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Europe Reopened to People. Why, It Asks, Hasn’t the U.S. Reciprocated?

MADRID — He was vaccinated in April, tested negative for the coronavirus and believed he was exempt from travel restrictions.

But on a stopover in Amsterdam in late May, Peter Fuchs, 87, was told he could not board his New York-bound flight to attend his great-granddaughter’s christening. The reason: As a European citizen, he was not allowed to enter the United States.

“I felt helpless and broken down,” Mr. Fuchs said in an email from his nursing home apartment in Hanover, Germany.

In June, as the United States made headway in its vaccination campaign, European Union leaders recommended that member countries reopen their borders to Americans, a significant gesture meant to signal what they hoped would be the beginning of the pandemic’s end. They expected to be repaid in kind.

That the United States remains largely closed has dismayed Europeans and frustrated their leaders, who are demanding that Europe’s decision to open its borders be reciprocated.

“We insist comparable rules be applied to arrivals in both directions,” Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, the bloc’s executive arm, said last week at a news conference. Officials with the bloc have even suggested reimposing travel restrictions against American travelers, though a quick change is not expected since many countries are reluctant to risk further ruin to summer tourism.

For some European families, the continued ban has compounded one of the deepest sorrows of the pandemic — separation itself — as loved ones become ill across closed borders and family elders grow fearful they may never see their loved ones again.

Unmarried partners with different passports have struggled to keep relationships afloat, giving rise to the popular Twitter hashtag #loveisnottourism. Europeans offered jobs in the United States still do not know whether they should accept them.

“Now that we have vaccines, at least let the vaccinated people come,” said Michele Kastelein, a dual French-American citizen living in Portola Valley, Calif. Her French brother Maurice had to abandon plans to attend her son’s wedding this month, despite hopes that the ban would be lifted by now for Europeans like him who are vaccinated.

The European travel ban dates to the start of the pandemic. President Donald J. Trump removed the restrictions in the final days of his term, but President Biden reinstated them shortly after taking office.

The White House, however, has offered little explanation on why the restrictions remain — even though some countries with higher infection and lower vaccination rates face no similar ban. At a news conference last week, Jen Psaki, the White House spokeswoman, cited the advice of medical experts and continued concerns about the Delta variant.

Under the current rules, virtually all residents of Europe’s Schengen Area — the passport-free zone that includes 26 countries plus other entities — as well as those living in Britain and Ireland are still barred from traveling to the United States.

Five other countries under the ban include ones with high infection rates, like Iran, South Africa, Brazil and India, but also China, where rates of spread have been far lower than those in the United States for months.

The travel ban exempts some people, among them American citizens, permanent U.S. residents and some family members of U.S. citizens, provided the American is under 21.

Updated 

Aug. 9, 2021, 9:16 p.m. ET

People from the prohibited countries can still enter the United States if they spend the 14 days before their arrival in a country that is not on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s list.

This last proviso led Shelley Murray, an American strength and conditioning coach, and her partner, Viktor Pesta, a mixed martial arts athlete from the Czech Republic, into an odyssey that spanned not just their native countries, but also Turkey and the Dominican Republic.

The two had moved into a home in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., shortly before the pandemic when Mr. Pesta was called to a coaching assignment in the Czech Republic. The European Union and the United States banned travel in both directions soon after, and the two were separated for six months, Ms. Murray said.

She was the first to leave her country, last August, after the Czech Republic created a so-called sweetheart exception that allowed Americans to visit unwed partners. But when Mr. Pesta wanted to return to the United States last October, he had to spend two weeks in Turkey — a country not on the C.D.C.’s prohibited list — so he would be allowed to enter.

This spring, shortly after Mr. Pesta was vaccinated in the United States, he traveled back to the Czech Republic for a mixed martial arts fight. When he wished to return to Florida this summer, the couple went to the Dominican Republic to allow for Mr. Pesta’s re-entry, a visit that stretched on for seven weeks because of visa delays.

Ms. Murray said her chief frustration was that American rules led the couple to stay in countries where infection rates were higher than in much of Europe, supposedly as a precaution against infected travelers.

“It was kind of nonsensical to us,” she said.

In another part of Fort Lauderdale sits the empty two-bedroom apartment of Elisabeth Haselbach, a Swiss citizen who bought it four years ago as an investment and vacation property.

Understand the State of Vaccine Mandates in the U.S.

But Ms. Haselbach has not been able to see her home since before the pandemic. She continues to pay taxes and condominium fees, but is worried because she has been unable to reinforce her home for the hurricane season, which lasts from June through November.

