List of events
The following is a list of notable events, births and deaths from 2020 in the United States .
The US was heavily impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic , which by the end of the year killed over 300,000 people within American borders. America also became a political battleground for various issues, with various instances of racism and more so police brutality commencing a wide movement of racial unrest and the George Floyd protests . The year has been characterized by some as among the most tumultuous in American history.[ 1] [ 2]
Donald Trump was a central figure to American politics during his final full year of his first term as president, which saw not only the pandemic and racial unrest but also Trump's first impeachment trial and the appointment of Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court . While Trump lost the 2020 election to former Vice President Joe Biden , he has disputed the result of the election, and effort continued into both 2021 and 2022 to overturn the election .
January 1
January 3 – 2019–2021 Persian Gulf crisis: President Donald Trump approves the targeted killing of Iranian general Qasem Soleimani and Iraqi paramilitary leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis in Baghdad , Iraq.[ 7]
January 5 – The 77th Golden Globe Awards are held in Beverly Hills, California .[ 8]
January 6 – Former film producer Harvey Weinstein is charged with four additional counts of rape and sexual battery in a Los Angeles court.[ 9]
January 8
Persian Gulf crisis: Iran attacks Iraqi military bases hosting U.S. troops, injuring more than 110 service members.[ 10]
The American Cancer Society reports a 2.2% drop in the cancer death rate between 2016 and 2017, the largest single-year decline in mortality for this disease ever recorded in the U.S.[ 11] [ 12]
January 9
January 10
January 11
Puerto Rico is hit by a 5.9Mw earthquake and several 5.0Mw earthquakes , following the 7 January 6.4Mw that left one dead and several wounded in addition to thousands without electric power.[ 16]
At least seven people are killed by wind and rain storms across the South .[ 17]
January 14
January 15 – President Donald Trump and China's Vice Premier Liu He sign the U.S.–China Phase One trade deal in Washington, D.C. [ 22] [ 23]
January 16 – The impeachment trial of President Donald Trump begins in the U.S. Senate .[ 24]
January 20 – 22,000 people attend a gun rights rally at the Virginia State Capitol in Richmond to protest proposed gun laws.[ 25]
January 21 – COVID-19 pandemic : The first case of COVID-19 in the United States is confirmed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).[ 26]
January 22 – The Oakland Raiders officially relocate to Las Vegas , Nevada .[ 27]
January 24 – Donald Trump becomes the first sitting president to personally attend the annual March for Life anti-abortion protest in Washington, D.C.[ 28]
January 26
January 28
Fotis Dulos attempts suicide at his home in Connecticut; gets airlifted to a Bronx hospital where he would die 2 days later.[ 31]
January 29
January 30 – COVID-19 pandemic: The CDC confirms the first case of human-to-human transmission of the COVID-19 coronavirus in the U.S.[ 34]
January 31
COVID-19 pandemic: President Donald Trump imposes travel restrictions preventing foreign nationals from entering the U.S. if they visited China within the previous two weeks.[ 35]
The U.S. Senate votes 51–49 against calling witnesses in President Trump's impeachment trial.[ 36]
President Trump expands his travel ban to include six new countries: Eritrea , Kyrgyzstan , Myanmar , Nigeria , Sudan , and Tanzania .[ 37]
At a human trafficking summit in the White House , Trump reportedly creates a new White House position dedicated solely to addressing the issue.[ 38]
February 2 – Super Bowl LIV : The Kansas City Chiefs defeat the San Francisco 49ers , 31–20. Jennifer Lopez and Shakira co-headline the halftime show .
