Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox News At Night With Shannon Bream 20200428

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out nearly identical guidelines getting totally different treatment in the media. bread him joins us to weigh in on what many are now arguing is a blatant double standard and in the last full week of april the number of new cases continuing on an encouraging trajectory declining for three days straight. i am shannon bream in washington, we begin with kevin cork as the president rolls out a new plan he says would ramp up testing across the country. >> reporter: earlier today we heard the president wasn't going to have everything but cancel which on the heels of the clark's controversy seems provocative to say the least but it turns out there was not only a briefing but plenty to discuss notably increased testing capability, public-private partnerships and the slow journey to rebuild our economy. >> we are doing everything in our particular stick and gradually reopen our nation. there is a hunger for getting our country back. >> to get the country back on the road to recovery white house officials insist there needs to be continued robust private and public partnerships, widespread testing and very likely more money to boost the economy. >> we will probably need another phase of stimulus of some form and we built a bridge to the other side of this crisis, looks like we are getting close to opening up in many places around the country. >> always very helpful at the white house, lastly there was a very interesting, perhaps even purposefully cryptic response by the president of the question in the rose garden, he was asked if he had been briefed by intelligence officials or had any word on the condition of kim jong un who has been outside for some time and there has been the subject of a number of rumors about his health. >> i do have a very good idea but i can't talk about it now. i just wish him well, i hope he is fine. i do know how he is doing relatively speaking, we will see, you will be hearing in the not too distant future. >> relatively speaking and hearing about it in the not too distant future? the description raised plenty of eyebrows in washington but officials in pyongyang insist mister kim is fine, stay tuned. >> the longer we go without seeing him the more questions there are so we will stand by. the speaker of the house floating the idea of the federal government providing a guaranteed income, unclear how many americans would be eligible or how much they would get. we are digging into those details tonight. >> the house and the senate plan to return to work next weekend some lawmakers say when they get back will support efforts to increase spending significantly while some other lawmakers say spending like this shouldn't be rushed. congress already approved billions in aid for airlines, small businesses and individuals, now nancy pelosi says she's open to another idea. >> others have suggested a minimum income for people. is that worthy of attention now? perhaps so. the question many more people in small business, hired by small business. >> they did not say how much people could receive but two house democrats, tim ryan of ohio recently introduced a bill to send americans making less than 130,$000 a year a monthly check for $2,000, the program would keep renewing until employment returned to precrisis levels, that is something experts don't expect to happen anytime soon but workers are not the only ones asking for help. >> small business is a priority, so our police, fire, school teachers and hospital workers. >> reporter: democratic governors and larry hogan of maryland i demanding to send money for revenue shortfalls, pelosi says states will get help initially. >> we will have state and local and we will have in a very significant way. >> donald trump weighed in on twitter writing, quote, why should people and taxpayers of america be bailing out poorly run states like illinois and cities, in all cases democrats run and manage when most of the other states are not looking for bailout help. i'm open to discussing anything but just asking. steve mnuchin said sunday the administration will consider proposals to help states while one senior republican senators says it is better not to rush the debate. >> let's see what is working and what is not working, let's not borrow another several hundred billion dollars and add to the dollars we already putting out there. >> reporter: white house officials say they are putting together a list of proposals for what congress should not include in the next stimulus bill but it is unclear at this point when congress may act. >> thank you very much. the communist party and the world health organization accused of working together to conceal the true extent of the original coronavirus outbreak and wuhan. they are both making moves to change the narrative. trace gallagher is on the case tonight. good evening. >> reporter: what satellite the old idiom that you can lead a horse to water, the director of the world health organization scolded numerous countries for not listening to the who's warning. >> i assure you who gives the best advice we can based on science and evidence. it is up to the countries to reject or accept. >> the advice he is referring to was that the who declared the outbreak emergency on january 30th, what the director failed to mention is that while issuing a global warning the world health organization simultaneously recommended countries keep their borders open. expert say fortunately donald trump failed to heed that advice and remember it was the who on january 14th that said there was no evidence of human to human spread and it wasn't until march 11th after coronavirus was in 110 countries they finally labeled a pandemic but most troubling for experts is while the world was scrambling to social