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Trump's rating is now the lowest since his presidency
According to the Pew Research Center, Trump is leaving his post with the lowest rating - only 29% approve of his work.
Other polls show similar drops in ratings. In addition, it is not clear if Trump's image will ever improve.
According to Gallup, Trump's approval rating “never exceeded 45% or dropped below 36%,” but is now down as much as 7 percentage points at 29%.
The Pew survey was conducted January 8-12 among 5,360 adults.
Other polls give similar results. A CNN poll conducted Jan 9-14 on a sample of 1,003 American adults also found Trump to have the lowest approval rating for his presidency compared to previous polls, with 34% of respondents approving of Trump's actions.
National Guard troops stationed in Capitol set up cots over the weekend after recent videos widely circulated online showed them sleeping on the marble floor
Dramatic video shows caravan of thousands of Honduran migrants attempting to reach the US border clashing with Guatemalan soldiers
An Arizona woman caused a scandal in a supermarket because of protective masks
Melissa Raine Lively, a 35-year-old PR manager from Scotland, Arizona, became famous after a video with her participation hit the Internet on July 4, 2020.
The videos were made at the Target supermarket, where Lively went to buy water, and where she had a nervous breakdown, and published by her in Instagram stories.
The indignant woman shouted and scattered protective masks from the stand, shouting insults and flaunting that she could buy everything she was scattering. She herself described the condition as a "steroid panic attack."
A MALE DIED IN SHOOTING IN MEMPHIS
"We have seen individuals screaming and yelling and all going to come out." Folks as well as cops across Maury Road were after a man shot to death at 9:45 p.m. outside a townhouse tower. Monday, in the Maury Street 800 section.
Neighbors in the Vollintine Evergreen Historic District informed a local new channel as they were there as they saw rescuer taking man who was not breathing well.
"We started trying to resuscitate him throughout the emergency care, but he was fired in such proximity that he expired in the moment he received help."
Most of the community thought narcotics linked to the attack. Police has said that the victim wasn't living around and arguing with either a person as someone walked by and began firing.
"The participants have dispersed that they have taken off running and this is typically a peaceful area. Anything between once in a while but late nights it was really sad. "Neighbours reported police took multiple men here into arrest in a suspected car a couple weeks ago.
Authorities had no records of any previous shootings, and they have not said that what the incident was all about.
There's an active investigation.
Memphis Alert Corona-virus positive people count hit 6,423 as of Sunday evening
Cumulative count of positive Corona patients in Shelby County Tennessee hit 2332 as of Sun evening, as per the District Medical Office.
According to the Tennessee Ministry of Medical and Health care; positive cases in the whole state of Corona hit 6,423 Sun evening 123 deaths and 681 people are in hospitals.
Memphis code enforcement officers say they lack training, resources for corona-virus pandemic
The rundown of trivial organizations that must close could keep on developing, Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland said for the current week, however a few officials who are bridging the city and closing the organizations down said they are frightened for their lives.
Code requirement officials said they haven't been prepared for the worldwide corona-virus pandemic or given enough assets to remain safe.
They're trusting the City of Memphis will make changes to give more secure conditions.
"They're not setting us up appropriately, and they're fundamentally sending us to our demises," one code implementation official told WREG.
A gathering of code Memphis Code Enforcement officials claims they're working in dread of contracting COVID-19.
Code requirement officials who talked with WREG said laborers got a one-hour instructional class for these phenomenal occasions, and various solicitations for additional covers have been denied.
"Presently their reason is they can't think that its, despite the fact that we informed them concerning along these lines before provisions went short," one official said.
The City of Memphis denied WREG's solicitation to talk with Public Works Director Robert Knecht, rather giving an explanation that said "The city is following all prescribed rules for staff PPE necessities," and "supplies are being renewed at the earliest opportunity."
The Shelby County Health Department demanded they are helping out code requirement as typical.
"We have verifiable cooperated to address issues this way," Shelby County Health Department Director Alisa Haushalter said. "So we'll keep on cooperating and decide for every infraction who's ideal to mediate, regardless of whether it's codes or well being."
Laborers reacted to that by saying these occasions call for new rules.
"It's hard to draw in with somebody from six feet away," one official said. "More often than not, on the off chance that they're extremely furious, they're going to get somewhat nearer than six feet."
Regardless of whether code requirement gets all the more preparing and gear or another office helps share the remaining task at hand, officials seeking after a change.
"There should be greater gear," an official said. "There most likely should be a superior perspective to deal with this—to protect us."
WREG will refresh this story on the off chance that we are permitted a meeting with the City of Memphis or gain proficiency with any new data.
Cuomo is racing to expand New York’s hospital capacity and crying out for yet even more federal resources and is actually quietly trying to slash Medicaid funding in the state, enraging doctors and nurses, and elected officials of his own party. The same Cuomo who holds press briefings at a major New York City convention center, and now the home of a temporary 1,000-bed hospital, presided over a decade of hospital closures and consolidations, prioritizing cost savings over keeping popular health care institutions open.
It’s the same Democratic governor—every liberal pundit’s tried-and-true Trump antidote—who is doing damage to his state’s health care system at the worst possible moment, in the eyes of the critics who follow him most closely.