general counsel for the department of homeland security in the Trump White House.

Florida judge voids transportation mask mandate

A federal judge in Florida has voided a national mask mandate covering planes and other public transportation, ruling that the Covid-19 mitigation measure exceeds the authority of federal health officials.

In her decision on Monday, Kathryn Kimball Mizelle, a US district judge in Tampa, also said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) improperly failed to justify its decision and did not follow proper rule-making.

The mask mandate was recently extended by Joe Biden’s administration until 3 May.

“In order to assess the potential impact the rise of cases has on severe disease, including hospitalisations and deaths, and healthcare system capacity, the CDC order will remain in place at this time,” the agency said, on extending the mandate.

The challenge on which Judge Mizelle ruled was filed in part by Health Freedom Defense Fund, a conservative group.

Judge Mizelle was nominated by Donald Trump and confirmed in November 2020, after Trump’s election defeat but before Biden took office. She is a former clerk for Clarence Thomas, one of the most conservative judges on the US supreme court.

In tweets on Monday, Dr Eric Feigl-Ding, an epidemiologist and health economist, pointed to worsening Covid conditions nationwide as the Florida ruling landed:

He wrote: “Worried – hospitalizations for Covdid-19 are rising exponentially again in Florida and New York. Meanwhile, New Jersey Covid hospitals admissions is second largest by number, while Vermont largest by percentage. Florida are sharply rising – faster than last Omicron wave.

“Meanwhile – a Florida judge just overturned the CDC public transportation mask mandate. All while hospitalizations increasing.”

Updated

Jamie Raskin: ‘We’ve got to save democracy in order to save our species’

When it comes to fighting for democracy and climate change – two of Jamie Raskin’s top priorities – the whole thing feels a bit like a game of chicken and egg to the Democratic congressman.

On the one hand there is the planet, heating up quickly past the limit that is safe and necessary for human survival, while Congress stalls on a $555bn climate package. On the other, a pernicious movement, spurred by Donald Trump and other rightwing conspiracy theorists, to upend voting rights protections and cast doubt on the current election system.

But Raskin, a progressive from Maryland, is clear about which comes first: he said America can’t fix the planet without fixing its government.

“We’ve got to save the democracy in order to save the climate and save our species,” he said in an interview with the Guardian in collaboration with Reuters and Climate One public radio, as part of the Covering Climate Now media collaboration.

Later Raskin added: “We’re never going to be able to successfully deal with climate change if we’re spending all our time fighting the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers and Ku Klux Klan, and the Aryan nations and all of Steve Bannon’s alt-right nonsense.”

Full interview:

Facing multiple defamation lawsuits, the far-right website InfoWars on Sunday voluntarily filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in federal court in Texas.

Chapter 11 bankruptcy procedures put a hold on all civil litigation faced by companies that file for the protection and allows them to prepare turnaround plans while remaining operational.

Alex Jones.
Alex Jones. Photograph: José Luis Magaña/AP

Alex Jones, founder of InfoWars, was found liable for damages in three lawsuits last year filed after he falsely claimed the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting was a hoax.

Jones claimed the shooting at the school in Newtown, Connecticut, which killed 20 children and six employees, was fabricated by gun-control advocates and mainstream media. He accused several families of victims of being paid actors trying to promote gun restrictions.

Jones has spent the last four years fighting multiple defamation lawsuits in Connecticut and Texas related to the Sandy Hook conspiracy theories he promoted.

In 2019, a Texas judge ordered Jones to pay $100,000 in a defamation suit. In November 2021, another judge in Connecticut found Jones liable for damages in a suit brought by 13 plaintiffs who are relatives of the shooting’s victims. The judge said Jones and his companies, including InfoWars and Free Speech Systems, failed to turn over documents for the trial such as internal records that show whether Jones and his companies profited from talking about Sandy Hook and other mass shootings.

In the Connecticut case, Jones is set to go to trial this year in front of a jury who will decide how much he owes the plaintiffs in the case.

Read the story here:

The conservative majority on the US supreme court “turned a blind eye” to claims of a juror’s racial bias in a Texas death penalty case when they rejected the inmate’s request for a review of his conviction, dissenting justice Sonia Sotomayor has said.

Kristopher Love, who is facing execution for the 2015 murder of a Dallas dentist, argued that the juror’s statement that “non-white” races were statistically more violent than Black people were sufficient grounds for the review.

Love’s defense team at his 2018 trial wanted the juror removed after his statement came to light during jury selection, but had already used its peremptory challenges, and the juror was seated. Love has argued since that his conviction should be nullified because of the bias.