February 3 – The 2020 Iowa Democratic and Republican caucuses take place. The Democratic caucus results are delayed due to problems with a vote-counting app .[ 39]
February 4 – President Donald Trump delivers his third State of the Union address. Among the guests are Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó and conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh , who is awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom .[ 40]
February 5 – The impeachment trial of President Donald Trump concludes with the Senate voting 52–48 to acquit on the first article of impeachment and 53–47 on the second charge . Utah Senator Mitt Romney becomes the first ever senator to vote to remove a president of their own political party.[ 41]
February 6 – The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) gives permission for Nuro Inc. to deploy up to 5,000 driverless delivery vehicles across the country. It is the first time the NHTSA allows deployment of automated driving systems without meeting all national auto safety standards.[ 42]
February 9 – The 92nd Academy Awards , the second in a row with no official host, are held at Dolby Theatre in Hollywood .[ 43] Bong Joon-ho 's Parasite becomes the first South Korean film to receive Academy Award recognition, winning four awards as well as becoming the first non-English-language film to win Best Picture ; Joon-ho also wins Best Director . Todd Phillips ' Joker leads the nominations with 11, with Joaquin Phoenix winning Best Actor . Renée Zellweger wins Best Actress for Judy , Brad Pitt Best Supporting Actor for Once Upon a Time in Hollywood and Laura Dern Best Supporting Actress for Marriage Story . The telecast garners over 23.6 million viewers, a 20% decrease from the previous year, at that point the lowest viewership for the ceremony since Nielsen began compiling figures.
February 10 – Former Congressman J. C. Watts launches the first all-news channel aimed at African Americans, the Black News Channel .[ 44]
February 11 – The 2020 New Hampshire primaries are held.[ 18]
February 13 – The McClatchy newspaper chain files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy .[ 45]
February 17
February 19 – The Utah Senate votes to decriminalize polygamy .[ 50]
February 20 – Political consultant Roger Stone is sentenced to 40 months in prison after being found guilty of witness tampering, obstructing an official proceeding, and five counts of making false statements.[ 51]
February 21
February 22 – The 2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses are held. The Republican caucuses are cancelled with President Trump winning all delegates by default.[ 18]
February 23 – Ahmaud Arbery is murdered in Glynn County, Georgia . No arrests are made until May.[ 54]
February 24 – Former film producer Harvey Weinstein is found guilty of rape .[ 55]
February 25
February 26
COVID-19 pandemic: First case of community spread reported in California.[ 58]
February 27
COVID-19 pandemic: Growing fear of the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic causes the Dow Jones Industrial Average to plunge by 1,190.95 points (4.4%), closing at 25,766.64—its largest one-day points decline in history. This follows several days of large falls, the Dow's worst week since 2008.[ 59]
Marine commandant General David H. Berger orders the removal of Confederate symbols from Marine Corps bases around the world.[ 60]
Former Baltimore mayor Catherine Pugh is sentenced to three years in prison and three years probation after pleading guilty to tax evasion and conspiracy to defraud the government.[ 61]
February 29
March 1 – Former South Bend, Indiana mayor Pete Buttigieg suspends his presidential campaign .[ 66]
March 2
March 3 – Super Tuesday 2020 takes place.[ 70]
March 3–10 – The 2020 Democrats Abroad presidential primary takes place.[ 71]
March 4
March 5
March 6
COVID-19 pandemic:
Florida reports two deaths from COVID-19, the first confirmed U.S. fatalities outside of the west coast .[ 79]
The annual South by Southwest (SXSW) festival is canceled due to COVID-19 fears; it is the first time the event has been canceled in its 34-year history.[ 80]
