Saturday, 31 October 2020

More than 50% of Contra Costa County residents have voted

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) -- More than half of Contra Costa County residents have already voted.

"I am relieved," Lily Wescott said. "I'm glad it's done."

On Saturday, Wescott crossed off voting on her to do list.

"I actually came in with my mail in ballot and didn't realize that I had the ability to go ahead and vote early so I went ahead and took care of that right away," she said.

Early voting in person began Friday in Contra Costa County.

Jennifer Luk-Matney lead's the Heather Farms Park site and says so far almost 500 people voted in person.

By Saturday the crowd tapered off.

"Today has been consistently slow," Luk-Matney said. "Well it's not that slow but yesterday earlier in the morning we had lines all the way around the park."

With Election Day fast approaching, over 50% of residents in the county already voted.

County officials have been encouraging residents to vote by mail advising it is the safest way during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Betty Tam never received her mail in ballot so she got it done in person and feels safer to make her vote count.

"I think voting early is for sure that I get my vote in and this vote is very efficient because we did it electronically, get a print out and just drop off one sheet of paper," Tam said.



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Staying safe in the Castro this Halloween

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) -- It's the place to be to celebrate Halloween in San Francisco. 

But climbing COVID cases now has city leaders asking folks to cut the Castro out of their plans on this Halloween night.

Saturday evening in the Castro was full of festive costumes and young trick-or-treaters.

People are out and about to celebrate but the key this year is to do it safely. The city is asking people to not have a big party tonight and suggests people stay home instead.

COVID-19 has changed things this year. Halloween masks aren't the only ones being worn and city officials say the neighborhood should be avoided.

"Definitely need to be safe need to be protected but you know what? We also gotta live our lives," Elvis Zavaleta said.

Zavaleta agrees that precautions should be taken but also feels like the culture and the community can be celebrated safely.

"We are in a pandemic you know be creative have fun you know," he said.

SFPD has been out in the neighborhood on foot keeping an eye on things.

Some early trick or treaters tell us they experienced a fun and safe time before the sun went down.

The goal for city officials is to not go backwards in the fight against COVID-19. 

Last week San Francisco was the first major city to reach the yellow-least risk tier in California but those reopening plans have been halted.

The concern is for a potential local surge that could overwhelm hospitals.

The Castro is being counted on.

"I think it's important to keep social distance mask on and if we abide by those I think it seems pretty safe, feels pretty safe."

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Antioch police arrest 13-year-old suspect driving stolen car

ANTIOCH, Calif. (BCN) -- A 13-year-old driver was arrested Friday in Antioch after being spotted driving a car that had been stolen during an armed carjacking in Oakland, police said.

The car, a Honda, was spotted shortly before 1 p.m. near 13th Street and August Way, according to Antioch police.

Officers tried to pull over the car, but the teen driver led them on a chase, entering the Highway 4 and exiting at Hillcrest Avenue.

When the driver tried to make a U-turn at Hillcrest and Wildflower Drive, officers forcibly stopped the car.

No injuries were reported and there was minor damage to the Honda, police said.

The teen suspect was turned over to Oakland police.

Copyright © 2020 by Bay City News, Inc. 

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$166M in fines recommended for PG&E over power outages

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — California regulators are being asked to fine Pacific Gas & Electric nearly $166 million for failing to properly inform customers before it cut power to millions of people last year.

The sweeping outages without proper notification were “a major public safety failure” that disrupted lives and posed a risk to medically vulnerable people who use electrical equipment such as wheelchairs, iron lungs and dialysis machines, according to a brief submitted Friday to the state Public Utilities Commission by the Public Advocates Office.

The office is an independent organization within the PUC that is charged with representing utility taxpayers’ interests before the agency.

Two blackouts in October 2019 lasted several days and affected dozens of Northern California counties. The resulting chaos — phones and gas pumps, elevators, traffic lights and even water pumps stopped working — created furious criticism.

The PUC last November declared that PG&E — the nation’s largest utility — had created risks to public safety by failing to properly communicate with customers and work with local governments before enacting sweeping Public Safety Power Shutoff blackouts from Oct. 9-12 and again from Oct. 23 to Nov. 1.

Altogether, the outages affected 1.67 million customers, which works out to more than 4 million people if each customer account serves between two and three people.

The outages occurred during hot, dry, windy weather and were designed to prevent PG&E power lines or other equipment from being knocked over or fouled and sparking catastrophic wildfires.

PG&E equipment caused several devastating wildfires in 2017 and 2018 that killed more than 100 people and destroyed more than 27,000 homes and other buildings.

However, the Public Advocates Office said PG&E “put the lives of many vulnerable customers at risk, and either failed in or disregarded its obligations to public safety partners, local agencies, and essential service workers.”

Furthermore, PG&E continues to fall short in its notification efforts, the office argued.

The office laid out three possible fines, ranging from about $87.5 million to a high of $277.5 million but recommended the PUC adopt the middle range of $165.7 million.

An email to PG&E seeking comment wasn’t immediately returned. The utility has until Nov. 11 to respond to the fine recommendation.

The utility did provide widespread notification to customers for each of five safety shutoffs it conducted this year, including one last week that affected about 1 million people in 34 counties.

However, the Public Advocates Office argued that the utility hasn’t learned its lesson and added: “if left unchecked, PG&E’s PSPS failures will result in loss of life.”

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After year of disruption, America set to choose a path ahead

WASHINGTON (AP) — After a year of deep disruption, America is poised for a presidential election that renders a verdict on the nation’s role in the world and the direction of its economy, on its willingness to contain an escalating pandemic and its ability to confront systemic racial inequity.