She said the predicament left her stunned: She found Mr. Trump’s behavior on the international stage unreasonable, but she did not expect to think the same of Mr. Biden on the closed borders.

“I was the No. 1 fan of the Democrats,” she said.

Frustration with the ban led Marius Van Der Veeken, a retired finance professional in the Netherlands, to write to Mr. Biden, saying he wanted to see his family in Michigan.

Mr. Van Der Veeken, 64, and his wife, Anne-Mieke, 61, had just gotten to know their grandchildren, now 3 and 4, before the pandemic prevented travel. Having received the AstraZeneca vaccine in March, they had believed they would soon have a chance to see the children, along with their daughter and son-in-law. Instead, they continue to meet each Sunday by video call.

Their grandchildren recognize them — calling them Opa and Oma, grandpa and grandma in Dutch — but Mr. Van Der Veeken worries that long-distance calls are not enough and that he is losing precious years.

“It’s important now to be building a relationship with them,” he said. “My big argument is that the travel restrictions should make a difference between family connections and tourists.”

Mr. Fuchs, the retiree from Germany, had similar feelings when he was blocked from his flight in May to attend the christening of his great-granddaughter, his first.

His daughter Natascha Sabert, an American citizen, said she had been told mistakenly by U.S. consular officials that he was eligible to enter the country as her father. But when he reached the airport in Amsterdam, he was told that he did not qualify because his daughter was over 21.

Ms. Sabert worried that her father, who is hard of hearing, would not be able to make it back to Germany that night from Amsterdam. Airport officials told her there were no more flights to Hanover that day, she said.

“I said, ‘You can’t push him in a wheelchair somewhere in the airport in the corner and just leave him there,’” she recalled.

Eventually, Mr. Fuchs was put on a flight to Hamburg, where a relative helped him onto a train to Hanover.

The experience has left Ms. Sabert fearful of asking her father to try to make the trip again. But she also feels time is running out and wants the chance for the family to reunite.

“It’s about these last moments before we say goodbye,” she said.

Monika Pronczukcontributed reporting from Brussels.

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Health

Moderna says it hasn’t discovered a hyperlink between its shot and coronary heart irritation

A healthcare worker stops during the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) in New York on Jan.

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Moderna has not found a link between its Covid-19 vaccine and the rare heart inflammation cases reported in young people who received the vaccination, the company said on Friday.

The Massachusetts-based biotech said it reached the conclusion after “carefully reviewing the safety data previously available for the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine for cases of myocarditis and / or pericarditis”.

“The company will continue to monitor these reports closely and is actively working with public health and regulators to further evaluate this issue,” said a statement.

A spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A CDC advisory body is organizing on 18.

A CDC official said Thursday that by May 31, the agency had received reports of 275 cases of myocarditis or pericarditis in this age group, up from the 10 to 102 expected cases. The condition includes inflammation of the heart muscle or the lining around it.

“We clearly have an imbalance,” said Dr. Tom Shimabukuro of the CDC’s Immunization Safety Office on Thursday at a meeting of the FDA’s Advisory Committee on Vaccines and Related Biological Products. The group met to discuss safety issues related to the use of Covid-19 vaccines in children 6 months and older.

The CDC’s vaccine safety group said last month it is studying heart infections in “relatively few” people who have received Covid vaccinations. Officials say they still don’t know if the condition is really related to the vaccines.

Some of the reported cases could be something other than myocarditis or pericarditis upon further investigation, Shimabukuro said Thursday.

Men make up the majority of reported cases and most cases appear to be mild, officials say. Of the 270 people who developed the disease and were discharged, 81% made a full recovery, according to a CDC presentation at Thursday’s meeting. By May 31, 15 people had been hospitalized, three of them in intensive care, the agency said.

Although no link has been found between the vaccines and the disease, health experts say side effects occur rarely once a vaccine or drug is administered to the general population. The US has distributed millions of Covid vaccines which have helped contain new cases and hospital stays across the country.

Categories
Politics

U.S. Help to Central America Hasn’t Slowed Migration. Can Kamala Harris?

SAN ANTONIO HUISTA, Guatemala — An American contractor went to a small town in the Guatemalan mountains with an ambitious goal: to ignite the local economy, and hopefully even persuade people not to migrate north to the United States.

Half an hour into his meeting with coffee growers, the contractor excitedly revealed the tool he had brought to change their lives: a pamphlet inviting the farmers to download an app to check coffee prices and “be a part of modern agriculture.”

