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Politics

Biden pledges an enormous federal response for ‘so long as it takes’

Dartanian Stovall looks at the house that collapsed with him inside during the peak of Hurricane Ida in New Orleans, Louisiana on August 30, 2021.

Michael DeMocker | USA TODAY network via Reuters

WASHINGTON – The federal government is doing everything in its power to help Louisiana and Mississippi rescue residents and recover from Hurricane Ida, President Joe Biden told the governors of those states on Monday.

“We’re here to help you get back on your feet,” said Biden during a virtual briefing at the White House with Democratic Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards, Republican Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves and others.

The hurricane hit land on Sunday as a strong Category 4 storm that supplied electricity to up to 2 million people in Louisiana and Mississippi. By Monday morning, one death had already been attributed to the storm. Edwards told MSNBC that he expected that number to grow significantly.

The massive federal response to the storm reinforces one of the pillars of Biden’s stance toward the presidency: his belief that the government is uniquely equipped to mobilize aid for millions of people.

“The people of Louisiana and Mississippi are resilient, but at moments like these we can see the power of government to meet people’s needs and serve people when the government is ready to respond. That’s our job, ”said Biden.

Five thousand National Guardsmen have been deployed across the southeast, Biden said, and more than 25,000 electrical crews and linemen from 30 states are “rolling in to assist”.

To assess the damage to electrical lines, Biden said he directed the Federal Aviation Administration to work with electrical companies to deploy surveillance drones in the affected areas.

Biden also authorized the Defense and Homeland Security departments to provide satellite imagery that could help assess the damage.

To help more people access cellular services, Biden said the Federal Communications Commission will enter into a cooperative framework agreement between cellular operators so that people can use each company’s roaming services.

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Biden was attended the briefing by former Louisiana MP Cedric Richmond, who stepped down from the House of Representatives in January to join the Biden administration as director of the White House Public Relations Office.

The president directed the governors to contact Richmond directly if they needed anything from the White House.

Ida first hit land over Port Fourchon, Louisiana, as a Category 4 storm with winds of 250 mph, one of the strongest storms to hit the region since Hurricane Katrina, which hit the area 16 years ago to the day.

Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell was also on-screen at the White House meeting, as was Cynthia Lee Sheng, President of Jefferson Parish, Louisiana.

Reeves and Edwards both thanked Biden for signing pre-landing federal emergency letters for their states, freeing up federal funds and resources to respond to the emergency.

“We have all the help you will need,” said Biden. “We’ll stand by you and the people of the Gulf while it takes you to recover.”

Officials downgraded Ida to a tropical storm on Monday en route inland, where it was expected to bring heavy rainfall, tornadoes and the potential for severe flooding later this week as it migrates up the Tennessee Valley and into the mid-Atlantic.

Rainfall could be 24 inches across parts of southeast Louisiana to the extreme south of Mississippi.

This was Biden’s second meeting in four days with governors of the storm-hit states. On Friday he met virtually with Edwards, Reeve and GOP Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey.

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Politics

As stablecoins explode in reputation, regulators put together a response.

Leading U.S. financial regulators met on Monday to discuss stablecoins, asset-backed digital currencies that are gaining popularity so quickly the government is struggling to keep up – and economic officials increasingly as a risk to financial stability look at.

Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies that derive their value from an underlying currency or basket of assets, and they have long been a matter of particular concern. When news broke in 2018 and 2019 that Facebook was looking to create a stablecoin, the Federal Reserve and other regulators took notice, fearing the project could quickly grow in scope. The pressure to develop a framework for their surveillance has increased recently as prominent stablecoins such as Tether and Binance have grown in popularity.

The Treasury Department announced Friday that Secretary of State Janet L. Yellen would convene a meeting of the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets to discuss the work of regulators on stablecoins. That group includes Jerome H. Powell, chairman of the Federal Reserve, as well as the leaders of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Monday’s session was expanded to include the Heads of the Auditor’s Office and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

The meeting’s attendees “discussed the rapid growth of stablecoins, the potential use of stablecoins as a means of payment, and potential risks to end users, the financial system and national security,” said a Treasury Department statement released after the meeting on Monday. Ms. Yellen “underlined the need to act quickly to ensure that an adequate US regulatory framework was in place.”

