2020 in United States politics and government
Events in 2020 pertaining to politics and government in the United States.
Events
January
- January 1
- *Crowds of demonstrators remain outside the Embassy of the United States and are smaller than on December 31, 2019 in Baghdad, Iraq. President Donald Trump sent 750 marines to guard the embassy and Tweeted a threat against Iran.
- *Recreational marijuana becomes legal in Illinois.
- *State laws on bail, the gig economy, minimum wages, data privacy, and red flag gun control take effect in several states, including California, New York, Colorado, Nevada, and Hawaii.
- *Several new federal regulations take effect in the US as of this date, including new regulations on retirement funds, new minimum wage rules, and new overtime rules.
- *Pete Buttigieg resigns as mayor of South Bend, Indiana. He is succeeded by James Mueller.
- January 2
- *Julian Castro drops out of the presidential race.
- * Secretary of State Mike Pompeo postpones his trip to Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Cyprus due to the situation in Iraq.
- *Virginia governor Ralph Northam requests a bill to remove the Robert E. Lee statue from the U.S. Capitol building.
- January 3 – 2019–2020 Persian Gulf crisis: President Donald Trump approves the targeted killing of notorious Iranian general Qasem Soleimani and Iraqi paramilitary leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis in Baghdad, Iraq, without the consultation of Congress. In anticipation of a conflict between Iran and the U.S. results in World War III trending on Twitter. Supporters of Soleimani protested his killing while those who participated in the 2019 Iranian demonstrations praised it.
- January 4
- *Thousands of people in 70 cities across the country protest against a new war in the Middle East.
- *The White House officially notifies Congress about the airstrike that killed Qassem Soleimani, in accordance with the 1973 War Powers Resolution.
- January 5
- *The Iraqi parliament votes to expel U.S. troops from the country.
- *Al-Shabaab attacks a U.S. military base in Kenya. Three Americans are killed and two are injured.
- *25,000 people march against Antisemitism in the United States in New York City.
- *Sixty people of Iranian descent, including American citizens, are detained at the Peace Arch Border Crossing in Washington.
- January 6
- *US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced she would introduce a resolution to limit Trump's ability to take actions against Iran.
- *Tennessee Congressman Phil Roe is the 26th Republican to announce he will not seek reelection.
- *Julian Castro endorses Elizabeth Warren for president.
- *Former Rhode Island governor Lincoln Chafee announces his candidacy for president with the Libertarian Party.
- *Kelly Loeffler is sworn in as a United States Senator.
- January 7
- *California Congressman Duncan D. Hunter sends a letter of resignation to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, effective January 13.
- *Between six and nine missiles fired by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps hit U.S. bases in Iraq, including Al Asad Airbase in the western part of the country. No casualties or damages are reported.
- January 8 – Maricopa County, Arizona, Assessor Paul Petersen resigns after being indicted for his alleged involvement in human-trafficking.
- January 9
- *Facebook reiterates that it will allow politicians to lie on political ads, although users are free to block them.
- *The New York City Bar Association asks Congress to investigate Attorney General William Barr for political bias and ethics violations.
- *Three Republicans join House Democrats and one Independent in voting 224–194 in favor of the Iran War Powers Resolution sponsored by Congresswoman Elissa Slotkin.
- *Tom Steyer will join Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar, and Andrew Yang in the 7th Democratic presidential debate on January 14.
- *Anti-war protests in 370 U.S. cities.
- *Staff for the Andrew Yang 2020 presidential campaign unionize. Workers for Buttigieg, Warren, Sanders, and Biden are also unionized.
- January 10 – Marianne Williamson announces she has ended her presidential campaign.
- January 11
- *Two American soldiers are killed and two wounded by an improvised explosive device in southern Afghanistan.
- *Independent Congressman Justin Amash accuses President Trump of selling U.S. troops to after Trump tells Laura Ingraham that Saudi Arabia deposited $1 billion in a bank account in return for an increased military presence.
- January 12 – A report by the Texas Department of Public Safety warns that "involuntary celibates" are a domestic terrorism threat.
- January 13
- *Senator Cory Booker drops out of the 2020 presidential campaign. He will run for reelection to the U.S. Senate instead.
- *All 16 Roman Catholic bishops in Texas and two large newspapers, The Dallas Morning News and the Houston Chronicle condemn Texas governor Greg Abbott's decision to bar refugees from settling in the state.
- January 14
- *Two white women and four white men participate in the 7th Democratic Party presidential debate in Des Moines, Iowa.
- January 15
- *U.S. Speaker of the United States House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi names the seven managers of the impeachment team and the House votes to send its impeachment resolutions to the Senate for a trial of President Donald Trump.
- *President Trump signs an initial trade deal with China.
- *Whitefield Academy in Kentucky expels a 15-year-old girl for wearing a rainbow sweater and blowing out candles on a rainbow birthday cake in her home.
- *Virginia becomes the 38th state to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment. It is unclear if, or when, it will become law.
- January 16
- *Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts and 99 Senators are sworn in at the Trump impeachment trial. Senator Jim Inhofe misses the vote because he is in Oklahoma with a sick relative.
- *The U.S. Senate ratifies the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement on a vote of 89 to 10. Environmentalists argue the treaty does not go far enough.
- *Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley reveals she has Alopecia areata, also called "spot baldness".
- January 17
- *The National Archives acknowledges that it altered photographs of the 2017 Women's March on Washington, blurring the word Trump in a sign that reads, "God Hates Trump" and another that reads, "Trump & GOP – Hands Off Women".
- *The Federal Election Commission grants Michael Bloomberg a 45-day extension to file his financial disclosure form, until after the Super Tuesday primaries.
- January 20 – Martin Luther King Jr. Day
- *Most Democratic Presidential candidates marched together in Columbia, South Carolina. Then they went to Des Moines, Iowa for the "Brown and Black Forum."
- *22,000 people, many heavily armed, participated in the Richmond, Virginia gun rally.
- January 20 – 24: World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Ivanka Trump, Jared Kushner, and several Cabinet members will be in the U.S. delegation. President Trump talks about the U.S. economy and warns about fearmongering on climate change.
- January 21 – In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Hillary Clinton says "nobody likes" Senator Bernie Sanders and refuses to promise to support him if he wins the 2020 Democratic Presidential Nomination.
- January 22
- *Tulsi Gabbard sues Hillary Clinton for $50 million for calling her a "Russian asset".
- *On the second day of the Donald Trump impeachment trial, Senate Republicans complain that House Democrats have not introduced any new evidence one day after voting against allowing new evidence.
- January 23
- *Prince Charles ignores and walks past U.S. Vice President Mike Pence without shaking his hand at the World Holocaust Forum in Jerusalem.
- *The U.S imposes new visa rules limiting entry by pregnant women.
- January 24 – Congressman Adam Schiff concludes the opening arguments in the impeachment trial of Donald Trump by calling upon Senators to show "moral courage" in voting to call witnesses.
- January 26 – Taking his cue from Fox News personality Mark Levin, President Trump threatens to eliminate funding for National Public Radio two days after Secretary of State Mike Pompeo lost his temper after an with reporter Mary Louise Kelly.
- January 27
- * The US Army announces that its Artificial Intelligence Task Force has developed a new Artificial Intelligence system, Aided Threat Recognition from Mobile Cooperative and Autonomous Sensors that may transform future operations.