But the two men on the ballot, President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden, offer more than just differing solutions for the country’s most pressing problems. The choice before voters is a referendum on the role of the presidency itself and a test of the sturdiness of democracy, with the president challenging the legitimacy of the outcome even before Election Day and law enforcement agencies braced for the possibility of civil unrest.

“There’s more than just your standard ideological difference between the two candidates. There’s a fundamentally different view of what the presidency is and what leadership means for the nation,” said Jeffrey Engel, director of the Center for Presidential History at Southern Methodist University.

Voters appear to recognize the moment: More than 91 million people have already cast ballots, shattering records for early voting.

A Trump victory would deepen the anti-establishment, inward-facing approach to the nation’s challenges that he has ushered in over the past four years — an approach enthusiastically embraced by the president’s supporters and loathed by his critics. The courts, which have been stacked with a generation of conservative jurists during Trump’s tenure, would veer further to the right.

Victory for Biden would be as much a repudiation of the incumbent as it would be a win for the longtime Democratic politician, a former vice president and senator. Though Biden has outlined an agenda that envisions a more robust role for the federal government in American life and a more aggressive effort to combat the pandemic, the core of his campaign centered on him being a temperamental contrast to Trump.

Control of the Senate is also at stake. Competitive races from Maine to Arizona give Democrats a chance to retake the majority from Republicans. Democrats are expected to easily maintain their grip on the House.

The election is being held at a moment of bitter partisanship in America, and whichever candidate wins the White House will confront the challenge of governing through deep divisions. If anything, the campaign has clarified how stratified the U.S. has become, with Trump’s base of support coming from overwhelmingly white voters at lower income and education levels. More highly educated Americans, particularly women, and voters of color, most notably African Americans, have all but abandoned the Republican Party during Trump’s four years in office.

Trump faced a particularly fierce outcry from Black Americans after his response to the largely peaceful protests that erupted across the country this summer over racial injustice in policing. The president highlighted the sporadic outbursts of violence and argued that white, suburban neighborhoods would be overrun by mayhem if Biden were elected.

Biden has condemned Trump as racist. Biden also has made explicit appeals to Republicans, seeking to draw support from those who may have taken a chance on Trump but have been turned off by his divisiveness and fierce personal attacks on his critics.

The Democratic nominee has proved to be an alluring alternative to some of those voters, given his more moderate record and campaign agenda, and his more traditional approach to foreign policy, including U.S engagement in the kinds of multilateral institutions such as NATO that Trump has flirted with abandoning.

Dan Giesen, 56, of Minneapolis, said he was a conservative voter before Trump became the Republican nominee four years ago, leading him to vote for third-party candidate Evan McMullin. Last week, Giesen was waiting in line to cast his vote early for Biden.

“I think we can deal with partisan differences when our institutions and our norms are in place, but I think that those are being seriously eroded under Donald Trump,” he said.

Biden heads into Tuesday’s election with an edge in public polling, including a comfortable national lead and a narrower advantage in some of the battleground states that will decide the contest. He has multiple paths to victory and has devoted significant resources to the Upper Midwest states where Trump surprised Democrats four years ago, but also to states such as Arizona and Georgia that for years have been reliable Republican territory.

Though Democrats are wary of overconfidence, given Trump’s upset in 2016, party leaders see significant differences in this year’s election. Biden is viewed more favorably by voters than Hillary Clinton was four years ago. And the pandemic, which has upended nearly every aspect of American life, saddled Trump with overwhelmingly negative reviews from voters on his handling of the crisis.

“In the last 10 days of 2016, the story was, ‘What’s the FBI going to do about the newly reopened Hillary Clinton email investigation?’” said Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia, who was Clinton’s running mate in 2016. Now, Kaine said, “they’re talking about COVID and how it’s affecting communities.”

The pandemic indeed turned Trump’s plans for this election year inside out.

The president opened 2020 in strong position, with a robust economic record and the GOP unified behind him after he survived an impeachment trial centered on his request for Ukraine’s help digging up dirt on Biden.

Since then, the coronavirus has gripped the nation, causing more than 230,000 deaths and infecting more than 9 million Americans; both are the highest confirmed counts in the world. The U.S. economy cratered, and though it has recovered somewhat, the unemployment rate rests at 7.9% and businesses across the country are worried about surviving the winter, given that infection rates are on the rise.

Trump himself contracted the virus in October and was briefly hospitalized. Since then, he’s been barnstorming the country, holding large rallies with crowds that are not socially distanced and only sporadically wearing masks. His message to Americans has been that the U.S. is “rounding the corner” on the virus, despite the fact that cases are on the rise in most states and the U.S. is setting daily records for confirmed cases.

Sixty-five percent of Americans said the president has not taking the pandemic seriously enough, according to a mid-October poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

Despite the pandemic’s toll on his political fortunes, Trump’s campaign is banking on strategy similar to 2016. Advisers contend that Trump will draw out new voters who haven’t participated in politics previously or in some time. His campaign is also banking on some voters ultimately looking beyond their personal qualms with the president to back his policies.

That was the case for Tom Redford, 79, who cast his ballot for Trump on Thursday outside of Richmond, Virginia. Redford said he’s the only Trump supporter in his family and doesn’t much like the president personally.

“But everything he’s done is great — everything, including what he’s done on the coronavirus,” Redford said as he waited in a line of more than 200 people.

The president’s pathway to the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the White House is narrow. He needs to hold onto Florida, a perennial battleground, as well as nearly all of the territory he carried in 2016. He’s spent the final days of the campaign on defense, making stops in states such as Georgia and Iowa, where he won comfortably four years ago.