Mr Powell has been particularly open about the need for better oversight of stablecoins, repeatedly saying at two appearances in Congress last week that they are inadequately regulated.

“If we want something that looks like a money market fund, or a bank deposit, a narrow bank and it’s growing really fast, we really need proper regulation – and today we don’t,” he said while giving evidence to the banking committee Senate.

Eric Rosengren, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, has similarly warned about Tether, arguing that it relies on underlying financial assets that could see investor runs during troubled times. The New York attorney general said earlier this year that Tether misled investors by claiming it was fully backed by US dollars at all times.

The Treasury Department said the working group expects to issue recommendations on stablecoins in the coming months. The group previously warned stablecoin operators that they must hold adequate cash reserves to cover their offerings.

The Fed could also try to crowd out digital offerings by offering its own alternative.

The central bank is looking at a digital currency offering that would likely work similarly to the digital cash you spend when you swipe your debit card. But where that debit card money is tied to the commercial banking system, the central bank’s digital currency would be backed directly by the Fed, as would physical cash.

Mr Powell told lawmakers last week that going without stable coins could be one of the stronger arguments in favor of a digital dollar.

But Mr Powell remains undecided whether central bank digital currency makes sense, he told lawmakers. The Fed plans to release a comprehensive report on the possibility of a digital dollar, expected in September.

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Politics

Biden Weighs a Response to Ransomware Assaults

William Evanina, who recently left a top counterintelligence post in the U.S. government and now advises companies, said he would advise Mr. Biden “to be bold.”

“We need to give Putin something to think about,” he said. “And while I know people in the government like the idea of having ‘unseen’ cyberoperations, we have to show the American people and the private sector that we are doing something about this.”

Mr. Putin has denied that many of the attacks have come from Russia and has argued that the United States, with its cyberoperations around the globe, is the most active disruptive force on the internet.

But clearly a large number of the ransomware demands come out of Russia, and the ransomware code is often written to avoid hitting Russian-speaking targets.

If Moscow wanted to stop Russia’s cybercriminals from hacking American targets, experts say, it would. That is why, some Russia experts argue, the United States needs take aim at Russia’s kleptocracy, either by leaking details of Mr. Putin’s financials or by freezing oligarchs’ bank accounts.

“The only language that Putin understands is power, and his power is his money,” said Garry Kasparov, the Russian chess grandmaster and a Putin critic. “It’s not about tanks; it’s about banks. The U.S. should wipe out oligarchs’ accounts, one by one, until the message is delivered.”

For now, REvil has shown no sign that it is diminishing operations.

In recent days, its cybercriminals continued to hijack American companies’ networks. On Wednesday, REvil hit a new target: a Florida defense contractor, HX5, that sells space and weapon launch technology to the Army, the Navy, the Air Force and NASA.

REvil posted hacked documents to its naming-and-shaming website, “The Happy Blog.” None appeared to be of vital consequence, but HX5 is just the latest contractor to be hit.

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Health

White Home to deploy response groups throughout U.S. to fight Covid variant

The White House is deploying Covid-19 response teams across the United States focused on combatting the highly contagious delta variant, the Biden administration announced Thursday.

The teams, comprised of officials from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other federal agencies, will work with communities at higher risk of experiencing outbreaks and will focus on increasing the rate of Covid-19 vaccinations, White House Covid czar Jeff Zients said during a White House news briefing on the pandemic.

The teams will also increase testing to expand detection of the virus, facilitate contact tracing and provide therapeutics to help treat those who become infected, he said, adding the government is ready to provide additional personnel.

There are 1,000 counties in the U.S. that have vaccination coverage of less than 30%, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said at the briefing. These counties, primarily in the South and Midwest, are the most vulnerable to the variant, she said.

“To be clear, the federal government stands ready to meet the moment and work with our state partners to respond to the delta variant,” Zients said.

“As we continue to work with communities across the country to get more shots in arms, we will also be working with governors and state and local health authorities to identify and address the needs on the ground in places with emergency outbreaks,” he added.

The Biden administration’s comments come just ahead of the Fourth of July weekend, when many Americans are expected to gather for fireworks, barbeques and other large, in-person activities.