Pedro Aguilar, a coffee farmer who hadn’t asked for the training and didn’t see how it would keep anyone from heading for the border, looked confused. Eyeing the U.S. government logo on the pamphlet, he began waving it around, asking if anyone had a phone number to call the Americans “and tell them what our needs really are.”

“They’ve never helped me,” Mr. Aguilar said after the training a few weeks ago, referring to American aid programs intended to spur the economy and prevent migration. “Where does all the money go? Where’s the aid? Who knows?”

As vice president, Joseph R. Biden Jr. led an enormous push to deter people from crossing into the United States by devoting hundreds of millions of dollars to Central America, hoping to make the region more tolerable for the poor — so that fewer would abandon it.

Now, as President Biden, he is doubling down on that strategy once again and assigning his own vice president, Kamala Harris, the prickly challenge of carrying out his plan to commit $4 billion in a remarkably similar approach as she travels to the region Sunday.

“When I was vice president, I focused on providing the help needed to address these root causes of migration,” Mr. Biden said in a recent speech to Congress. “It helped keep people in their own countries instead of being forced to leave. Our plan worked.”

But the numbers tell a different story. After years of the United States flooding Central America with aid, migration from the region soared in 2019 and is on the upswing once more.

Here in Guatemala, which has received more than $1.6 billion in American aid over the last decade, poverty rates have risen, malnutrition has become a national crisis, corruption is unbridled and the country is sending more unaccompanied children to the United States than anywhere else in the world.

That is the stark reality facing Ms. Harris as she assumes responsibility for expanding the same kind of aid programs that have struggled to stem migration in the past. It is a challenge that initially frustrated her top political aides, some of whom viewed the assignment from Mr. Biden as one that would inevitably set her up for failure in the first months of her tenure.

Her allies worried that she would be expected to solve the entire immigration crisis, irked that the early reports of her new duties appeared to hold her responsible for juggling the recent surge of children crossing the border without adults.

Ms. Harris, who has little foreign policy experience and no history in the region, has already been criticized for not visiting the border. At a recent news conference, a group of Republicans displayed a milk carton that had been mocked up to show a picture of Ms. Harris with the headline “MISSING AT THE BORDER,” even as she held a news conference with reporters detailing her plans to visit the region.

The political risks are evident, including the obvious pitfalls of investing billions in a region where the president of Honduras has been linked to drug traffickers and accused of embezzling American aid money, the leader of El Salvador has been denounced for trampling democratic norms and the government of Guatemala has been criticized for persecuting officials fighting corruption.

Even so, Ms. Harris and her advisers have warmed to the task, according to several people familiar with her thinking in the White House. They say it will give her a chance to dive squarely into foreign policy and prove that she can pass the commander-in-chief test, negotiating with world leaders on a global stage to confront one of America’s most intractable issues.

That test begins Sunday, when Ms. Harris embarks on her first international trip, to Guatemala and Mexico, where she is expected to detail efforts to reduce migration to the United States by seeking to improve conditions in those countries.

“Injustice is a root cause of migration,” Ms. Harris said during a White House meeting on May 19 with four women who fought corruption in Guatemala. “It is causing the people of the region to leave their homes involuntarily — meaning they don’t want to leave but they are fleeing.”

While White House officials say their push to help Central America can do a tremendous amount of good, there is growing recognition inside the Biden administration that all the money spent in the region has not made enough of a difference to keep people from migrating, according to several administration officials and others with knowledge of the discussions.

“We’ve looked extensively at different programs that have been approached,” said Nancy McEldowney, a longtime diplomat who serves as Ms. Harris’s national security adviser. “She obviously has learned a lot from what then-Vice President Biden did. And so we are very mindful of the need to learn of both positive and negative, what has happened in the past.”

Foreign aid is often a difficult, and at times flawed, tool for achieving American interests abroad, but it’s unclear whether there are any simple alternatives for the Biden administration. President Donald J. Trump’s solution to migration centered on draconian policies that critics denounced as unlawful and inhumane. Moreover, members of the current administration contend that Mr. Trump’s decision to freeze a portion of the aid to the region in 2019 ended up blunting the impact of the work being done to improve conditions there.

But experts say the reasons that years of aid have not curbed migration run far deeper than that. In particular, they note that much of the money is handed over to American companies, which swallow a lot of it for salaries, expenses and profits, often before any services are delivered.

