What you need to know about the coronavirus today

French daily infections at record high
France recorded almost 10,000 new COVID-19 infections on Thursday, its highest single-day total, a day before a cabinet meeting that might consider imposing fresh, local lockdowns to curb the spread of the disease.

Health authorities reported 9,843 new confirmed coronavirus cases, beating by almost 900 the previous record of 8,975, set six days earlier.

Since the beginning of the month, new cases have gone up by 7,292 each day on average, a figure that blows away the previous record daily average of 3,003 seen in August. France has the seventh-highest COVID-19 death toll in the world.

Track the spread of COVID-19 globally

Coronavirus aid bill killed in U.S. Senate
The U.S. Senate defeated a Republican bill that would have provided around $300 billion in new coronavirus aid, as Democrats seeking far more funding prevented it from advancing. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters before the failed Senate vote on Thursday that she thought negotiations could still produce a compromise before the Nov. 3 presidential and congressional elections. But after the vote, several Republican senators were skeptical.

U.S. cites Smithfield Foods for failing to protect workers
The Labor Department cited Smithfield Foods for failing to protect employees from the coronavirus, making it the first major meatpacker to face a fine after outbreaks at slaughterhouses infected thousands of workers. The citation did little to quiet complaints from labor unions and safety advocates, who say the Trump administration needs to do more to protect workers critical to the nation’s food supply.

Latin America passes 8 million cases
The coronavirus tally passed the 8 million mark on Thursday in Latin America, the region with the most infections in the world, although there were indications the virus was now spreading more slowly in some countries. Over the past week, the daily average of cases in the region fell to 67,173 through Wednesday from 80,512 in the previous seven days, according to the Reuters tally, which is based on figures released by governments.

Vaccine confidence volatile
Political polarization and online misinformation are threatening vaccination programs worldwide, with public trust volatile and varying widely between countries, according to a global vaccine confidence study. The study, which maps trends in vaccine confidence across 149 countries between 2015 and 2019, found that skepticism about the safety of vaccines tended to grow alongside political instability and religious extremism.

From Breakingviews - Corona Capital: Brake sale, UK jobs, Hotels.
German billionaire Heinz Hermann Thiele sells a bit more of Knorr-Bremse, and Britain limbers up for a furlough U-turn. Catch up with the latest financial insights.

Reuters reporters and editors around the world are investigating the response to the coronavirus pandemic.

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U.S.

President Trump and Democrat Joe Biden will commemorate the 19th anniversary on Friday of the Sept. 11 attacks, with both candidates separately visiting the rural Pennsylvania field where one of the hijacked planes crashed.

Anti-racism protesters recognize the risk that comes with their calls for equal justice, knowing that for all their peaceful protests, scenes of burning buildings will hand President Trump the images he needs for his “law and order” re-election campaign.

Europe

Russian police have traced opposition politician Alexei Navalny’s movements and what he drank before falling ill in Siberia last month, and are trying to locate a witness who has left the country, the interior ministry said.

The European Union stepped up planning for a ‘no-deal’ Brexit after Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government refused to revoke an ultimatum on breaking the divorce treaty that Brussels says will sink four years of talks.

Reuters Investigates

How Big Pharma is waging war on nonprofit drug-pricing watchdog ICER, which has pressured drugmakers to lower the costs of more than 100 drugs in the past five years and aims to do the same with emerging treatments and vaccinations for COVID-19.

Special Report: This summer, the country almost seems at war with itself, over politics and the coronavirus pandemic, race and the economy, climate change and energy. Here’s how one Pennsylvania family is finding their place in an unprecedented moment in history.

Business

China's expanded export controls pose fresh challenge to global tech industry

The latest additions to China’s list of controlled technology exports could upset a broad range of industries and raise the possibility that some global tech giants might have to split off their Chinese operations, legal experts said.

4 min read

Rio Tinto bows to pressure over cave blast as CEO, executives exit

Rio Tinto parted ways with its chief executive and two deputies, bowing to a shareholder outcry over the destruction of two significant Aboriginal rockshelters and what was seen as the miner's inadequate initial response.

5 min read

TikTok owner ByteDance to invest billions in Singapore over three years: source

TikTok owner ByteDance plans to invest billions of dollars and recruit hundreds of employees in Singapore after opting to base its Southeast Asia regional headquarters there, a person familiar with the matter said.

2 min read

Fear and frustration: Europe's wealthy keep wallets closed

As coronavirus cases rise again across Europe, spending data shows that fear of infection is deterring many wealthier consumers from splashing out. That spells trouble for retailers, luxury goods and leisure firms desperate to make up lost ground.

5 min read

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