March 7 – COVID-19 pandemic: Washington, D.C. records its first case of COVID-19.[ 81]
March 9
Black Monday 2020 : Share prices fall sharply in response to economic concerns and the impact of COVID-19. The Dow Jones industrial average plunges more than 2,000 points, its biggest ever fall in intraday trading.[ 82] Oil prices plunge by as much as 30% in early trading, the biggest fall since 1991, after Saudi Arabia launches a price war with Russia.[ 83]
The U.S. begins a conditional troop withdrawal from Afghanistan ; American troop numbers are to be reduced from 12,000 to 8,600 within 135 days.[ 84]
March 10 – COVID-19 pandemic: COVID-19 cases in the U.S. exceed 1,000, with a 50% increase within a 24-hour period and infections reported in 35 states.[ 85]
March 11
March 12
Confirmed COVID-19 cases per million inhabitants
March 13
March 15 – COVID-19 pandemic: The Federal Reserve announces that it will cut its target interest rate to 0-0.25 percent.[ 99]
March 16
March 17
March 18
March 19 – COVID-19 pandemic: The Department of Labor reports that 281,000 Americans filed for unemployment in the last week, a 33 percent increase over the prior week and the biggest percentage increase since 1992 .[ 111]
March 20 – COVID-19 pandemic: The governor of New York orders staff at all "non-essential" businesses to remain at home as the number of COVID-19 cases in the state exceeds 7,000.[ 112]
March 21 – COVID-19 pandemic: Biotech company Cepheid Inc reports that it has been granted FDA approval for a new rapid diagnostic test, able to detect COVID-19 in 45 minutes.[ 113] [ 114]
March 22
March 23 – Colorado becomes the 22nd state to abolish the death penalty .[ 119]
March 24
COVID-19 pandemic:
A Gallup poll places President Trump's approval rating at 49 percent, his highest thus far.[ 124] A separate Hill -HarrisX poll places him at 50 percent, his highest since August 2018 .[ 125]
March 25
COVID-19 pandemic:
Nationwide COVID-19 deaths surpass 1,000 as the total number of cases reach almost 69,000.[ 126]
The White House and the Senate agree to a $2 trillion stimulus package —the largest in U.S. history—to boost the economy amid the ongoing pandemic.[ 127] The Senate subsequently approves the negotiated bill (the CARES Act) in a 96–0 vote.[ 128] Trump signs the bill into law on March 27 after a House voice vote .[ 129]
The Pentagon orders a 60-day halt on all overseas troop travel and movement as 227 U.S. troops have thus far tested positive for COVID-19. The withdrawal from Afghanistan will continue.[ 130]
March 26
COVID-19 pandemic:
Nationwide COVID-19 infections exceed 82,000—surpassing infections in China and Italy —as the U.S. now has more cases reported than any other country to date.[ 131]
The Department of Labor reports that 3.28 million Americans filed for unemployment benefits in the last week, the largest increase in U.S. history. It supersedes the all-time high of 695,000 in October 1982 .[ 132]
The Trump administration indicts Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro 's government of drug trafficking and narcoterrorism and offers a $15 million reward for information leading to Maduro's arrest.[ 133]
The Space Force launches its first satellite, a $1.4 billion Advanced Extremely High Frequency (AEHF-6) military communications satellite.[ 134]
March 27 – President Trump signs the CARES Act in response to the COVID-19 pandemic .[ 135]
March 29 – U.S.-led coalition troops withdraw from Iraq's K-1 Air Base , the third base transferred to the Iraqi military this month.[ 136]
March 31
April 1
April 3 – COVID-19 pandemic: The CDC recommends all citizens consider wearing cloth or fabric face coverings in public.[ 143]
April 6
COVID-19 pandemic: Nationwide COVID-19 deaths surpass 10,000, with more than 19,800 recoveries.[ 144]
President Trump signs an executive order encouraging future long-term commercial exploitation of various celestial bodies and mining of lunar resources .[ 145]
April 7 – COVID-19 pandemic: The U.S. records the most COVID-19 deaths in a single day to date, with more than 1,800 fatalities reported, taking the cumulative total to nearly 13,000.[ 146] This is overtaken on April 15 when 2,371 deaths are recorded in a single day, topping 30,800 fatalities.[ 147]