- *Dr. Laura Hawks of Harvard University publishes a study in the JAMA Internal Medicine that shows that even many people who have private insurance cannot afford to pay for hospital care and doctor's visits.
- January 28 – The defense wraps up in the Impeachment trial of Donald Trump.
- January 31
- *Senate rejects calling witnesses in Trump impeachment trial.
- *The Trump administration restricts entry into the United States from the People's Republic of China in an attempt to slow the Novel Coronavirus.
- *The Trump Administration partially bans immigration from Kyrgyzstan, Myanmar, Eritrea, Nigeria, Sudan, and Tanzania.
- *The Trump Administration ends the ban on land mines in South Korea.
- *Heavily armed gunmen, some with masks, take over the Capitol in Frankfort, Kentucky in gun rally.
- *Former Congressman John Delaney drops out of the 2020 presidential race.
February
- February 1
- *Palestinean leader Mahmoud Abbas threatens to cut security ties to the United States and Israel.
- *The U.S. Secretary of State says the United States can supply Belarus with 100% of its needed oil and gas after Russia cuts its supply.
- *Republican Montana Representative Rodney Garcia says socialists should be shot or jailed.
- February 2 – Former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg responds to President Donald Trump's Twitter attacks during the Superbowl LIV. Trump called Bloomberg "Mini Mike" and attacked his candidacy for president after seeing a series of Trump attack ads put out by the Bloomberg campaign; the former mayor responded with, "I stand twice as tall as he does on the stage, the stage that matters."
- February 3
- *2020 Iowa Democratic caucuses: The Democratic caucus results are delayed thirteen hours due to a snafu with a vote-counting app.
- **With 99.94% of precincts reporting, the results are: Buttigieg, 26.1% ; Sanders 26.1% ; Warren 18.0% ; Biden 15.8% ; and Klobuchar 12.3%.
- *2020 Iowa Republican caucuses: Donald Trump 97%, Joe Walsh 1.4%, Bill Weld 1.2% with 8% of the votes counted.
- **Former Massachusetts governor Bill Weld gets one delegate and Trump gets 39 delegates to the 2020 Republican National Convention.
- February 4 - President Donald Trump delivers his third State of the Union address. The speech has partisan overturns, as Trump refuses to shake Speaker Nancy Pelosi's hand and she tears up the text in disgust at the end.
- February 5 — the US Senate voted on whether or not to convict the president on the charges and evidence as they were presented and debated upon. The senators voted 52 to 48 to find President Trump not guilty on the charge of abuse of power. They voted 53 to 47, in a party-line vote, to find him not guilty on the charge of obstruction of Congress.
- February 7
- *U.S. Army Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman and Ambassador Gordon Sondland are fired in retaliation for testifying at the impeachment inquiry against Donald Trump. Vindman's twin brother, Lt. Col. Yevgeny Vindman, was also fired.
- *Former Illinois Congressman Joe Walsh drops out of the Republican presidential primaries.
- February 10
- *New York Congressman Jerry Nadler demands that Attorney General Bill Barr explain the Justice Department's special new policy for investigating allegations of corruption based on evidence provided by attorney Rudy Giuliani related to Ukraine. The existence of the non-standard channel of investigation was first revealed by Senator Lindsey Graham on February 9.
- *Construction begins of the border wall in the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, destroying Native American burial sites belong to the Tohono Oʼodham Nation and threatening severe environmental damage.
- February 11
- *2020 New Hampshire Democratic primary
- **100% of precincts reporting: Sanders 25.7%, Buttigieg 24.4%, Klobuchar 19.8%, Warren 9.2%, Biden 8.4%
- *Andrew Yang and Michael Bennet suspend their presidential campaigns. Deval Patrick suspend his campaign on February 12.
- *Four federal prosecutors resign in response to the politicization of the United States Department of Justice in the Roger Stone case.
- February 13 – Attorney General William Barr says that Trump tweets make it impossible for him to do his job.
- February 14 – Justice Department decides not to prosecute former FBI director Andrew McCabe.
- February 16 – Ivanka Trump praises Saudi Arabia and other Mideast countries for the advances they have made on women's rights.
- February 17 – 1,100 former DOJ employees call on Attorney General Bill Barr to step down and for current employees to speak up against politicization of the department.
- February 18
- *Donald Trump commutes former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich's 14-year sentence to seven years. He pardons former New York police commissioner Bernard Kerik and former San Francisco 49ers owner Edward J. DeBartolo Jr.
- *Sarah Miyazawa LaFleur of MM LaFleur clothing says the company will lend free clothing to any woman running for office.
- *The lawyer for Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks, claims that former Congressman Dana Rohrabacher offered Assange a pardon in 2017 in exchange for denying Russian involvement in the DNC leak. In a February 20 interview with Yahoo! News, Rohrabacher admitted that he had offered a pardon to Assange.
- February 19 – President Trump replaces acting director of national intelligence Joseph Maguire with the inexperienced ambassador to Germany Richard Grenell after Maguire's office tells the United States House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence that Russia intends to interfere in the 2020 elections.
- February 22 – 2020 Nevada Democratic caucuses
- February 26 – Donald Trump files a lawsuit against The New York Times for libel for saying Russia supported his 2016 campaign.
- February 28 – At a political rally in North Charleston, South Carolina, Donald Trump accuses the Democrats of politicizing the coronavirus and says the media are perpetuating a "hoax" as new outbreaks are reported in the United States, Iran, South Korea, and Italy.
- February 29
- *The United States and the Taliban sign an agreement that may lead to the end of the war in Afghanistan.
- *Joe Biden is declared the winner of the 2020 South Carolina Democratic primary.
March
- March 1
- *Pete Buttigieg withdraws from the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries.
- *Joe Biden says he will insist that the 2020 Democratic presidential nominee has a majority, not a plurality, of votes at the DNC national convention.
- *U.S. District Judge Randolph Moss rules that Ken Cuccinelli was not eligible to serve as acting director of the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services and suspends two policies Cuccinelli implemented while leading the agency.
- March 2
- *Amy Klobuchar suspends her 2020 presidential campaign and endorses the Joe Biden 2020 presidential campaign.
- *Michael Bloomberg pledges carte blanche support for Israel in a speech before AIPAC.
- *A report by the British newspaper The Guardian shows that Texas leads the South in closing down voting places, making it more difficult for Democratic-leaning African-Americans and Latinos to vote.
- March 3
- *Super Tuesday presidential primary elections
- **Joe Biden wins Alabama, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia. Preliminary results place him second in California. He leads with 453 pledged delegates.
- **Bernie Sanders wins Colorado, Utah, and Vermont and leads in California. He is in second place with 382 pledged delegates.
- **Elizabeth Warren fails to win any states, but she is in third place with 50 pledged delegates.
- **Michael Bloomberg has 44 delegates, including four from American Samoa. On March 4 he drops out and endorses Biden.
- **Tulsi Gabbard has two delegates from American Samoa.
- *The Texas Democratic primary for the Railroad Commission of Texas is expected to be a major test on climate change. No candidate wins the primary, so there will be a runoff on May 26.
- *During a meeting of the House Ways and Means Committee, Congressman Bill Pascrell accuses Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin of lying and breaking the law by hiding President Trump's tax returns.
