President Donald Trump’s positive coronavirus test has scrambled the White House race with 32 days remaining until the election, calling into question prospects for the next two debates with Joe Biden and other in-person events.
Next up on the debate stage: Mike Pence and Kamala Harris. Donald Trump’s vice president and Joe Biden’s running mate will face off against each other in Salt Lake City on Oct. 7, in the sole vice-presidential debate of Campaign 2020.
President Donald Trump, at the end of an uncharacteristically inactive day on Twitter and just ahead of his departure to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for observation and continuing treatment after contracting the coronavirus that causes the disease COVID-19, recorded a video message providing an update on his condition.
With President Donald Trump testing positive for COVID-19, it’s worth looking at how the presidential line of succession is currently set in U.S. law — and whether Trump could get replaced on the ballot with Election Day just over a month away.
As if 2020 couldn’t get any more dramatic for investors, President Trump and his wife contracting the deadly illness has injected a fresh dose of uncertainty into the U.S. stock market.
President Donald Trump, who recently tested positive for the coronavirus, has been given a dose of Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s experimental neutralizing antibody cocktail, which is currently being tested in clinical trials for non-hospitalized COVID-19 patients.
U.S. stock benchmarks closed lower Friday, as investors reacted to a weaker-than-expected jobs report for September and news that President Donald Trump and first lady Melania tested positive for the coronavirus.
The snags holding up a second big coronavirus economic aid package include money for state and local government as well as for the unemployed, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told her colleagues Friday.
The record decline in the U.S. economy in the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic was lowered slightly to a 31.4% annual pace — setting the stage for a big rebound in the third quarter.
The $600 in weekly unemployment benefits provided by the CARES Act expired at the end of July, and the extra $300 funded by FEMA will be exhausted soon.