Delta, first identified in India but now in at least 96 countries, is expected to become the dominant variant of the disease in the U.S. The prevalence of the delta, estimated to be about 60% more transmissible than the alpha variant first found in the U.K., is doubling in the U.S. about every two weeks, according to the CDC.

Health officials say there were reports that the delta variant also causes more severe symptoms, but that more research is needed to confirm those conclusions. Still, there are signs the delta strain could provoke different symptoms than other variants.

This is a “highly contagious virus,” said Dr. Paul Offit, a pediatrician and vaccine advocate who has served on advisory panels for both the CDC and the Food and Drug Administration.

“We need to vaccinate now. I mean get everyone vaccinated now because these mutations are going to continue to occur,” he said. It’s only July but “as we head into the fall and early winter you’re going to see a surge and there are too many people in this country who are still unvaccinated.”

Delta accounts for around 26% of Covid cases in the U.S., the CDC has estimated. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the White House’s chief medical advisor, has called the variant the “greatest threat” to the nation’s attempt to eliminate Covid-19.

The WHO has said the variant is the fastest and fittest coronavirus strain yet, and it will “pick off” the most vulnerable people, especially in places with low Covid vaccination rates. It recently urged everyone, including vaccinated people, to continue to wear masks as the variant spreads.

In some regions of the country, nearly one in two sequences is the delta variant, Walensky said Thursday. As the variant spreads, officials expect to see an increase in transmission unless states can vaccinate more people, she added.

As of Thursday, more than 181 million Americans, or 54.6% of the U.S. population, have had at least one dose of a Covid vaccine, according to data compiled by the CDC. More than 155 million Americans are fully vaccinated, according to the CDC.

“The delta variant is predicted to be the second most prevalent variant in the United States, and I expect that in the coming weeks it will eclipse the alpha variant,” she said, urging those with symptoms to get tested for Covid.

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Health

Moderna says vaccine generates promising immune response in opposition to variants

A doctor draws a syringe of Moderna’s vaccine.

Oliver Berg | Image Alliance | Getty Images

A booster of Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccine triggered a promising immune response against variants B.1.351 and P.1, which were first identified in South Africa and Brazil, respectively, the company announced on Wednesday, citing early data from an ongoing clinical study.

In the study, Moderna is testing a 50 microgram dose of its vaccine in previously vaccinated people. The booster dose was found to increase neutralizing antibody responses against the original virus, as well as against B.1.351 and P.1, two variants that have since spread to other countries, including the United States

The company also said that a booster shot of its other vaccine, which it calls mRNA-1273.351, produced an even better immune response over its current vaccine against the B.1.351 variant from South Africa. The new vaccine is a variant-specific booster shot that targets B.1.351.

The preliminary results, which Moderna says will be published online, have not yet been peer-reviewed.

“As we seek to defeat the ongoing pandemic, we continue to seek to be proactive as the virus evolves,” said Stephane Bancel, CEO of Moderna, in a press release. “We are encouraged by this new data, which increases our confidence that our booster strategy should protect against these newly discovered variants.”

According to Moderna, the side effects were similar to those seen after the second dose of the vaccine in the previously reported studies. Side effects included injection site pain, fatigue and headache, and muscle and joint pain.

The new data comes as drug makers and scientists now say people will likely need a booster shot of Covid-19 vaccines and possibly additional shots each year, just like they did with seasonal flu.

Moderna’s vaccine requires two doses four weeks apart. As with Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson, the shot against Covid is very effective, although company executives and officials now say they expect this strong protection to wear off over time. Pfizer’s vaccine is also a two-dose therapy, while the J&J immunization is just one burst.

The Chief Medical Officer of the White House, Dr. Anthony Fauci, previously said that Americans may need booster vaccinations to better protect themselves from variants.

Earlier Wednesday, US health officials said highly contagious variants are still a “wild card” in their nationwide campaign to vaccinate most American adults by July 4th.

A report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published on Wednesday predicted that Covid-19 cases will increase until May due to the highly contagious variant B.1.1.7 first identified in the UK, before declining sharply by July, because vaccinations reduce infections. Still, variants threaten to reverse the nation’s progress, officials said,

“We are seeing that our current vaccines protect against the pollutants circulating in the country. Put simply, the sooner more people are vaccinated, the sooner we will all get back to normal,” said CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky during a Covid press conference at the White House.

