Republican Senators Marsha Blackburn and Martha McSally have introduced legislation that would allow U.S. citizens to file lawsuits against the Chinese Communist Party over the COVID-19 pandemic.
The senators are calling it the Stop COVID Act, with "COVID" standing for "China-Originated Viral Infectious Diseases."
"This would allow the insertion of COVID-19 as a 'biological agent,'" Blackburn said, adding the change would be made to the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act.
As precedent, Blackburn pointed out that the law allowed families of the victims of the 9/11 attacks to sue Saudi Arabia for its suspected role in those attacks.
"What we are doing is giving the individual citizen the right to hold the Chinese Communist Party legally responsible for the act that they have committed," Blackburn said.
During the interview Tuesday, the senator would not rule out speculation the coronavirus that has spread across the globe was a man-made biological weapon, despite a lack of evidence.
"We're going to leave it to the intel community and Five Eyes to say exactly what happened here," the Tennessee senator said. "[China] had 3,000 cases on their hands before they said anything about this."
The theory that the coronavirus emerged from a lab in China has pitted medical experts, like Dr. Anthony Fauci, against senior Trump administration officials. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said there was "enormous evidence" to support the theory in an interview on ABC News earlier this month, though he also said he had "no reason to disbelieve" the Office of the Director of National Intelligence assessment that "the COVID-19 virus was not manmade or genetically modified."
Blackburn, who has publically shared Pompeo's view, says that whether the coronavirus was manmade, the Chinese government failed to protect its citizens and the rest of the world.
"They eliminated travel between Wuhan and the rest of China, but they allowed international flights from Wuhan to other parts of the globe," Blackburn said. "They knew about this for weeks. They didn't do anything to stop it."
An Army private who fled to North Korea before being returned home to the United States last month has been detained by the U.S. military, two officials said Thursday night, and is facing charges including desertion and possessing sexual images of a child.
Israel bombarded Gaza early Friday, hitting areas in the south where Palestinians had been told to seek safety, and it began evacuating a sizable Israeli town in the north near the Lebanese border, the latest sign of a potential ground invasion of Gaza that could trigger regional turmoil.
The Justice Department has secured a $9 million settlement with Ameris Bank over allegations that it avoided underwriting mortgages in predominately Black and Latino communities in Jacksonville, Florida, and discouraged people there from getting home loans.
Israel pounded the Gaza Strip with airstrikes on Thursday, including in the south where Palestinians were told to take refuge, and the country's defense minister told ground troops to “be ready” to invade, though he didn’t say when.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Thursday that inflation remains too high and that bringing it down to the Fed's target level will likely require a slower-growing economy and job market.
Despite deepening opposition, Rep. Jim Jordan is expected to try a third vote to become House speaker, even as his Republican colleagues are explicitly warning the hard-edged ally of Donald Trump that no more threats or promises can win over their support.
Donald Trump is winning over swing state voters including in several states even leaning toward President Joe Biden, according to a recent poll by Bloomberg and Morning Consult.
A Russian-American journalist working for a U.S. government-funded media company has been detained in Russia and charged with failing to register as a “foreign agent,” her employer said Thursday.