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Hamlin’s collapse spurs new wave of vaccine misinformation

WASHINGTON (AP) — Unfounded claims about the safety of COVID-19 vaccines proliferated in the hours and days after Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin collapsed during Monday’s game, revealing how pervasive vaccine misinformation remains three years after the pandemic began.

Even before Hamlin was carried off the field in Cincinnati, posts amassing thousands of shares and millions of views began circulating online claiming without evidence that complications from COVID-19 vaccines caused his health emergency.

While cardiac specialists say it’s too soon to know what caused Hamlin’s heart to stop, they’ve offered a rare type of trauma called commotio cordis as among the possible culprits. Physicians interviewed by The Associated Press say there’s no indication Hamlin’s vaccine status played a role, and said there’s no evidence to support claims that a number of young athletes have died as a result of COVID vaccinations.

Peter McCullough, a Dallas cardiologist and outspoken vaccine critic, amplified the theories on a Fox News segment hosted by Tucker Carlson on Tuesday, speculating that “vaccine-induced myocarditis,” may have caused Hamlin’s episode. While the Bills have not said whether Hamlin was vaccinated, about 95% of NFL players have received a COVID-19 vaccine, according to the league.

In his Tuesday segment, Carlson claimed McCullough and another researcher found that “more than 1,500 cardiac arrests” have occurred among European athletes “since the vax campaign began.”

But Carlson was citing a letter in which the authors’ evidence was a dubious blog that lists news reports of people all over the world, of all ages, dying or experiencing medical emergencies. The blog proves no relationship between the incidents and COVID-19 vaccines; it also includes in its count reported deaths from cancer and emergencies of unknown causes.

“It’s not real research, but he quotes it as if it’s real research,” said Dr. Matthew Martinez, director of sports cardiology at Atlantic Health System in Morristown Medical Center. “Anybody can write a letter to the editor and then quote an article that has no academic rigor.”

Many social media users have also shared deceptive videos that purport to show athletes collapsing on-field because of COVID-19 vaccines. However, several of the cases shown have been proven to be from other causes.

Though anti-vaccine influencers have insisted that sudden cardiac arrests during sports games are unprecedented, cardiologists say they’ve observed these traumatic events throughout their careers, and long before the COVID-19 pandemic.

“There have always been cases of athletes having sudden cardiac death or cardiac arrest,” said Dr. Lawrence Phillips, sports health expert and cardiologist at NYU Langone Health. “I have not seen a change in the prevalence of them over the last couple of years versus earlier in my career.”

In fact, Phillips said, these rare medical emergencies are the main reason that doctors and activists have spent years campaigning for defibrillators to be on standby at sporting events.

That push, and the implementation of emergency action plans, has improved outcomes after cardiac events on the playing field, even as the number of such events has remained “remarkably stable,” Martinez said.

Martinez, who has worked for the National Football League, National Basketball Association, National Hockey League and Major League Soccer, said he has investigated but not seen any signal that COVID-19 or vaccines are causing an increased incidence of cardiac events among athletes.

His research shows that among professional athletes who have had COVID-19, rates of inflammatory heart disease were about 0.6% — showing no increased risk compared to other viruses.

Online posts mentioning Hamlin and vaccines soared into the thousands within one hour of Hamlin’s collapse, according to an analysis conducted for the AP by Zignal Labs, a San Francisco-based media intelligence company.

It’s not surprising that misleading claims about COVID-19 vaccines surged following Hamlin’s cardiac arrest, given how much vaccine misinformation has spread since the pandemic began, said Jeanine Guidry, a Virginia Commonwealth University professor who researches health misinformation and vaccine hesitancy.

High-profile public events like Hamlin’s collapse often create new waves of misinformation as people grasp for explanations. For people concerned about vaccine safety, Hamlin’s sudden collapse served to affirm and justify their beliefs, Guidry said.

“This happened to a person in the prime of their life, on primetime television, and the people watching didn’t immediately know why,” she said. “We like to have clear answers that make us feel safer. Especially after the last three years, I think this is coming from fear and uncertainty.”