Moderna is evaluating three approaches to increasing immunity. The first approach would use variant-specific booster vaccinations such as mRNA-1273.351, but at a lower dose than the original vaccine. The second would combine the original vaccine with a variant-specific vaccine into a single shot at 50 micrograms or less, Moderna said. The third would test a third shot of the original vaccine at a lower dose.

Bancel told CNBC last month that the company is hoping to have a booster shot for its two-dose vaccine in the fall.

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Health

Oxford to launch human problem trial to review immune response

Caroline Nicolls will receive an injection of the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine administered by Nurse Amy Nash at Madejski Stadium in Reading, west of London, on April 13, 2021.

STEVE PARSONS | AFP | Getty Images

LONDON – Oxford University researchers announced the start of a Human Challenge study on Monday to better understand what happens when people who have already contracted the coronavirus become infected for the second time.

The researchers will investigate what kind of immune response can prevent people from becoming infected with Covid-19 again and examine how the immune system reacts to the virus a second time.

Little is currently known about what happens to people who had the virus the second time they were infected.

The experiment is carried out in two phases with different participants in each phase. The first phase is slated to begin this month and the second phase is slated to begin in summer.

In medical research, Human Challenge studies are controlled studies in which participants are intentionally exposed to a pathogen or beetle to study the effects.

“Challenge studies tell us things that other studies cannot because, unlike natural infections, they are tightly controlled,” said Helen McShane, chief investigator for the study and professor of vaccinology in the Department of Pediatrics at Oxford University.

“If we re-infect these participants, we will know exactly how their immune systems responded to the first COVID infection, when exactly the second infection occurs, and how much virus they have,” said McShane.

It is hoped that the study will help improve scientists’ basic understanding of the virus and develop tests that can reliably predict whether people will be protected.

What happens in each phase?

In the first phase, up to 64 volunteers between the ages of 18 and 30 who were previously infected naturally will be re-exposed to the virus under controlled conditions.

Researchers will oversee attendees’ care while they perform CT scans of the lungs and MRI scans of the heart while isolating in a specially designed suite for at least 17 days.

All participants must be fit, healthy and have fully recovered from their initial infection with Covid to minimize the risk.

Study participants will only be released from the quarantine unit if they are no longer infected and there is a risk of the disease spreading.

A view of the City of London on a clear day.

Vuk Valcic | SOPA pictures | LightRocket via Getty Images

In the second phase of the experiment, two different areas are examined.

“First we will very carefully define the basic immune response of the volunteers before we infect them. We will then infect them with the dose of virus selected from the first study and measure how much virus we can detect after infection. We will then.” to be able to understand what kind of immune responses protect against re-infection, “said McShane.

“Second, we will measure the immune response several times after infection so we can understand what immune response is being generated by the virus,” she added.

The entire study period is 12 months, including at least eight follow-up appointments after discharge.

“This study has the potential to change our understanding by providing high-quality data on how our immune systems react to a second infection with this virus,” said Shobana Balasingam, senior research advisor on vaccines at Wellcome, a nonprofit that funded the study.

“The results could have important implications for the future management of COVID-19, influencing not only vaccine development but research into the range of effective treatments that are also badly needed,” Balasingam said.

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Business

QuantumScape CEO mulls authorized response to scathing brief vendor report

QuantumScape could take legal action after it was attacked in a scathing report by activist short seller Scorpion Capital.

“We are definitely going to take a look,” said Jagdeep Singh, managing director of QuantumScape, when CNBC’s Jim Cramer asked if the company would consider filing a lawsuit against the company.

“Some of the points there are simple, just absurd. Absurd to the point where there are … things that we want to take legal action on.”

Singh appeared on “Mad Money” Friday, the day after Scorpion published the short report. In the 188-page report, Scorpion accused QuantumScape, released in November through a blank check association, of acting as a “pump and dump SPAC”. It even compared the company to Theranos, the disgraced healthcare technology startup.

QuantumScape shares fell more than 12% after the information was released. The stock fell again on Friday, contributing to a 28% decline in less than two weeks.

