Coronavirus live updates: Trump says he is suspending immigration over coronavirus – NBC News

Saphora Smith

1h ago / 6:18 PM UTC

A potential coronavirus vaccine being developed at the University of Oxford in Britain will be trialed on people starting Thursday, Britains Health Secretary Matt Hancock said.

Hancock said Tuesday two leading vaccine developments were taking place in Britain one at the University of Oxford and another at Imperial College London as he announced more than $50 million in fresh funding for the trials.

He added that the project at Imperial would receive more than $27 million to support its phase two clinical trials and beyond, while Oxford University would be granted more than $24 million to fund its clinical trials.

We have put more money than any other country into the global search for a vaccine, he said. Both of these promising projects are making rapid progress and Ive told the scientists leading them that we will do everything in our power to support.

Hancock added that at the same time the U.K. will invest in manufacturing capabilities so that if either of these vaccines safely works then they can make it available for the British people as soon as humanly possible.

But he warned that nothing about the process was certain.

Ali Vitali

2h ago / 5:28 PM UTC

Their numbers were small, but their message was powerful.

Nearly two dozen nurses from National Nurses United stood in protest outside the White House Tuesday, demanding more Personal Protective Equipment and a codification of protective standards as healthcare workers across the country find themselvesunderprepared on the frontlines of the coronavirus crisis.

Were here because our colleagues are dying, Erica Jones, a nurse at Washington Hospital Center in D.C., told NBC News. Jones stood silently Tuesday as the names of 50 nurses who died from COVID-19 were read aloud in the shadow of the White House.

Read the full story here.

Rev. Dr. William J. Barber and Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove

2h ago / 5:24 PM UTC

Though President Donald Trump insists on calling it an invisible enemy, COVID-19 is ever before us and the data increasingly make clear that the South will soon become ground zero for coronavirus deaths.

COVID-19, then, is a contrast dye, highlighting the South as the native home of poverty in America.

Read the full opinion piece here.

David K. Li

2h ago / 5:15 PM UTC

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Tuesday he faced sharp questions - from his own adult daughters - on why he had not looked overseas to buy coronavirus test kits.

Cuomo said his family was watching TV news on Monday night when a story aired on Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, who with help from his wife, just scored 500 test kits from her native South Korea,

"My daughter turns to me and looks at me and says, 'Wow that was really smart,' " said Cuomo, father of three adult daughters. "One of my other daughters, who's a little more pointed in life ... said, 'Why didn't you think of that, Dad? Why didn't you think of buying test kits from South Korea?'"

The New York governor was hammering home his belief that the federal government should take the lead in securing equipment to contain the pandemic, though he heaped praise on his Maryland counterpart: "God bless Larry Hogan; he really thought outside the box."

Ben Kesslen

3h ago / 4:47 PM UTC

Germany's famous Oktoberfest, the world's largest beer festival, has been cancelled, Bavarian officials announced Tuesday.

"It hurts, it's such a pity," Minister PresidentMarkus Sder of Bavaria, in southern Germany, said in a news conference. "We have agreed that the risk is simply too high."

The festival, planned to begin in late September and last through early October, usually draws around six million visitors from around the world. But Soder said "as long as there is no vaccine, as long as there is no medicine, special care must be taken," adding that the festival could have been a potential "virus hub."

Dan Good

3h ago / 4:39 PM UTC

Georgia reported nearly 20,000 confirmed coronavirus cases and 800 deaths Tuesday days ahead of Gov. Brian Kemp's planned reopening of many of the state's businesses.

The latest numbers, announced at noon Tuesday, reflect an increase of 482 cases and 24 deaths since the previous update at 7 p.m. Monday. The counties with the most coronavirus cases are Fulton (2,208 cases and 82 deaths), Dekalb (1,534 cases and 29 deaths), and Dougherty (1,446 cases and 103 deaths).

An additional 3,779 remained hospitalized withCOVID-19 on Tuesday.

Despite the state's coronavirus death toll continuing to rise, Kemp on Monday announced plans to reopen businesses such as gyms, barber shops, and bowling alleys. Kemp'sdecision was criticized by many state and local leaders.

There's nothing about this that makes sense," Stacey Abrams said in an interview on MSNBCs Morning Joe. "The mayors of Atlanta, Albany and Savannah have all questioned the wisdom of doing this. And the fact is the governor didn't consult with mayors before making this decision.

Pete Williams

3h ago / 4:50 PM UTC

President Donald Trump cited both public health concerns and the economy as reasons for suspending immigration into the U.S. in his tweet Monday night announcing the move.

"In light of the attack from the Invisible Enemy, as well as the need to protect the jobs of our GREAT American Citizens, I will be signing an Executive Order to temporarily suspend immigration into the United States!" he wrote.

Can the president do that? The answer appears to be yes. Any such sweeping action is bound to produce court challenges, but it's not at all clear that they would succeed.

The president would probably cite the same legal authority that he used to justify his March 11 executive orderrestricting entry by travelersfrom countries coping with the pandemic; it's a provision of federal law the Immigration and Nationality Act that gives a president very broad power.

Read the full story here.

David K. Li

3h ago / 4:18 PM UTC

A Louisiana pastor who has defied state orders against large gatheringswas arrestedTuesday for allegedly backing his church bus dangerously close to a protester.

Pastor Tony Spell of Life Tabernacle Church in the city of Central, near Baton Rouge, was charged with aggravated assault in connection to the incident Sunday that was caught on tape, police said.

Central police chief Roger Corcoran said local authorities are trying to enforce the law and insisted that Spell isn't being denied his freedom to practice religion.

"They're trying to make a mockery of this, like he's some kind of victim," Corcoran told NBC News on Monday night. "No one, not one person, is trying to stop him from preaching the word."

Read the full story here.

David K. Li and Tom Winter

4h ago / 3:48 PM UTC

At least another 481 New York state residents died from complications related to COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, officials said Tuesday.

The state's coronavirus death toll has now reached 14,828 since the outbreak, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said.

There were 1,308 new patients hospitalized with COVID-10 on Monday, down from rates of 2,000 a day late last week.Cuomo called it good news while noting, "Our definition of good has changed here.

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Coronavirus live updates: Trump says he is suspending immigration over coronavirus - NBC News

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