The challenge for Trump is engineering a late shift in the race when so many voters have already cast ballots. By Saturday, the early vote tally represented more than 66% of all the votes cast in the 2016 race.

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Girl who lost baseball card collection in Creek Fire gets surprise from Cal Fire

PRATHER, Calif. (KGPE) -- The community is stepping up to the plate for a 9-year-old girl who lost it all in the Creek Fire.

Reese Osterburg was devastated after her beloved baseball card collection was destroyed. So Cal Fire put a call out for donations and had a big surprise for her Friday.

Reese was told she was going on a fire station tour but instead was surprised with a massive new baseball card collection.

"The baseball card drive donation is not only bringing the kids together, but it's really bringing the community back together," Seth Brown a Cal Fire battalion chief said.

Reese's family lost their home, along with her 100 card collection. So Cal Fire started the 'Step up to the Plate' baseball card drive to gather donations and a stranger hit it out of the park.

"I got to thinking about what I have out here in the garage and I thought 'You know what? Rather than sell these on ebay I'm just going to donate them. I'm going to donate them all and put a smile on a little girls face,'" Kevin Ashford said.

Ashford sent his entire collection of more than 25,000 baseball cards from his San Jose home to surprise Reese.

"We just appreciate everyone for what they've done for us," Reese's mother Amy said.

"It's the best day I ever had, and it's more than awesome probably," Reese said.

She also said she wants to pay it forward and deliver baseball cards to other children who are either in the hospital or have experienced loss during natural disasters.

Cal Fire plans on collecting cards until next week. They posted information to social media for anyone who wants to donate:

"Please send any baseball card donations to the Shaver Lake CAL FIRE Station at 41640 Dinkey Creek Rd, Shaver Lake, CA 93664. You can also drop off baseball card donations at any CAL FIRE / Fresno County Fire Station. Include a note of encouragement if you would be so kind."



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Earthquakes vs. LAFC game postponed after players contract COVID-19

SAN JOSE, CAlif. (KRON) -- The match between the San Jose Earthquakes and Los Angeles Football Club scheduled for Sunday has been postponed after players tested positive for COVID-19.

LAFC announced three players tested positive for the virus earlier this week.

As a precaution, the game has been postponed for more testing and evaluation.

Major League Soccer is evaluating whether the match can be rescheduled before Nov. 8.

Multiple clubs will finish the season without playing the full 23 scheduled matches due to disruptions from COVID-19.

Qualifications for the 2020 playoffs will be determined by points per game average.

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Obama sinks 3-pointer while campaigning for Biden in Michigan

Former President Barack Obama couldn’t pass up an opportunity to play some ball while visiting Flint Northwestern High School in Flint, Michigan on October 31, during a campaign stop for Joe Biden three days before the presidential election.

A member of the Biden campaign captured this footage of Obama sinking a three-pointer in the high school gymnasium before shouting, “That’s what I do!”

Biden and Obama spoke at the Flint high school Saturday afternoon before heading to another Detroit area event, reports said.

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Rare blue moon on Halloween: Here's how to see it

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) -- On Saturday, the skies will bless us with another full moon on Halloween.

It's the second full moon we've seen this month and it will be visible practically anywhere with a clear view of the sky.

Astronomer Gerald McKeegan with the Chabot Space and Science Center says this "Blue Moon" is very rare.

The last two times we saw a full moon on Halloween night were in 2001 and 1944.

Chabot Space and Science Center is hosting a virtual telescope viewing of the Blue Moon starting at 9pm tonight until 10:30pm on their Facebook page.

Chabot's astronomers will answer questions about the rare event.

Don't miss it!

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Obama criticizes Trump in scathing, personal terms

FLINT, Mich. (AP) — Barack Obama is hitting President Donald Trump right where he thinks it’ll hurt most: His ego.

Campaigning for Joe Biden on Saturday, the former president painted Trump as insecure and self-absorbed, describing him as a failed president who cares more about himself than the country.

“Trump cares about feeding his ego. Joe cares about keeping you and your family safe,” Obama said in Flint, Michigan.

In a scathing speech, Obama mocked and belittled Trump for everything from the president’s criticism of the media coverage of the coronavirus pandemic — Trump, he said, was “jealous of COVID’s media coverage” — to his “obsession with crowd size.”

“He’s still worried about his inauguration crowd being smaller than mine. It really bugs him. He’s still talking about that. Does he have nothing better to worry about?” Obama said. “Did no one come to his birthday party as a kid? Was he traumatized?”

After delivering a sober indictment of Trump’s presidency and warning that America’s democracy is at stake this election at the Democratic National Convention, Obama has taken on a more lighthearted approach since returning to the campaign trail earlier this month for Biden. The personal attacks on Trump have been a centerpiece of Obama's campaign pitch, and he seems to relish the opportunity to needle his successor. On Saturday, Obama at times smiled as he jabbed the president and often sounded incredulous at the state of his administration.

“The president wants to get credit for the economy he inherited and zero blame for the pandemic he ignored,” Obama said.

Obama also dinged Trump on his masculinity. Without mentioning the president directly, Obama said that “kindness, humility, responsibility, helping somebody else out” used to be “the definition of manliness.”

“Not strutting and showing off. Acting important and bullying people,” Obama said. “It used to be being a man meant taking care of other people. Not going around bragging.”

It's a theme Biden echoed in his own speech, saying that Trump is “not strong, weak,” in reference to the moment when U.N. delegates laughed at the president.