distance and save lives the world health organization was praising china for its transparency and willingness to share information and now australia is threatening to launch an investigation into beijing's early on slowing of the outbreak the china has responded saying of australia doesn't back down it could face economic consequences including the chinese boycott of australian exports but unfortunately for china australia is not the only country planning to investigate. >> there are a lot of ways you can hold them accountable. we are doing serious investigations as you probably know and we are not happy with china, we are not happy with that whole situation because we believe it could have been stopped at the source. >> reporter: germany's largest newspaper says coronavirus is cost an estimated $161 billion in damage to the german economy, different news organizations suggested the german government send china a bill. so far it appears to be untrue. shannon: thank you so much. do we know now about the length china went to to disguise the true magnitude of the resort outbreak and wuhan. some believe at this point we should be beyond that question. >> that is a distraction, there's a lot of americans and for things, china did a lot of things right in the beginning like any country where a virus shows up where they can look back and say they missed some things. >> what about china? look at that and more, good to have you back with us. it is fair to say there are a lot of things we didn't know, things they didn't share with us. we are learning a lot as we go along but here's what china's foreign ministry says, china always stands against disinformation campaign, we are victim rather than producer of this information, recrimination by no means prescriptions for anti-pandemic cooperation and should be rejected by all. where do we go with china? >> reporter: we have to remember this is a totalitarian state, a communist dictatorship. consequently we can trade with them from time to time if we want to to the extent we want to wonder our terms which we can't lose sight of the fact that this is a communist regime and one in which we can't differentiate between a business enterprise and the chinese government and the chinese military. this is a 3-headed monster. shannon: so many american companies have deep connections, operations, you know about the pharmaceutical supply lines. is there any way you can, quote, punish or hold china accountable knowing how intertwined the economies really are? >> sure and the fact they are intertwined doesn't mean they have to be to the same extent. the fact we are mad at them doesn't mean we don't have to have any trade with them but take the pharmaceutical industry is one example and manufacturing capacity in that. and the pharmaceutical product more than we have been. especially with things like pharmaceutical products, let's adopt policies and changes, in tax-cut in the regulatory system to bring more of that manufacturing capacity to the united states. this is one area where i think americans would voluntarily without action by the government voluntarily spend a little more for prescription if they know it is a secure pipeline and not one that relies on this communist dictatorship. shannon: you will be on the hill trying, with respect to the crackdown saying we are not going to a lot. states, the chicago sun-times editorial board says in the midst of this crisis that threatens to slide into a second great depression his solution, meaning mitch mcconnell would be for states to fire or reduce hundreds of thousands workers/health and retirement benefits and cut back on services to them and leo, disabled and elderly. they are calling about on pushing back against states asking for financial help. >> i disagree with every single word by the chicago sun-times. everything they said is wrong. every characterization they've been done mitch mcconnell is unfair. the fact is if you take the top 5 states with the top highest per capita unfunded pension liability, roughly 25 times the per capita unfunded pension liabilities of the most responsible states. we can't have a government at the time we've already spent $150 billion helping state specifically deal with the covid-19 epidemic, we can do the same moment fix another problem but has been years and in fact decades in the making as a result of decades of mismanagement by democratic liberal progressive regimes in various states, we can suddenly change that and pretend it is somehow necessitated by covid-19. the chicago sun-times might want to pretend otherwise they are wrong. shannon: the idea that there's a way for the federal government or should be to guarantee a minimum income to some americans? >> if we want to become a western european style socialized democracy than that is the approach we should take. that hurts poor at the request people and runs contrary to everything we believe about the limited role of government and abilities that individual citizens need to have to achieve upward economic mobility. if you want to statement economy in which poor and middle-class americans are locked in place with artificial barriers put in their way by government and that is what you should do. otherwise we should stick with free markets, nancy pelosi knows better and not to be ashamed of herself for suggesting otherwise. >> you will be back here in a matter of days in dc. if not before. thank you. quarantine fatigue begins to kick in. how much longer will americans go along with a lot oversee a political analyst britt hume has plenty to say on that next. into a smaller life? are your asthma treatments just not enough? then see what could open up for you with fasenra. it is not a steroid or inhaler. it is not a rescue medicine or for other eosinophilic conditions. it's an add-on injection for people 12 and up with asthma driven by eosinophils. nearly 