April 8
April 11
April 12 – At least 30 people are killed and 1.3 million left without electricity after an Easter tornado outbreak across the South.[ 155]
April 14 – COVID-19 pandemic: President Trump announces that he will suspend U.S. funding of the World Health Organization (WHO) pending an investigation into its early response to the outbreak.[ 156]
April 15
April 16
COVID-19 pandemic:
It is revealed that nearly 22 million Americans have filed for unemployment within a single month due to COVID-19 lockdowns, the worst unemployment crisis since the Great Depression .[ 160]
The Trump administration reveals federal guidelines outlining a three-phased, gradual reopening of schools, commerce, and services for parts of the country.[ 161]
April 17 – COVID-19 pandemic: Texas is the first state to begin easing coronavirus-related restrictions.[ 162] Florida's Duval County is the first in the state to ease restrictions, with Jacksonville , Atlantic , and Neptune being the first beaches in the state to reopen, on a limited basis.[ 163]
April 20 – Oil prices reach a record low, falling into negative values, due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia–Saudi Arabia oil price war.[ 164]
April 21
April 22 – COVID-19 pandemic: President Trump signs an immigration executive order halting the issuance of certain green cards for 60 days.[ 168]
April 24
COVID-19 pandemic:
New Jersey reports 100,000 cases and 5,617 deaths.[ 169]
President Trump signs a $483 billion bill to rescue small businesses.[ 170]
April 27
April 29 – The Department of Commerce reports that the U.S. economy shrank by 4.8% in the first quarter of 2020, its most severe contraction since 2008 .[ 173]
April 30
May 1 – COVID-19 pandemic: The FDA authorizes emergency remdesivir use to treat the sickest COVID-19 patients.[ 176] [ 177]
May 2 – 2020 Kansas Democratic primary :[ 18] Joe Biden wins in a mail-in primary with ranked choice voting .[ 178]
May 3 – The United States faces an invasion of Asian giant hornets (Vespa mandarinia magnifica ), threatening domestic bees.[ 179]
May 7 – The Department of Justice drops charges against former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn in the Mueller investigation .[ 180] On May 11, nearly 2,000 former Justice Department officials sign a letter calling for Attorney General William Barr to resign over what they describe as his improper intervention in the Flynn case.[ 181]
May 8 – COVID-19 pandemic: The national unemployment level reaches 14.7%, with more than 33 million jobless claims having been filed since mid-March.[ 182]
May 12 – COVID-19 pandemic: The Broadway League extends its shutdown of Broadway theatres for a second time, projecting reopening on September 6.[ 183]
May 13 – COVID-19 pandemic: President Donald Trump's former election campaign chairman, Paul Manafort , is released to home confinement due to fears of possible COVID-19 infection.[ 184]
May 15
May 16
May 18 – The FBI confirms that the 2019 Naval Air Station Pensacola shooting was the first terrorist attack on U.S. territory that had been directed by a foreign actor since 9/11 .[ 191]
May 19
COVID-19 pandemic: The U.S. surpasses 1.5 million confirmed COVID-19 cases and 90,000 deaths.[ 192]
Two dams in Midland County , Michigan , fail, resulting in extensive evacuations and the declaration of a state of emergency.[ 193]
The Congressional Budget Office reports a 38% fall in GDP on an annualized basis in the second quarter of 2020, with 26 million more unemployed Americans than in Q4 2019.[ 194]
May 20 – COVID-19 pandemic: James Jamal Curry, 31, who spat and coughed on a police officer in Miami, Florida after claiming to have COVID-19, is indicted for committing a biological weapon hoax (terrorism).[ 195]
May 25 – Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin murders George Floyd , 46, by kneeling on his neck, as three other officers watch. Video of the incident goes viral and the four officers are subsequently fired.[ 196]
May 26: George Floyd protests in Minneapolis–Saint Paul begin.
