Arab Times

House orders broad mask mandates

Member Gohmert gets virus

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WASHINGTON, July 30, (AP): Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Capitol officials issued broad new mask requiremen­ts Wednesday after a Republican member of Congress tested positive for the coronaviru­s. The member, Texas Rep. Louie Gohmert, often shunned wearing masks and was known to vote without one.

Pelosi announced Wednesday evening that all members will be required to wear a mask when voting on the House floor and that one will be provided if anyone forgets. Several hours later, the House sergeant-at-arms and the Capitol’s top physician issued an order requiring masks inside House office buildings, with few exceptions. That mandate goes into effect at 8 a.m. Thursday.

Pelosi said failure to wear a mask on the House floor is a “serious breach of decorum” for which members could be removed from the chamber. Members will be able to temporaril­y remove them while speaking, however. In the House office buildings, people can remove them to eat, drink and give interviews, among a few other specific situations.

“It’s a sign of respect for the health, safety and well-being of others present in the chamber and in surroundin­g areas,” Pelosi said.

Gohmert tested positive just before he was scheduled to travel to his home state with President Donald Trump. He was forced to cancel his plans and was immediatel­y criticized by colleagues for not always wearing a mask. “A selfish act,” one lawmaker said.

The 66-year-old Gohmert, one of the House’s most conservati­ve and outspoken members, told a Texas news station that he tested positive before boarding Air Force One and planned to self-quarantine. He is at least the 10th member of Congress known to have tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

Gohmert’s positive test raised further questions about the lack of mask and testing requiremen­ts in the Capitol as members frequently fly back-and-forth from their hometowns and gather for votes, hearings and news conference­s.

Several GOP senators said they were pushing for more regular testing in the Capitol, as there is currently no testing program or requiremen­ts.

“I think particular­ly for members

killed during a robbery by a gang member. (AP)

Train derails, catches fire:

A freight train derailed Wednesday as it traveled on a bridge that spans a man-made lake in a Phoenix suburb, setting the bridge ablaze and partially collapsing the structure, officials said.

Tempe police said there was another derailment in the same area last month that slightly damaged the bridge, but it’s unclear if that led to the latest incident.

Union Pacific Railroad officials said 12 cars derailed on June 26 of Congress who are going back-andforth, they represent sort of the perfect petri dish for how you spread a disease,” said GOP Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri, chair of the Senate Rules Committee. “You send 535 people out to 535 different locations, on about 1,000 different airplanes, and bring them back and see what happens.”

An eight-term lawmaker, Gohmert participat­ed in the House Judiciary Committee hearing Tuesday where Attorney General William Barr testified. Before the hearing, Gohmert was seen approachin­g the meeting room behind Barr, and neither man was wearing a mask.

Gohmert also voted on the House floor Tuesday and attended a House Natural Resources Committee hearing, where a staff member sat close behind him on the dais as he talked without a mask. The chair of that committee, Democratic Rep. Raúl Grijalva of Arizona, said he would self-quarantine.

Disrupted

“In the meantime, my work schedule and the lives of my employees are disrupted,” Grijalva said. “This stems from a selfish act by Mr. Gohmert, who is just one member of Congress.”

When Gohmert flew to Washington on Sunday, he sat next to Rep. Kay Granger, R-Texas, who also went into quarantine after learning of her colleague’s test results. A third lawmaker, Republican Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana, said he was advised to quarantine after having dinner with Gohmert on Monday.

Mask wearing had been strongly encouraged but not enforced for lawmakers in the Capitol, while other workers and law enforcemen­t officers were required to wear masks. Committees had rules requiring face coverings in hearing rooms, but until now, they hadn’t been required in hallways or personal offices.

In a letter late Wednesday, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., wrote to the House Office of Employee Assistance and, citing Gohmert’s positive test, asked if officials there had “sufficient resources to meet the greater demand for staff counseling created by these incidents.” He asked that the office take additional measures to publicize its

and the repairs were done within 48 hours. It also said the bridge had its annual inspection on July 9.

The derailment Wednesday occurred about 6 am. About 90 fire-fighters were dispatched to fight the blaze that followed, fire Chief Greg Ruiz said at a news conference.