7 out of 10 adults with asthma may have elevated eosinophils. fasenra is designed to target and remove eosinophils, a key cause of asthma. it helps to prevent asthma attacks, improve breathing, and can reduce the need for oral steroids like prednisone. fasenra may 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california. the only thing that will set us back is our behavior, that the only thing that will slow down our ability to reopen this economy, our ability to adapt and modify the stay-at-home order. shannon: gavin newsom ordering disregarding social distancing guidelines will hinder his state's battle against coronavirus as the great reopening debate continues nationwide. joining us with his perspective senior political and political analyst britt hume. you and i both watched this link this weekend to these two doctors in california who are er doctors, immunologists, virologists and they talked to the data we have especially in california where governor newsom is not happy about what he saw on the beaches this weekend. i want to play a little bit from one of those doctors and talk about their argument. >> 0.03 chance of dying from covid-19 in the state of california. does that necessitate sheltering in place? does that necessitate shutting down medical systems, does that necessitate people being out of work? shannon: essentially his answer was no. he watched the data, an interesting, compelling argument he made. >> he mentioned not only california but a lot of different places it is fair to argue each of these studies that pointed in the same direction that we have a lot more cases than we thought and the death rate lower than we thought, each is imperfect in its own way but there are a lot now, a lot of data sets pointing in that direction and more coming in every day so i think the argument these doctors made becomes compelling when you take into account how many sets of information they are working with. shannon: there's a new study out in this area that talks about the fact that people might be getting a little sick of quarantining. the headline in the washington post, quarantine fatigue, researchers find more americans venturing out against orders, they said researchers are tracing smartphone data, recently made a disturbing discovery, americans are staying home less. what is your sense on how much longer people may be willing to do what they had been doing up to this point although they seemed to be venturing out a little more? >> people will be less willing to do it because the evidence mounts that outside of new york city and its immediate environments we've not had a massive outbreak in this country, we've had hotspots around the country but nothing compared to what has been experienced in the new york metropolitan area, new york and new jersey and in addition, we know the vulnerability to the disease as experienced by the elderly people and people with certain underlying health conditions. if you take them out of the equation which you can do by quarantining them, the disease is not all that threatening, the death rates are lower than we were led to believe, but the threat of a major outbreak nationwide is lower than we thought and people are coming to grips with that and under the circumstances given the devastating collateral damage we are seeing from the lockdown, hospitals closing, medical facilities are not being overwhelmed, being damaged because finances are being wrecked by the fact that all these other treatments they normally do, are not being done, this isn't worth it. this cure is becoming worse than the disease and that is where we are. shannon: and if americans start to feel that way they lose the bond of trust with the government that they do -- they are helping their neighbors by staying home, people seem less convinced by some of that and as the doctors in california said we didn't have a lot to work with in the beginning, we had to do these lockdowns because all we had was the radical but now we have 6 to 8 weeks of data and for a lot of people that changes the picture. there are several states that are doing some type of rollout, not complete, measured rollouts but interesting to see, they are playing out to family and the media, georgia and colorado, with a republican governor and when the democrat governor, here's what townhall says, the headline is media demonstrates double standard on governor kemp and governor hollis of colorado, similar reopening plan saying this, while kemp bore the brunt of the media backlash, his democratic colleague received no criticism on a mirror-image decision to reopen parts of colorado's economy and even talking about the same kinds of businesses, the same kinds of limits and yet the reporting on these two governors by any standard was not neutral. >> it certainly was not nor was the coverage of trump which is cuomo, same thing, presiding over the most disastrous outbreak in the country, he along with his fellow democrat through february, telling people to get out and about, there was no great threat and cuomo seemed to panic and was demanding staggering amount of ventilators and so on that proved not to be necessary and he talks about this much more smoothly than donald trump has, he can even be eloquent but is not presiding over a good outcome up there, and he is lionized where is donald trump who doesn't speak about vista very smoothly, speaks about it too much is under withering criticism. same thing. one is a democrat, one is not. >> care to weigh in on the attorney general william barr saying if we think some of these localities and states are crossing the line when it comes to constitutional rights we will get involved in these cases. >> the federal government has a serious public interest in public health but it does not override the constitutional rights but we all have without major defense of doing that, they need to prove