From 2016 to 2020, 80 percent of the American-financed development projects in Central America were entrusted to American contractors, according to data provided by the U.S. Agency for International Development. The upside is that these companies have big offices capable of meeting the strict oversight requirements involved in handling millions of taxpayer dollars. The downside, critics say, is that a lot of the money disappears into those bureaucracies instead of reaching the people they’re trying to help.

Half a dozen development experts who have worked with or for the contractors said the companies could easily take about 50 percent of the aid money they receive and direct it toward overhead — including generous salaries for executives — and company profits. When asked about that figure, U.S.A.I.D. did not contest it.

“It’s a business,” said Carlos Ponce, a professor of nonprofit management at Columbia University who has worked for several U.S.-funded programs in the region. “And the same implementers win the contracts again and again, despite having implemented badly in the past, not showing any level of impact and not changing anything.”

U.S.A.I.D. would not provide an estimate of how much taxpayer money spent on specific projects in Central America gets eaten up by administrative costs, noting that the agency is “legally restricted” from sharing its partners’ “proprietary information.”

“It’s an incredibly not-transparent situation,” said Eric Olson, an expert on foreign aid to Central America at the Seattle International Foundation. “It’s like this is a national secret.”

Updated 

June 4, 2021, 7:27 p.m. ET

Ms. Harris’s aides say she wants to make absolutely sure that as much assistance as possible heads directly to the communities it’s intended for.

“She is concerned to make sure that we’re getting maximum benefit for every single dollar that we spend,” Ms. McEldowney said. Asked whether that included scrutinizing the money flowing to U.S. contractors, she said, “We are looking at that issue.”

Even when aid money reached Guatemala in recent years, it often brought little change, according to interviews with dozens who worked with or received assistance from U.S.-financed projects in the country’s western highlands.

One, called the Rural Value Chains Project, spent part of its $20 million in American aid building outhouses for potato farmers — many of which were quickly abandoned or torn apart for scrap metal.

“This brings no value to people,” said Arturo Cabrera, a local government official, peeking into an unused outhouse. “It doesn’t generate income,” which is what people ultimately need, he added.

One achievement touted by Nexos Locales, a $31 million project administered by Development Alternatives Incorporated, a company based in Bethesda, Md., was creating an app to enable residents to see how their local government spent money. Aid workers said that many residents didn’t have smartphones, and that they couldn’t afford to pay for the data to use the app even if they did.

The company did not comment, directing questions to U.S.A.I.D. But several people who worked for or advised Nexos said they had grown frustrated at what they saw as wasted funding on dubious accomplishments. They described being pushed to count results like how many meetings they held and how many people attended, but had no idea whether those activities had any lasting impact.

“You felt impotent, knowing what young people or women needed, and we couldn’t do it,” said Alma López Mejía, a K’iche’ Maya Indigenous leader and a former manager at Nexos.

When aid workers started showing up one after another in the town of San Antonio Huista about six years ago, Elvia Monzón was relieved.

Then, it seemed that everyone Ms. Monzón knew had left the area, spread across a mountain range where coffee fields bask in a perfect mix of sun and rain. On clear days, you can see Mexico from the dirt road that snakes through town.

Ms. Monzón’s husband was already in the United States, and her son, then 14, begged her to take him there. When she wouldn’t, he left on his own and, his mother said, made it safely across the border.

For decades, migration to the United States followed a pattern: Aside from some spikes in migration from Central America after civil wars or natural disasters, it was mostly single Mexicans who headed north in search of better jobs and pay.

Then, in 2014, officials noticed the makings of a major shift: Record numbers of Central American children and families were crossing, fleeing gang violence and widespread hunger.

The Obama administration tackled the dicey politics of immigration in part by removing undocumented workers, earning the president the nickname “deporter in chief” from critics. But he also oversaw an infusion of new aid money that would, in theory, make countries like Guatemala more bearable for the poor. Mr. Biden was tapped to help disburse $750 million to the region.

Since then, at least three programs that won more than $100 million in U.S. funding in all have come to San Antonio Huista, hoping to make life better. Yet, in interviews, Ms. Monzón and more than a dozen other coffee farmers here could not point to many long-term benefits, despite the attention.

Aid workers kept coming to deliver lots of seminars on topics in which the farmers were already well versed, they said, such as planting new varieties of coffee beans, and then left.

“So many trainings, but at the end of the day where is the money?” asked Ms. Monzón. “The aid isn’t reaching the poor.”

U.S.A.I.D. said its programs in Central America “have had demonstrable success,” creating tens of thousands of jobs in the region in recent years, helping increase sales for small businesses and contributing to “declining migration intentions” from some Hondurans who received services.