“We don’t want to be too distracted either, but you know we feel pretty good where we are,” said Singh.

The battery company said it stood by the data it presented to investors and will continue to build a battery for its customers like Volkswagen, who recently invested an additional $ 100 million in the company.

QuantumScape argued that Scorpion was motivated to release the report because it could benefit financially from the subsequent price decline. Investors who want to make a profit on a sharp drop in prices are known as short sellers.

“We have always been fairly transparent about what we have and what work still needs to be done,” said Singh. “That’s one of the things we are honestly proud of. We believe we have been the most transparent of all solid-state battery companies.”

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Business

Inside Company America’s Frantic Response to the Georgia Voting Regulation

On March 11, Delta Air Lines inaugurated a building at its Atlanta headquarters for Andrew Young, civil rights activist and former mayor. At the ceremony, Mr. Young spoke of the restrictive voting law that Republicans were pushing through Georgia state lawmakers. Then, after the speeches, Mr. Young’s daughter Andrea, herself a prominent activist, cornered Delta’s executive director, Ed Bastian.

“I told him the importance of opposing this law,” she said.

It was an early warning to Mr Bastian that the issue of voting rights could soon embed Delta in another national dispute. For the past five years, companies have taken political positions like never before, often in response to former President Donald J. Trump’s extreme policies.

Following Mr Trump’s equivocal reaction to the violence by white nationalists in Charlottesville, Virginia in 2017, Ken Frazier, Merck’s black executive director, stepped down from an advisory group to the president and caused dozens of other top executives to distance themselves from the president . Last year, after the assassination of George Floyd, hundreds of companies expressed solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement.

For companies, however, the dispute over voting rights is different. An issue that both parties consider a priority cannot easily be resolved with solidarity and donation statements. The stance on voting rights brings corporations into partisan politics and pits them against Republicans who have proven willing to collect taxes and enact burdensome regulations on corporations that politically cross them.

It’s a stunning new landscape for big corporations trying to appease Democrats who are focused on social justice, as well as populist Republicans who are suddenly no longer afraid of breaking ties. Companies like Delta are caught in the middle and face steep political ramifications no matter what they do.

“It was very difficult under President Trump, and the business community hoped that a change of administration could make things a little easier,” said Rich Lesser, executive director of the Boston Consulting Group. “However, business leaders still face challenges in dealing with a number of issues, and the electoral problem is one of the most sensitive.”

At first, Delta, Georgia’s largest employer, tried to stay out of the battle for the right to vote. But after the Georgian law was passed, a group of powerful black executives publicly urged large corporations to oppose the electoral law. Hours later, Delta and Coca-Cola abruptly reversed course and rejected Georgian law. Major League Baseball pulled the All-Star game out of Atlanta in protest on Friday, and more than 100 other companies spoke out in favor of defending the voting rights.

The wave of support suggests that black leaders’ call for clarification will have an impact in the coming months as Republican lawmakers push restrictive electoral laws in more than 40 states. But the backlash was already quick: Trump called for boycotts of companies that opposed such laws, and Georgian lawmakers voted for new taxes on Delta.

“If people feel like it’s been a week of discomfort and uncertainty, it should and must be,” said Sherrilyn Ifill, the president of the NAACP Legal Protection and Education Fund, who urged companies to do so to get involved. “Companies need to find out who they are right now.”

Delta was at the center of the storm throughout the period. Delta has long played an oversized role in Georgia’s business and political life, and since Mr. Bastian became Managing Director in 2016, he has dealt with some sensitive political and social issues.

Delta supports LGBTQ rights and in 2018, Mr. Bastian ended a partnership with the National Rifle Association after the shootings in Parkland, Florida. In response, Republican lawmakers in Georgia voted to remove a tax break for Delta that cost the company $ 50 million.

But when 2021 kicked off and Mr Bastian focused on his company’s recovery from the pandemic, an even more partisan problem emerged.

In February, civil rights activists began reaching out to Delta in what they described as problematic provisions in early bills, including a Sunday voting ban, and asked the company to use its clout and lobbying to sway the debate.

The Delta government team shared some of these concerns, but chose to work behind the scenes instead of going public. It was a calculated decision so as not to upset Republican lawmakers.