- March 4 – 2020 Alabama Republican primary: In the presidential primary, Donald Trump gets 96% of the vote and all 50 delegates; Bill Weld gets 1.5% of the votes. Former attorney general and senator Jeff Sessions will face football coach Tommy Tuberville in a runoff election for the Republican Senate nomination on March 31.
- March 5
- *The Elizabeth Warren 2020 presidential campaign ends after a dismal showing on Super Tuesday.
- *The Attorney General of New York warns televangelist Jim Bakker against profiting off an unproven cure for the novel coronavirus.
- *Former Congressman Aaron Schock, a leading anti-LGBTQ voice while in Congress, comes out as gay.
- March 6
- *The Donald Trump 2020 presidential campaign sues CNN for libel.
- *After Vice President Mike Pence praised Washington Governor Jay Inslee for his efforts to control the outbreak of the coronavirus, the Trump called Inslee "a snake."
- *The Tulsi Gabbard 2020 presidential campaign appeals to Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders to support her participation in the March 15 presidential debate after the DNC changes its rules to deny her a spot.
- *Five senior members of the Atomwaffen Division right-wing hate group are charged with federal crimes in two cases across four states.
- March 7 – The Trump administration ignores politically inconvenient CDC recommendation that elderly people should be advised to avoid commercial air flights in response to the coronavirus. Fox News helps Donald Trump spread false information about the virus.
- March 9
- *Former Wells Fargo Chairwoman Elizabeth “Betsy” Duke and James Quigley resign three days before House Committee on Financial Services hearings on the Wells Fargo account fraud scandal.
- *President Trump proposes a payroll tax cut to stimulate the economy. Democrats oppose the idea, proposing paid sick leave and infrastructure spending instead.
- March 10 – Six Democratic primaries and caucuses
- *Kansas City mayor Quinton Lucas says he was not allowed to vote in the Missouri Democratic primary at his regular polling place.
- *Joe Biden defeats Bernie Sanders in the Michigan Democratic primary.
- March 12 – Two Americans and a British soldier are killed during a rocket attack in Iraq.
- March 13
- *The Pentagon announces it will keep two aircraft carrier groups in the Persian Gulf after carrying out airstrikes against five depots for Iranian rockets in Iraq.
- *Donald Trump declares an emergency and the House approves a $50 billion package to address the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.
- March 15
- *Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders debate; Biden promises to choose a female running mate.
- *Donald Trump says he is considering a full pardon for Michael Flynn.
- March 16
- *Springfield, Missouri gunman kills five, including a police officer.
- *Ohio Governor Mike DeWine postpones the primary elections until June 2. This comes one day after a judge said he could not do so. Kentucky then postponed its primary for five weeks.
- *A Lebanese military court releases Amer Fakhoury, a Lebanese-American who was accused of aiding an Israeli-backed militia group. The judge appeals the verdict.
- *Los Angeles releases 600 inmates to prevent the spread of coronavirus.
- *Congressman Louie Gohmert holds up the bipartisan coronavirus relief bill that provides for free testing; paid sick, family, and medical leave; strengthen unemployment insurance and food security; it increases funds for Medicaid. Gohmert's objections are purely technical.
- March 17
- *Democratic primaries in Arizona, Florida, and Illinois. Biden wins all three states. Biden has 1,180 delegates and Sanders has 885.
- **Progressive Marie Newman defeats incumbent conservative Congressman Dan Lipinski in the 2020 Illinois Democratic primary.
- *Mark Andrew Green, the head of the United States Agency for International Development, resigns. Green enjoyed bipartisan support.
- *The Justice Department quietly drops charges against Russian business charged in the Report on the Investigation into Russian Interference in the 2016 Presidential Election.
- March 18 – Tulsi Gabbard drops out of the presidential race and endorses Joe Biden.
- March 19 – Muhammad Masood, 28, a Pakistani doctor working in the U.S., is arrested on terrorism charges in Minnesota.
- March 20
- *Secretary of State Mike Pompeo criticized the Communist Party of China for delaying information about the coronavirus. A Chinese spokesperson shot back, noting that China had notified the U.S. government about the outbreak on January 3, 2020, but that the U.S. Embassy in Wuhan did not notify its residents until January 15.
- *Senator Richard Burr faces calls for his resignation after allegations that he used insider information about the coronavirus pandemic to make millions off the stock market. Senators Dianne Feinstein, Kelly Loeffler, and James Inhofe also made questionable deals. Burr asks for an ethics review.
- *The Pentagon successfully tests a Mach 5 hypersonic missile.
- *The Michael Bloomberg 2020 presidential campaign transfers $18 million to the Democratic National Committee.
- March 23 – Senate colleagues Martha McSally and Kyrsten Sinema call Rand Paul "absolutely irresponsible" for going out in public and using the Senate pool and gym after testing positive for Covid-19.
- March 24
- *Donald Trump easily fields softball questions in a virtual town hall meeting on Fox News. He compares the coronavirus pandemic to a bad seasonal flu epidemic, promises to help Boeing, and calls for the country to go back to work by Easter.
- *A congressionally-mandated commission recommends women should be eligible for the draft.
- *The $2 trillion rescue package worked out by Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is held up by Republican Senators Lindsey Graham, Tim Scott, Ben Sasse, and Rick Scot who fear it is too generous for American workers. Independent Bernie Sanders says he will vote against the bill unless the Republicans drop their demands. The bill passed 96-0.
- *Joe Biden calls for an end to Democratic debates.
- *The FBI kills a suspected white supremacist just before he detonated a car bomb outside a medical center in Kansas City, Missouri. 36-year-old Timothy Wilson “espoused white supremacist ideology” and “made a threat that if any agent attempted to they should ‘bring a lot of body bags,” said the FBI alert that circulated on March 25.
- March 25 – A 17-yer-old boy in Lancaster, California died of COVID-19 after being denied health care because he did not have health insurance.
- March 26 – The Green Party of the United States says the COVID-19 pandemic will keep third parties off the ballot in 2020 unless petitioning requirements are relaxed.
- March 27 – The House approves the $2 trillion stimulus bill previously approved by the Senate. Pelosi says more money will be needed.
April
- April 1 – In an interview on The View, Whoopi Goldberg asks Bernie Sanders why he is continuing his campaign for president. Sanders replies, "We are assessing our campaign, as a matter of fact, where we want to go forward. But people in a democracy do have a right to vote."
- April 3
- *Democratic Senate leader Chuck Schumer says more money for the unemployed will probably be necessary after a record 6.6 million people filed for unemployment benefits last week.
- *In an interview on CNBC, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi pushes an infrastructure proposal but says that clean water and broadband provisions will probably have to wait in favor of more funding for direct payments to individuals, unemployment insurance, small-business loans, and protective equipment for doctors and other medical professionals.
- *President Trump nominates Justin Walker, 37, who was approved just five months ago to a federal judgeship in Kentucky despite having no experience and receiving a “not qualified” rating from the American Bar Association, to a seat on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
- *Donald Trump fires Michael Atkinson, who was the Inspector General of the Intelligence Community who revealed the Ukraine whistleblower complaint that led to Trump's impeachment. Thomas Monheim, a career intelligence professional, will serve as acting inspector general.