the case that what they are doing is necessary and knowing what we know about who gets this disease and who doesn't, whether the whole nation should be under lockdown with constitutional rights being infringed all over the place is an issue and we are going to find when religious freedom is being impinged there better be a good case to be made for it and so much of what we have seen seems so arbitrary that i don't think it could withstand constitutional muster if people start taking the stuff to court as has happened in several cases. shannon: we've seen a lot of women's on the freedom loving side as we get more data, helpful for people to make saver decisions, governors have difficult decisions to make, always good to have you weigh in, thank you. shannon: sean hannity giving the new york times 24 hours to retract, correct and apologize for a report about a new york bar owner who got coronavirus and died in april, the times mentioned hannity's coverage of the coronavirus and joyce's support for donald trump. hannity's for some attorneys check out the comment selected by the times happened after joyce had left on a cruise he went on, appearing to link that decision, his personal attorneys say the times misled on the timeline, they knew that in order to mislead their viewers, looks like the times is standing by its story. we will continue to follow that. also tonight, endorsements for joe biden amid development in a sexual assault case. allegations against him you may have heard about, that is next. >> live from america's news headquarters donald trump says states should consider reopening their public schools before summer. the president made the call with governors as the cdc works to finalize guidelines for reopening the economy. for schools that means putting desks 6 feet apart, serving meals in the classroom and closing playgrounds. a new pulse existing many adults would not seek coronavirus care due to many concerns which could into a gallop healthcare costs are they, one in 10 adults it would prevent them from seeking help even if they thought they were infected. 14% say they would avoid seeking treatment because of cost a fever and a dry cough which are two wildly publicized symptoms of covid-19. now back to fox news at night. shannon: as nancy pelosi joins the joe biden endorsement club, bernie sanders back as our accusing, those receiving the primary of not taking him seriously. their calling on the vermont senator to withdraw his support of joe biden. >> today two people came forward in the wake of the allegation against joe biden, one recalled his accuser talking about the alleged sexual assault, the other recalled are talking about sexual harassment and over the weekend the tape surfaced purporting to show her mother alluding to an incident. for biden staffer tara reid told fox news the media needs to do a better job of questioning joe biden over her claim he sexually assaulted her in the 1990s, networks would handle the allegations differently if claims were against donald trump or brett kavanaugh and she railed against anderson cooper for interviewing biden twice and not broaching the subject. i think it is shocking this much time has passed that he's a national nominee for president and they are not asking the questions adding in other words if politics and political agenda playing a role in objective reporting and asking the questions. in the months since allegation surface by an has had a dozen interviews but has not faced questions over the claim and neither have those in his circle. house speaker nancy pelosi appeared on cnn before endorsing biden monday. >> he knows how to get the job done. >> and was not asked about it. msnbc also did not question her following her endorsement and two women on biden's short list made appearances on networks without raising questions, georgia's stacy abrams on cnn and nbc and senator amy klobuchar on abc news although klobuchar has commented on the issue previously, she told msnbc a claim should be investigated and she thinks it was sufficiently researched by the new york times. amid silence from the dnc and biden some former bernie sanders supporters are pushing him to withdraw his endorsement and his former press secretary tweeted progressives didn't make this happen, corporate democrats chose biden and it is a good time to know if bernie is on the ballot. biden has not addressed these allegations personally. his campaign denies it and we are being careful not to silence his accuser amid the me too movement. >> reporter: sanders supporters feeling as new york state cancels its presidential primary because they believe the voting is too dangerous among the coronavirus pandemic. report from new york on that. >> reporter: new york governor andrew cuomo indicated a stay-at-home order for new york city would likely extend past may 15th but some parts of the state could begin reopening by then. >> reporter: statistics show new york headed in a positive certain, there has been a net drop in hospitalizations in the last 14 days and 327 people died sunday of covid-19 it was the lowest since march 30th. the new york state board of elections came from tuesday's presidential primary election calling it unnecessary and frivolous, the move angering bernie sanders supporters and his campaign who hoped to amass delegates to push the party platform further to the left, quote, given the primary is months away the proper response must be to make the election safe such as going to vote by mail rather than eliminating people's right to vote completely. states ramp reopening efforts today, georgia and tennessee opening restaurants, mississippi and montana opening retail shops that limited capacity, colorado instituting curbside shopping while minnesota opened agriculture and manufacturing and other states allowing elective medical procedures. and tennessee restaurants must