Similarly unfounded claims about vaccine injuries surged last month following the death of sports journalist Grant Wahl, who died of a ruptured blood vessel in his heart while covering the World Cup in Qatar. His death was not related to vaccines.

___

Associated Press writer Angelo Fichera in Philadelphia contributed to this report.

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Hong Kong residents rush to get vaccinated ahead of China border reopening

2023-01-05T02:20:37Z

Hong Kong residents have swamped clinics to get vaccinated against COVID-19 ahead of the expected reopening of the city’s border with mainland China, which some people fear will bring a surge of infections to the financial hub.

City government centres providing shots produced by BioNTech have in recent days been mostly booked solid, some until February, in contrast with a few weeks ago when anyone seeking a vaccine could stroll into a nearly empty facility.

“After the opening of the border, I expect there will be more infected people on the streets, I want to reduce my chance of getting infected,” said a Hong Kong resident surnamed Wan, 33, who got his fourth shot this week.

Hong Kong’s government announced plans to reopen its border and resume restriction-free travel for the first time in more than three years after Beijing abandoned its strict “zero-COVID” policy and announced it was easing its travel restrictions from Jan. 8.

Hong Kong saw a sluggish vaccine uptake when the shots first became available in 2001, particularly among the elderly, but rates picked up over the past year and more than 83% of Hong Kong residents have received three doses of either the BioNTech shot or China’s Sinovac vaccine, according to government data.

The number of people getting a fourth shot jumped more than 100% this week from a week earlier.

It’s not just a fear of new infections after the border reopens but worry that mainland visitors will snap up mRNA vaccines, which can give better protection against COVID but are not available for Chinese residents in the mainland.

Many mainlanders have been asking on social media about how to get an mRNA vaccine in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong’s government has said non-residents will have to pay for vaccines at private clinics.

“I’m afraid it might be harder to get vaccinated once mainlanders start coming,” said Kevin Lam, 29, queuing up along with dozens of other people for his fourth vaccine at a clinic in the city’s Quarry Bay district.

A Hong Kong resident surnamed Tsoi said she was relieved to have made a booking for BioNTech’s second-generation booster.

“I’m a bit worried that vaccinations will run out,” the 35-year-old said.

Related Galleries:

People queue at a community vaccination centre, ahead of an expected border reopening with China, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Hong Kong, China, January 4, 2023. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu

People queue at a community vaccination centre, ahead of an expected border reopening with China, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Hong Kong, China, January 4, 2023. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu

People sit at a community vaccination centre, ahead of an expected border reopening with China, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Hong Kong, China, January 4, 2023. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu

A member of staff moves chairs outside a community vaccination centre, ahead of an expected border reopening with China, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Hong Kong, China, January 4, 2023. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu

A woman holds hand of the child at a community vaccination centre, ahead of an expected border reopening with China, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Hong Kong, China, January 4, 2023. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
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New York City buying more than 900 EVs for government fleets

2023-01-05T02:13:01Z

New York said on Wednesday it will replace more than 900 city-owned fossil-fuel powered vehicles with electric models and install 315 additional EV charging ports after receiving a $10.1 million U.S. Transportation Department grant.

The announcement is the latest by a U.S. government agency to speed the shift away from gas-powered vehicles to EVs. New York City currently has more than 4,000 government-owned electric vehicles and by later this year says close to 20% of city vehicles will be EVs.

The new funding will help New York acquire 382 Chevrolet Bolt EVs, 360 Ford (F.N) E-Transit vans, and 150 Ford F-150 E-Lightning pick-up trucks as well as 25 plug-in hybrid street sweepers.

The city already operates about 850 Bolts, built by General Motors (GM.N), and more than 200 Ford Mustang Mach-Es.

New York said the city currently has more than 1,360 charging ports, 120 fast chargers and 106 free-standing solar carports, and plans to add another 600 ports in the next 18 months.

The city’s goal is to install 1,000 curbside chargers by 2025 and 10,000 charging stations by 2030. “Electric vehicles, they are clearly the future,” New York Mayor Eric Adams said on Wednesday.

