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26 mins ago - Politics & PolicyStocks close down more than 3%
35 mins ago - Economy & BusinessMLB to investigate Dodgers player who joined celebration after positive COVID test
40 mins ago - Health"Anonymous" senior Trump official revealed as ex-DHS chief of staff Miles Taylor
1 hour ago - Politics & PolicyBoston Marathon delayed as COVID-19 surges
2 hours ago - SportsGermany goes back into lockdown
4 hours ago - WorldKushner to Woodward in April: Trump is "getting the country back from the doctors"
4 hours ago - Politics & PolicyCuomo adviser: New York is "putting equity at the center" of climate work
4 hours ago - Energy & EnvironmentSunrun CEO: Transition to renewables will happen "independently" of politics
4 hours ago - Energy & EnvironmentPete Buttigieg talks Joe Biden's economic plans
4 hours ago - PodcastsCoronavirus dashboard
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
- Politics: Biden ahead in Wisconsin, Michigan as cases surge in the Midwest.
- Health: Surge "is real" and not just caused by more tests, Trump's testing czar says — Mask mandates help control rise in hospitalizations — Some coronavirus survivors have "autoantibodies."
- Business: Surge is sinking consumer confidence — Testing is a windfall.
- World: France imposes lockdown as Macron warns of overwhelming second COVID wave — Germany to close bars and restaurants for a month.
- Sports: Boston Marathon delayed as COVID-19 surges — MLB to investigate Dodgers player who joined celebration after positive COVID test.
1 🌆 thing
Stocks close down more than 3%
Photo: Alexi Rosenfeld via Getty Images
Stocks took a hit on Wednesday, with the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrials Average and Nasdaq dropping more than 3% across the board.
Why it matters: The volatility is a break from the stock market grinding higher in the face of spiking coronavirus cases, a stalling economy and gridlocked negotiations over an additional stimulus package.
Zeta, now a Category 2 Hurricane, closes in on Louisiana coast
The probable path of Zeta, per the National Hurricane Center. Photo: NHC/NOAA
Zeta strengthened on Wednesday afternoon, on track to make landfall along the southeastern coast of Louisiana by the afternoon as a "significant" Category 2 hurricane, per the National Hurricane Center.
The state of play: Zeta is producing 100-mph maximum sustained winds and stronger gusts. The storm is gaining strength as it heads northeastward at 20 mph. Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards (D) requested a pre-landfall Emergency Declaration in a letter to President Trump on Tuesday.
France imposes lockdown as Macron warns of overwhelming second COVID wave
French President Emmanuel Macron. Photo: LUDOVIC MARIN/AFP via Getty Images
French President Emmanuel Macron announced on Wednesday a second nationwide lockdown starting Friday to contain the coronavirus.
Why it matters: “(France has been) overpowered by a second wave,” Macron said in a national televised address Wednesday, noting the "new wave will be stronger and deadlier," than the first. The announcement comes after the country saw over 36,000 new cases in the last 24 hours.
"Anonymous" senior Trump official revealed as ex-DHS chief of staff Miles Taylor
Miles Taylor in a Republican Voters Against Trump ad. Screenshot via YouTube
Former Department of Homeland Security chief of staff Miles Taylor on Wednesday publicly claimed to be the author of the anonymous New York Times op-ed that described a "resistance" within the Trump administration working to thwart President Trump's agenda.
Why it matters: Taylor already publicly endorsed Joe Biden in a video funded by Republican Voters Against Trump in August, accusing the president of wanting to "exploit the Department of Homeland Security for his own political purposes and to fuel his own agenda."
Parties trade election influence accusations at Big Tech hearing
Photo: Michael Reynolds/Pool/AFP via Getty Images
A Senate hearing Wednesday with Big Tech CEOs became the backdrop for Democrats and Republicans to swap accusations of inappropriate electioneering.
Why it matters: Once staid tech policy debates are quickly becoming a major focal point of American culture and political wars, as both parties fret about the impact of massive social networks being the new public square.
Germany goes back into lockdown
Photo: Fabrizio Bensch/Pool/AFP via Getty Images
German Chancellor Angela Merkel will enact one of Europe's strictest coronavirus lockdowns since spring, closing bars and restaurants nationwide for most of November, Reuters reports.
Why it matters: Germany is the latest European country to reimpose some form of lockdown measures amid a surge in cases across the continent.
How overhyping became an election meddling tool
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
As online platforms and intelligence officials get more sophisticated about detecting and stamping out election meddling campaigns, bad actors are increasingly seeing the appeal of instead exaggerating their own interference capabilities to shake Americans' confidence in democracy.
Why it matters: It doesn't take a sophisticated operation to sow seeds of doubt in an already fractious and factionalized U.S. Russia proved that in 2016, and fresh schemes aimed at the 2020 election may already be proving it anew.
Pete Buttigieg talks Joe Biden's economic plans
Joe Biden has a very different prescription for America's economy than does President Trump. Not just in terms of how to tax and spend, but also in how to approach trading partners like China.
Axios Re:Cap digs into Biden's economic policies and philosophies with former presidential candidate and current Biden campaign surrogate Pete Buttigieg.
Jack Dorsey: Twitter has no influence over elections
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey said Twitter does not have the ability to influence elections because there are ample additional sources of information, in response to questioning from Republican Sen. Ted Cruz during a hearing Wednesday.