operated 50% capacity, temperature checks the normal but some owners are not rushing to open. >> my biggest fears we will have a lot of people. a fairly large way. >> reporter: barbershop is open friday are trying to adjust to the new normal. >> wearing gloves cutting hair cannot crazy about wearing a mask but i will comply with our government into what we need to do to safely operate. >> reporter: texas became the largest state to announce they plan on opening restaurants, movie theaters and retail shops on may 1st but at 25% capacity. shannon: thank you very much. a look at a country that is resisting a full lockdown, details of the strategy and questions about whether it is working, we will talk to someone on the ground there next. >> didn't do a stay-at-home approach, they didn't close themselves down which sounds awesome, right? with the the helter-skelter encouragement of donald trump we now got red state governors all over our country saying screw it, let's tear the lid off, the swedes did it, it was great. >> reporter: the decision to make large parts of the economy and society open during a global pandemic is facing criticism, the country's infections and death rates are currently higher than their nordic neighbors but they may soon be turning our corner. let's talk about the strategy with johann norberg who was on the ground, great to have you with us tonight. i want to read something from forbes that is a couple days old but says sweden's state epidemiologist announce a record daily high of coronavirus cases for the second consecutive day, insisted on several occasions the spread of the virus was slowing, the numbers are higher than your neighbors there. tell us what is playing out on the ground. >> reporter: that is true but it should also be pointed out that it is all a matter of comparison if you compare sweden to other european countries including britain, belgium, france, spain, italy, sweden is doing much much better and that is interesting in itself because it tells you sweden is an outlier when it comes to policy because we haven't locked down society and the economy we are not an outlier when it comes to the results and outcomes so far and more than that it seems we might be out of this hopefully quicker than others because what other countries have done is merely postponing cases and death by telling people to stay at home. the moment they get out whether they are bound to see a second wave of this section because we are a long way away from a vaccine or anything like that. shannon: i know there's the argument by many who support what sweden is doing to say there may be heard immunity building up by not being a true lockdown, allowing people, younger children 16 and under to be in school, others to be at restaurants and shops, there may have been some of that building but one of the critics, virus immunology researcher at the carrollliska institute, we are not just enough, not tracking, not isolating, we have let the virus loose, they are leading us to catastrophe. why such a divergent view of the reality of what is playing out? >> there are divergent views in sweden as in many other countries we should add. the interesting things as many abroad have this interpretation or perspective that sweden is feeling terribly it is interesting to see the popular responses been sympathetic in sweden, trust in the public health authority jumped by 20 percentage points in sweden which seems to suggest that they are broadly sympathetic to this policy and the reason there are not divergent views is obvious because sweden has not postponed death in the same way as other countries did so in the short run it looks worse than other countries. the key question is does death that would have been avoided had the cases been there 6 months later or 12 months later? the evidence suggests that is not the case. it is not that they died for lack of care but the healthcare system was overwhelmed. we have extra capacity when it comes to intensive care units and hospital beds in sweden. we still have not opened the big field hospital that was built in sweden because so far it has not been needed. that tells you something interesting. it seems like sweden is managed to mitigate, slow it down by having voluntary social distancing and keep it down at a level where healthcare can deal with the cases rather than trying to suppress it and keep it suppressed for a while because then when we open up we will see the same afterwards. shannon: thank you for giving us the scoop in country and the world will continue to watch as we are all things here in the us, thank you for your time. congress and the president have worked to fund trillions in coronavirus relief, some lawmakers busy on the front lines battling the virus, congressman doctor roger marshall of kansas, great to have you with us. >> good to be with you. shannon: i know you have been on the front lines volunteering and getting back into the healthcare system. what do you think? >> we are seeing the sun come up in kansas, the worst days are behind us, i'm seeing great physicians, nurses reaching out to their communities, working at a clinic in kansas city kansas, incredible staff, committed people, patients that were hurting and it was good to help them out and do what we could to help them. on the other hand in southwest kansas where 20% is processed we are on an uptick so i'm in southwest kansas seeing what i can do to help these folks out as well. shannon: i have worked in a number of hospitals out there that were bracing and preparing for this, that is not come to fruition was one of them into peak a talks about a case that talked about st. francis announces layoffs and furloughs, the university of kansas health system st. francis campus announcing it is implementing 200 furloughs to mitigate the impact the covid-19 pandemic animal hospital financial footing, site