But in a 6-3 decision, the supreme court rejected his claim.

The dissent, written by Sotomayor and joined by fellow liberals Stephen Breyer and Elena Kagan, states:

Racial bias is ‘odious in all aspects,’ but ‘especially pernicious in the administration of justice.

When racial bias infects a jury in a capital case, it deprives a defendant of his right to an impartial tribunal in a life-or-death context, and it ‘poisons public confidence’ in the judicial process.”

The seating of a racially biased juror, therefore, can never be harmless. As with other forms of disqualifying bias, if even one racially biased juror is empaneled and the death penalty is imposed, ‘the State is disentitled to execute the sentence.’

Elizabeth Warren says it’s no foregone conclusion that Democrats will lose control of Congress in November’s midterm elections, but believes the party is “headed toward big losses” if it fails to counter raging inflation and Joe Biden’s plunging popularity ratings, and doesn’t deliver more of what it promised.

In an foreboding op-ed published in the New York Times on Monday, the Massachusetts senator said she believes Democrats can win by working relentlessly to try to fix the country’s economic woes, and not simply by highlighting successes such as the bipartisan infrastructure bill and confirmation to the US supreme court of Biden’s pick Ketanji Brown Jackson:

Republicans are betting that a stalled Biden agenda won’t give Democrats enough to run on in the midterm elections - and they might be right. Despite pandemic relief, infrastructure investments and the historic confirmation of Ketanji Brown Jackson, we promised more - and voters remember those promises.

Republicans want to frame the upcoming elections to be about wokeness, cancel culture and the militant left wing. Standing up for the inherent dignity of everyone is a core American value, and Democrats are proud to do that every day. While Republican politicians peddle lies, fear and division, we should use every single one of the next 200 days or so before the election to deliver meaningful improvements for working people.

Democrats win elections when we show we understand the painful economic realities facing American families and convince voters we will deliver meaningful change. To put it bluntly: if we fail to use the months remaining before the elections to deliver on more of our agenda, Democrats are headed toward big losses in the midterms.

Senator Elizabeth Warren.
Senator Elizabeth Warren. Photograph: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Warren, a former candidate for the Democratic nomination, is among the party’s progressive wing, frustrated that Biden’s ambitious plans for social spending and reform, such as the Build Back Better act, were sunk as much from within as anything the Republicans did. Joe Manchin, the Democratic senator from West Virginia said he could not support the bill, killing its chances of passing in the split 50-50 chamber.

Warren believes Biden “can do more”:

Decisive action on everything from lowering prescription drug prices to ensuring that more workers are eligible for overtime pay can be executed by the president alone, using the authority already given to him by existing laws, without rounding up 50 Senate votes.

Like many Americans, I’m frustrated by our failure to get big things done — things that are both badly needed and very popular with all Americans. While Republican politicians obstruct many efforts to improve people’s lives and many swear loyalty to the Big Lie, the urgency of the next election bears down on us.

Democrats cannot bow to the wisdom of out-of-touch consultants who recommend we simply tout our accomplishments. Instead, Democrats need to deliver more of the president’s agenda — or else we will not be in the majority much longer.

Read Warren’s op-ed here.

Updated

Biden welcomes families to White House for return of Easter Egg roll

The traditional White House Easter Egg roll returned to the south lawn after a Covid-enforced two-year absence on Monday, the celebratory mood of Joe Biden’s first time hosting it a marked contrast to the politics-infused events of the Donald Trump era.

“My job is to keep it from raining,” the president said as he joined the first lady Jill Biden, vice-president Kamala Harris and thousands of children and their families for the day-long event.

Ultimately, the weather didn’t cooperate, and delivered an Easter Monday soaking reminiscent of the 2019 egg roll hosted by Trump that was the most recent before the pandemic intervened.

First lady Jill Biden and her husband President Joe Biden read to families during the White House Easter Egg Roll.
First lady Jill Biden and her husband President Joe Biden read to families during the White House Easter Egg Roll. Photograph: Shawn Thew/EPA

But the rain was one of few similarities. Instead of talk of the border wall and other campaign rhetoric, Trump throwing signed hats into the crowd and Donald Trump Jr declaring his own daughter the “winner” of the egg racing, this year’s event was themed around education, and had a much lighter feel, billed as the “egg-ucation roll.”