- April 4 – Wyoming Democratic caucuses and Alaska Democratic primary changed from in-person to a mail-in process
- April 6 – The Supreme Court turns down an appeal from a Catholic church in Washington, DC, that would have allowed them to place religious ads on public buses.
- April 7 – The Wisconsin primaries goes ahead as scheduled but absentee voting is extended until April 13. Nineteen people were infected with COVID-19.
- April 8 – Bernie Sanders drops out of the presidential race.
- April 12 – Virginia Governor Ralph Northam signs new measures into law aimed at expanding access to voting in the commonwealth. Election Day is made a national holiday, early voting is extended to 45 days, and the requirement that a photo ID is shown before voting is eliminated.
- April 13
- *Donald Trump claims that he has exclusive authority to end restrictions as the COVID-19 outbreak eases. Joe Biden attacked Trump's comments, tweeting "I am not running for office to be King of America. I respect the Constitution. I’ve read the Constitution. I’ve sworn an oath to it many times." Federal legislators of both parties pushed back against Trump's comments.
- *Bernie Sanders endorses Joe Biden for president.
- April 14
- *Former President Barack Obama formally endorses Joe Biden for President.
- *Liberal Jill Karofsky defeats conservative incumbent Daniel Kelly as Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
- April 15
- *A Texas judge rules that all citizens of Texas are eligible to request mail-in ballots based on disability if they fear contracting COVID-19 by voting in person. Republican lawmakers oppose the ruling and plan to appeal.
- *The Georgia election board has approved drop-boxes for the primary election in June. Absentee voters will have the option of using the drop-boxes rather than paying for postage. Individual counties will have the option to use the drop-boxes or not, and they will have to pay for them.
- *The Republican-controlled Kentucky General Assembly overrides Governor Andy Beshear′s veto of a bill requiring government-issued voter-ID in order to participate in the November 3 elections. State offices that issue such IDs are closed.
- April 16 – A published by Vice Media asserts that former Michigan governor Rick Snyder covered up and lied about the Flint water crisis. VICE notes that the Michigan statute of limitations runs out on April 25, 2020, for new felony misconduct-in-office charges related to the water crisis to be filed, although the Michigan AG’s office disputes this deadline.
- April 19 – Republicans are pushing an anti-Chinese narrative about the origins of the coronavirus outbreak, despite warnings from the FBI and Asian-American leaders about xenophobia and racism. Dr. Anthony Fauci, of the White House Coronavirus Task Force has denied the theory of a laboratory origin of the virus, and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley, said that the “weight of evidence” points toward natural origins.
- April 20
- *The Supreme Court rules 6-3 that criminal convictions require unanimous votes, rather than the 10-2 vote allowed in Louisiana and Oregon.
- *Big restaurant chains are getting millions in subsidies earmarked for small businesses so long as they do not have 500 employees in a single location.
- *Trump tweets that he intends to sign an executive order suspending all immigration to the U.S.
- *The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit upholds the Texas ban on most abortions.
- April 21 – Authorities in Milwaukee link seven COVID-19 infections to the April 7 election.
- April 22 – Dr. Rick Bright, the head of the federal agency charged with overseeing the production of a vaccine to fight the novel coronavirus pandemic, says he was transferred "in response to my insistence that the government invest the billions of dollars allocated by Congress to address the COVID-19 pandemic into safe and scientifically vetted solutions, and not in drugs, vaccines and other technologies that lack scientific merit."
- April 23
- *The State Department announces a $12.1 million economic aid package for Greenland aimed at strengthening mutual ties and boosting a renewed U.S. push for a greater military presence in the Arctic.
- *SCOTUS rules 6-3 that dumping polluted water into the ground does not make it miraculously clean and is still a violation of the Clean Water Act.
- April 27 – In a 5-4 decision, SCOTUS dismisses a case brought by gun-rights advocates in New York City that would prohibit transporting guns outside the city.
- April 29 – The United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit rules that Kansas cannot require voters to show proof of citizenship when they register.
May
- May 1
- *The White House blocks testimony by Dr. Anthony Fauci before the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies. Fauci is expected to testify before the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
- *Christi Grimm is fired from her position as Inspector General of Health and Human Services.
- May 2 – Kansas Democratic primary changed from in-person to a mail-in process Biden wins 29 delegates and Sanders 10. Biden now has 1,424 delegates of the 1,991 needed for the nomination.
- May 4 – Trump celebrates World Press Freedom Day by blasting NBC's Joe Scarborough and Fox News opinion polling.
- May 12
- *West Virginia Democratic primary
- *Republican Mike Garcia wins California's 25th congressional district special election flipping the seat formerly held by Katie Hill.
- May 13 – Utah decriminalizes polygamy.
- May 16
- *Hundreds march in Glynn County, Georgia demanding justice for the alleged February 23 murder of Ahmaud Arbery, 25.
- *Robert Tesh, 32, is arrested for terrorism after making “credible threats” to kill Governor Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and the state attorney general, Dana Nessel.
- *Congressman Justin Amash ends his campaign for the Libertarian Party presidential nomination.
- May 18 – Rebekah Jones, the architect and manager of Florida's COVID-19 dashboard, says she was removed from her post after she would not censor data.
- May 19
- *Rescheduled 2020 Georgia Democratic primary
- *Mail-in referendum on proposed "homeless tax" in Metro Voters appeared to be approving taxes on personal income and business profits that would raise $2.5 billion over a decade to fight homelessness.
- *Jo Rae Perkins, a member of the far-right conspiracy group QAnon, wins the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate in Oregon.
- *Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos admits that she is diverting funds intended to help low-income students at public schools to private schools even if they do not serve low-incme students.
- May 20 – President Trump threatens to halt federal funding to Michigan and Nevada over the distribution of absentee ballots.
- May 22 – President Trump fires the acting Inspector General of the United States Department of Transportation Mitch Behm and appoints Howard “Skip” Elliott. Behm was investigating allegations that Secretary Elaine Chao gave her husband′s Kentucky constituents special treatment and helped steer millions of federal dollars to the state as he is facing low approval ratings and a tough reelection bid.
- May 23 – Hawaii presidential primary: Won by Joe Biden with 63% of vote
- May 24 – Vice President Mike Pence sets off a diplomatic row by questioning Australia's involvement in China's Belt and Road Initiative.
- May 25 – Trump threatens to move the 2020 Republican National Convention from Charlotte, NC, if the governor cannot guarantee large crowds will be allowed to attend.
- May 26
- *For the first time, Twitter labels a Trump tweet ″misleading.″ Trump threatens censorship in retaliation.
- *Police dressed in riot gear use tear gas, rubber bullets, and stun grenades to disperse crowds protesting the alleged murder of George Floyd by police officers in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
- May 27 – The Justice Department drops insider trader investigations against three U.S. Senators, but continues the investigation of Senator Richard Burr.
- May 29 – Donald Trumps withdraws the United States from the World Health Organization.
- May 31
- *George Floyd protests: Police in Nashville, Tennessee, arrest a 25-year-old white man suspected of setting the city's historic courthouse on fire during protests against the killing of George Floyd.
- *AG William Barr is accused of politicizing the Department of Justice for firing Joseph D. Brown, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, for pursuing possible criminal charges against Walmart in relation to the opioid crisis.