New York City has about 26,000 government vehicles in service.

Last month, the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) said it would more than double its planned electric delivery vehicles purchases, tapping $3 billion in funding from Congress.

USPS said it plans to buy at least 66,000 electric vehicles through 2028 after committing in July to buying 25,000 next-generation electric delivery vehicles.

President Joe Biden in December 2021 issued an executive order directing the federal government to end purchases of gas-powered vehicles by 2035. Biden’s order also directed 100% of light-duty federal acquisitions by 2027 be EV or plug-in hybrid EV (PHEV) purchases.

Federal agencies quintupled purchases of EVs and PHEVs in the 12-months ending Sept. 30, moving from approximately 1% of vehicle acquisitions in the 2021 budget year to 12% of light-duty purchases in 2022, or 3,567 total, the White House said.

Related Galleries:

An electric car charging station is seen in the parking garage of Union Station in Washington, U.S., September 29, 2022. REUTERS/Sarah Silbiger

The logo of an electric car is painted on the road during the opening ceremony of the first Latin American public charging station, at Santiago, April 20, 2011. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado
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Walgreens, CVS plan to start offering abortion pills

2023-01-05T02:17:41Z

CVS Health logo is seen displayed in this illustration taken, May 3, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

Walgreens Boot Alliance Inc (WBA.O) and CVS Health Corp (CVS.N) said on Wednesday they plan to offer abortion pills following the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) decision to allow retail pharmacies to offer the drug in the country for the first time.

The FDA on Tuesday finalized a rule allowing one of two drugs to be dispensed by retail pharmacies, but sellers will have to weigh whether or not to offer the pill. U.S. abortion rights were curtailed in 2022 when the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision.

Medication abortion accounts for more than half of U.S. abortions. The decision will make the medication more accessible in states where abortion remains legal, but its impact in states that have banned abortion will be limited.

“We are working through the registration, necessary training of our pharmacists, as well as evaluating our pharmacy network in terms of where we normally dispense products that have extra FDA requirements and will dispense these consistent with federal and state laws,” Walgreens said in an emailed statement.

The FDA on Tuesday said mifepristone, one of two drugs used in medication abortions, can be dispensed by retail pharmacies.

CVS Health also said it plans to seek certification to dispense mifepristone, where legally permissible.

The health agency finalized the changes after reviewing supplemental applications from Danco Laboratories and GenBioPro, the two companies that make the drug in the United States.

In several countries, including India and Mexico, women can buy the medication without a prescription to induce abortion.

CVS shares fell 1% in regular U.S. trading on Tuesday; Walgreens shares rose 0.8%.

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This monster must be stopped

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Two years ago this Friday a mob gathered. Their goal was to protest the “stolen” election and “stop the steal,” to hold individuals personally responsible for then president Donald Trump’s loss in November. The mob got ugly and the chants were terrifying. Fortunately, the intended victims of the mob had escaped to safety. Given the bellicose nature of the mob it was a close escape. Harm could have come to these intended victims, possibly even death.

That was the scene on January 6, 2021. Only I’m not referring to the mob at the Capitol Building in Washington DC. I’m referring to the mob at 62 year old Ruby Freeman’s house in Cobb County Georgia. People had come to Ms. Freeman’s house, people looking for her and her daughter Shaye Moss. They were there demanding answers. They were there to do violence, if necessary.

Both women had spent the previous few days in mortal terror. Both women were in hiding, petrified of the MAGA lunatics who called them on the phone at all hours of the day or night, threatened their lives and even came banging on their doors. All at the invitation of the president of the United States.

All because of a perfectly innocent vIdeo of both women doing their jobs. But when the likes of Rudy Giuliani and Donald Trump and idiots at Fox News viewed that same video, instead of seeing two women doing their jobs, which is what it was, they saw (or claim they saw) two women stealing the 2020 election.

This is preposterous, of course. Not a single frame of that video shows any such thing. Donald Trump was even told as much, not just by reporters and fact-checkers, but by his own Justice Department. What conspiracy theorists said were “suitcases” of bogus ballots were really just standard boxes used locally to transport real ballots, nothing more.

