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First Thing: DoJ called Trump election claims pure insanity , emails show |
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Last modified on Mon 1 Mar 2021 07.11 EST
Good morning.
Donald Trump made his first post-presidential speech at the weekend, using the occasion to continue to peddle lies abut a “rigged” 2020 election and hint at a 2024 run for president. He covered familiar ground, lashing out at immigrants, Joe Biden and the media, as he spoke at the largest annual gathering of conservatives in Florida for the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC).
After a standing ovation, Trump trotted out familiar lines, stating that “illegal aliens and dead people are voting” and that “this election was rigged and the supreme court and other courts didn’t want to do anything about it”.
First Thing: Trump treads familiar ground with first post-presidential speech
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How Israel secured more vaccines than it can use A promise to share data from a rapid inoculation drive helped the country win a supply deal with Pfizer 26 January 2021 - 20:21 By Mehul Srivastava and Quique Kierszenbaum
Late last year Israel was competing furiously with much larger countries to secure vaccine supplies from global manufacturers as the coronavirus pandemic raged. Now it finds itself spearheading one of the world’s fastest vaccination drives, with more vaccines in-country and en route than it will use.
How did a country with barely nine million citizens persuade companies courting markets with hundreds of millions of potential customers to fill its orders first? The answer lies in 17 conversations between Albert Bourla, Pfizer’s CEO, Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, and Yuli Edelstein, the health minister.