Between the lines: The claim is sure to stir irritation on both the right and left. Conservatives argue Twitter and Facebook's moderation decisions help Democrats, while liberals contend the platforms shy from effectively cracking down on misinformation to appease Republicans.
Scoop: Secret Israel-Sudan contacts enabled deal sealed by Trump
Trump on the phone with the leaders of Sudan and Israel. Photo: Alex Edelman/AFP via Getty
While the U.S. officially brokered the Israel-Sudan normalization deal, it was Israel that facilitated talks between the U.S. and Sudan on the broader deal that included Sudan’s removal from America’s state sponsors of terrorism list.
Why it matters: Israel’s secret contacts with Sudanese officials paved the way for a deal that was nearly a year in the making.
Trump's testing czar: COVID surge "is real" and not just caused by more tests
Assistant Secretary of Health Adm. Brett Giroir, who leads the federal government's coronavirus testing response, pushed back on Wednesday against President Trump's continued claims that rising coronavirus cases are a product of increased testing.
The big picture: Every available piece of data shows that the pandemic is getting worse again across the country. Hospitalizations are on the rise — and some hospitals are warning that they could soon be overwhelmed — while 13 states set new highs last week for coronavirus infections recorded in a single day.
Cook Political Report moves Texas to "toss up" in presidential race
Photo: Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images
Cook Political Report moved Texas from "lean Republican" to "toss up" for the 2020 presidential race on Wednesday.
Why it matters: Texas, which has 38 electoral votes, hasn't backed a Democrat for president since 1976. A win for Biden in the historically red state would likely be a knockout blow against Trump.
Joe Biden's private equity plan
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
We're less than one week away from the election, and hopefully less than one month away from knowing who won the election. In the interim, private equity investors are beginning to contemplate life under a President Biden.
The big picture: Biden would be worse for private equity than President Trump, at least from a structural tax perspective.
Why the pandemic's carbon cuts still won't head off a climate emergency
Global carbon emissions from energy, which are the lion's share, will never fully come back from pre-pandemic levels — recovering from a pandemic-fueled decline but sinking again around 2027 with renewable energy on the rise — according to a BloombergNEF analysis.
But, but, but: It still won't prevent the planet from cooking, as the firm still sees enough emissions to lead to over 3.3°C of warming above preindustrial levels by century's end.
Coronavirus surge is sinking consumer confidence
The rise in coronavirus cases in certain parts of the U.S. is stunting confidence across the country, a crop of new reports show.
Driving the news: After stalling during the previous two-week period, overall economic sentiment declined for the first time in two months, according to the Economic Sentiment Index, a biweekly survey from data firm CivicScience and Hamilton Place Strategies (HPS).
The GOP's monstrous math problem
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Republicans, win or lose next week, face a big — and growing — math problem.
The state of play: They're relying almost exclusively on a shrinking demographic (white men), living in shrinking areas (small, rural towns), creating a reliance on people with shrinking incomes (white workers without college degrees) to survive.
Right-wing misinformation could gain steam post-election
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
With less than a week until the 2020 election, researchers have expressed concern that the information ecosystem today is ripe for an unprecedented level of exploitation by bad actors, particularly hyper-partisan media and personalities on the right.
Why it matters: The misinformation-powered right-wing media machine that fueled Donald Trump's 2016 victory grew stronger after that win, and it's set to increase its reach as a result of the upcoming election, whether Trump wins or loses.
U.S. election result will shake up Israeli politics
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's biggest domestic political asset is on the ballot on Nov. 3 — his relationship with President Trump.
Why it matters: The outcome of America's election could help determine whether Israel soon faces yet another election of its own.
Mask mandates help control the rise in coronavirus hospitalizations
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Coronavirus hospitalizations are rising much more dramatically in places that don’t require people to wear a face mask, according to a new Vanderbilt University analysis.
The big picture: The findings reinforce what experts have been saying for months: Masks — and mask mandates — work. They will not vanquish the coronavirus on their own, but they help. A lot.
Unrest in Philadelphia after fatal police shooting of Black man
Demonstrators rally on Tuesday near the location where Walter Wallace was killed by two police officers in Philadelphia. Photo: Mark Makela/Getty Images
The Pennsylvania National Guard was mobilized Tuesday during a tense second night of protests in Philadelphia over the fatal police shooting of Walter Wallace, a 27-year-old Black man.
Driving the news: Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney (D) and Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw said in a joint statement a "full investigation" would be launched to answer questions that arose from video that captured part of Monday's incident.
Los Angeles Dodgers win World Series
Mookie Betts slides home safely to give the Dodgers a 2-1 lead. Photo: Tom Pennington/Getty Images
The Los Angeles Dodgers won their seventh World Series in franchise history with a 3-1 Game 6 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on Tuesday. Shortstop Corey Seager was named the series MVP.
The big picture: It's the Dodgers' first championship since 1988, though they've won the NL West division in eight straight seasons and reached the World Series three times in the last four years.
Trump's campaign website hacked
A screenshot of the Trump campaign website after it was hacked.
The Trump campaign website briefly went down and its "About" page was modified after hackers attacked the site Tuesday evening — just seven days before the election.
The big picture: The hackers emulated the FBI and declared on the "About" page that "this was seized. the world has had enough of the fake-news spreaded [sic] daily by president donald j trump. it is time to allow the world to know truth." Two addresses linked to the cryptocurrency Monero appeared on the site. Trump campaign spokesperson Tim Murtaugh in a statement said no sensitive data had been exposed in the attack.
Go deeper: Twitter hack raises fears of an unstable election