the new york times - for ailing nation $1.9 trillion ......2021/03/07  · $1.9 trillion in aid for...

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U(D547FD)v+#!"!_!?!# The retirement of a moderate Republi- can senator and conservative infighting may have created an opening. PAGE 16 Democrats See a Way in Ohio Residents seeking a respite from urban life are trekking to far corners of the city, mobbing parks and trails. PAGE 10 INTERNATIONAL 10-15 Wild for Nature in Hong Kong Daniel Kaluuya uses deep preparation and a layer of spontaneity to bring his characters to life. PAGE 6 ARTS & LEISURE An Important Actor Arises With performances on hold, dancers are reconsidering questions of extreme thinness and healthy living. PAGE 10 What Is a Ballet Body? Cameras with heat- or motion-triggered shutters can let you know what visitors are munching on your plants and add to the sense of awe in your garden. PAGE 8 AT HOME Window on Backyard Wildlife Seth Rogen, the Hollywood player with an Everydude persona, has stayed busy during the pandemic with ceramics and expanding his cannabis brand. PAGE 1 SUNDAY STYLES He’s All About Pot and Pots Jay Caspian Kang PAGE 4 SUNDAY REVIEW White-collar jobs are feeling the pinch of automation as unassuming software programs are becoming the star em- ployees at many American companies and transforming workplaces. PAGE 1 SUNDAY BUSINESS Bots Climb Corporate Ladders The Work Friend columnist writes about what the absence of day-to-day connections showed us about how we spent our days. PAGE 1 A Year Without Office Life Off the coast of Los Angeles, more than two dozen container ships filled with exercise bikes, electronics and other highly sought imports have been idling for as long as two weeks. In Kansas City, farmers are struggling to ship soybeans to buyers in Asia. In China, furniture destined for North America piles up on factory floors. Around the planet, the pan- demic has disrupted trade to an extraordinary degree, driving up the cost of shipping goods and adding a fresh challenge to the global economic recovery. The vi- rus has thrown off the choreogra- phy of moving cargo from one con- tinent to another. At the center of the storm is the shipping container, the workhorse of globalization. Americans stuck in their homes have set off a surge of orders from factories in China, much of it car- ried across the Pacific in contain- ers — the metal boxes that move goods in towering stacks atop enormous vessels. As households in the United States have filled bedrooms with office furniture and basements with treadmills, the demand for shipping has out- stripped the availability of con- tainers in Asia, yielding shortages there just as the boxes pile up at American ports. Containers that carried millions of masks to countries in Africa and South America early in the pan- demic remain there, empty and uncollected, because shipping carriers have concentrated their vessels on their most popular routes — those linking North America and Europe to Asia. And at ports where ships do call, bearing goods to unload, they are frequently stuck for days in floating traffic jams. The pan- demic and its restrictions have limited the availability of dock- workers and truck drivers, caus- ing delays in handling cargo from Southern California to Singapore. Every container that cannot be unloaded in one place is a con- tainer that cannot be loaded some- where else. “I’ve never seen anything like this,” said Lars Mikael Jensen, head of Global Ocean Network at Logjam at Sea As Virus Roils Global Trade This article is by Peter S. Good- man, Alexandra Stevenson, Niraj Chokshi and Michael Corkery. Ships waiting to unload outside the congested Port of Los Angeles, one of the main arrival points for products manufactured in Asia. COLEY BROWN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page 9 WASHINGTON — A year ago, President Donald J. Trump de- clared a national emergency, promising a wartime footing to combat the coronavirus. But as Covid-19 spread unchecked, send- ing thousands of dying people to the hospital, desperate pleas for protective masks and other medi- cal supplies went unanswered. Health workers resorted to wearing trash bags. Fearful hospi- tal officials turned away sick pa- tients. Governors complained about being left in the lurch. Today the shortage of basic supplies, alongside inadequate testing and the slow vaccine rollout, stands as a symbol of the broken federal re- sponse to a worldwide calamity that has killed more than a half- million Americans. Explanations about what went wrong have devolved into parti- san finger pointing, with Mr. Trump blaming the Obama ad- ministration for leaving the cup- board bare, and Democrats in Congress