June
- June 1 – George Floyd protests: President Trump tells governors they need to ″dominate″ streets in response to protests.
- June 2 – Elections in eleven states
- *District of Columbia: Voters face long lines and delays as fewer polling places are available and social distancing is enforced.
- *Indiana rescheduled from May 5 Conservative Club for Growth member Victoria Spartz wins the Republican nomination for Indiana's 5th congressional district.
- *Iowa: Congressman Steve King, known for his racism and anti-immigrant bigotry, loses the Republican primary for Iowa's 4th congressional district to Randy Feenstra. Democrats nominate Theresa Greenfield to run for the 2020 United States Senate election in Iowa against Joni Ernst.
- *Maryland rescheduled from April 28 Former head of the NAACP Kweisi Mfume wins the Democratic nomination for Maryland's 7th congressional district.
- *Missouri: Ferguson, Missouri, home to the late Michael Brown, Jr., elects its first black and first female mayor, Ella Jones.
- *Montana: Republican Congressman Greg Gianforte and Democrat Mike Cooney will run in the November election for Montana governor after a mail-in primary that saw huge voter participation. Gianforte is best known for beating up a reporter in 2017.
- *New Mexico: Teresa Leger Fernandez, an attorney, defeats former CIA agent Valerie Plame for the Democratic nomination in New Mexico's 3rd congressional district. Liberals dominate elections for the New Mexico Senate. Conservative Native American Yvette Herrell wins the Republican nomination for New Mexico's 2nd congressional district.
- *Ohio, originally scheduled for March 17
- *Pennsylvania A decision by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania not to extend the vote-by-mail deadline is expected to lower Asian-American participation since many of them require translation services. Voters face long lines at the polls.
- *Rhode Island: Biden and Trump win their respective primaries.
- June 2 – George Floyd protests
- *Charges against Officer Derek Chauvin are upgraded to second-degree unintentional murder and the other three officers involved are charged with aiding and abetting in the death of 46-year-old Floyd.
- *DoD Secretary Mark Esper rejects using the military to quell protests.
- *Evangelical leader Pat Robertson opens his nightly The 700 Club television show by saying the political moment in the U.S. now calls for compassion and reassurance.
- June 6 – Joe Biden wins all seven delegates in the 2020 U.S. Virgin Islands caucuses.
- June 8
- *List of George Floyd protests in the United States: Over 10,000 people have been arrested in protests, many of them non-violent.
- *Before unveiling a sweeping overhaul of police reforms, House and Senate Democrats kneel in silence at the Capitol’s Emancipation Hall, reading the names of George Floyd and others killed during police interactions.
- *The National Bureau of Economic Research says the United States is in an economic recession after 128 months of economic growth. GDP dropped by 5 percent in the first quarter of 2020.
- June 9 – Elections
- *Georgia primaries: Minority areas in Fulton, DeKalb and Gwinnett counties experience long lines and voting machine failures; Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger calls the situation ″unacceptable.″ Jon Ossoff leads in the race for the Democratic Senate nomination with 48% of the vote but needs 50% to avoid a runoff. Absentee voting increased from 40,000 in a typical election to 1.2 million.
- *South Carolina primaries: Conservative Nancy Mace, the first female graduate of The Citadel wins the Republican nomination to face Democrat Joe Cunningham in South Carolina's 1st congressional district.
- *West Virginia: The state senate president Mitch Carmichael loses the Republican primary to Amy Nicole Grady, a teacher who campaigned for better teacher salaries. Rosemary Ketchem becomes the state's first openly transgender person elected to political office by winning in Wheeling.
- June 9 – Statues of Christopher Columbus are beheaded in Boston, Massachusetts, and knocked over in Richmond, Virginia in support of Native American rights.
- June 10 – NASCAR bans Confederate flags at its events.
- June 12
- *Governors of Iowa and New York sign police reform legislation.
- *Boston shifts $3 million from the Boston Police Department to community programs.
- *A Tennessee House committee votes against removing a bronze bust of Nathan Bedford Forrest, saying racists would be offended if it were removed. The mayor of Albany, New York signs an order to remove a statue of slave-owner Philip Schuyler that stands in front of city hall. A stature of Jefferson Davis is removed from the Kentucky State Capitol rotunda.
- *The Minneapolis City Council approves a resolution to pursue a community-led public safety system to replace the police department following the killing of George Floyd.
- June 13 – Virginia Republican convention: Freshman Denver Riggleman loses the nomination in Virginia's 5th congressional district amidst charges of voter fraud.
- June 15 – Two resignations of top officials at Voice of America are followed by the firing of the heads of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Radio Free Asia, and the Open Technology Fund. The purge was carried out by Michael Pack, a conservative film-maker who is under investigation for allegedly misusing funds from his nonprofit Public Media Fund for his for-profit film agency.
- June 19 – United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary chairperson Lindsey Graham says he will not hold hearings on Bill Barr's appointment of Donald Trump flunkie Jay Clayton to be the next Senate-confirmed U.S. attorney for the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York unless he gets "blue slips" from both New York senators, Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand. The U.S. Attorney's office is involved in several investigations of Trump and Trump-henchmen.
- June 20
- *President Trump reschedules a campaign rally originally planned for Juneteenth in Tulsa, Oklahoma, sight of the Tulsa race massacre in 1921. Reportedly 100,000 tickets were sold for the 19,000-person venue, which was filled well below capacity. Trump spoke for about 90 minutes, used a racial slur, and repeated his support for Confederate statues, but did not reference Juneteenth or George Floyd.
- *Attorney General Barr says Trump fired Geoffrey Berman, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York.
- June 23 – Elections
- *Kentucky Democratic primary rescheduled from May 19 After the entire city of Louisville was reduced to one voting location, thousands are locked out and denied the vote due to a traffic jam.
- *New York Democratic primary rescheduled from April 28 African-American schoolteacher Jamaal Bowman defeats Eliot Engel for the nomination in New York's 16th congressional district. Progressive Mondaire Jones wins the nomination in New York's 17th congressional district.
- *Runoff election for Republican nominee in North Carolina's 11th congressional district. Twenty-four-year-old investor Madison Cawthorn defeats the candidate endorsed by Donald Trump. If elected, Cawthorn will be the youngest person elected to Congress.
- June 24 – The U.S. Senate confirms President Trump's 200th judicial nominee, Cory T. Wilson to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit by a vote of 52-48 with only Senator Susan Collins dissenting from the Republican majority.
- June 26 – The White House denies that President Trump was briefed about Russian bounties to the Taliban for killing American soldiers in Afghanistan, but does not deny the intelligence itself.
- June 27 – COVID-19 pandemic: A Los Angeles sweatshop owned by Dov Charney is forced to close after 300 infections and four deaths are reported there.
July
- July 3 – Donald Trump holds a campaign rally at taxpayer expense at Mount Rushmore, South Dakata, as social distancing is ignored and few mask are worn by the 7,500 participants. A group on Native American protesters blocked the access road briefly before the event, and 15 were arrested.
- July 4 – President Trump makes a politically divisive speech from the South Lawn of the White House to commemorate Independence Day.
- July 5
- *A group of mostly Black, heavily armed protesters march through Stone Mountain Park in Georgia, demanding removal of the Confederate sculpture the park is best known for.