significant decreases in patient volume due to postponed elective surgeries, procedures and testing for its revenue losses. how concerned are you about the medical system in kansas? the story we're hearing across the country about closing doors to employees because they were ready for the worst of the pandemic and it is not come to fruition but leaves them in a tough financial spot? >> whether you are a hospital or a rancher in the cattle industry we have been hugely stressed by this. the economic consequences of this crisis may be worse than the virus itself which is why we need to talk about a responsible, safe way to open business back up again so we have been talking about this for a couple weeks in kansas. what does it look like on the other side of this. how can we safely -- doing surgery again, how can we have patients, the confidence to come back, the little girl for 12 weeks waiting for a 10 minute surgeries but the tube in her years so she doesn't have an ear ache anymore. we need to figure this out. that is the solution we need to be looking at. shannon: we thank you for you and the other medical workers and administrators on the front lines, the medical part of it, we know you will come back to dc and work on another round of funding so good to have you with us tonight. >> can i say thanks to the president for helping us out in southwest kansas, since a lot of surprises our way, we really appreciate it, it is working, thank you so much. shannon: they have to work together on this, paying tribute to the legacy of charles krauthammer next. and spray... and spray... and spray. well, we used to. with new ortho home defense max indoor insect barrier, one simple application kills and prevents bugs in your home for up to a year without odors, stains or fuss. it's the modern way to keep bugs away. new ortho home defense max. bugs gone. stress gone. ♪ ♪ >> shannon: tonight, shannon: we are happy to announce the recipients of a scholarship established on one of our most treasured voices who is no longer with us but lives in our memories each day. bret baer has the story. >> i want you to know everything, to learn everything, you don't have to do everything. charles krauthammer's father instilled in him the importance of education at a young age, a lesson he took to heart and would later pass on to his own son. the late conservative columnist began his college career studying political theory at the university of oxford but finished studying psychiatry at harvard medical school. a diving accident at harvard left him paralyzed from the waist down but he finished with the class. this class. the desire to continue his studies is what kept him alive. >> never thought about taking a year off for taking a couple years off. i knew that would be fatal. it was not a question. >> couldn't survive. >> life would be over. >> reporter: his life was just getting started. in 1978 krauthammer took a job at will be the national institute of mental health in washington dc. >> i thought one time in washington, isn't that where they do politics? one thing lead to another. >> reporter: and it did. krauthammer became a speechwriter for walter mondale, then editor for the new republic, then a wiki columnist for the washington post and the pulitzer prize winner for commentary. >> if i see an impasse we're taking a calculated risk. >> reporter: a longtime fixture on the special report panel krauthammer shared his perspectives on the most important issues of our time, managing to cut through the noise of the day to get to the heart of the issue. >> he knew an immense amount of a lot of things. >> reporter: long car rides provided the best opportunities to pick his father of spring. >> a lot of the backbone of my knowledge comes from the way he told things and i learned myself later and got full understanding but he understood it so well and told it in such a cohesive story that did form the backbone of so much of my knowledge. >> reporter: daniel is not the only beneficiary of krauthammer's lifetime love of learning, in 2018 after krauthammer died from battle with intestinal cancer fox news established memorial scholarship in his name awarded to children of network employees who apply. fox news in partnership with the national merit scholarship program announced the first two recipients of the inaugural charles krauthammer memorial scholarship. amy carey, daughter senior vice president of technical operations steve carey, and michael carey, son of senior director of it operations john kerry. >> father loved learning, thought it was one of life's ice duties, we hoped it would help to choose their own path to a lifetime of learning and find life's work with meaning and consequence and joy just as my father did. >> reporter: congratulations to this year's winners it is a joy to have this scholarship in charles krauthammer's name so we can continue to honor his life and legacy this time every year. if you want to see more about doctor krauthammer's life, there are 3 are specials hosted on fox nation, check them out. shannon: they are excellent, thank you. most-watched, most trusted, most grateful, you spent the evening with us, good night from washington. i am shannon bream. for? download now and get your first stock on us. robinhood. >> all retail can open up, get back to business, this is going to be slow and steady wins the race, very methodical, data-driven. >> there is no light switch we flip a switch and every buddy goes back to doing what they were doing. rob: some states are officially open for business kicking off a wave of restriction rollback set to sweep the nation this week. >> reporter: with us cases closing in on the 1 million mark is america ready to reopen? expert say the true test is in a testing. a bombshell development throwing gasoline on claims against joe biden.

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