Video showed huge flames, thick black smoke and three train cars in a park next to Tempe Town Lake.

Ruiz said crews were working to contain a leak from one derailed train car, and the liquid was going into a dry bed, not the lake. (AP)

A carriage carrying the body of Rep John Lewis finishes the final crossing over the Edmund Pettus Bridge, site of the historic 1965

voting rights marches, on July 26, 2020 in Selma.(AP)

services.

Most senators had warn masks, but a few had refused, including Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, a doctor who says it’s unnecessar­y because he previously tested positive for the virus. There is no proven science saying that a person cannot get the virus again.

In a television interview, Gohmert said he was given a rapid test by the White House that came back positive and then took a more thorough test to rule out a false positive. That test came back positive, too, so “apparently I have it,” Gohmert told KLTV’s East Texas Now.

Gohmert also suggested that he might have contracted the virus by wearing a mask. Medical experts say masks are one of the best ways to prevent transmissi­on of the virus, which is thought to mainly spread through people who are in close contact.

Justice Department spokespers­on Kerri Kupec said Barr would be tested Wednesday. Gohmert did not wear a mask while questionin­g Barr, but the seats in the hearing room are spaced many feet apart, and it is common practice to remove masks during questionin­g.

During the Barr hearing, the committee chair, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., chastised some of Gohmert’s GOP colleagues for not wearing masks when they weren’t speaking. Nadler did not call out Gohmert by name.

Nadler tweeted Wednesday: “When individual­s refuse to take the necessary precaution­s it puts everyone at risk. I’ve regularly instructed all members to wear their masks and hope this is a lesson by all my colleagues.”

Multiple GOP senators said Wednesday they were pushing Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., to allow expanded testing. McConnell and Pelosi jointly rejected Trump’s offer for rapid testing for lawmakers in May, saying they wanted instead to direct resources to front-line workers.

Blunt said he believes that lawmakers should be tested every time they travel and that staff and others should be tested occasional­ly. He said McConnell and the Capitol physician would have to be on board for that to happen, and he doesn’t know why it hasn’t.

Ex-girlfriend tries late bid:

A British socialite charged with recruiting three girls for Jeffrey Epstein to sexually abuse made a last-minute bid Wednesday to stop the public release of her 2016 testimony in a civil case.

Ty Gee, a lawyer for Ghislaine Maxwell, told a Manhattan judge that the deposition­s by his client should be kept sealed, in part because they are evidence in the criminal case brought against her on July 2.

US District Judge Loretta A. Preska denied what she described as an “eleventh-hour” request after last week ordering the public release of the documents by Thursday. But she also delayed the release of the deposition­s through Friday to give Gee time to appeal. He immediatel­y did with the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan.

Maxwell, 58, has pleaded not guilty to charges that she procured the girls, including one as young as 14, for Epstein to abuse in London and the United States in the 1990s. She remains at a federal jail in Brooklyn after bail was denied because she is a risk to flee. (AP)

Judge halts immigratio­n:

A federal judge on Wednesday blocked a Trump administra­tion rule that could deny green cards to immigrants over use of public benefits from being applied during

the pandemic.

The controvers­ial guidelines had gone into effect in February, after legal challenges and amid concerns that they would have a chilling effect on immigrants in seeking medical care and other social services.

In issuing the preliminar­y nationwide injunction, US District Judge George Daniels in Manhattan said, “Any policy that deters residents from seeking testing and treatment for COVID-19 increases the risk of infection for such residents and the public. Adverse government action that targets immigrants, however, is particular­ly dangerous during a pandemic.” (AP)

Family of 9 slain sues Juarez:

Family members of nine women and children from an offshoot Mormon community who were killed in Mexico have filed a federal lawsuit accusing the Juarez drug cartel of carrying out the attack in retributio­n for their public criticism and protests against the cartel.

A lawyer for the family members said they are suing to show that the Juarez cartel was responsibl­e for the Nov. 4 slaughter and to seek damages. Mexican prosecutor­s have identified more than 40 suspects in the attack. Authoritie­s have arrested and indicted nine members of the Juarez cartel, according to the lawsuit, which was filed in US federal court in North Dakota. (AP)

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