Jill Biden, a college professor, gave the introduction from the south lawn balcony, flanked by her husband and two outsized Easter bunnies:

As your first lady and as a teacher, I’ve seen again and again that learning doesn’t only happen in the classroom. There are so many fun opportunities to learn around us every day. And that’s especially true here at the White House.

For generations, presidents, and first ladies, and kids just like you celebrated the Easter Egg roll together, racing and making crafts, reading books and of course, meeting the Easter Bunny.

Education never stops. The determined spirit of education is what we wanted to honor in this Easter Egg Roll. So we turned the south lawn into a school community.

About 30,000 children and their families were invited to attend the celebration. Besides the egg roll and an egg hunt, events included a schoolhouse activity area, a reading nook, a talent show, a place to teach about farming, a photo-taking station, a physical “egg-ucation” zone with an obstacle course, and a “cafetorium” where children will learn to make treats according to Reuters.

Costumed characters included several from Sesame Street and Dr Seuss’s The Cat in the Hat.

Since its first appearance on Easter Monday in 1878, The White House egg roll has, traditionally, been hosted as a politics-free event. Biden said: “It’s so special. It means so much to see the children and all the families show up, the joy, the laughter.”

Updated

Kamala Harris plays Wordle as a “brain cleanser” between official duties and has never failed to guess the five-letter word of the day, but cannot share successes with friends because her official phone does not let her send text messages.

Kamala Harris.
Kamala Harris. Photograph: REX/Shutterstock

The vice-president discussed her love for the online game designed by Welsh-born Josh Wardle in an interview with the Ringer.

“I have 100%,” she said, “and I intend to keep it that way.”

She also said her winning streak was just 48, because “it got messed up when it got moved over to the New York Times”.

Wardle designed Wordle for his partner. The Times bought it in January for a price “in the low seven figures”.

Players of Wordle are given six chances to guess one five-letter word a day, coloured squares indicating letters in the right slot or contained in the word elsewhere.

Harris said she averaged four guesses and started with the same word every day: “Notes. N-O-T-E-S.”

She added: “I think that you have to have a healthy mix of consonants and vowels, and a lot of words come with an S. For example, today there was an S and an E, I believe.”

Harris was speaking on Friday, when the word of the day was “shame”.

The vice-president said she sometimes played while traveling, and “must have played it when I was in Poland”.

Harris visited Poland in March, to bolster US allies amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

“But we won’t talk about that, right?” she said.

Full story:

The race to challenge Florida’s Trumpist Republican governor Ron DeSantis in November’s midterms is heating up. On Monday, one of the leading candidates - the former governor and current congressman Charlie Crist - won a key endorsement from House speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Pelosi’s backing is hardly a surprise, given the two have worked side by side in the Capitol for six years.

But it does give Crist, who switched to the Democratic party after serving as Florida’s governor from 2007 to 2011 as a Republican, a name-brand lift over his main rivals for the Democratic nomination, Florida’s agriculture commissioner Nikki Fried and state senator Annette Taddeo.

Crist says he has raised $8.2m in his campaign to unseat DeSantis, tipped as a 2024 presidential candidate and who has garnered headlines in recent weeks for picking a fights with Disney over his anti-LBGTQ+ “don’t say gay bill” and signing into law draconian new abortion restrictions.

But DeSantis leads in the polls, and has amassed his own sizeable election war chest of almost $110m, according to Ballotpedia.

Republicans have a plan to gain revenge over Democrats for booting controversial lawmakers Marjorie Taylor Greene and Paul Gosar from House committees, the Punchbowl newsletter is reporting, so long as they win back control of the chamber in November’s midterms.

Kevin McCarthy.
Kevin McCarthy. Photograph: J Scott Applewhite/AP

They are considering imposing term limits on committee chairs and ranking members when the 118th Congress convenes in January 2023.

There’s been simmering anger among senior Republicans, including the House minority leader Kevin McCarthy, since extremists Greene and Gosar were removed from their committee assignments by the Democratic-controlled House.

Greene, a Georgia congresswoman, lost her committee assignments in February 2021 for “racist and incendiary” comments.

The Arizona representative Gosar, who has extensive links to white nationalists and 6 January Capitol rioters, was censured and lost his in November for posting an animated video that depicted him killing Democratic congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio Cortez and attacking Joe Biden.

The Republicans’ plan to limit chairs and ranking members to three terms, according to Punchbowl, would forcibly remove long-serving Democratic veterans under a Republican majority.

They include Maxine Waters of California (top Democrat on the financial services committee since 2013); Bennie Thompson of Mississippi (homeland security, 2005); Frank Pallone of New Jersey (energy and commerce, 2015); Adam Smith of Washington state (armed services, 2011) and Nydia Velázquez of New York (small business, 1998).