accusing Mr. Trump of negligence. An investigation by The New York Times found a hidden expla- nation: Government purchases for the Strategic National Stock- pile, the country’s emergency medical reserve where such equipment is kept, have largely been driven by the demands and financial interests of a handful of biotech firms that have special- ized in products that address ter- rorist threats rather than infec- tious disease. Chief among them is Emergent BioSolutions, a Maryland-based company now manufacturing Covid-19 vaccines for As- traZeneca and Johnson & John- son. Last year, as the pandemic raced across the country, the gov- ernment paid Emergent $626 mil- lion for products that included vaccines to fight an entirely differ- ent threat: a terrorist attack using anthrax. Throughout most of the last decade, the government has spent nearly half of the stockpile’s half- billion-dollar annual budget on the company’s anthrax vaccines, The Times found. That left the government with less money to buy supplies needed in a pan- demic, despite repeatedly being advised to do so. Under normal circumstances, Emergent’s relationship with the federal stockpile would be of little public interest — an obscure con- tractor in an obscure corner of the federal bureaucracy applying the Preparing for Bioterror, Neglecting Virus Threat By CHRIS HAMBY and SHERYL GAY STOLBERG Continued on Page 22 U.S. Stockpiled a Firm’s Anthrax Vaccines SAVANNAH, Ga. — Sundays are always special at the St. Philip Monumental A.M.E. church. But in October, the pews are often more packed, the sermon a bit more urgent and the congregation more animated, and eager for what will follow: piling into church vans and buses — though some prefer to walk — and head- ing to the polls. Voting after Sunday church services, known colloquially as “souls to the polls,” is a tradition in Black communities across the country, and Pastor Bernard Clarke, a minister since 1991, has marshaled the effort at St. Philip for five years. His sermons on those Sundays, he said, deliver a message of fellowship, responsi- bility and reverence. “It is an opportunity for us to show our voting rights privilege as well as to fulfill what we know that people have died for, and peo- ple have fought for,” Mr. Clarke said. Now, Georgia Republicans are proposing new restrictions on weekend voting that could se- verely curtail one of the Black church’s central roles in civic en- gagement and elections. Stung by losses in the presidential race and two Senate contests, the state party is moving quickly to push through these limits and a raft of other measures aimed directly at suppressing the Black turnout that helped Democrats prevail in the critical battleground state. “The only reason you have these bills is because they lost,” said Bishop Reginald T. Jackson, who oversees all 534 A.M.E. churches in Georgia. “What makes it even more troubling than Georgia Bills Target Black Church Voting Drives By NICK CORASANITI and JIM RUTENBERG Israel Small spent most of last fall helping parishioners at Greater Gaines Chapel A.M.E. navigate the absentee voting process. STEPHEN B. MORTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page 17 When Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo came under fire just a few weeks ago over his handling of nursing home deaths in the pandemic, he and his top advisers followed their usual playbook to stem the fall- out: They worked the phones, pressing his case in private calls to legislators and other New York Democrats. Then came a crisis that Mr. Cuo- mo’s signature blend of threats, flattery and browbeating could not mitigate. And he seemed to know it. As three women stepped for- ward with claims of sexual har- assment and other unwanted ad- vances by Mr. Cuomo, the most visible governor in America effec- tively went dark. After one of the women detailed her accusations against the gover- nor in a Medium post, State Sena- tor Liz Krueger, a Manhattan Democrat, decided that she would come out with a statement calling for an independent investigation — an implicit rebuke of Mr. Cuomo. She reached out to the governor’s team to alert them, aware of the typical angry re- sponse. No call came, she said. “None of my colleagues have said they have heard from the governor on this,” Ms. Krueger said of the harassment accusa- tions. At the greatest moment of polit- ical peril for Mr. Cuomo in his dec- ade in power, interviews with nearly two dozen Democratic law- makers, strategists and Albany veterans paint a portrait of a gov- ernor who is increasingly isolated. Mr. Cuomo faces a federal inqui- ry into his administration’s han- dling of nursing home deaths dur- Cuomo, Shaken and Isolated, Feels His Grip on New York