The agency noted that American companies administering aid in the region subcontract part of their work to local groups, that no formal complaint had been filed against Nexos Locales, and that building outhouses or smartphone apps represented a small part of the efforts in Guatemala.

Some programs, like efforts to reduce violence in Honduras and El Salvador, have worked well, independent studies have found.

“All activities funded with U.S.A.I.D.’s foreign assistance benefit countries and people overseas, even if managed through agreements with U.S.-based organizations,” said Mileydi Guilarte, a deputy assistant administrator at U.S.A.I.D. working on Latin America funding.

But the government’s own assessments don’t always agree. After evaluating five years of aid spending in Central America, the Government Accountability Office rendered a blunt assessment in 2019: “Limited information is available about how U.S. assistance improved prosperity, governance, and security.”

One U.S.A.I.D. evaluation of programs intended to help Guatemalan farmers found that from 2006 to 2011, incomes rose less in the places that benefited from U.S. aid than in similar areas where there was no intervention.

Mexico has pushed for a more radical approach, urging the United States to give cash directly to Central Americans affected by two brutal hurricanes last year. But there’s also a clear possibility — that some may simply use the money to pay a smuggler for the trip across the border.

The farmers of San Antonio Huista say they know quite well what will keep their children from migrating. Right now, the vast majority of people here make their money by selling green, unprocessed coffee beans to a few giant Guatemalan companies. This is a fine way to put food on the table — assuming the weather cooperates — but it doesn’t offer much more than subsistence living.

Farmers here have long dreamed of escaping that cycle by roasting their own coffee and selling brown beans in bags to American businesses and consumers, which brings in more money.

“Instead of sending my brother, my father, my son to the United States, why not send my coffee there, and get paid in dollars?” said Esteban Lara, the leader of a local coffee cooperative.

But when they begged a U.S. government program for funding to help develop such a business, Ms. Monzón said, they were told “the money is not designed to be invested in projects like that.”

These days, groups of her neighbors are leaving for the United States every month or two. So many workers have abandoned this town that farmers are scrambling to find laborers to harvest their coffee.

One of Ms. Monzón’s oldest employees, Javier López Pérez, left with his 14-year-old son in 2019, during the last big wave of Central American migration to the United States. Mr. López said he was scaling the border wall with his son when he fell and broke his ankle.

“My son screamed, ‘Papi, no!’ and I said to him, ‘Keep going, my son,’” Mr. López said. He said his son made it to the United States, while he returned to San Antonio Huista alone.

His family was then kicked out of their home, which Mr. López had given as collateral to the person who smuggled him to the border. The house they moved into was destroyed by the two hurricanes that hit Guatemala late last year.

Ms. Monzón put Mr. López in one of her relatives’ houses, then got the community to cobble together money to pay for enough cinder blocks to build the family a place to live.

While mixing cement to bind the blocks together, one of Mr. López’s sons, Vidal, 19, confessed that he had been talking to a smuggler about making the same journey that felled his father, who was realistic at the prospect.

“I told him, ‘Son, we suffered hunger and thirst along the way, and then look at what happened to me, look at what I lost,’” Mr. López said, touching his still-mangled ankle. “But I can’t tell him what to do with his life — he’s a man now.”

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Health

U.S. officers say China hasn’t been ‘fully clear’ in Covid probe

During the visit of the World Health Organization (WHO) team tasked with investigating the causes of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China, on February 3, 2021, security guards will be on guard in front of the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

Thomas Peter | Reuters

White House officials told reporters Tuesday that China had not been “completely transparent” in its global investigation into the origins of Covid-19 and that a full investigation was needed to determine whether the virus is affecting nearly 3.5 million people killed, came from nature or a laboratory.

“We have to get to the bottom of whatever the answer,” Andy Slavitt, senior advisor to Covid-19 at the White House, told reporters at a briefing in Covid on Tuesday. “We need a completely transparent process from China, we need that [World Health Organization] to help on this matter, and we don’t feel like we have it now. “

The theory that Covid-19 escaped the Wuhan Institute of Virology was initially dismissed as a conspiracy theory by most medical experts and health officials, but credible scientists continue to question the true origins of Covid-19.

Members of the World Health Organization (WHO) team investigating the causes of the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic leave the Jade Hotel on a bus after completing their quarantine in Wuhan, China’s central Hubei Province, on Jan. 28, 2021.

