
Biden administration wants $30 billion more for COVID-19 response
The Biden administration is gauging support more money to pay for testing, treatment programs and development of vaccines to fight the virus and future diseases.
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Ed O'Keefe is CBS News' senior White House and political correspondent reporting for all CBS News platforms.
He is part of the team covering President Trump and covered all four years of Joe Biden's presidency. O'Keefe previously reported on the 2024 presidential election, including Biden's decision to exit the race and the quick emergence of Vice President Harris as the Democratic candidate. He served as a floor reporter at the 2024 Democratic and Republican conventions. In 2020, he was lead correspondent for the Biden-Harris campaign, the Democratic presidential primaries, and at the 2020 Democratic National Convention.
Since 2018, O'Keefe has helped lead coverage of election nights and the ensuing days from CBS News' Election Headquarters in New York City. He also helped lead CBS News' hours-long coverage of the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the United States Capitol.
From the White House to the campaign trail, O'Keefe's reports stretch from the politics of the moment to how policy enacted in Washington affects the nation and the world. His reporting has taken him to Canada to assess President Trump's trade war; to Guatemala to see why people immigrate to the United States and ignore warnings about the dangers of doing so; to Las Vegas to interview service workers eager for tax breaks on tipped wages; and to multiple states for lengthy conversations with voters grappling with their choice for president. Along the way, he's interviewed dozens of presidential, congressional, and gubernatorial candidates.
Since joining CBS News in April 2018, O'Keefe has contributed to coverage of the July 2024 assassination attempt on Trump; the 2018 and 2022 midterm elections; the contentious confirmation hearing for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh; funerals for late presidents and senators; the record-long 2019 federal government shutdown; and the blackface and sexual misconduct scandals that rocked Virginia state government that same year.
Before CBS News, O'Keefe spent more than a dozen years with The Washington Post covering federal agencies, federal employees, Congress, and presidential elections. A proud Guatemalan-Irish-American, he is a lifetime member of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and once served as one of the group's national vice presidents. He grew up in Delmar, New York, and attended American University in Washington.
The Biden administration is gauging support more money to pay for testing, treatment programs and development of vaccines to fight the virus and future diseases.
The U.S. aims to allow $3.5 billion of the assets to be used for programs to benefit the Afghan people.
The president met Thursday at the White House with Democratic members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, but did not review specific women under consideration for the post.
Jill Biden said Congress has failed to pass the Build Back Better plan "and free community college is no longer a part of that package."
Xavier Becerra appears to have taken a backseat to people like Dr. Fauci and COVID response czar Jeffrey Zients despite outranking them.
The New Mexico senator suffered a stroke last week.
DeWine is being criticized by Republicans over his COVID-19 response, while Hogan is being courted to run for U.S. Senate.
Childs, 55, was nominated last year by President Biden to serve on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.
The U.S. is considering depriving Russia of semiconductor technology needed to power industries.
Jamal Simmons took on the new role last week.
One activist in Atlanta said, "What we really want to see, given that he came down here, is that he's got an iron-clad deal in place. Anything short of that is really going to be disappointing."
Several candidates running for office in Michigan attended the January 6 rally in Washington, D.C.
Manchin's stated opposition to the president's social spending bill could be a fatal blow.
"Senator Manchin's comments this morning on FOX are at odds" with what he told the president, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said.
"I cannot vote to continue with this piece of legislation. I just can't. I've tried everything humanly possible," Manchin said.