Slip By KATIE GLUECK Continued on Page 26 A long-planned goal to expand Amtrak service nationwide has run into opposi- tion from some local politicians. PAGE 20 NATIONAL 16-26 All Not Aboard on Rail Routes Francis, meeting with the country’s top ayatollah and other leaders, tries to forge closer bonds among faiths. PAGE 12 Pope Appeals to Iraq for Unity WASHINGTON — President Biden’s extensive $1.9 trillion stimulus bill passed a deeply di- vided Senate on Saturday, as Democrats pushed through a pan- demic aid plan that includes an ex- traordinary increase in safety net spending in the largest antipov- erty effort in a generation. The package, which still must pass the House before it heads to Mr. Biden’s desk to be signed into law, is the first major legislative initiative of his presidency. The measure seeks at once to curtail the coronavirus pandemic, bolster the sluggish economy and protect the neediest people within it. Re- publicans voted unanimously against it and assailed it as unnec- essary and unaffordable. It would inject vast amounts of federal resources into the econ- omy, including one-time direct payments of up to $1,400 for hun- dreds of millions of Americans, jobless aid of $300 a week to last through the summer, money for distributing coronavirus vaccines and relief for states, cities, schools and small businesses struggling during the pandemic. Beyond the immediate aid, the bill, titled the American Rescue Plan, is estimated to cut poverty by a third this year and would plant the seeds for what Demo- crats hope will become an income guarantee for children. It would potentially cut child poverty in half, through a generous expan- sion of tax credits for Americans with children — which Democrats hope to make permanent — in- creases in subsidies for child care, a broadening of eligibility under the Affordable Care Act, and an expansion of food stamps and rental assistance. Its eye-popping cost is just shy of the $2.2 trillion stimulus meas- SENATE APPROVES $1.9 TRILLION IN AID FOR AILING NATION Partisan Vote After All-Night Session By EMILY COCHRANE President Biden after the vote. STEFANI REYNOLDS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page 18 WASHINGTON — To jump- start the ailing economy, Presi- dent Biden is turning to the lowest-paid workers in America, and to the people who are cur- rently unable to work at all. Mr. Biden’s $1.9 trillion economic relief package, which cleared the Senate on Saturday and could be headed for the president’s signa- ture in a matter of days, would overwhelmingly help low earners and the middle class, with little direct aid for the high earners who have largely kept their jobs and padded their savings over the past year. For the president, the plan is more than just a stimulus pro- posal. It is a declaration of his economic policy — one that captures the principle Democrats and liberal economists have espoused over the past decade: that the best way to stoke faster economic growth is from the bottom up. Mr. Biden’s approach in his first major economic legislation is in stark contrast to President Donald J. Trump’s, whose initial effort in Congress was a tax-cut package in 2017 that largely benefited corporations and wealthier Americans. The “American Rescue Plan” advanced by Mr. Biden includes more generous direct benefits for low-income Americans than the rounds of stimulus passed last year under Mr. Trump, even though it will arrive at a time when economic and coronavirus vaccine statistics suggest the broad economy is poised to take flight. It is more focused on peo- ple than on businesses and is expected to help women and minorities in particular, because they have taken an outsize hit in the pandemic recession. Researchers predict it could become one of the most effective laws to fight poverty in a genera- tion. Columbia University’s Cen- ter on Poverty and Social Policy estimates that the plan’s provi- sions, including a generous ex- pansion of tax credits for low- income Americans with children, would reduce the poverty rate by Biden Lifts Up Poor to Jolt the Recovery By JIM TANKERSLEY Continued on Page 19 NEWS ANALYSIS NO BIPARTISANSHIP Despite the president’s wishes, the parties are far apart. News Analysis. PAGE 19 Bianca Smith, recently hired by the Red Sox as the first Black female coach in pro baseball, learned the game from her mother, an ardent Yankees fan. PAGE 30 SPORTS 30-32 A Family Allegiance to Baseball Late Edition VOL. CLXX . . . No. 58,990 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SUNDAY, MARCH 7, 2021 Today, mostly sunny, still cold, high 38. Tonight, mainly clear, rather chilly, low 25. Tomorrow, plenty of sunshine, not as cold, high 44. Weather map appears on Page 25. $6.00