May 26
May 27
COVID-19 pandemic: The official nationwide death toll surpasses 100,000—more Americans than were killed in the Vietnam and Korean wars combined, and approaching that of the First World War , when more than 116,000 Americans died in combat.[ 199] [ 200]
George Floyd protests: Protests in Minneapolis turn violent as activists call for murder charges against the police officers involved in George Floyd's murder.[ 201] [ 202]
President Trump threatens to shut down Twitter and other social media platforms, accusing them of bias against conservatives .[ 203]
May 28
George Floyd protests: A state of emergency is declared in the Twin Cities, with hundreds of National Guard soldiers deployed on the streets as protests spread nationwide .[ 204]
President Trump signs an executive order rolling back liability protections for social media companies over user-generated content.[ 205] [ 206]
May 29
George Floyd protests:
Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin is charged with third-degree murder and manslaughter in the killing of George Floyd.[ 207] An independent autopsy concludes on June 1 that Floyd's cause of death was "homicide caused by asphyxia ".[ 208] Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison later increases the charge against Derek Chauvin to second degree on June 3; charges against the three other officers who were present are also filed.[ 209]
Twitter hides a tweet by President Trump after he reacts to the Minneapolis unrest by warning that "when the looting starts, the shooting starts ." Twitter says the post violates its rules on glorifying violence.[ 210]
May 30
May 31 – In response to the wave of civil unrest across the country, President Trump says he will designate the far-left activist group Antifa a terrorist organization.[ 213] [ 214] The next day, June 1, Trump threatens to deploy the military to quell the riots[ 215] and conducts a controversial photo-op at St. John's Episcopal Church .[ 216] [ 217]
June 2 – Blackout Tuesday , an industry-driven collective protest against racism and police brutality inspired by the George Floyd protests, is observed.[ 218] [ 219] [ 220]
June 3 – A 5.5 Mw earthquake said to be an aftershock of the 2019 Ridgecrest earthquakes hits near Searles Valley, California . No injuries or damages are reported.[ 221]
June 5 – Washington, D.C. mayor Muriel Bowser designates a two-block-long section of 16th Street NW as "Black Lives Matter Plaza ".[ 222]
June 8
June 9 – Air Force General Charles Brown becomes the first African American to lead a branch of U.S. Armed Forces and the first African American Air Force Chief of Staff .[ 226]
June 10 – COVID-19 pandemic: Nationwide confirmed COVID-19 cases surpass 2 million.[ 227]
June 11 – The Trump administration authorizes sanctions and additional visa restrictions against the International Criminal Court in retaliation for their investigation into potential war crimes by U.S. officials.[ 228]
June 12
June 14 – COVID-19 pandemic: New infections increase by 25,000, the highest since May 2, in part due to increased testing.[ 232]
June 15
June 18 – The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) withdraws the introduction of federal limits for perchlorate , which has been linked to brain damage in infants.[ 235]
June 19 – Juneteenth is observed across the country.
June 20 – President Trump holds his first 2020 campaign rally in months at the Bank of Oklahoma Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma .[ 236]
June 25 – COVID-19 pandemic: The U.S. reaches a record daily high of 40,000 new COVID-19 cases, following a reversal in the downward trend of infections in early June. Southern and western states are the worst affected.[ 237]
June 26
President Trump signs an executive order against the destruction or vandalism of public monuments, memorials, or statues.[ 238]
The New York Times reports that a Russian military intelligence unit offered bounties to Taliban -linked militants for the killing of U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan and that President Trump was briefed on the findings in late March 2020, but did not authorize any response.[ 239] Trump denies he was ever briefed on the matter.[ 240]
June 29 – COVID-19 pandemic: Arizona Governor Doug Ducey orders all bars, nightclubs, gyms, movie theaters and water parks to close for 30 days due to a spike in COVID-19 cases.[ 241]
June 30 – Following a vote by the state legislature , Mississippi governor Tate Reeves signs a bill retiring the official Mississippi state flag , the last state flag incorporating the Confederate Battle Flag of the Army of Northern Virginia into its design. A commission is established to design a new state flag.[ 242]
July 1 – The House Armed Services Committee votes for a National Defense Authorization Act amendment to restrict President Trump's ongoing troop withdrawal from Afghanistan and prospective withdrawal from Germany.[ 243]
July 2
The FBI arrests British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell , an associate of late disgraced U.S. financier Jeffrey Epstein , in New Hampshire .[ 244]
COVID-19 pandemic: Florida reports 10,000 new coronavirus cases in a single day, the biggest one-day increase in the state since the pandemic started, and more than any European country had at the height of their outbreaks.[ 245]
July 4
July 7 – Primary elections are held in New Jersey, rescheduled from June 2.[ 249]
July 8
The Supreme Court rules that President Trump must release his financial records for examination by prosecutors in New York.[ 250]
COVID-19 pandemic: Florida emerges as the world's new epicenter of the pandemic, with 220,500 confirmed cases statewide.[ 251]
Naya Rivera , a star in the show Glee , dies at age of 33 from drowning. Her death was not announced until July 13, 2020.
