Your Tuesday Briefing

Tuesday, April 21, 2020 | View in browser
Good morning.
We’re covering President Trump’s plan to suspend immigration to the U.S. amid the coronavirus pandemic, the loosening of restrictions in some states, and questions about the health of North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un.
By Chris Stanford

President Trump plans to bar immigrants

The president said on Monday that he intended to temporarily suspend immigration to the U.S., which he said would protect American workers once the economy began to recover.
A formal order temporarily barring the issuance of new green cards and work visas could come within days, according to several people familiar with the plan, although it was unclear what legal basis Mr. Trump would invoke to justify the move.
Here are the latest updates about the coronavirus pandemic from the U.S. and from around the world, as well as maps of the outbreak.
We’re also tracking the virus’s growth rate in U.S. metro areas.
In other developments:
■ The governors of Georgia, South Carolina and Tennessee said they would start relaxing restrictions intended to curb the spread of the virus. Plans to reopen were also moving forward in Ohio, where a state prison has become the country’s largest-known source of coronavirus infections.
■ At least 26,000 more people have died over the past month than have been officially reported, a review of mortality data in 11 countries shows. The totals include deaths directly caused by Covid-19, as well as those stemming from other illnesses that couldn’t be treated by overwhelmed health care systems.
■ A dispute between Democrats and the White House over virus testing has stalled a nearly $500 billion bipartisan agreement to replenish a loan program for small businesses and provide more financing for hospitals.
■ The benchmark price for crude oil in the U.S. fell below zero on Monday for the first time. It was the result of a quirk in the market, but Neil Irwin, our senior economics correspondent, explains that it’s also an example of the pandemic’s deflationary effect on the economy.
■ The fast-food chain Shake Shack said it would return a $10 million stimulus loan amid criticism that big outlets were getting relief funds meant for small, struggling businesses.
■ Ramadan begins this week. Our Cairo bureau chief reports on how the pandemic has cast a shadow over the holy month of fasting for the world’s 1.8 billion Muslims.
Queen Elizabeth II turns 94 today. For the first time in her nearly seven-decade reign, her birthday will not be commemorated by a gun salute — another longstanding ritual halted by the pandemic.
The Times is providing free access to much of our coronavirus coverage, and our Coronavirus Briefing newsletter — like all of our newsletters — is free. Please consider supporting our journalism with a subscription.
The coronavirus has killed more than 13,000 people in New York City.  Juan Arredondo for The New York Times

New York’s long, hard road

The city has bounced back from other calamities — the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the 2008 Lehman Brothers collapse, the 1970s fiscal crisis — but none of them shut down New York as profoundly, or for as long, as the coronavirus pandemic has.
The Times interviewed more than two dozen business executives, city and state officials, and industry groups to find out more about the challenges facing New York, where hundreds of thousands have lost their jobs and at least $7.4 billion in tax revenue is projected to be lost by the middle of next year.
“I don’t think the New York that we left will be back for some years,” said Gregg Bishop, the commissioner of the city’s small businesses agency. “I don’t know if we’ll ever get it back.”
Related: Gov. Andrew Cuomo said on Monday that an additional 478 people had died in New York State, the lowest single-day toll in more than two weeks.
Closer look: Coogan’s, an Irish pub that opened in Upper Manhattan in 1985, said on Monday that it was closing permanently. Our Metro columnist Jim Dwyer remembers a place that was “the promise of New York incarnate: multiethnic, friendly, welcoming, smart.”

If you have 7 minutes, this is worth it

A deadly undersea mystery

Mathias Svold for The New York Times
Few people talk about what a Russian submarine, the Losharik, was doing near Norway’s coast last year when a fire killed 14 sailors, including some of the most decorated officers in Russia’s submarine corps. Moscow has said the submarine was merely a research vessel, and the Norwegian military refuses to say what it may have seen.
Our reporters James Glanz and Thomas Nilsen write: “The extraordinary incident may offer yet another a clue to Russia’s military ambitions in the deep sea, and how they figure into a plan to leverage Arctic naval power to achieve its strategic goals around the globe — including the ability to choke off vital international communication channels at will.”
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Here’s what else is happening