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Page 1: The New York Times - FOR AILING NATION $1.9 TRILLION ......2021/03/07  · $1.9 TRILLION IN AID FOR AILING NATION Partisan Vote After All-Night Session By EMILY COCHRANE President

C M Y K Nxxx,2021-03-07,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D547FD)v+#!"!_!?!#

The retirement of a moderate Republi-can senator and conservative infightingmay have created an opening. PAGE 16

Democrats See a Way in Ohio

Residents seeking a respite from urbanlife are trekking to far corners of thecity, mobbing parks and trails. PAGE 10

INTERNATIONAL 10-15

Wild for Nature in Hong KongDaniel Kaluuya uses deep preparationand a layer of spontaneity to bring hischaracters to life. PAGE 6

ARTS & LEISURE

An Important Actor Arises

With performances on hold, dancers arereconsidering questions of extremethinness and healthy living. PAGE 10

What Is a Ballet Body?

Cameras with heat- or motion-triggeredshutters can let you know what visitorsare munching on your plants and add tothe sense of awe in your garden. PAGE 8

AT HOME

Window on Backyard Wildlife

Seth Rogen, the Hollywood player withan Everydude persona, has stayed busyduring the pandemic with ceramics andexpanding his cannabis brand. PAGE 1

SUNDAY STYLES

He’s All About Pot and Pots

Jay Caspian Kang PAGE 4

SUNDAY REVIEW

White-collar jobs are feeling the pinchof automation as unassuming softwareprograms are becoming the star em-ployees at many American companiesand transforming workplaces. PAGE 1

SUNDAY BUSINESS

Bots Climb Corporate Ladders

The Work Friend columnist writesabout what the absence of day-to-dayconnections showed us about how wespent our days. PAGE 1

A Year Without Office Life

Off the coast of Los Angeles,more than two dozen containerships filled with exercise bikes,electronics and other highlysought imports have been idlingfor as long as two weeks.

In Kansas City, farmers arestruggling to ship soybeans tobuyers in Asia. In China, furnituredestined for North America pilesup on factory floors.

Around the planet, the pan-demic has disrupted trade to anextraordinary degree, driving upthe cost of shipping goods andadding a fresh challenge to theglobal economic recovery. The vi-rus has thrown off the choreogra-phy of moving cargo from one con-tinent to another.

At the center of the storm is theshipping container, the workhorseof globalization.

Americans stuck in their homeshave set off a surge of orders fromfactories in China, much of it car-ried across the Pacific in contain-ers — the metal boxes that movegoods in towering stacks atopenormous vessels. As householdsin the United States have filledbedrooms with office furnitureand basements with treadmills,the demand for shipping has out-stripped the availability of con-tainers in Asia, yielding shortagesthere just as the boxes pile up atAmerican ports.

Containers that carried millionsof masks to countries in Africa andSouth America early in the pan-demic remain there, empty anduncollected, because shippingcarriers have concentrated theirvessels on their most popularroutes — those linking NorthAmerica and Europe to Asia.

And at ports where ships docall, bearing goods to unload, theyare frequently stuck for days infloating traffic jams. The pan-demic and its restrictions havelimited the availability of dock-workers and truck drivers, caus-ing delays in handling cargo fromSouthern California to Singapore.Every container that cannot beunloaded in one place is a con-tainer that cannot be loaded some-where else.

“I’ve never seen anything likethis,” said Lars Mikael Jensen,head of Global Ocean Network at

Logjam at SeaAs Virus Roils

Global TradeThis article is by Peter S. Good-

man, Alexandra Stevenson, NirajChokshi and Michael Corkery.

Ships waiting to unload outside the congested Port of Los Angeles, one of the main arrival points for products manufactured in Asia.COLEY BROWN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page 9

WASHINGTON — A year ago,President Donald J. Trump de-clared a national emergency,promising a wartime footing tocombat the coronavirus. But asCovid-19 spread unchecked, send-ing thousands of dying people tothe hospital, desperate pleas forprotective masks and other medi-cal supplies went unanswered.

Health workers resorted towearing trash bags. Fearful hospi-tal officials turned away sick pa-tients. Governors complainedabout being left in the lurch. Todaythe shortage of basic supplies,alongside inadequate testing andthe slow vaccine rollout, stands asa symbol of the broken federal re-sponse to a worldwide calamitythat has killed more than a half-million Americans.

Explanations about what wentwrong have devolved into parti-

san finger pointing, with Mr.Trump blaming the Obama ad-ministration for leaving the cup-board bare, and Democrats inCongress accusing Mr. Trump ofnegligence.

An investigation by The NewYork Times found a hidden expla-nation: Government purchasesfor the Strategic National Stock-pile, the country’s emergencymedical reserve where suchequipment is kept, have largelybeen driven by the demands andfinancial interests of a handful ofbiotech firms that have special-ized in products that address ter-rorist threats rather than infec-tious disease.

