Even if Trump is not barred from holding future office, his support has waned among GOP voters.
President Donald Trump immediately teased a 2024 White House run after Joe Biden was declared President-elect, propping himself up as the front-runner for the Republican Party. But his leadership within the GOP could partially vanish in the aftermath of the deadly siege from pro-Trump rioters on the U.S. Capitol, as the House voted to impeach the president a second time for “inciting violence,” with some lawmakers even calling on Trump to resign.
Republican support for a non-consecutive Trump term dipped by twelve percent after last week’s assault, according to a Morning Consult-POLITICO poll released Wednesday, with 42 percent of Republicans saying they would vote for Trump in 2024, compared to the 54 percent who said the same in November.
Injections Of Second Coronavirus Vaccine Doses Have Begun | NPR & Houston Public Media houstonpublicmedia.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from houstonpublicmedia.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Embed iframe src https://www.npr.org/player/embed/954970455/955066170 width 100% height 290 frameborder 0 scrolling no title NPR embedded audio player The vaccine clinic at PeaceHealth St Joseph Medical Center has started giving health care workers and others in the community their second shot of the vaccine. The hospital has saved up some doses in case of supply chain issues that could interrupt the vaccine dosing timeline. Will Stone
toggle caption Will Stone
The vaccine clinic at PeaceHealth St Joseph Medical Center has started giving health care workers and others in the community their second shot of the vaccine. The hospital has saved up some doses in case of supply chain issues that could interrupt the vaccine dosing timeline.
As states try to broaden the reach of their coronavirus vaccination campaigns and navigate uncertain supply chains, many of the first people to receive
Hospitals required to create new price menus
Law now requires hospitals make their costs public
and last updated 2020-12-30 18:32:06-05
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. â When the calendar flips to 2021, a new set of federal laws will make it easier for patients to plan their medical care.
The laws, a mandate from federal health departments like DHHS and CMS, require hospitals and health systems to publish the costs of many of their services online in a format easily accessible to patients. Hospitals must list at least 300 required services, and many will list the prices of far more.
âThis includes care for doctors as well as drugs, supplies and facility fees,â says Dr. Mark Fendrick, director of U Michiganâs Center for Value Based Insurance Design. âMore price transparency would inject greater competition into the healthcare market and ultimately improve quality at lower costs.â