A violent and deadly EF4 tornado occurs in Minnesota.[ 252]
July 10 – President Trump commutes the 40-month sentence of political consultant Roger Stone .[ 253] [ 254]
July 11 – COVID-19 pandemic: President Trump is seen publicly wearing a face mask for the first time while visiting wounded soldiers and health care workers at Walter Reed Military Hospital .[ 255]
July 12
18 sailors are injured by an explosion and fire on the USS Bonhomme Richard in San Diego, California.[ 256]
COVID-19 pandemic: Florida reports 15,299 cases, a new single-day record since the start of the pandemic.[ 257]
July 14
White supremacist and murderer Daniel Lewis Lee is executed by lethal injection in Terre Haute, Indiana , becoming the first federal execution since 2003.[ 258]
COVID-19 pandemic:
The Trump administration orders hospitals to bypass the CDC and send all COVID-19 patient data to a central database in Washington, D.C.[ 259]
Pharmaceutical company Moderna announces that its vaccine will begin the final phase of testing, with approximately 30,000 human volunteers.[ 260] [ 261]
July 15
July 17 – Secretary of Defense Mark Esper issues a memorandum to the military on the appropriate display of flags, which excludes the Confederate flag , thereby effectively banning it.[ 265]
July 18 – George Floyd protests: Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum files a lawsuit against the federal government, accusing it of unlawfully detaining protesters in Portland .[ 266]
July 21 – Republican Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder is arrested by federal agents in connection with a $60 million bribery case. Former Ohio GOP Chairman Matt Borges is also arrested, along with a GOP advisor and two lobbyists.[ 267]
July 22
A 7.8-magnitude earthquake is reported off the coast of Alaska .[ 268]
George Floyd protests: President Trump announces a "surge " in deployments of federal officers to Democratic-run cities, following an earlier crackdown on protests in Oregon.[ 269]
July 23 – The Trump administration announces that it is revoking the Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing provision of the 1968 Fair Housing Act .[ 270]
July 25 – Hurricane Hanna makes two landfalls in South Texas , one in Padre Island and another in Kenedy County , killing 5 people. [citation needed ]
July 29 – George Floyd protests: Oregon Governor Kate Brown and Vice President Mike Pence agree to a phased withdrawal of deployed federal law enforcement from Portland.[ 271]
July 30
August 2 – Crew Dragon Demo-2 , the first U.S.-crewed splashdown since 1975 , lands in the Gulf of Mexico .
August 3
August 4 – The Great American Outdoors Act is passed.[ 278]
August 5 – Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar travels to Taiwan , the highest U.S. official visit to the country in 40 years.[ 279]
August 6
August 7–17 – COVID-19 pandemic: The Sturgis Motorcycle Rally takes place despite concerns by health officials.[ 283]
August 9 – President Trump is escorted from a news briefing by the Secret Service following a shooting near the White House .[ 284]
August 10–11 – A derecho with winds recorded at up to 140 mph strikes the Midwest , resulting in four deaths, hundreds of injuries, widespread utility outages, and severe property damage.
August 11 – Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden names Senator Kamala Harris as his vice presidential nominee, the first African American woman to serve in the role.[ 285]
August 13
August 16 – During a record-breaking heat wave, a remnant thunderstorm from Tropical Storm Fausto spawns hundreds of wildfires in California .[ 288]
August 17–20 – The Democratic National Convention is held in Milwaukee , Wisconsin , with events happening virtually.[ 289] Delegates of the Democratic Party formally choose former Vice President Joe Biden and Senator Kamala Harris of California as the party's nominees for president and vice president, respectively, in the 2020 election .