Chief among them is EmergentBioSolutions, a Maryland-based

company now manufacturingCovid-19 vaccines for As-traZeneca and Johnson & John-son. Last year, as the pandemicraced across the country, the gov-ernment paid Emergent $626 mil-lion for products that includedvaccines to fight an entirely differ-ent threat: a terrorist attack usinganthrax.

Throughout most of the lastdecade, the government has spentnearly half of the stockpile’s half-billion-dollar annual budget onthe company’s anthrax vaccines,The Times found. That left thegovernment with less money tobuy supplies needed in a pan-demic, despite repeatedly beingadvised to do so.

Under normal circumstances,Emergent’s relationship with thefederal stockpile would be of littlepublic interest — an obscure con-tractor in an obscure corner of thefederal bureaucracy applying the

Preparing for Bioterror, Neglecting Virus ThreatBy CHRIS HAMBY

and SHERYL GAY STOLBERG

Continued on Page 22

U.S. Stockpiled a Firm’s Anthrax Vaccines

SAVANNAH, Ga. — Sundaysare always special at the St. PhilipMonumental A.M.E. church. Butin October, the pews are oftenmore packed, the sermon a bitmore urgent and the congregationmore animated, and eager forwhat will follow: piling intochurch vans and buses — thoughsome prefer to walk — and head-ing to the polls.

Voting after Sunday churchservices, known colloquially as“souls to the polls,” is a tradition inBlack communities across thecountry, and Pastor BernardClarke, a minister since 1991, hasmarshaled the effort at St. Philipfor five years. His sermons onthose Sundays, he said, deliver amessage of fellowship, responsi-bility and reverence.

“It is an opportunity for us toshow our voting rights privilegeas well as to fulfill what we knowthat people have died for, and peo-ple have fought for,” Mr. Clarkesaid.

Now, Georgia Republicans areproposing new restrictions onweekend voting that could se-verely curtail one of the Blackchurch’s central roles in civic en-gagement and elections. Stung bylosses in the presidential race andtwo Senate contests, the stateparty is moving quickly to push

through these limits and a raft ofother measures aimed directly atsuppressing the Black turnoutthat helped Democrats prevail inthe critical battleground state.

“The only reason you have

these bills is because they lost,”said Bishop Reginald T. Jackson,who oversees all 534 A.M.E.churches in Georgia. “Whatmakes it even more troubling than

Georgia Bills Target Black Church Voting DrivesBy NICK CORASANITIand JIM RUTENBERG

Israel Small spent most of last fall helping parishioners at GreaterGaines Chapel A.M.E. navigate the absentee voting process.

STEPHEN B. MORTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page 17

When Gov. Andrew M. Cuomocame under fire just a few weeksago over his handling of nursinghome deaths in the pandemic, heand his top advisers followed theirusual playbook to stem the fall-out: They worked the phones,pressing his case in private callsto legislators and other New YorkDemocrats.

Then came a crisis that Mr. Cuo-mo’s signature blend of threats,flattery and browbeating couldnot mitigate. And he seemed toknow it.

As three women stepped for-ward with claims of sexual har-assment and other unwanted ad-vances by Mr. Cuomo, the mostvisible governor in America effec-tively went dark.

After one of the women detailedher accusations against the gover-nor in a Medium post, State Sena-tor Liz Krueger, a Manhattan

Democrat, decided that she wouldcome out with a statement callingfor an independent investigation— an implicit rebuke of Mr.Cuomo. She reached out to thegovernor’s team to alert them,aware of the typical angry re-sponse.

No call came, she said.“None of my colleagues have

said they have heard from thegovernor on this,” Ms. Kruegersaid of the harassment accusa-tions.

At the greatest moment of polit-ical peril for Mr. Cuomo in his dec-ade in power, interviews withnearly two dozen Democratic law-makers, strategists and Albanyveterans paint a portrait of a gov-ernor who is increasingly isolated.