That was the truth. But today, in the post-truth era, truth is whatever some people want it to be, whatever is convenient for them. That such madness has real victims with real lives that get ruined in real time matters not at all to the spreaders of these lies. They live in their own world and in their world the truth is whatever they say it is, in service to whatever narrative they support.

So Donald Trump was told the truth about these two innocent election workers, but he chose to tell lies that put both women in danger. And last night he decided to do it again.

On “Truth” Social, Donald Trump wrote, “Wow! Has anyone seen the Ruby Freeman ‘contradictions’ of her sworn testimony? Now this is ‘BIG STUFF.’ Look what was captured by Cobb County police body cameras on January 4, 2021. … Now it gets really bad.”

Shortly after that, Trump published a second item, directly accusing Freeman of election crimes, followed by a third item, in which he asked, “What will the Great State of Georgia do with the Ruby Freeman MESS?” Trump then concluded that he’s fighting “the evils and treachery of the Radical Left monsters who want to see America die.”

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Today’s article isn’t about Donald Trump and his claim of a “stolen” election. It isn’t about the perfidy of the Republican Party. It isn’t about Kevin McCarthy and the clown show in Congress. It’s about two women, two patriots, who love their country and wanted to serve it. It’s about how their lives were unjustly ruined because it was convenient to ruin them. It’s about how Donald Trump doesn’t care who he hurts in order to get what he wants, because in the end, everything is about him and no one else matters.


Two years ago two innocent, decent women were disingenuously targeted by the president of the United States. Their lives were deliberately ruined by Donald Trump so he could exploit them for a narrative he knows is a lie. Now he’s doing it again because he can. Now he’s doing it again because no one will stop him.

This monster, Donald Trump, must be stopped. This monster, Donald Trump, must be indicted. This monster, Donald Trump, must go to prison. And, as ever, ladies and gentlemen, brothers and sisters, comrades and friends, stay safe.

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Amazon CEO says job cuts to exceed 18,000 roles

2023-01-05T01:41:42Z

FILE PHOTO: The Amazon logo is displayed on a sign outside the company’s LDJ5 sortation center in the Staten Island borough of New York City, U.S. April 25, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid./File Photo/File Photo

Amazon.com Inc’s (AMZN.O) layoffs will now stretch to more than 18,000 roles as part of a workforce reduction it previously disclosed, Chief Executive Andy Jassy said in a public staff note on Wednesday.

The layoff decisions, which Amazon will communicate starting Jan. 18, will largely impact the company’s e-commerce and human-resources organizations, he said.

The cuts amount to 6% of Amazon’s roughly 300,000-person corporate workforce and represent a swift turn for a retailer that recently doubled its base pay ceiling to compete more aggressively for talent.

Jassy said in the note that annual planning “has been more difficult given the uncertain economy and that we’ve hired rapidly over the last several years.”

Amazon has more than 1.5 million workers including warehouse staff, making it America’s second-largest private employer after Walmart Inc (WMT.N). It has braced for likely slower growth as soaring inflation encouraged businesses and consumers to cut back spending and its share price has halved in the past year.

It began letting staff go in November from its devices division, with a source telling Reuters at the time it was targeting 10,000 job cuts.

In number, its layoffs now surpass the 11,000 job cuts at Facebook-parent Meta Platforms Inc (META.O) as well as reductions at other tech-industry peers.


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Gen. Mark Milley said he had calls with up to 60 different countries during the chaotic 2020 election period, assuring them the US was ‘not going to do something crazy’

Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, testifies.Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, testifies before the House Committee on Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense on May 11, 2022.

Jose Luis Magana/AP

  • Gen. Mark Milley said he spoke with his counterparts in up to 60 countries after the 2020 election.
  • Milley told the January 6 committee there was “great concern” overseas on the stability of the US.
  • The theme of the calls was “steady in the saddle, safe landing, peaceful transfer of power,” he said.