August 19 – Apple Inc. becomes the first U.S. company to be valued at over $2 trillion.[ 290]
August 20
COVID-19 pandemic: Bill Cassidy (R-LA) is the second senator to test positive for COVID-19.[ 291]
Former White House advisor Steve Bannon is arrested and charged with fraud over a fundraising campaign to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border.[ 292] He is released on a $5 million bail bond after pleading not guilty.[ 293]
August 23
August 24 –27 – The Republican National Convention is held in Charlotte , North Carolina and Washington, D.C. Delegates of the Republican Party formally nominate incumbent President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence as the party's nominees for the 2020 election .[ 297]
August 25 – Four U.S. soldiers are diagnosed with mild concussion -like symptoms following a skirmish with Russian forces in northeast Syria .[ 298]
August 26 –31 – Riots break out in downtown Minneapolis following false rumors about the suicide of an African American man being pursued by police. 113 people are arrested.[ 299]
August 26
August 28 – Thousands of people gather at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. for the Commitment March in support of black civil rights .[ 304]
September 2 – Protests breakout in Rochester, New York following the release of police body camera footage of the fatal March 2020 arrest of Daniel Prude .[ 305] [ 306]
September 4 – A Trump administration memo calls on all executive branch agencies to cease funding for diversity and sensitivity training and teachings of critical race theory .[ 307]
September 5 – Authentic wins the 2020 Kentucky Derby .
September 6 – California sets a new record for land area destroyed by wildfires , with 2.1 million acres burned in the year thus far.[ 308]
September 9 – President Donald Trump is nominated for the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize by a Norwegian lawmaker for his role in facilitating the Israel–United Arab Emirates normalization agreement .[ 309]
September 10 – Over 10 percent of Oregon 's state population are reported to be fleeing wildfires .[ 310]
September 12 – Two Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department deputies are shot and critically injured while sitting in their patrol car in Compton, California .[ 311]
September 16 – Hurricane Sally brings massive flooding to the South after making landfall, killing eight people and costing billions in damage.[ 312]
September 17 – President Trump announces the formation of the 1776 Commission .[ 313]
September 18 – A Supreme Court seat is vacated following the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg , 87. President Trump says he will choose a woman to fill the seat.[ 314]
September 19
September 21 – Microsoft agrees to buy ZeniMax Media holding company and its subsidiaries for $7.5 billion, the largest and most expensive takeover in the history of the video game industry .[ 318]
September 22 – COVID-19 pandemic: Nationwide official COVID-19 deaths surpass 200,000.[ 319]
September 25 – President Trump unveils his "Platinum Plan " at a campaign rally in Atlanta , in which he proposes making Juneteenth a federal holiday, labeling the Ku Klux Klan and Antifa as terrorist organizations, and making lynching a national hate crime, among other socioeconomic initiatives aimed at African Americans.[ 320]
September 26 – President Trump nominates Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Amy Coney Barrett to fill the vacant Supreme Court seat following the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.[ 321]
September 27
A New York Times report on President Trump's personal and business tax returns alleges years of tax avoidance and millions in debt and IRS penalties, among other allegations.[ 322] [ 323]
Former Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale is hospitalized under the Florida Mental Health Act after arming himself and threatening to commit suicide at his home.[ 324]
September 28 – The Tampa Bay Lightning defeat the Dallas Stars 4–2 to win their second Stanley Cup championship .[ 325]
September 29 – The first 2020 presidential debate between President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden takes place in Cleveland , Ohio .[ 326]
October 1
COVID-19 pandemic : The White House COVID-19 outbreak is realized, as both President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump test positive for COVID-19 and enter quarantine. Several White House staffers and multiple congress members also test positive.[ 327]
The Trump administration announces plans to slash U.S. refugee admissions for 2021 to a record low–15,000 refugees, down from a cap of 18,000 for 2020.[ 328] [ 329] [ 330]