Uncertainty about North Korean leader: South Korean officials today disputed a news report that Kim Jong-un was receiving treatment after undergoing heart surgery. Mr. Kim was last seen in public on April 11, and he missed an event last week honoring the birthday of his grandfather, North Korea’s founder.
Joe Biden’s fund-raising hole: New figures show that Mr. Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee, and his party are nearly $187 million behind President Trump and the Republican National Committee.
Maggie Steber for The New York Times
Snapshot: Above, the photographer Maggie Steber welcoming a new day at her home in Miami. We asked photographers around the U.S. to capture our unusual state of isolation during the coronavirus pandemic.
Michael Jordan’s spin move: The former basketball great, ever image conscious, seems to be using a new 10-part documentary series to reaffirm his legacy in the LeBron James era, our columnist writes.
Late-night comedy: After protesters called for the end of stay-at-home orders, Jimmy Kimmel said, “It’s like if the Titanic was headed towards the iceberg, and half of the passengers were like, ‘Can you please speed this thing up?’”
What we’re reading: This article in The New Yorker. Jennifer Steinhauer, a reporter in our Washington bureau, says: “I am often awake these days at 2 a.m., which has become my time for reading The New Yorker. This piece covers a topic I thought I knew well — the origins of the ‘Never Trump’ movement — but unpacks it with immense detail.”
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Now, a break from the news

Melissa Clark
Cook: Tonnato sauce made with canned fish can be spooned onto steamed or raw vegetables.
Watch: This is exactly the right time to stream documentaries about very strange things (competitive endurance tickling, for instance). And the designer Mary Ping made a bag out of newspaper for T, The Times’s style magazine.
Cope: Here’s how to set up your home work space so you can put away your “office” at the end of each day. And if you’re feeling lonely, we have some ideas to help.
We have more ideas about what to read, cook, watch and do while staying safe at home.

And now for the Back Story on …

The coronavirus and gender

The virus is killing more men than women, even though infection rates are more or less the same. That’s because the male body and the female body respond differently to viruses. But unlike many other countries, the U.S. is not systematically tracking Covid-19 gender data.
Francesca Donner, who leads our Gender Initiative, spoke with Caroline Criado Perez, the author of “Invisible Women,” and Alisha Haridasani Gupta, a reporter for The Times. Their conversation is excerpted from the In Her Words newsletter:
Francesca: We know differences between male and female immune systems exist, yet we know very little about them.
Caroline: The reason we don’t know that much is that, historically, we’ve preferred to study the male body.
We do know the female immune system is more active than the male immune system. The hypothesis is that it’s because women give birth and the female immune system has evolved around that. That can be bad for women in that women make up 80 percent of those with autoimmune diseases. Women also tend to have more frequent and more adverse reactions to vaccines.
The result is that we are less good at diagnosing diseases in women. If you look at something like heart disease in Britain, women are 50 percent more likely to be misdiagnosed than men. One outcome is that in the U.S. and Britain, women are more likely than men to die following a heart attack. And yet you still encounter resistance in the research community, who say things like, “The female body is too complicated, the menstrual cycle will interfere with the results.”
Abbey Lossing
Francesca: Alisha, give us a little background on the sex data being collected.
Alisha: The U.S. is one of 11 countries that aren’t systematically tracking infections and deaths by men and women. Since we published the sex-data article, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention did release a report that included a race and a sex breakdown. But even that was a snapshot, drawing information from hospital networks in parts of 14 states.
Francesca: What implications does this have in our search for a vaccine?
Alisha: The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is already in phase one human trials for a potential vaccine on 45 healthy adults. It said it would need a larger number of participants to be able to disaggregate data by sex. That’s not to say that it’s impossible to have disaggregated data right from phase one — because Johnson & Johnson said that’s what it’s going to do as it heads into human trials in September.
A correction: Monday’s briefing misstated the circumstances of dozens of deaths at a nursing home in New Jersey. At least 70 residents have died since March 29, but not all of them had tested positive for the coronavirus.
That’s it for this briefing. See you next time.
— Chris
Thank you
To Melissa Clark for the recipe, and to Theodore Kim and Jahaan Singh for the rest of the break from the news. You can reach the team at briefing@nytimes.com.
P.S.
• We’re listening to “The Daily.” Today’s episode is about coming rulings from the Supreme Court.
• Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: Currency of Poland (five letters). You can find all our puzzles here.
• Today at 4 p.m. Eastern, our Adolescence columnist, the psychologist Lisa Damour, will discuss how to help young people cope during coronavirus-related lockdowns. R.S.V.P. here for the free call.
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