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    Redistricting setbacks, hantavirus repatriations and Russia’s small parade

     
    TODAY’S POLITICS story

    Democrats reel from court-imposed redistricting losses

    What happened
    Democrats scrambled over the weekend to respond to setbacks in the national redistricting fight, most recently the Virginia Supreme Court’s 4-3 decision Friday to nullify the state’s voter-approved congressional map. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (N.Y.) (pictured above) and other House Democrats “vented anger at their defeat” in Virginia during a private discussion Saturday, The New York Times said, “with some party leaders discussing an audacious and possibly far-fetched idea” to restore the map, designed to flip four Republican seats. 

    Who said what
    “Just two weeks ago, Democrats had fought to a draw” in the mid-decade gerrymander race started by President Donald Trump and Texas Republicans, The Washington Post said. Now, between the Virginia decision and the expected loss of several additional seats in the South following the U.S. Supreme Court’s neutering of the Voting Rights Act, Democrats are “confronting the reality that Trump succeeded in tilting the playing field to the GOP’s advantage.” 

    What next?
    If the Republicans maintain their current net gain of about a dozen seats, Democrats “could need to win the House combined national popular vote by around 4 percentage points,” Nate Cohn said at the Times. That “structural advantage wouldn’t be enough to make the Republicans favorites,” but it “gives them a real shot at” winning. And if the court rulings help Republicans keep the House despite “badly losing the national vote, it would be yet another blow to the credibility of American institutions during a time of bitter division.” 

     
     
    TODAY’S GLOBAL HEALTH story

    2 new hentavirus cases as passengers flown home

    What happened
    The Dutch cruise ship at the center of the hantavirus outbreak docked off Spain’s Canary Islands yesterday so passengers could be evacuated to their home countries. They included all 17 American passengers from the MV Hondius, one of whom tested positive for the virus yesterday while another developed mild symptoms, the U.S. Health and Human Services Department said last night. One of five French passengers also tested positive after showing symptoms on the flight home, the French government said. Three passengers died since April 11 and at least five others have fallen ill with hantavirus symptoms. 

    Who said what
    Hantavirus is a rare and deadly virus usually spread by inhaling rodent droppings, but the Andes strain found in the infected passengers can spread through close human contact, the World Health Organization said. “This is not another Covid,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said yesterday. “And the risk to the public is low.” 

    What next?
    The U.S. passengers are arriving in Omaha this morning, where most will be monitored at the specialized National Quarantine Unit while the one who tested positive will be transferred to the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit, HHS said.

     
     
    TODAY’S UKRAINE WAR Story

    Putin suggests Ukraine war ‘coming to an end’

    What happened
    Russian President Vladimir Putin on Saturday presided over the “most ‌scaled-back Victory Day parade in years,” Reuters said. Afterward, he told reporters he thought the Ukraine war was “coming to an end.” President Donald Trump on Friday said Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had agreed to exchange 1,000 war prisoners and pause the fighting through today to mark the annual celebration of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany.

    Who said what
    Russia’s “markedly pared down” Victory Day parade “went forward amid veiled threats from Ukraine,” Radio Free Europe said. Zelenskyy “issued a mocking statement” beforehand “saying he was authorizing the Kremlin parade to be held” free from attacks. If Putin’s parade was “subdued” because he “feared a long-range Ukrainian drone strike” in Red Square, that’s “one more sign that the tide may be turning against Russia after four long years of death,” The Wall Street Journal said in an editorial. 

    What next?
    Russia’s Ukraine offensive “has slowed to a crawl” and its “challenges on the battlefield complicate the narrative of imminent victory” Putin is “selling” Trump to convince him Kyiv needs to cede land in U.S. peace talks, The New York Times said. At its current rate, Moscow would need “more than three decades to seize full control of the Donbas.”

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    A neglected bridge in San Francisco’s Glen Park neighborhood was turned into a beautiful piece of infrastructure after residents banded together to cover it with tiles. Before its makeover, the crossing at Bosworth Street and Lippard Avenue was dirty and overgrown. About 100 volunteers from Glen Park Beautiful and the Create Peace Project and kids from Glen Park School spent months cleaning and painting the bridge, pulling out weeds and finally designing and installing the colorful mosaics.

     
     
    Under the radar

    Atmosphere found around tiny object near Pluto

    Scientists studying a distant region of the solar system near Pluto have discovered the unexpected: a very small celestial body with its own atmosphere. It was previously believed that such tiny objects located that far from the sun were incapable of having their own atmospheres, and the new finding could unlock insights into planets millions of miles away.

    The 310-mile-wide world, officially designated 2002 XV93, is classified as a trans-Neptunian object (TNO) because it resides farther from the sun than the outermost planet, Neptune. Its characteristics were described by Japanese astronomers in a study published in the journal Nature Astronomy. 

    Though the icy body was identified many years ago, only now has it been observed to be “swaddled in a layer of air,” said The New York Times. This atmosphere appears to be “roughly 5 million to 10 million times thinner than Earth’s robust atmosphere and about 50 to 100 times thinner than Pluto's tenuous atmosphere,” said Reuters. 

    At the edge of the solar system, any air that does “not float away would be expected to turn into ice and fall to the surface,” said the Times. So the discovery of this mini TNO’s atmosphere some 3.5 billion miles from the sun suggests that “some small ​icy bodies in the outer solar system may not be completely inactive or unchanging,” said lead study researcher Ko Arimatsu, the head of Japan’s National Astronomical Observatory. The finding indicates that “even in a distant, cold world, there ​are dynamisms we haven’t imagined,” said study co-author Junichi Watanabe, the director of Japan’s Koyama Space Science Institute.

     
     
    On this day

    May 11, 1846

    President James K. Polk asked Congress to declare war on Mexico. Lawmakers did so two days later, beginning the Mexican-American War. Congress hasn’t declared war since World War II, though it has occasionally authorized military force. President Donald Trump has refused to seek any authorization for his war in Iran.

     
     
    TODAY’S newspaperS

    ‘Piling up debt’

    “Iran war is casting shadow on China summit,” The Wall Street Journal says on Monday’s front page. “Fears of an AI leap may revive U.S.-China talks,” the Los Angeles Times says. “China surging into summit” as “Trump is weakened with U.S. mired in war,” The Washington Post says. “Trump rips Iran’s response to plan,” the Houston Chronicle says. “Politics soon to get even more polarized” as “raging redistricting wars enter new territory,” USA Today says. “Migrant held by ICE loses her baby,” says the Austin American-Statesman. “As costs rise,” Americans are “piling up debt just to get by,” says The New York Times. “Passengers evacuated from stricken cruise ship,” The Dallas Morning News says. 

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    Heart and minds

    Emergency medical technician students in Wisconsin saved their instructor’s life when he went into cardiac arrest during class. Karl Arps, 72, was discussing signs of a heart attack when his face suddenly contorted and he lost consciousness and started snoring. Realizing something was wrong, one student called 911 and five others began taking turns administering CPR and used a defibrillator. First responders praised the students and said Arps survived because of their quick action.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Rafi Schwartz, Peter Weber and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Tom Williams / CQ-Roll Call Inc. via Getty Images; Chris McGrath / Getty Images; Maxim Shipenkov / Pool / AFP via Getty Images; Illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images
     

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