In early March, Delta lobbyist David Ralston, Republican head of the Georgia House, and aide to Governor Brian Kemp pushed for some sweeping provisions to be removed from the bill.

But even as pressure increased on Delta to publicly oppose the legislation, Mr Bastian’s advisors urged him to keep quiet. Instead, the company issued a statement generally endorsing voting rights. Other big Atlanta companies, including Coca-Cola, UPS, and Home Depot, followed the same script and didn’t criticize the bill.

Updated

April 2, 2021, 3:52 p.m. ET

This passive approach enraged activists. In mid-March, protesters held a “die-in” in the Coca-Cola Museum. Bishop Reginald Jackson, an influential pastor from Atlanta, took to the streets with a megaphone calling for a boycott of Coca-Cola. Days later, activists gathered at the Delta Terminal at Atlanta Airport and urged Mr. Bastian to use his clout to “kill the bill.” Nevertheless, Mr. Bastian refused to say anything publicly.

The law passed two weeks prior to the day Delta dedicated its building to Mr. Young. Some of the most restrictive provisions have been removed, but the law restricts access to ballot papers and makes it a crime to give water to people standing in line to vote.

The fight in Georgia seemed to be over. Days after the law was passed, a group of powerful black leaders, disappointed with the results, took action. Soon Atlanta businesses were being drawn back into the fray, and the controversy had spread to other businesses across the country.

Last Sunday, William M. Lewis Jr., chairman of investment banking at Lazard, emailed a handful of Georgia academics and executives asking what he could do. The group had a simple answer: make other black business leaders sound the alarm.

Minutes after receiving this reply, Mr. Lewis emailed four other Black executives, including Ken Chenault, former executive director of American Express and Mr. Frazier, executive director of Merck. Ten minutes later, the men had a Zoom call and decided to write a public letter, according to two people familiar with the matter.

That Sunday afternoon, Mr. Lewis sent an email with a list of 150 prominent black executives he is curating. It didn’t take long for the men to collect more than 70 signatures, including Robert F. Smith, executive director of Vista Equity Partners; Raymond McGuire, a former Citigroup executive who is running for Mayor of New York; Ursula Burns, former executive director of Xerox; and Richard Parsons, former Citigroup Chairman and Managing Director of Time Warner.

Mr. Chenault said some executives who were asked to sign turned down. “Some were concerned about the attention they and their company would get,” he said.

Before the group went public, Mr. Chenault reached out to Mr. Bastian of Delta, according to information provided by three people familiar with the matter. The men have known each other for decades and spoke extensively on Tuesday evening about Georgian law and what role Delta could play in the debate.

The next morning the letter appeared as a full-page advertisement in the New York Times, and Mr. Chenault and Mr. Frazier spoke to the media. “There’s no middle ground here,” Chenault told the Times. “You are either in favor of getting more people to vote or you want to suppress the vote.”

“That was unprecedented,” said Mr. Lewis. “The African American business community has never banded together on a non-business issue and has made a call to action for the wider business community.”

According to two people familiar with the matter, Mr Bastian was unable to sleep on Tuesday evening after he called Mr Chenault. He had also received a number of emails about the law from Black Delta employees, who make up 21 percent of the company’s workforce. Finally, Mr Bastian concluded that it was deeply problematic, said the two people.

Late that night he finished a fiery memo that he sent to Delta employees on Wednesday morning. In it he gave up any claim to neutrality and declared his “crystal clear” rejection of the law. “The entire rationale for this bill was based on a lie,” he wrote.

Hours later, Coca-Cola’s executive director James Quincey made a more reluctant statement, imitating part of Mr Bastian’s language and also using the words “crystal clear”. Mr Quincey, a British citizen who has been through the crisis from his home in London, then attended a private 45 minute Zoom meeting with Mr Jackson and Ms Ifill trying to show solidarity with their cause.

“A lot of CEOs want to do the right thing, they’re just afraid of setback and they need cover,” said Darren Walker, who signed the letter and is president of the Ford Foundation and on the boards of three public companies. “What the letter did was provide cover.”

But for Delta and Coca-Cola, the effects were intense and immediate. Governor Kemp accused Mr Bastian of “spreading the same false attacks repeated by partisan activists”. And the Republicans in the Georgia house voted to have Delta cut a tax break, just as they did three years ago. “You don’t feed a dog that will bite your hand,” said Mr. Ralston, the house spokesman.