Punchbowl reports:

This potential move by Republicans would have a seismic impact on the House and would be a huge breach of tradition.

For decades, the two parties have set their own internal rules to decide who sits on committees and for how long. Republicans have had term limits in place since 1994, Democrats currently don’t have any such regulations.

Read the Punchbowl newsletter here.

An influential conservative group that includes two Donald Trump allies who helped push lies about voter fraud in 2020 is spearheading “election integrity” summits in battleground states, advocating for expanded poll watching, “clean” voter rolls and other measures watchdogs say could curb voting rights to help Republican candidates.

Cleta Mitchell.
Cleta Mitchell. Photograph: Pablo Martínez Monsiváis/AP

The Conservative Partnership Institute (CPI) “election integrity network” is run by the veteran GOP lawyer Cleta Mitchell, who helped to spread misinformation about supposed election fraud in 2020.

Mark Meadows, Donald Trump’s last White House chief of staff, is a senior partner of the CPI and reportedly had a lead role in at least one of its summits.

Mitchell, CPI’s senior legal fellow, has hosted multi-day summits, seeking to mobilize hundreds of conservative activists for elections this year in Georgia, Arizona and Pennsylvania, all states that Trump lost to Joe Biden, and Florida, which he won.

CPI is slated to hold summits this spring in Virginia, Michigan and Wisconsin, as it seeks to build “election integrity” infrastructure in swing states.

Powerful groups on the right such as Heritage Action and Tea Party Patriots Action have participated in previous summits.

Ties between CPI and Trump were underscored last July, when the former president’s Save America leadership Pac donated $1m to the group weeks after the House voted to create a committee to investigate the attack on the US Capitol on 6 January 2021 by Trump loyalists seeking to disrupt certification of Biden’s election victory.

Read more here:

A second global Covid-19 summit will take place virtually on 12 May, the White House has announced, seeking to increase the take-up rate of vaccinations internationally.

The news comes as the BA.2 subvariant begins to take hold in several areas of the US. The White House statement said the US would co-host the summit with Belize, chair of the Caribbean Community (Caricom); Germany, which holds the G7 presidency; Indonesia and Senegal:

The emergence and spread of new variants, like Omicron, have reinforced the need for a strategy aimed at controlling Covid-19 worldwide. Together, we can mitigate the impact of Covid-19 and protect those at the highest risk with vaccinations, testing, and treatments.

We know we must prepare now to build, sustain, and finance the global capacity we need, not only for emerging Covid-19 variants, but also future health crises.

Joe Biden convened the first global Covid-19 summit last September, calling for international cooperation in finding strategies to end the pandemic. But the Delta and Omicron variants sent infection rates soaring, while less than 60% of the world’s population is fully vaccinated.

There are renewed concerns over a resurgence of the pandemic, with Omicron forcing new lockdowns and deaths in China, and the spread of BA.2 worrying world leaders, including in the US, where an indoor mask mandate took effect Monday in Philadelphia, the first major American city to do so.

The 12 May summit, the White House says, will focus on several areas and “place an emphasis on supporting locally-led solutions to both immediate and long-term challenges.”

They include “getting shots into arms; deploying tests and treatments, especially for the highest-risk populations; expanding and protecting the health workforce and minimizing disruptions to routine and essential health services; and generating sustainable financing for pandemic preparedness, health security, and health systems.”

Read the White House statement here.

Good morning, welcome to the US politics blog, and a new week in Washington DC (although lawmakers are mostly elsewhere, with Congress on Easter recess for another week).

Joe Biden begins his week with the coronavirus pandemic on his mind. The White House has announced the US will co-host the second global Covid-19 summit on 12 May, the virtual event seeking primarily to increase the take-up rate of vaccinations internationally.

Russia appears to be making territorial gains and expanding its missile attacks in Ukraine. You can follow developments in the conflict on our 24-hour live blog here.

Here’s what else we’re following today:

  • Joe Biden will host the annual Easter Egg roll at the White House later this morning, joined by the first lady Jill Biden and the vice-president Kamala Harris. The year’s event, the first for two years, is billed as an EGGucation egg roll.
  • It’s Tax Day in the US, and soaring inflation remains a concern for American families and Democratic politicians, who fear it could cost them dearly in November’s midterm elections.
  • If Republicans do win back control of Congress, they have a plan to term-limit ranking Democrats on House committees.
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