- *Singer Kanye West declares his independent candidacy for the presidency although he has already missed several state deadlines and does nothing else to promote such a campaign.
- July 6 – Supreme Court of the United States: In a unanimous decision, SCOTUS rules that individuals elected to the United States Electoral College are not free agents and must vote according to the laws of their state, eliminating "rogue" electors. In a 6-3 decision, the Court upholds the ban on most robocalls, including those with political messages, to cell phones.
- July 7 – One million foreign students risk losing their visas under new immigration rules that forbid them from remaining in the country if their universities offer only on-line classes.
- July 8
- *SCOTUS: The Supreme Court rules 7-2 to let more employers opt-out of the Affordable Care Act mandate guaranteeing no-cost contraceptive services for women.
- *Democratic primary in New Jersey: Amy Kennedy will face incumbent Jeff Van Drew in New Jersey's 2nd congressional district. Incumbent Cory Booker survives against progressive challenger Lawrence Hamm in the Democratic Senate primary.
- *Houston officials cancel the in-person Texas Republican Convention, scheduled for July 13-18.
- July 9
- *SCOTUS
- **The Court rules 7-2 that Trump must turn over his tax records to the Manhattan prosecutor, but they will not be made available to House investigators or the general public.
- **In a 5-4 decision, the Court rules that a large part of Oklahoma belongs to the Muscogee Nation and upholds treaty obligations.
- July 10 – Trump commutes the sentence of dirty-trickster Roger Stone.
- July 11 – Rescheduled Louisiana primaries. Originally planned for April 4 and then changed to June 20; early voting expanded and mail-in votes are encouraged.
- July 14
- *The Asheville, North Carolina city council approves 7-0 a plan to provide reparations to the community's black residents.
- *Congressman Steve Watkins is charged with three felonies and a misdemeanor in relation to voter fraud in the 2019 Topeka municipal elections.
- *Elections
- **Runoff primaries in Alabama: Trump-supported football coach Tommy Tuberville defeats former senator and attorney general Jeff Sessions for the Republican Senate nomination.
- **Runoff primaries in Texas
- **Maine primaries
- July 15 – COVID-19 pandemic: The Trump administration politicizes health information by ordering hospitals to send all coronavirus patient information to a central database in Washington rather than to the CDC.
- July 20 – Georgia State Senator Nikema Williams, is chosen to replace Representative John Lewis on the ballot in November.
- July 21
- *Twitter bans 7,000 QAnon accounts and limits 150,000 others.
- *Ohio Democrats call for the repeal of a nuclear bailout bill after Ohio Speaker Larry Householder is arrested on bribery charges related to the bill.
- July 23 – The Senate approves the $740.5 billion National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 86-14, including a provision to rename military bases, over President Trump's veto threat.
- July 24 – Officials in New York State, the District of Columbia, and 19 other states, as well as a dozen cities and counties, sue Donald Trump for his memo excluding undocumented immigrants from the 2020 census.
- July 27 – The Richmond, Virginia, Police Department determines that weekend riots were instigated by white supremicists under the guise of the Black Lives Matter movement.
- July 28
- *AG William Barr appears before the United States House Committee on the Judiciary.
- *Joe Biden reveals economic plan to address racial inequality.
- July 29
- *CEO tech "emperors" from Amazon, Facebook, Google, and Apple testify before the United States House Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law.
- *Oregon Governor Kate Brown announces a phased withdrawal of federal forces from Portland after two months of protests.
- July 30 – Donald Trump threatens to postpone the election if it appears mail-in-votes might go against him. Leaders of both parties reject the suggestion.
- July 31 – Congressman David Schweikert is sanctioned by the House of Representatives for violating campaign finance rules and improperly using official resources for his reelection efforts.
Scheduled
- April 26 – 2020 Puerto Rico Democratic primary Rescheduled from March 29 Indefinitely postponed.
- August 4 – Primaries in Arizona, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, and Washington
- August 11 – Primaries in Connecticut, Minnesota, Vermont, and Wisconsin; runoff primaries in Georgia
- August 18 – Primaries in Alaska, Florida, and Wyoming
- August 17 to 20 – 2020 Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin Rescheduled from July 13-16.
- August 24–27: 2020 Republican National Convention in Jacksonville, Florida; originally set for Charlotte, North Carolina
- August 28 – March on Washington organized by Rev. Al Sharpton and the family of George Floyd.
- September 1 – Massachusetts primaries
- September 8 – New Hampshire and Rhode Island primaries
- September 15 – Delaware primaries
- September 29 – First presidential debate at Case Western Reserve University Health Education Campus in Cleveland.
- October 7 – Vice presidential debate at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.
- October 15 – Second presidential debate at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts in MiamiDade County.
- October 22 – Third presidential debate at [Belmont University in Nashville.
- November 3 – United States presidential election.
- December 14 – Members of the Electoral College meet in their state capitals to vote for the president and vice-president.
- The 2020 G20 Riyadh summit will be the fifteenth meeting of Group of Twenty. It will be held on November 21–22, 2020 in the city of Riyadh, the new future city of Saudi Arabia.
History by government agency
Congressional Budget Office
The Congressional Budget Office predicts the federal budget deficit will reach $1 billion for the first time since 2012. Deficits will rise from 4.6% to 5.4% of GDP by 2030, the highest since World War II.Defense Department
warns in early January that Kata'ib Hezbollah, the group responsible for the attack on the embassy in Baghdad, may be planning new attacks in Iraq, and that the U.S. is prepared to preemptive attacks. A short while later, a U.S. airstrike at the Baghdad International Airport killed top Iranian general Qasem Soleimani, escalating tensions between the United States and Iran.In January, the Army prohibited its members from using TikTok, saying the Chinese-owned social media poses a security risk.
Heavy traffic apparently fueled by fears of a return of the draft for the first time since 1973 caused the Selective Service System website to crash on January 3.
The U.S. military deployed a new submarine-launched low-yield nuclear weapon, seen as critical to countering the threat posed by Russia's arsenal of smaller tactical nukes. The new warheads, the first new U.S. nuclear weapon in decades, were first produced in February 2019.
On March 2, President Trump sent the nomination of Kenneth Braithwaite for United States Secretary of the Navy to the Senate. Braithwaite's predecessor, Richard Spencer, resigned in November 2019 after criticizing the pardoning of Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher, who had been accused of war crimes.
In mid-March, Secretary Esper announced thirteen cases of COVID-19 among the military and their dependents, suspended tours of The Pentagon, and imposed a 60-day travel ban on service members, DOD employees, and their dependents. Participation of U.S. forces in military exercises in Europe, South Korea, Africa, and Antarctica have also been restricted or reduced.
EPA
In December 2019, the EPA announced that it will seek to address concerns emphasized by American farmers over new rules for blending biofuels.New rules proposed on January 3 would exempt long-term accumulative effects such as climate change from being considered in the implementation of the National Environmental Policy Act. Court cases extending back to the Obama administration have ruled that such effects must be taken into consideration.
Education Department
In December 2019, consumer advocates sued the U.S. Department of Education and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, alleging that these government agencies had failed to protect student loan borrowers. The lawsuit provides an overview of the alleged problems. The U.S. Department of Education is the biggest player in the student loan world, handling hundreds of billions of dollars in federal student loan debt. Rather than managing this sprawling portfolio itself, however, the Department outsources operations to several large servicing companies.Large student loan servicing firms such as Navient, FedLoan Servicing have been faced with allegations of violations of consumer protection statutes. But the Department of Education has largely not addressed these issues, and has omitted to oversee its servicers.