Gen. Mark Milley said he had calls with counterparts in up to 60 countries during the months after the 2020 election to assure them the US was stable, according to testimony released by the January 6 committee.

Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has served as the top military adviser to the president since 2019. The House Select committee investigating the Capitol riot released his testimony, taken on November 17, 2021, on Sunday among a trove of documents.

Milley told the committee his calls with White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo increased after the election. He said he used the calls to promote a peaceful transfer of power and to report to them what he was seeing overseas, as then-President Donald Trump refused to concede the election and spread false claims about widespread fraud. 

“Because internationally, post-election, there was great concern on the stability of the United States Government,” Milley said, according to the transcript, adding, “I was consistently talking with my foreign counterparts.”

Milley noted that his calls to his counterpart in China made during the final months of former President Donald Trump’s presidency have been widely known. But he said he also made “50 or 60 phone calls to other counterparts” during that time.

“There was a lot of effort to calm waters, to make sure that people overseas understood that, you know, the normal puts and takes of democracy, and this is a stable government, we’re not going to do something crazy and all that,” he said. “That took a degree of effort.”

Milley added that the theme of the calls was “steady in the saddle, safe landing, peaceful transfer of power, all of that.”

Milley’s testimony also included other revelations, including that there were talks during the Trump administration about retaliating against retired military officers who were publicly critical of the president. He noted there had been several op-eds written by retired officers that were “very critical of then President Trump.” 

“And there was actually discussions with me: Bring him back on Active Duty, court-martial him, you know, make him walk the plank sort of thing, right? I advised them not to do that, because that would further politicize, in my personal view,” Milley said.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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Video captures the moment Rep.-elect George Santos appeared to not hear his name multiple times before he responded during McCarthy’s 5th failed speaker vote

Incoming GOP Rep. George Santos of New York at the Republican Jewish Coalition Annual Leadership Meeting in Las Vegas, Nevada on November 19, 2022.Incoming GOP Rep. George Santos of New York at the Republican Jewish Coalition Annual Leadership Meeting in Las Vegas, Nevada on November 19, 2022.

Wade Vandervort / AFP via Getty Images

  • Rep.-elect George Santos momentarily held up the speaker vote by not responding to his name.
  • Santos is under scrutiny for being dishonest to voters during his campaign.
  • The video of him not responding prompted Twitter users to further question his identity.

During the fifth House Speaker vote, beleaguered New York Representative-elect George Santos seemed to briefly stall the process by not responding to his name being called.

“Santos. Santos,” a voice said over a microphone as Santos held his head down and the person next to him appeared to be talking quietly. He then raised his hand moments after his name was called for the second time, according to a video captured by CSPAN and also posted to Twitter by The Recount on Wednesday.

—The Recount (@therecount) January 4, 2023

The 34-year-old Republican is under intense scrutiny for running a campaign rooted in dishonesty, being investigated in the US. and by Brazilian authorities, and getting called out by an ex-boyfriend for not paying bills and stealing his phone.

The video posted by The Recount prompted Twitter users to poke fun at Santos’ moment of absence. 

“Bueller… Bueller… Bueller,” one user quipped.

—Hamby aka Walt’s Dad (@HambySanDiego) January 4, 2023

 

On his first day at Congress, Santos largely avoided reporters and sat isolated throughout the day, Insider reported. A fellow congress member called Santos a liar in Portuguese on Tuesday after he cast his vote for Rep. Kevin McCarthy, Insider also reported.

The New York Post reported that Santos remained somewhat standoffish during the vote on Wednesday, appearing to only look at his phone and be unengaged overall.

Santos voted in favor of McCarthy becoming House Speaker. After six votes over two days, McCarthy still has not earned the spot.

—Acyn (@Acyn) January 3, 2023

 

Santos was not immediately reachable for comment. DOES THIS MEAN YOU REACHED OUT BUT DIDN’T HEAR BACK? I couldn’t find contact info!

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Byron Donalds emerges as GOP alternative for House speaker

MIAMI (AP) — As Republicans struggled for a second day to elect a House speaker, Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida emerged as the choice of conservative holdouts who are refusing to support Kevin McCarthy’s bid.