Florida Senator Marco Rubio posted a video calling Delta and Coca-Cola “aroused corporate hypocrites,” and Trump joined calls for a boycott of companies opposed to electoral law.

Companies that were more cautious were not approached in the same way. UPS and Home Depot, major Atlanta employers, were also urged early to oppose Georgia law, but made non-specific commitments regarding voting rights.

After the letter from black executives and statements from Delta and Coca-Cola, other companies have contacted us. On Thursday, American Airlines and Dell, both based in Texas, announced their opposition to the bill for voting in that state. And on Friday, more than 170 companies signed a statement calling on elected officials across the country not to pass laws that make it difficult for people to vote.

It was chaotic, but for many activists it was progress. “Corporations don’t exist in a vacuum,” said Stacey Abrams, who has worked for years to get the Georgia black vote. “It will require a national corporate response to prevent what happened in Georgia from happening in other states.”

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Health

Research exhibits promising immune response towards variants

Scientists at the Mirimus Laboratory prepare to test COVID-19 samples from recovered patients on April 8, 2020 in Brooklyn, New York.

Mischa Friedman | Getty Images

One type of T cell responsible for destroying cells infected with viruses was able to detect three variants of Covid-19 in a small US study, a promising sign that vaccines should continue to protect against new, emerging strains researchers at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said Tuesday.

Researchers led by NIAID researcher Andrew Redd investigated whether T cells were found in blood samples from patients recovering from the original strain of virus that recognized B.1.1.7, the variant B.1.351 originally detected in the UK was originally found in South Africa and P.1, first seen in Brazil. The NIAID is part of the National Institutes of Health, which published the study.

Each of the three variants the scientists examined contained mutations in what is known as the spike protein, which the virus uses to enter human cells. Mutations in this spike protein region could make it less noticeable to T cells and neutralizing antibodies, another important part of the immune response, after infection or vaccination, the researchers said.

In the study, which used blood samples from 30 recovered Covid-19 patients, T-cell responses “remained largely intact and were able to detect virtually all mutations in the variants studied,” they said, adding that even larger studies are required.

“The researchers note that their results suggest that the T-cell response in convalescents, and most likely in vaccines, is largely unaffected by the mutations found in these three variants and should provide protection against emerging variants,” the US wrote Authority a press release.

The results of the study could give hope to public health officials as they attempt to vaccinate the US and other parts of the world. New variants have been a problem for health officials as studies have shown that variants can reduce the effectiveness of current vaccines. The Chief Medical Officer of the White House, Dr. Anthony Fauci, urged Americans to get vaccinated as soon as possible before potentially more dangerous variants emerge.

On Monday, the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the reporter. She said she was concerned the nation was facing “impending doom” as variants spread and daily Covid-19 cases rise again, threatening to send more people to the hospital.

Scientists say strong responses from both antibodies and T cells are likely required for an effective immune response against the virus. Further studies to examine immune responses are still needed, the researchers stressed, including whether a booster shot would be effective against emerging variants.

“New variants continue to be identified around the world and it will be important to continuously monitor them for possible accumulation of T cell escape mutations,” the researchers wrote.

The researchers also noted that the study had limitations, including the relatively small size of the population studied and that all participants were from North America.

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Health

Biden Covid response workforce holds briefing after J&J requests FDA OK for vaccine

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President Joe Biden’s Covid-19 Response Team will hold a briefing Friday on the coronavirus pandemic that left at least 455,875 Americans dead.

The briefing comes one day after Johnson & Johnson asked the Food and Drug Administration to approve the unique Covid-19 vaccine for use in the United States. The FDA has scheduled a meeting of its Advisory Committee on Vaccines and Related Biological Products in February 26 to discuss the vaccine, which could be distributed in the US as early as this month.

Federal and state officials are eagerly awaiting approval of J & J’s vaccine.Unlike Pfizer and Moderna’s vaccines, which require two doses three to four weeks apart, J & J’s drugs only require one dose , which makes logistics easier for healthcare providers.

Read CNBC’s live updates for the latest news on the Covid-19 outbreak.