The Education Department announced in February that it was changing the rules for more than 800 rural schools, cutting off federal funds designed to help poor, rural schools.
FEMA
President Trump has made Federal Emergency Management Agency aid available for Puerto Rico since the December 29, 2019, earthquake. However, as of January 9, only $1.5 billion of the $9.7 billion approved by Congress has been released.FEMA says it may bill 2015–2018 California fire victims if Pacific Gas and Electric Company goes bankrupt.
Intelligence community
President Trump nominates former Congressman John Ratcliffe as Director of National Intelligence for the second time. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell refuses to support Ratcliffe. Since Dan Coats resigned in August 2019 because of differences with the president, Trump appointed two acting directors, emphasizing loyalty over competence or experience.NASA
may return to manned-flights in 2020, in cooperation with private companies such as Boeing.Post Office
Following 13 straight years of financial losses, the United States Postal Service may be privatized in 2020.State Department
The situation in Iraq causes Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to postpone a planned visit to Ukraine and other eastern European countries in early January.Treasury Department
A bipartisan bill proposes transferring control of the Secret Service back to the Treasury Department, but it is hung up on a dispute over whether to disclose the costs of protection for President Trump's travel.History by issue
Note: This section is provided for issue-based overviews in narrative format, if desired.Banking and finance
In the first half of 2019, global debt levels reached a record high of $250 trillion, led by the US and China. The IMF warned about corporate debt. The European Central Bank raised concerns as well. The EU was concerned about high rates of debt in France, Italy and Spain.Environment
In 2020, expect major fights over EPA regulatory rollbacks, as well as conflicts over the environmental impact of the Mexico–United States border wall, the Atlantic Coast Pipeline, PFAS, the Waters of the U.S. Rule, and the Arctic Refuge drilling controversy. Underfunding of the EPA has led to an increased backlog at major hazardous waste sites.Climate change
In December 2019, the World Meteorological Organization released its annual climate report revealing that climate impacts are worsening. They found the global sea temperatures are rising as well as land temperatures worldwide. 2019 is the last year in a decade that is the warmest on record.Global carbon emissions hit a record high in 2019, even though the rate of increase slowed somewhat, according to a report from Global Carbon Project.
The Trump Administration plans to rewrite EPA regulations to make it easier to build major infrastructure projects such as pipelines.
Foreign policy
President Donald Trump faced his first foreign policy crisis of 2020 with the attack on the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, Iraq on December 31, 2019 and January 1, 2020. A January 2 U.S.-ordered strike that killed Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, a terrorist with close ties to Iran, threatened to escalate the conflict.President Trump may find his greatest challenges in Europe, where his popularity is very low. Tariffs, trade, and China's growing military power are concerns, as is unrest in Hong Kong. There is concern about Russian involvement in Syria as well as its increasingly aggressive foreign policy.
There is increased pressure to reduce troop levels in Afghanistan to 8,600 and reach a peace agreement with the Taliban.
Conflict with Iran
Tensions with Iran rise as 2020 begins. Sticky points are not only the attack on the U.S. Embassy in Bagdhad, but also a nuclear agreement, shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, economic sanctions, and the war in Yemen. Tension increased after the United States killed Iranian General Qasem Soleimani in a drone strike in Bagdhad on January 3. President Trump claimed the targeted killing prevented an attack on American interests and saved many lives, insisting he does not want a war while warning Iran against retaliation. Many are concerned that Iranian retaliation could lead to a wider conflict.Domestic political reaction was mostly along party lines, with Republicans, particularly Senator Lindsey Graham, supporting the move and Democrats opposing it. Senator Rand Paul and Fox News commentator Tucker Carlson were exceptions. On the Democratic side, Senator Bernie Sanders had the strongest reaction, calling the killing an "assassination;" he was echoed by Andrew Yang and Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard. Other Democratic presidential candidates were more muted, calling Soleimani a bad man but questioning Trump's lack of strategic planning. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi complained that the Congressional Gang of Eight was not notified before the attack, which was therefore unauthorized.
Thousands marched in anti-war protests in seventy cities across the nation and around the world on January 4.
US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced she would introduce a resolution to limit Trump's ability to take actions against Iran. Former Vice President Joe Biden called for sanctions relief in April in light of the COVID-19 pandemic in Iran. As six U.S. Navy ships conducted drills in the Presian Gulf on April 17, 2020, eleven Iranian Navy of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps ships harassed them, some coming within ten yards of the American ships. On April 21, President Trump ordered the Americans to "shoot down and destroy any and all Iranian gunboats" that harass American warships in international waters.
Venezuela
On March 26, 2020, the United States accused Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro of narcoterrorism and offered a $15 million reward for information leading to his arrest. On March 31, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that sanctions did not apply to humanitarian aid during the health emergency and that the United States would lift all sanctions if Maduro agreed to organize elections that did not include him in a period of six to twelve months. Pompeo reiterated U.S. support for Juan Guaidó. On April 1, Trump announced that he was sendin anti-drug Navy ships and AWACS planes to the Caribbean near Venezuela in the largest military build-up in the region since the 1989 invasion of Panama. Elliott Abrams, the United States special representative for Venezuela, claimed on April 23 that "many people" both inside and outside the Maduro government support the proposed U.S. transition to a government that would involve neither Maduro nor Guaidó.Disarmament
threatens to resume nuclear testing as the year begins. Disarmament is also a concern in relations with Russia and Iran. Iran's January 5 pullout from its nuclear agreement following the killing of Qassem Soleimani was no surprise but it makes it more difficult to reach another agreement at a later date.Incidents of saber rattling by American rivals increase as the coronavirus pandemic winds down in April 2020. Iranian patrol boats harass U.S. naval ships in the Persian Gulf, Russian planes fly dangerously close to American fighters in the eastern Mediterranean, and North Korea fires missile tests into the Sea of Japan. Intelligence sources suspect China is preparing for low-intensity nuclear tests. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps launched its first satellite on April 22.