HECTOR RETAMAL | AFP | Getty Images

A previously unpublished US intelligence report found that researchers at the institute in Wuhan, where the outbreak began in late 2019, were seeking treatment in hospital after an illness, “with symptoms consistent with both Covid-19 and common seasonal illnesses “reported the Wall Street Journal on Sunday, quoting from the report.

While the coronavirus is more likely to have jumped from animal to human, “we don’t know 100% the answer to that,” said White House chief medical officer Dr. Anthony Fauci, reporters at the same briefing on Tuesday. “We absolutely need to conduct an investigation.”

Last week, the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, admitted that there is “a possibility” that Covid-19 leaked from a laboratory.

Peter Ben Embarek and Marion Koopmans (R) come to a press conference on February 9, 2021 to conclude a visit by an international team of experts from the World Health Organization (WHO) to the city of Wuhan in the Chinese province of Hefei.

HECTOR RETAMAL | AFP | Getty Images

WHO has said the virus likely came from an animal host, but the agency hasn’t ruled out that the virus leaked from a laboratory.

“Some questions have been raised as to whether some hypotheses have been rejected,” said WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “I want to make it clear that all hypotheses remain open and require further investigation.”

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Entertainment

Gustavo Dudamel Hasn’t Carried out A lot Opera. That’s OK.

Historically, European opera houses have been the traditional training ground for young conductors of all kinds. Before prospective conductors were entrusted with leading performances, they began coaching singers on the piano, rehearsing the choir and supporting senior conductors. (This was the path of Dudamel’s predecessor in Paris, Philippe Jordan, 46, who moved to the Vienna State Opera.)

Working directly with singers was and is vital. When all instrumentalists imitate the human voice to a certain extent, opera conductors gain a special feel for the art of forming a long lyrical line: they learn to breathe with singers, to anticipate the melodic tempo and flow of fine singers . But you also have to lead these singers and almost curb them, so that their lines do not slack off with too much expression. This sensitivity develops with long practice. Opera also forces young conductors to hone their skills as musical traffic cops by coordinating singers and choristers (who are often far apart on stage) and the players in the box.

The traditional way to learn the conducting profession through the opera was illustrated by Gustav Mahler, who in his youth worked in opera houses in Prague, Leipzig and Hamburg and then became director of the Vienna State Opera and briefly chief conductor at the Met also large orchestras, including the New York Philharmonic from 1909 until his death in 1911. Although he was known for his visionary symphonies and never wrote an opera, Mahler conducted most of his conducting in opera houses.

Toscanini spent the first half of his long career in opera, working tirelessly in Italian houses. By today’s standards, he would be considered a specialist in new music as he directed many premieres, including “La Bohème” in 1896, the year he conducted his first symphonic concert. In 1898 he became chief conductor of the Teatro alla Scala in Milan and in 1908 took the main position at the Met before returning to La Scala. Then, in 1928, he became music director of the New York Philharmonic and never ran an opera house again. In 1937, NBC formed for him the NBC Symphony, a high-profile orchestra, and his broadcasts gained a large following (including an influential series of opera performances).

George Szell is so well known for his long tenure as music director of the Cleveland Orchestra (1946-70) that it is sometimes forgotten that he spent much of his early professional life in the opera. This includes the Berlin State Opera, in which the young Szell was looked after by Richard Strauss; Szell eventually becomes chief conductor there. In the 1940s, Szell conducted regularly at the Met, including two celebrated “Ring” cycles. Then, in 1950, Rudolf Bing, who didn’t like Szell, took over the management of the company, and Szell made his last appearance there in 1954. Anyway, he was based in Cleveland until then and never looked back.

Categories
Politics

Biden Desires Harris to Have a Main Function. What It Is Hasn’t Been Outlined.

WASHINGTON – President Biden was removing a list of his priorities for a coronavirus relief law at one of his first meetings with reporters as commander in chief when he stopped correcting himself in mid-sentence.

These points, Mr Biden said, are what “we think the priorities are” with an emphasis on the pronoun. Then he turned to Vice President Kamala Harris and stood a few socially distant feet behind him. He apologized.

It has been a rare slip up for the President who has worked to include Ms. Harris in almost all of his public appearances and stresses that she is a full partner in his decisions. These recurring scenes are the most tangible result of the efforts of Mr Biden – and an instruction from the President – to treat Ms. Harris, the first woman and black Vice President, as equal stakeholders as he works to piece together and engage with the nation’s political rifts Races deal with inequalities and bring the coronavirus pandemic to heel.