Mr. Cuomo faces a federal inqui-ry into his administration’s han-dling of nursing home deaths dur-

Cuomo, Shaken and Isolated,Feels His Grip on New York Slip

By KATIE GLUECK

Continued on Page 26

A long-planned goal to expand Amtrakservice nationwide has run into opposi-tion from some local politicians. PAGE 20

NATIONAL 16-26

All Not Aboard on Rail Routes

Francis, meeting with the country’s topayatollah and other leaders, tries toforge closer bonds among faiths. PAGE 12

Pope Appeals to Iraq for Unity

WASHINGTON — PresidentBiden’s extensive $1.9 trillionstimulus bill passed a deeply di-vided Senate on Saturday, asDemocrats pushed through a pan-demic aid plan that includes an ex-traordinary increase in safety netspending in the largest antipov-erty effort in a generation.

The package, which still mustpass the House before it heads toMr. Biden’s desk to be signed intolaw, is the first major legislativeinitiative of his presidency. Themeasure seeks at once to curtailthe coronavirus pandemic, bolsterthe sluggish economy and protectthe neediest people within it. Re-publicans voted unanimouslyagainst it and assailed it as unnec-essary and unaffordable.

It would inject vast amounts offederal resources into the econ-omy, including one-time directpayments of up to $1,400 for hun-dreds of millions of Americans,jobless aid of $300 a week to lastthrough the summer, money fordistributing coronavirus vaccinesand relief for states, cities, schoolsand small businesses strugglingduring the pandemic.

Beyond the immediate aid, thebill, titled the American RescuePlan, is estimated to cut povertyby a third this year and wouldplant the seeds for what Demo-crats hope will become an incomeguarantee for children. It wouldpotentially cut child poverty inhalf, through a generous expan-sion of tax credits for Americanswith children — which Democratshope to make permanent — in-creases in subsidies for child care,a broadening of eligibility underthe Affordable Care Act, and anexpansion of food stamps andrental assistance.

Its eye-popping cost is just shyof the $2.2 trillion stimulus meas-

SENATE APPROVES$1.9 TRILLION IN AID

FOR AILING NATIONPartisan Vote After

All-Night Session

By EMILY COCHRANE

President Biden after the vote.STEFANI REYNOLDS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page 18

WASHINGTON — To jump-start the ailing economy, Presi-dent Biden is turning to thelowest-paid workers in America,and to the people who are cur-

rently unable towork at all.

Mr. Biden’s $1.9trillion economic

relief package, which cleared theSenate on Saturday and could beheaded for the president’s signa-ture in a matter of days, wouldoverwhelmingly help low earnersand the middle class, with littledirect aid for the high earnerswho have largely kept their jobsand padded their savings overthe past year.

For the president, the plan ismore than just a stimulus pro-posal. It is a declaration of hiseconomic policy — one thatcaptures the principle Democratsand liberal economists haveespoused over the past decade:that the best way to stoke fastereconomic growth is from thebottom up.

Mr. Biden’s approach in hisfirst major economic legislationis in stark contrast to PresidentDonald J. Trump’s, whose initialeffort in Congress was a tax-cutpackage in 2017 that largelybenefited corporations andwealthier Americans.

The “American Rescue Plan”advanced by Mr. Biden includesmore generous direct benefits forlow-income Americans than therounds of stimulus passed lastyear under Mr. Trump, eventhough it will arrive at a timewhen economic and coronavirusvaccine statistics suggest thebroad economy is poised to takeflight. It is more focused on peo-ple than on businesses and isexpected to help women andminorities in particular, becausethey have taken an outsize hit inthe pandemic recession.

Researchers predict it couldbecome one of the most effectivelaws to fight poverty in a genera-tion. Columbia University’s Cen-ter on Poverty and Social Policyestimates that the plan’s provi-sions, including a generous ex-pansion of tax credits for low-income Americans with children,would reduce the poverty rate by

Biden Lifts Up Poorto Jolt the Recovery

By JIM TANKERSLEY

Continued on Page 19

NEWSANALYSIS

NO BIPARTISANSHIP Despite thepresident’s wishes, the parties arefar apart. News Analysis. PAGE 19

Bianca Smith, recently hired by the RedSox as the first Black female coach inpro baseball, learned the game from hermother, an ardent Yankees fan. PAGE 30

SPORTS 30-32

A Family Allegiance to Baseball

Late Edition

VOL. CLXX . . . No. 58,990 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SUNDAY, MARCH 7, 2021

Today, mostly sunny, still cold, high38. Tonight, mainly clear, ratherchilly, low 25. Tomorrow, plenty ofsunshine, not as cold, high 44.Weather map appears on Page 25.

$6.00