Obama himself has been pushing the personal attacks on Trump all week. Earlier this week in Florida he joked that “Florida Man wouldn’t even do” some of the things Trump has done, a reference to a comical meme highlighting news coverage of the oddball and often reckless conduct that seems to come frequently from Florida residents. In Philadelphia earlier this month, Obama needled Trump for his Chinese bank account, joking that if he’d done the same while running for reelection “they would’ve called me Beijing Barry.”

Trump, meanwhile, has taken his own jabs at Obama, declaring at a North Carolina rally earlier this month that Obama was “all over the place” campaigning for Hillary Clinton before she lost in 2016 and suggesting Obama wasn't enthusiastic for Biden's candidacy.

The president added: “I think the only one more unhappy than crooked Hillary that night was Barack Hussein Obama.”

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Obama: Trump failed to take pandemic, presidency seriously

FLINT, Mich. (AP) — Calling Joe Biden his “brother,” Barack Obama on Saturday accused Donald Trump of failing to take the coronavirus pandemic and the presidency seriously as Democrats leaned on America’s first Black president to energize Black voters in battleground Michigan on the final weekend of the 2020 campaign.

Obama, the 44th president, and Biden, his vice president who wants to be the 46th, held drive-in rallies in Flint and Detroit, predominantly Black cities where strong turnout will be essential to swing the longtime Democratic state to Biden’s column after Trump won it in 2016.

The memories of Trump’s win in Michigan and the rest of the Upper Midwest are still searing in the minds of many Democrats during this closing stretch before Tuesday’s election. That leaves Biden in the position of holding a consistent lead in the national polls and an advantage in most battlegrounds, including Michigan, yet still facing anxiety it could all slip away.

As of Saturday morning, nearly 90 million voters had already cast ballots nationwide, according to a tally by The Associated Press. Tens of millions more will vote by the time polls close on Tuesday night.

Obama said he initially hoped “for the country’s sake” that Trump “might take the job seriously. He never has.”

The former president, addressing voters in dozens of cars in a Flint high school parking lot, seized on Trump’s continued focus on the size of his campaign crowds.

“Did no one come to his birthday party when he was a kid? Was he traumatized?” Obama mocked. “The country’s going through a pandemic. That’s not what you’re supposed to be worrying about.”

Trump made an aggressive play for pivotal Pennsylvania, focusing largely on his white, working-class base. His first of four scheduled stops in Pennsylvania was in a small town in Bucks County on the eastern edge of the state.

Repeating what has become a consistent part of his closing message, Trump raised baseless concerns about election fraud, pointing specifically at Philadelphia, a city whose large African American population is key to Biden’s fate in the state.

“They say you have to be very, very careful — what happens in Philadelphia,” Trump charged. “Everybody has to watch.”

The president also railed against a recent Supreme Court ruling that will allow Pennsylvania to count mail ballots received as many as three days after polls close.

The extra time, Trump alleged without evidence, would allow for fraud and potentially deny him a win in the state. “What’s going on?” he asked during a late afternoon rally in Reading, Pennsylvania. “That was a very disappointing opinion, but I’ve had many disappointing opinions from the Supreme Court.”

Several studies, including one commissioned by Trump himself, have failed to uncover any significant examples of election fraud. Good-government advocacy groups are concerned that the president’s repeated calls for his supporters to monitor the polls may lead to widespread voter intimidation.

Republicans are betting that Trump can win a second term by driving up turnout among his strongest supporters — white, noncollege-educated men and rural voters — while limiting Biden’s advantage with Blacks and Latinos. Democrats in several swing states worry that voters of color may not be excited enough about Biden to show up in the numbers they need.

In Michigan, Rep. Dan Kildee, a Democrat who represents the Flint area, said he had been pressing for a couple of months for Biden or Obama to visit the majority Black city where a water crisis that began in 2014 sickened the city’s residents, exposing stark racial inequities.

“Showing up matters,” Kildee said. “The message is important, no question about it. But there’s a message implicit in showing up, especially in Flint. This is a community that has felt left behind many, many times and overlooked many, many times.”

R&B legend Stevie Wonder was to perform in Detroit after Biden and Obama speak.

Biden’s campaign announced it was sending Obama to Florida and Georgia on Monday. He is the campaign’s most valuable asset to help energize the nonwhite voters Democrats so badly need to defeat Trump. “Joe Biden is my brother. I love Joe Biden, and he will be a great president,” Obama said Saturday.

The press for Michigan’s Black voters comes after voting was down roughly 15% in Flint and Detroit four years ago — a combined 48,000-plus votes in a state Trump carried by about 10,700 votes. Overall, the Black voter turnout rate declined for the first time in 20 years in a presidential election, falling to 59.6% in 2016 after reaching a record-high 66.6% four years earlier, according to the Pew Research Center.

Trump isn’t ceding Michigan to Biden. He visited Waterford Township, near Detroit, on Friday and held a rally in the state capital, Lansing, this past week, though the surging coronavirus cases are clouding his presidency.

The worst week of the year, in terms of new infections, arrived with Election Day looming. More than 99,000 Americans reported new infections on Friday, a record high, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Trump told Pennsylvania voters that his administration has done “an incredible job” dealing with the pandemic. He promised that the mass distribution of a vaccine was “just weeks away.” He’s been saying that since August,

Biden has focused almost exclusively on Trump’s inability to control the pandemic. “We’re gonna beat this virus and get it under control and the first step to doing that is beating Donald Trump,” Biden said after Obama spoke in Flint.

With the campaign down to the final days, Trump’s closing sprint includes, in addition to the four stops in Pennsylvania, nearly a dozen events in the final 48 hours across states he carried in 2016.

Biden will close out his campaign on Monday in Pennsylvania, the state where he was born and the one he’s visited more than any other. The Biden team announced that the candidate, his wife, Jill, running mate Kamala Harris, and her husband, Doug Emhoff, plan to “fan out across all four corners of the state.”