“The President has given us clear instructions,” said Ron Klain, Mr Biden’s chief of staff, in an interview. “Our goal is to get them out as far as possible.”

Ms. Harris’s relationship with the President was forged through the politics of the Democratic Primary Campaign when she emerged as one of Mr. Biden’s most vocal opponents. A surprising chemistry with Mr. Biden made her run mates, and now that relationship will be critical to Ms. Harris being able to define herself in what historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. said has turned out to be “a spectacular and, in my opinion, incurable job “Proved frustration.”

“She moved from that failed campaign to the Golden Ticket to replace a man who appreciates the role of Vice President and will get her out of there in that historic role,” said Gil Duran, a former aide to Ms. Harris, when she served as Attorney general in California. “So the question is: what is she doing with this reset?”

The answer is in the works.

The vice president has already announced her presence, most recently on Friday morning when she traveled to Capitol Hill before sunrise to cast a groundbreaking Senate vote that clears the way for Mr Biden’s $ 1.9 trillion coronavirus stimulus package made progress without Republican support.

And as a groundbreaking part of the partnership, Ms. Harris took on the burden of living up to the expectations of voters, especially those of color, who helped get Mr. Biden into the Oval Office. It is a burden that Mr. Klain says she carried “with grace”, even if it weighs heavily on her. Others say it will take her some time to set her own course.

At the moment, the Vice President’s recruitment agents seem determined to cement and highlight their bond with Mr. Biden through their joint appearances, even if they want to avoid Ms. Harris becoming a rigid, mannequin-like figure standing by the President’s side. much like Vice President Mike Pence has done for the past four years.

For a model, Ms. Harris need look no further than Mr. Biden. In eight years as Vice President, he has carved out his own role alongside President Barack Obama, but not before overcoming a relationship that was initially rigid and formal.

Mr Biden and Mrs Harris are off to a faster start. They spent a lot more time together than their predecessors – usually four to five hours a day in the White House, helpers say – partly because the coronavirus pandemic has restricted their travel.

Ms. Harris and Mr. Biden usually start the day by receiving the President’s Daily Letter in the Oval Office together, a tradition restored since the departure of President Donald J. Trump, who had little interest in it. They also quickly embraced the idea of ​​a weekly White House lunch as a private opportunity to build trust and share thoughts.

In building her own workforce, Ms. Harris selected people she knew had good relationships with the president and his team. She chose Tina Flournoy, who is closely associated with Mr. Klain, to run her office. Ashley Etienne, a former advisor to Spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi, is its communications director.

The new Washington

Updated

Apr. 5, 2021, 9:20 p.m. ET

Ms. Harris also knew that the President held Symone in high regard for Sanders, who served as the press secretary for Senator Bernie Sanders’ 2016 presidential campaign before joining the Biden campaign. Ms. Sanders is now her press officer.

The Vice-President’s advisors repeatedly stressed that all of their public events and messages were closely coordinated with members of Mr Biden’s team. A visit by Ms. Harris last week to the National Institutes of Health to thank scientists and get their second dose of the coronavirus vaccine was paired with a speech by Mr. Biden later that day in which he announced the purchase of 200 Millions of additional doses touted the vaccine.

The performance made a lasting impression in the district of Representative Joyce Beatty, Democrat of Ohio and Chair of the Black Caucus of Congress. In an interview, Ms. Beatty said her phone was lit up with calls from voters newly curious to get the vaccine themselves after photos of Ms. Harris who received the shot came online.

Black Americans are nearly three times more likely to die from the coronavirus than white Americans, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. White Americans are more likely to receive the vaccine, however, in part because of systemic racism in health care institutions. The sight of a black woman receiving the vaccine, Ms. Beatty said, “gave people hope and gave them education.”

These moments when Ms. Harris contacts people across the country are critical to any future she might have outside of the administration. But they also align with the messages Mr Biden hopes his Vice President – as a woman, a minority and a generation younger – can convey on behalf of his agenda.

But as Mr Biden knows well, the more opportunities there are to develop your own identity as a Vice President, the greater the chances of causing chaos. As Vice President, Mr. Biden’s honesty often surprised Obama’s tightly scripted White House. At times, including 2012 when he spoke out in favor of gay marriage in front of Obama, Mr Biden threw the script away entirely.

While Ms. Harris was sitting for an interview with a television station in West Virginia last week, her support for the president’s $ 1.9 trillion coronavirus relief plan was interpreted as an attempt to put pressure on the state’s Democratic Senator Joe Manchin III, who took offense and expressed anger that he hadn’t gotten heads-up.