Guns
and 2nd Amendment rights promise to be major issues in 2020, in Congress, on the campaign trail, and at the state level, particularly in Virginia. 177 gun deaths were recorded across the country on January 1. New Mexico joins New York, California, Florida, and other states in passing a red flag law on February 25.Health issues
Coronavirus outbreak
Dr. Nancy Messonnier of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns that the COVID-19 pandemic may become a pandemic. Moody's Analytics says there is a 40% chance of a U.S. recession in the first half of 2020 and the virus may set off a worldwide economic recession. It has already sidetracked a U.S.-China trade agreement, slowed tourism, and caused a 2,000-point drop in the Dow. The Trump administration is criticized for its handling of a response. On March 6, President Trump signed the $8.3 billion . 44,183 Covid-19 cases and 544 deaths are reported in the United States on March 23, 2020.Financing health care
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says that in 2020, Democrats will prioritize getting bills such as the "Lower Drug Costs Now Act" signed into law. Increasing health care is a priority for 2020 Democratic presidential candidates, although there are large differences in how to go about it.Opioid epidemic
Mother Jones reports that Johns Hopkins University researchers have concluded that lax oversight by the Food and Drug Administration is hampering efforts to ensure that opioids such as OxyContin are not overprescribed. This despite Trump Administration claims that addressing opioid misuse is a top priority. A March 25, 2020 report by ProPublica revealed that Walmart used its political influence with the Trump administration to avoid criminal prosecution for ever-dispensing opioids in Texas.Impeachment
Following the December 2019 House impeachment vote, Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced she would restrain from delivering the acts of impeachment to the Senate until Majority Leader Mitch McConnell explained the trial procedures. Pelosi indicated she would release the articles the week of January 13, after former National Security Advisor John Bolton indicated he would testify if subpoenaed, and unredacted emails from the Department of Defense relevant to the Ukraine investigation were released. On January 15, the U.S. House of Representatives sent the impeachment resolutions to the Senate for trial. At least 11 million people tuned in to watch at least part of the first day of the trial on January 21, 2020. On February 5, 2020, the Senate acquitted Trump on both counts. The votes were 52–48 to acquit on the first count and 53–47 to acquit on the second count. The votes were sharply divided along party lines.Marijuana policy
On the federal level, there is increased pressure to liberalize marijuana laws, such as bills to reclassify marijuana from a Schedule I to a Schedule III drug. Illinois legalized recreational use of marijuana starting January 1, and other states are expected to legalize marijuana and/or liberalize existing laws in 2020. In December 2019, Politico reported that 21 of 27 presidential candidates support legalization, five want the states to decide the issue, and one has called for decriminalization of marijuana.Online privacy rules issue
In December 2019, members of the Senate Committee on Commerce announced sweeping new proposals for federal laws to protect online privacy.In response to the coronavirus pandemic, Apple Inc. and Google are collaborating on technology to create smartphone apps that would help identify people who have crossed paths with a contagious person and alert them. Privacy advocates are skeptical.
Presidential Election
As 2020 opens, there are 14 candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination; four are women and four are people of color. Biden swept the South and surged ahead in delegates; Sanders won the West; the other candidates all dropped out, except for Tulsi Gabbard. Biden extended his lead after the March 10 primaries.The coronavirus pandemic changed electioneering. Sanders and Biden canceled live rallies starting March 10, while forums and fund-raising events moved on-line. Louisiana and Georgia postponed their primaries, and Wyoming changed to a mail-in system. Other states are considering similar moves, and the March 15 Biden-Sanders televised debate is the only campaign event scheduled. A poll taken by The Hill-HarrisX on May 27-28 indicated that 53% of registered voters said they would feel "somewhat" or "very" comfortable voting in person, compared to 47% who said they'd be uncomfortable.
Racism and police brutality
Racial tensions came to a peak on May 25, 2020, when 46-year-old George Floyd was killed by police following his arrest in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Protests soon broke out across the United States and around the world. Activists are calling for police reforms and some have called for defunding or abolishing the police. Some jurisdictions have approved changes. The debate about Confederate flag displays, statues, and places named for racist leaders has reopened.State and local issues
During 2019, ten states moved toward ensuring abortion rights, while eleven passed laws to restrict legal abortions.Illinois legalized recreational use of marijuana on January 1, and other states are expected to reform marijuana laws in 2020.
California's fight for workers' rights is being challenged by ride-sharing and food-delivery companies Uber, Postmates, Lyft, and DoorDash. 21 states and 26 local jurisdictions raised their minimum wage laws on January 1, many to $15/hour.
New York State implemented justice reforms by eliminating cash bail for many offenses.
Red flag laws go into effect on January 1 in Colorado, Nevada, and Hawaii. Following the 2019 Virginia elections, major gun control legislation is expected in that state in 2020. According to Gun Owners of America, 200 counties, cities, and towns in 19 states have passed 2nd Amendment sanctuary ordinances. The Senate of Virginia passed several gun-control laws on January 16, days before a planned pro-gun rally was planned in Richmond.
Technology
The introduction of new 5G wireless technology caused major public discussion about possible security risks and safety risks. Many experts said 5G would require new methods to ensure the security of data. The US Congress passed legislation regarding security concerns about 5G networks. The federal government prohibited the use of Huawei equipment for 5G networks due to security concerns and encouraged its allies to also do so as well. The US government imposed strict controls on US companies as to their ability to do business with Huawei, thus disrupting sales of Huawei phones overseas. Chinese vendors and the Chinese government have denied these claims. Huawei submitted a petition in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit against the FCC's decision to prohibit rural U.S. network providers from using equipment from the China-based vendor due to national security concerns, asking that the recent FCC order be overturned.The development of technology has elicited various responses and concerns that 5G radiation could have adverse health effects. An editorial in the scientific magazine Scientific American emphasized that complete scientific research regarding its effects have not been conducted and that there could be health risks. Wired characterized fears that the technology could cause cancer, infertility, autism, Alzheimer's, and mysterious bird deaths as "conspiracy theory". The US FCC and nearly all other regulators claim 5G radiation will have no significant health effects.
The United States is no longer the world's leader in science and engineering, according to a report by the National Science Foundation. Federal government spending on research has fallen steadily since 2000, and the U.S. total contribution to research and development has fallen to 25%, compared to 33% for China. Women hold 29% and minorities 13.3% of jobs in science and engineering. The U.S. still leads in the granting of doctorates in science and engineering.
World trade
US-China Trade Dispute
A trade dispute between the US and China caused economic concerns worldwide. In December 2019, various US officials said a trade deal was likely before a proposed round of new tariffs took effect on December 15, 2019. US tariffs had a negative effect on China's economy, which slowed to growth of 6%. In December 2019, new deal was announced regarding US-China trade dispute. Farmers are skeptical of the proposed new deal, as it would require China to double the farm purchases made before the trade war started. President Trump signed an initial trade deal worth $200 billion with China on January 15.United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement
The United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement is a signed but not ratified free trade agreement between Canada, Mexico, and the United States. The Agreement is the result of a 2017–2018 renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement by its member states. Negotiations "focused largely on auto exports, steel and aluminum tariffs, and the dairy, egg, and poultry markets." One provision "prevents any party from passing laws that restrict the cross-border flow of data". Compared to NAFTA, USMCA increases environmental and labour regulations, and incentivizes more domestic production of cars and trucks. The agreement also provides updated intellectual property protections, gives the United States more access to Canada's dairy market, imposes a quota for Canadian and Mexican automotive production, and increases the duty-free limit for Canadians who buy U.S. goods online from $20 to $150. Mexico and the U.S. House ratified the treaty in December 2019; the U.S. Senate ratified it in January 2020. Environmentalists argue the treaty does not go far enough. The Parliament of Canada ratified the agreement on March 13 before going on recess because of the coronavirus pandemic.Country overviews
- United States
- History of United States
- History of modern United States
- Outline of United States
- Government of United States
- Politics of United States
- Years in United States
- Timeline of United States history
- 2020s in United States political history
Related timelines for current period
- 2020
- 2020 in politics and government
- 2020 in the United States
- 2020 in United Kingdom politics and government
- 2020s
Specific situations and issues
- 2019-20 Persian Gulf crisis
- Impeachment of Donald Trump
- COVID-19 pandemic in the United States
- *COVID-19 pandemic in Washington
- *COVID-19 pandemic in New York