During three rounds of balloting Wednesday, Donalds received 20 votes to McCarthy’s 201 — enough to keep McCarthy short of the 218 needed to win the speakership in a full House.

On Tuesday, Republicans opposing McCarthy nominated a slew of candidates, including Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona, Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio and even former Rep. Lee Zeldin of New York. Donalds joined the insurgent Republicans on the final vote Tuesday, switching his vote from McCarthy to Jordan.

So just who is Byron Donalds?

NO SOPHOMORE SLUMP

Donalds, 44, was elected in November to his second term representing Florida’s 19th District, in the state’s southwest. For his first election in 2020, Donalds won a nine-way GOP primary and defeated his Democratic opponent to succeed retiring Republican Rep. Francis Rooney.

A native of Brooklyn, Donalds was raised by a single mother and graduated from Florida State University in 2002. He was working as a financial adviser when he was appointed to the board of trustees at a state college by then-Gov. Rick Scott, which helped elevate his profile in Florida’s GOP circles.

His wife, Erika Donalds, is an advocate of the school choice movement in the state. Byron Donalds has acknowledged being arrested as a young man on a marijuana distribution charge that was later dismissed, and said he turned his life around.

He unsuccessfully ran for the U.S. House in 2012, winning a state House seat four years later.

HOUSE SPEAKER VOTES

In December 2021, Donalds told CBS that McCarthy had “done tremendous things” for Republicans in the House. “So right now, the question is, who’s going to be the person that’s going to take us to the next level?” Donalds said. “Kevin’s proven he can do that.”

In the first two rounds of votes on Tuesday, Donalds cast his vote for McCarthy before opting for Jordan in the third round. In doing so, Donalds tweeted that the “reality is … McCarthy doesn’t have the votes.”

“This will take time, Democracy is messy at times, but we will be ready to govern on behalf of the American people,” Donalds added. “Debate is healthy.”

On Wednesday, when his own name was placed in nomination, Donalds cast votes in favor of himself. On Fox after one of those votes, Donalds said he had briefly spoken with McCarthy and called for leadership that “actually reflects where the American people are, and that leadership is something that is earned here in the nation’s Capitol, not just given.”

PREVIOUS LEADERSHIP PURSUIT

Donalds has previously sought GOP leadership posts. In November, he unsuccessfully challenged Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York for conference chair, the No. 4 position in Republican House leadership, losing a closed-door vote.

VOICES FROM THE FLOOR

Rep. Chip Roy of Texas was the sole member to vote for Donalds for speaker on Tuesday, before subsequently supporting Jordan. In his Wednesday speech nominating Donalds, Roy said the sophomore represented a move toward something different, both for Washington and the Republican Party.

“Here we are, and for the first time in history, there have been two Black Americans placed into the nomination for speaker of the House,” Roy said, referring to Donalds and Democratic House leader Hakeem Jeffries. “This country needs a change. This country needs leadership that does not reflect this city, this town that is badly broken.”

Donalds is currently one of only four Black Republicans in the House.

Cori Bush, a Black Democratic congresswoman from Missouri, called Donalds a “prop.”

“Despite being Black, he supports a policy agenda intent on upholding and perpetuating white supremacy. His name being in the mix is not progress — it’s pathetic,” she tweeted.

Nominating Donalds in the fifth round, Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado said the House’s job “is not to coronate the biggest fundraiser, or rubberstamp the status quo or keep on going along to get along. It’s to use our votes to elect a speaker who will enable us to get our country back on track.”

Speaking with reporters on the Capitol steps, Donalds on Wednesday called the ongoing debate “an invigorating day for America” but noted that “there’s a lot of members in the chamber who want to have serious conversations about how we can bring this all to a close and elect a speaker.”

“Once we get this organized and figured out, we’ll get back to business,” he said. “It’s only Day Two, y’all. Settle down. We’re going to be all right.”

___

Kinnard reported from Columbia, S.C. Associated Press writer Mary Clare Jalonick in Washington contributed to this report.