And in a minor mistake during the same interview, Ms. Harris promoted the clearance of “abandoned landmines” in West Virginia – not “abandoned mines” – as a job creation measure in the state.

White House officials quickly contacted Mr. Manchin for damage control and papered the hatch, publicly praising Mr. Manchin’s worth in the Biden-Harris agenda.

Ms. Harris also had questions about members of her family who benefited from her relationships with her. Ms. Harris’ stepdaughter reportedly received a modeling contract a week after inauguration day that raised eyebrows even among the president’s allies. And a business run by Mrs. Harris’ niece that sells Harris-themed goods has been an ethical issue for Mr. Biden’s employees since the campaign. The White House has stated that her name will not be used in any commercial activity that a spokeswoman said would “imply endorsement or support.”

This did not affect the President’s view of Mrs Harris. White House officials said Mr. Biden was eager to get her to work, much like Mr. Obama blamed him for the stimulus plan in early 2009. The fact that the President did not intend to assign her a specific portfolio immediately has inevitably raised some questions about her role in the administration.

Instead, Mr. Biden has given Ms. Harris a number of high-profile assignments in the first two weeks of office. Just hours after the President announced on inauguration day that the United States intended to rejoin the World Health Organization, the Vice President spoke to Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the group’s general manager, and reiterated the support of the new administration following Mr Trump’s ongoing attacks on the world’s leading healthcare facility.

The call sent an early message that she was speaking for Mr. Biden about some of his top priorities, but Ms. Harris wasn’t shy about pushing Mr. Biden on her own. Over the past few weeks, advisers to the President and Vice-President have said she has repeatedly urged a greater focus on how administration policies would affect disadvantaged people in urban and rural communities who are often overlooked.

During an Oval Office meeting with Mr. Biden and his advisors on their first Monday at the White House, Ms. Harris urged Jeffrey D. Zients, the Coronavirus Response Coordinator, to provide more details on using mobile vaccination centers to ensure that the poor people, those who live in remote areas could be protected from the virus.

“The Vice President has been pushing us hard in a very good way to see if enough mobile units are available. When we finished the meeting, she urged me further: “Where are we in mobile vaccination units? How many will we have in what period of time? Will they be able to reach rural and urban communities? How much progress have you made? ‘”Said Mr. Zients.

That kind of persistence made a deep impression on Mr. Biden, his aides say.

Just hours after Ms. Harris showered Mr. Zients with questions, the President found himself on stage with Ms. Harris solely responsible for his coronavirus relief plan. Mr Klain, who has served two vice-presidents as chief of staff, said the instance was further evidence that Mr Biden had an instinctive understanding of what those moments might feel like.

“It starts with a president who has been there and understands what it feels like to take two steps back at a public event,” said Klain. “I think he has this empathy for your situation that is unique.”

Categories
Health

FDA says it hasn’t authorized Moderna Covid vaccine regardless of Trump tweet

US President Donald Trump gives a speech at an Operation Warp Speed ​​Vaccine Summit on December 8, 2020 at the White House in Washington, USA.

Tom Brenner | Reuters

The Food and Drug Administration has not yet approved Moderna’s coronavirus vaccine, contrary to a tweet from President Donald Trump on Friday that said the agency had “overwhelmingly approved” it and would distribute it immediately.

The FDA did not comment on Trump’s tweet, instead referring CNBC to a statement from FDA Commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn said Thursday evening that the agency would “work quickly towards finalizing and issuing emergency clearance” for Moderna’s vaccine.

“The agency has also notified the US Centers for Disease Control, Prevention and Operation Warp Speed ​​so that they can implement their plans for a timely distribution of the vaccine,” Hahn said in a joint statement with Dr. Peter Marks, director of the FDA Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research.

The FDA statement on Thursday “is current,” FDA spokesman Michael Felberbaum told CNBC after Trump’s tweet.

It’s possible that Trump was referring to a vote by the FDA’s Advisory Committee on Vaccines and Related Biological Products Thursday, which voted 20-0, with one member abstaining to approve Moderna’s emergency vaccine advocate. The advisory board plays a key role in approving influenza and other vaccines in the US and verifying that the vaccinations are safe for public use. While the FDA does not need to follow the advisory board’s recommendation, it often does.

The FDA is expected to approve Moderna’s vaccine as early as Friday. The US plans to ship close to 6 million cans next week pending agency approval. This was announced by General Gustave Perna, who oversees the logistics for the Operation Warp Speed ​​vaccination project, to reporters on Monday.