If Saturday was any indication, the final 72 hours of the 2020 campaign will get nasty.

Speaking in Flint, Michigan, Biden joked of Trump, “When you were in high school, wouldn’t you have liked to take a shot?”

The Democrat then mocked the president as a “macho man” and called him “weak.”

Biden’s reference to “taking a shot” at Trump was reminiscent of remarks Biden made at least twice before indicating he’d fight the president if both were younger. Trump, too, on Saturday suggested he could beat up Biden if given the chance and suggested the former vice president wears sunglasses to cover up “surgery on the eyes.”

“Remember when he said he’d like to take me to the back of the barn?” Trump asked.

He then waved his hand, suggesting he could easily topple Biden.

“He’s not a big guy,” Trump said of his Democratic opponent. “A slight slap, you wouldn’t have to close your fist.”

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How the Electoral College works

WASHINGTON (NEXSTAR) -- The Electoral College is a big reason why Donald Trump won the presidency in 2016. Four candidates in history have won the popular vote only to be denied the presidency by the Electoral College.

Our country's unique system of electing presidents was devised at the Constitutional Convention in 1787. It was a compromise between those who wanted direct popular elections for president and those who preferred to have Congress decide. At a time of little national identity and competition among the states, there were concerns that people would favor their regional candidates and that big states with denser populations would dominate the vote.

The Electoral College has 538 members, with the number allocated to each state based on how many representatives it has in the House plus its two senators. (The District of Columbia gets three, despite the fact that the home to Congress has no vote in Congress.)

To be elected president, the winner must get at least half plus one — or 270 electoral votes.

This hybrid system means that more weight is given to a single vote in a small state than the vote of someone in a large state, leading to outcomes at times that have been at odds with the popular vote.

In fact, part of a presidential candidate’s campaign strategy is drawing a map of states the candidate can and must win to gather 270 electoral votes.

In 2016, for instance, Democrat Hillary Clinton received nearly 2.9 million more votes than Trump in the presidential election, after racking up more lopsided wins in big states like New York and California. But she lost the presidency due to Trump’s winning margin in the Electoral College, which came after he pulled out narrow victories in less populated Midwestern states like Michigan and Wisconsin.

It would take a constitutional amendment to abolish the Electoral College — an unlikely move because of how difficult it is to pass and ratify constitutional changes. But there’s a separate movement that calls for a compact of states to allocate all their electoral votes to the national popular vote winner, regardless of how those individual states opted in an election. That still faces an uphill climb, though.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Priest shot outside church in France

LYON, France (AP) — French police say a Greek Orthodox priest was shot Saturday while he was closing his church in the city of Lyon, and authorities are hunting for the assailant.

The priest, a Greek citizen, is in a local hospital with life-threatening injuries after being hit in the abdomen, a police official told The Associated Press. The attacker was alone and fired from a hunting rifle, said the official, who was not authorized to be publicly named.

Police locked down the neighborhood around the church and warned the public on Twitter to stay away. As night fell on Lyon, police tape and emergency vehicles could be seen on images shown on French television.

The reason for the attack was unclear. It happened two days after an Islamic extremist knife attack at a Catholic church in the French city of Nice that killed three people and amid tensions over a French newspaper’s publication of caricatures mocking the Muslim Prophet Muhammad.

French anti-terrorist authorities were not investigating Saturday’s shooting, although the interior minister activated a special emergency team to follow the case while the gunman was still at large.

Prime Minister Jean Castex reiterated government promises to deploy military forces at religious sites and schools. He said French people can “count on the nation to allow them to practice their religion in full safety and freedom.”

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LIST: What is, isn't allowed on Halloween in SF

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) -- San Francisco city officials want to make sure those who choose to celebrate Halloween this year do so safely and responsibly amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The San Francisco Department of Public Health provided tips for a safer Halloween to clarify what is and isn't allowed.

Not allowed:

  • Indoor private gatherings with different households.
  • Organizing or coordinating groupings of gatherings at indoor or outdoor spaces at the same time is also prohibited (“simultaneous gatherings”)
  • Unauthorized street fairs or festivals such as those that might take advantage of streets that have been closed to support economic activity (such as outdoor dining, outdoor personal services, etc.)

Clarifications to allowed outdoor gatherings:

  • As of 10/20/20, all outdoor gatherings are limited to up to 3 households up to a
    maximum of 25 people.
  • For an outdoor meal gathering, the number of people allowed is stricter - 6 people
  • Sharing a meal with different households is higher risk, since masks cannot be worn
    while eating
  • All gatherings should be two hours or less. The longer the duration, the greater the
    risk of COVID-19 transmission

Activities discouraged during COVID-19:

  • Traditional door-to-door trick-or-treating or “trunk-or-treating” between cars because it can be
    difficult to maintain 6 feet of physical distance when multiple households gather on a street or
    in a space, and food sharing can be unsafe
  • Traveling to a rural fall festival. Unnecessary travel can spread COVID-19. Festivals are higher
    risk because people from multiple households are gathered together, and maintaining 6 feet of
    distance at all times can be difficult
  • Gatherings longer than 2 hours. The longer the duration, the greater the risk of COVID-19
    transmission

Safer activities allowed:

  • In the home:
    • Dressing up living space and outdoor areas with Halloween-themed decorations
    • Virtual parties/contests (e.g. costume contests or pumpkin carving)
    • Creating a haunted house in your living space for members of your household
    • Scavenger hunt for hidden treats in your living space for members of your household, rather than going house-to-house
    • Having a scary movie night or other Halloween-themed activities (dance party with Halloween music, pumpkin carving, face painting, etc.)
  • Safer outdoor activities:
    • Participate in a Halloween scavenger hunt in your neighborhood with a group of up to 3 households up to a max of 25 people, while maintaining at least 6 feet of physical distance between people who are not in the same household. Be sure everyone is wearing a face covering over their mouth and nose since participants may accidentally come closer than 6 feet apart while searching for objects.
    • Outdoor pumpkin carving
    • Halloween themed meals at outdoor restaurants to support local businesses
    • Although trick-or-treating is discouraged, if you choose to do so, consider laying out individually wrapped goodie bags that are lined up for families to grab and go while continuing to physically distance (such as at the end of a driveway or at the edge of a yard)
    • Having or attending an outdoor, open-air costume parade with up to 3 households up to a max of 25 people, where protective masks are used and people can remain more than 6 feet apart

Regardless of how you choose to celebrate Halloween, make sure you continue to wear a face covering, practice physical distancing, wash your hands as frequently as possible and stay home if you are sick.

The tips may be updated as necessary.

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'Get out and vote': Early voting tips

SANTA CLARA COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) - Santa Clara County is offering new resources to make sure people can get to their early voting location to cast their ballot.

"Get out and vote," said Santa Clara County resident Kimberly Rivera.

Levi's Stadium will be one of 100 voting centers in Santa Clara County, along with 98 drop box locations. Additional locations include the Chase Center and the Oakland Coliseum.

Map: Where to drop off your ballot

“Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority “ is helping people find polling locations with a new interactive feature on its transit app, which can be found in the app store. You can download it from the Apple iTunes store or from the Google Play store.

  • Zoom in and a checkmark appears at each of the 100 voting centers
  • Locations are throughout Santa Clara County.
  •  When touching a checkmark on the screen, the information pops up
  • It includes an option for directions on how to find a polling place

California allows people to vote during work on Election Day

This will be a historic and Bay Area counties are stepping up to provide as many resources as possible.

However you choose to vote, make sure not to miss any deadlines: Polls close at 8 p.m. on November 3, and your early ballots should be at your county election offices well before then.

>> More voting resources at Your Local Election Headquarters

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$1,200 direct payments: Americans blame both parties for stimulus check stalemate

WASHINGTON (NEXSTAR) -- A new poll shows voters across the country blame both Republicans and Democrats over stalled stimulus negotiations keeping Americans from getting a second direct payments.

According to a new Morning Consult-Politico poll, 44% of people blame the president or Republicans while 41% think Democrats are at fault. 1,067 likely voters were polled.

A survey from September found similar numbers with voters blaming the GOP slightly more than Democrats.

Morning Consult notes the results of the poll largely fell along party lines.

This time last week, Republican and Democratic leadership remained somewhat optimistic a coronavirus relief deal could be reached in a matter of days. In that matter of days, optimism turned sour and chief negotiators Treasury Secretary Mnuchin and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi resorted to publicizing their differences in the press.

Things started to get ugly Thursday morning when Mnuchin woke up and first learned about a letter he was sent from Pelosi in Politico's newsletter. According to the Washington Post, Pelosi sent the letter to Mnuchin's office at midnight before making it available to the media.

In that note, Pelosi outlined unresolved issues between the parties that includes money for state and local governments, school funding, child care money, tax credits for families, and unemployment insurance aid among other issues.

Hours later, Mnuchin made his response to Pelosi public calling her overnight letter a "political stunt."

“Your ALL OR NONE approach is hurting hard-working Americans who need help NOW,” Mnuchin wrote at the end of his letter.

This may be the last we hear from the pair ahead of Tuesday's election. They had been negotiating back-and-forth for weeks - failing to reach a consensus their respective parties would stand behind.

Both are now hoping for post-election stimulus deals.

At issue is a huge virus relief bill that would send another $1,200 direct payment to most Americans, restart bonus unemployment benefits, fund additional testing and vaccines, provide aid to schools and allocate money to state and local governments, a Democratic priority.

Pelosi says she wants a relief bill that is predicated on steps that science dictates should be taken to deal with the coronavirus, and “if we don’t, we’re just giving money to the president to spend any way he wants and that has not been in furtherance of crushing the virus.”

White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows said over the weekend the administration made many offers, but Pelosi “continues to move the goalposts.”

Meadows noted the relief bill being negotiated would cost about $1.9 trillion. Pelosi is hoping for a $2.2 trillion package. Meadows says he has a commitment from McConnell to bring a bill to the floor if negotiations with Pelosi conclude successfully.

A $1.8 trillion rescue plan in March passed virtually unanimously. The Pelosi-pushed package today is even larger but has run into resolute opposition from Republicans. Taking care of the issue would clear the decks for a fresh start on the congressional agenda next year.

Senate Democrats blocked a Senate GOP plan that McConnell brought to a vote earlier this month. The measure contained more than $100 billion for schools, a $300 per week supplemental unemployment insurance benefit, and more subsidies for businesses especially hard hit by pandemic-related downturns and closures. It did not include the $1,200 direct payments that are so important to Trump.

Trump says that if he wins reelection, aid will flow immediately. If he loses, it's unclear whether his enthusiasm for delivering it will be as strong.

“I’m never very optimistic about the lame duck and I’ve never been surprised,” said Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo. “You don’t get near as much done as you think you’re going to get done.”

Those Republicans willing to speculate about a Trump loss say not to expect much, either.

“I think Democrats would want to wait until the new president is sworn in and do it then and I think Republicans probably would say ... the economy’s taking care of it,” said Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.

On Thursday, Pelosi told reporters she hopes to get a deal passed before the end of the year in the event Biden is victorious on Tuesday night. She says the new president would have too much to focus on during the transition process.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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As Trump faces uncertain future, so do his signature rallies

LITITZ, Pennsylvania (AP) — They began to arrive more than 40 hours before President Donald Trump took the stage in this stretch of rural Pennsylvania where horse-drawn buggies remain a common sight. By 10 p.m., a small group had set up an overnight camp on lawn chairs as a cold drizzle set in.

“I am the crazy Trumper,” declared Kyle Terry, 33. He had been the first to arrive at the IMAX parking lot — at 8 p.m. Saturday for a Monday afternoon rally, his fifth of the fall. “I love it. I’ve been having the most fun of my life. And I really just don’t want this to stop."

As President Donald Trump faces an uncertain future, so too does a fixture of the American political scene over the last five years: the Trump campaign rally, a phenomenon that has spawned friendships, businesses and a way of life for Trump’s most dedicated supporters. His fans have traveled the country to be part of what they describe as a movement that could outlive his time in office.

Some have attended so many rallies they've lost count, road-tripping from arena to arena like rock groupies. They come for the energy, the validation of being surrounded by like-minded people, the feeling of being part of something bigger than themselves. Sociologists and historians see elements of a religious following.

They are people like Cynthia Reidler, 55, who has been a Trump supporter since he announced his candidacy. She has been to nearly 20 Trump events, from rallies to Fourth of July celebrations on the National Mall.

“The feeling — like it just grabs you," she said as she waited near the front of the line Monday morning, dressed in a red poncho and headband with tinsel and lights that no longer lit up because of the rain. “I always say it’s better than a rock concert. And it’s free.”

Reidler, who lives in Pine Grove, Pennsylvania, arrived at Lancaster Airport around 2:30 p.m. the day before the rally and camped out overnight so she could snag her favorite spot up front. The waiting game, for her, is part of the fun.

“It’s just a whole lot of excitement that I don’t think you can explain. It brings back a time when our country was just so happy and so positive," she said, comparing the feeling to the time she marched in a bicentennial parade as a Girl Scout when she was 11.

And what of the threat from the coronavirus pandemic?

“I know the statistics. It is a risk,” said Reidler, who works in health care. But "the thought of not having him as a president is more of a fear to me than the alternative."

Tears welled in her eyes as she entertained the prospect.

It was a similar story for Terry, the first-in-line Trump fan from northeast Philadelphia. He had never been into politics until this year, when he registered to vote for the first time. Now he's fully committed: He spent three nights camped outside Walter Reed military hospital after Trump was admitted with the coronavirus.

Terry, who is unemployed, said he was hooked after attending his first rally. “It was the most awesome thing I’ve ever experienced in my life,” he said. “What you see on TV and when you see him in person, is two different things. It’s almost unexplainable.”

To him, it's about the camaraderie: “We’re all standing together, we’re all smiling, we’re all laughing.” The community: “There’s three or four people sitting in my car that I know from other rallies.” And the common purpose: “Just standing up for my country."

That rhetoric was echoed by Bob Wardrop, 55, who arrived from Long Island around 9 p.m. to be “part of the movement.” In his telling, he and other Trump supporters were continuing the fight of their “forefathers that fought the British hundreds of years ago."

“We’re still fighting that now because they’re trying to overthrow us and take over our country,” he said.

By morning, the crowd had grown. Thousands snaked around a holding area, with trucks selling funnel cakes and cotton candy. A parking lot several blocks away had transformed into a Trump bazaar where traveling merchants were selling shirts and buttons.

The morning arrivals included Celeste March, 58, from Elverson, Pennsylvania, who had seen Trump once in 2016 and was determined to see him again before Nov. 3.

“There’s nothing like it. It’s on my bucket list,” she said.

And while some dismiss the rallies as an ego project for a president who revels in the adoration of his crowds, campaign spokeswoman Samantha Zager said the events are tools to energize volunteers, drive media coverage and collect voter data.

Indeed, the Trump campaign estimates the events have generated tens of millions of dollars a week in free television coverage. While many rally-goers are loyal Trump supporters who don't need motivation, the campaign said 22% of those who attended the Lititz rally were not Republicans and 21% had not voted in 2016.

George Gigicos, who ran Trump’s 2016 advance operation, said the rallies "were hugely important” to Trump's campaigns and presidency.

Like his Twitter account, “it allows him to connect directly with the people without the filter of the media," Gigicos said. "It’s him with the people. And it was remarkable to watch and to see how he resonated."

“There’s a kind of a populist feel," added Douglas Brinkley, a presidential historian at Rice University. “It’s about being part of a spectacle, which is different from a campaign rally, which is typically a little bit more intellectual in presentation.”

The phenomenon, he said, is not unique in American history.

He pointed to the 1840 election when William Henry Harrison gave out free alcohol at events nicknamed “booze rallies" during a “last-minute crazy physical push like you see Trump resorting to.”

Brinkley tied the events to a long religious tradition tracing from the second great awakening Protestant revival of the early 1800s, when ministers traveled from city to city, to evangelist Billy Graham’s crusades.

“A religious fervor gets developed, and it becomes sort of like a cult-based atmosphere,” he said.

Sociologist Arlie Hochschild, who has been studying Trump supporters, agreed that he had tapped into religious imagery that secular liberals often missed.

Trump “is saying, ‘Oh I’m surrounded by enemies and look how I’m suffering. And I suffer for you.’ So it’s got a religious metaphor it’s tapping into," she said, combined with elements of a love affair.

“He needs us. He's feeding off of us. So we must be pretty powerful," she said, describing his supporters.

Trump, who is notoriously superstitious, has refrained from weighing in on his future if he loses. But some have speculated he might continue to tour the country, regardless of the outcome.

“Do I see him going out there and rallying Americans behind his country? Absolutely. I think he should," said Gigicos, who believes Trump will win reelection. “He loves America, and he is the Republican Party right now, so why wouldn’t he?”

Those who have been part of the movement agree.

“I think it will endure. I think there’s going to be people out there that have kind of been brought into the political fray,” said James Epley, who worked for Trump's 2016 campaign and now sells merchandise at Trump rallies and online under the “Silent Majority” trademark.

Reidler, who volunteered for the campaign this summer, said that if Trump loses, she plans to “see what I can do to get involved.”

“It’s sort of filled that void that I haven’t had (filled) for a long time," she said. “And it just seems important.”

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Former James Bond actor Sean Connery dies at age 90

LONDON (NewsNation Now) — Scottish movie legend Sean Connery, who shot to international stardom as the British agent James Bond and went on to dominate the silver screen for four decades, has died at age 90, the BBC reported Saturday.

Connnery shot to fame as British agent 007, the character created by novelist Ian Fleming and immortalized by Connery in films starting with "“Dr. No" in 1962.

Connery played a series of noteworthy roles besides Bond and won an Academy Award for his portrayal of a tough Chicago cop in “"The Untouchables" (1987).

Some noteworthy non-Bond films included director Alfred Hitchcock's "Marnie" (1964), "The Wind and the Lion" (1975) with Candice Bergen, director John Huston's "The Man Who Would be King" (1975) with Michael Caine, director Steven Spielberg's "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" (1989) and the Cold War tale "The Hunt for Red October" (1990).

Connery was knighted by the Queen in 2000.

Born Thomas Connery on Aug. 25, 1930, he was the eldest of two sons of a long-distance truck driver and a mother who worked as a cleaner in Scottland. He dropped out of school at age 13 and worked in a variety of menial jobs. At 16, two years after World War Two ended, Connery was drafted into the Royal Navy, and served three years.

Connery played small parts with theatre repertory companies before graduating to films and television.

It was his part in a 1959 Disney leprechaun movie, "Darby O'Gill and the Little People," that helped land the role of Bond. Broccoli, a producer of the Bond films, asked his wife to watch Connery in the Disney movie while he was searching for the right leading actor.

After the smashing success of "Dr. No," more Bond movies followed for Connery in quick succession: "From Russia with Love" (1963), “"Goldfinger" (1964), “"Thunderball" (1965) and "“You Only Live Twice" (1967).

Connery grew concerned about being typecast and decided to break away. Australian actor George Lazenby succeeded him as Bond in “"On Her Majesty's Secret Service" in 1969.

But without Connery it lacked what the public wanted and he was lured back in 1971 for "“Diamonds Are Forever" with temptations that included a slice of the profits, which he said would go to a Scottish educational trust. He insisted it would be his last time as Bond.

Twelve years later, at age 53, Connery was back as 007 in "“Never Say Never Again" (1983), an independent production that enraged his old mentor, producer Albert "Cubby" Broccoli.

The Bond franchise was still going strong more than five decades after Connery started it. The lavishly produced movies, packed with high-tech gadgetry and spectacular effects, broke box office records and grossed hundreds of millions of dollars.

Connery retired from movies after disputes with the director of his final outing, the forgettable "The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen" in 2003.

Connery married actress Diane Cilento in 1962. Before divorcing 11 years later, they had a son, Jason, who became an actor. He married French artist Micheline Roquebrune, whom he met playing golf, in 1975.

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Halloween treat: Full 'blue moon' set to shine

HOUSTON (NEXSTAR) -- The last time there was a full moon on Halloween, the United States was still engaged in World War II. Now it looks like the stars - and the clouds - are aligning to allow most Americans to enjoy some added ambiance on October 31st, even if their trick-or-treat plans have been disrupted by the pandemic.

For many people, the Halloween full moon will be a once-in-a-lifetime event. The last time it occurred was in 1944, according to the Farmer's Almanac. The next one isn't expected to happen until 2039, NASA said.

Although Saturday's moon will be a "blue" moon, it won't actually appear to be blue. Scientists use the term to describe the second full moon of a given month, which only occurs about once every 2 1/2 years, NASA said.

According to the Farmers Almanac, the first full moon of 2020 howled onto the scene with January’s Wolf Moon on Jan. 10. And usually, we have one for each month, making the total 12 for the year. But on occasion, some months will have two full moons.

That's the case for this month. There was a full moon on Oct. 1, known as the Harvest Moon, which usually appears in September. It is so named because it occurs closest to the autumnal equinox. The Sept. 2 full moon occurred too early to be known as the harvest moon.

The second is coming up on Oct. 31 — a Halloween Blue Moon. It is also called the Hunter’s Moon because it usually occurs in October, the month when traditionally game was fattened and preparations for winter began.

This year's Blue Moon, which will turn full at 10:49 a.m. EDT, will be a rare Halloween treat.

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Photo gallery: Remembering Sean Connery

(NEXSTAR) -- Legendary James Bond actor Sean Connery has died, according to multiple reports. He was 90.

While the Scottish actor is best known for portraying Agent 007, he had a long career spanning decades. His film credits include Indiana Jones, The Rock and The Hunt for Red October.

According to the BBC, Connery won an Oscar, two Bafta awards and three Golden Globes.

In 2000, he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth at Holyrood Palace -- becoming Sir Sean Connery.

Here's a look back at his legendary life and career through pictures:

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