October 3 – COVID-19 pandemic: By this date, multiple U.S. senators whom have attended presidential events have tested positive for COVID-19.[ 331]
October 5 – COVID-19 pandemic: President Trump returns to the White House after three days of hospitalization at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center .[ 332]
October 7
October 8
COVID-19 pandemic: 34 editors of The New England Journal of Medicine denounce the Trump administration's handling of the pandemic.[ 336]
A former leading fundraiser for president Donald Trump has been indicted on a charge that he illegally lobbied the US government to drop its probe into the Malaysia 1MDB corruption scandal and to deport an exiled Chinese billionaire. The indictment said Elliott Broidy was recruited in 2017 by an unnamed foreign national, understood to be Malaysian Low Taek Jho , to pressure US officials to end their investigation into a scandal engulfing the then Malaysian prime minister, Najib Razak .[ 337]
The FBI charges 13 militiamen with plotting to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer at her vacation home.[ 338] A fourteenth suspect is arrested on October 15.[ 339]
October 9
October 10 – COVID-19 pandemic: President Trump hosts his first public event at the White House since becoming ill, informing attendees that a vaccine is forthcoming.[ 343]
October 11 – The Los Angeles Lakers defeat the Miami Heat in the 2020 NBA Finals to win their 17th championship in franchise history.[ 344]
October 12
October 15
October 16 – COVID-19 pandemic: The U.S. surpasses eight million COVID-19 cases.[ 349]
October 22
October 23 – COVID-19 pandemic: Arkansas and Oregon set single-day records for new cases.[ 352] [ 353]
October 24 – COVID-19 pandemic: Michigan , Illinois , New Mexico , and Ohio all set single-day records for new cases.[ 354] [ 355] [ 356] [ 357]
October 25 – Daily nonstop American Airlines flights return to India for the first time since 2015.
October 26
October 27
October 28 – President Trump declares a state of emergency for Louisiana ahead of Hurricane Zeta 's landfall.[ 365]
October 29
COVID-19 pandemic:
Michigan, Oregon, and Illinois report new single-day records for new cases.[ 366] [ 367] [ 368]
87,164 new cases are reported nationally, a new single-day record.[ 369]
October 30
COVID-19 pandemic:
The U.S. is the first country to exceed 100,000 daily cases of COVID-19.[ 370]
Nationwide COVID-19 cases surpass nine million.[ 371]
The FBI launches an investigation into an incident in Texas where a Joe Biden campaign bus tour was cancelled after a caravan of supporters of President Trump attempted to run it off the road and hit a staffer's car.[ 372]
October 31
Joe Biden is elected the 46th president of the United States
November 3
November 4 – The United States formally withdraws from the Paris Agreement .[ 380]
November 5
November 6
COVID-19 pandemic:
Texas surpasses one million confirmed cases of COVID-19, the first state and the world's first place to pass that milestone that is not an independent country.[ 383]
Michigan surpasses 200,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19.[ 384]
November 7
2020 presidential election:
November 8 – Longtime Jeopardy host Alex Trebek dies at the age of 80 following a yearlong battle with pancreatic cancer .
November 9
November 10 – President Trump promotes a number of reported loyalists to various roles in the Defense Department following the November 9 ouster of Defense Secretary Mark Esper .[ 389]
November 12
2020 presidential election: A coalition of federal and state officials declare the 2020 presidential election "the most secure in American history" and asserts there is no evidence of compromised voting systems.[ 390] [ 391]
COVID-19 pandemic:
California becomes the second state after Texas to reach one million cases.[ 392]
More than 150,000 new cases are reported nationwide, setting a world record for a third consecutive day.[ 393]
The FBI arrests convicted murderer Leonard Rayne Moses, who escaped from custody in 1971 and had been on their Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list.[ 394]
November 13
2020 presidential election: President-elect Joe Biden is projected to win Arizona , the first Democrat to do so since Bill Clinton in 1996 .[ 395] Biden also becomes the first Democrat to win Georgia since Clinton did so in 1992 .[ 396]
COVID-19 pandemic:
A 5.5 Mw earthquake strikes Tonopah, Nevada , the largest earthquake in Nevada in over 66 years.[ 405]
November 14 – 2020 presidential election: Thousands of protesters march in Washington, D.C. in support of President Trump and his claims of electoral voter fraud.[ 406]
November 15
2020 presidential election: President Trump concedes that Joe Biden won the presidential election, but alleges vote rigging .[ 407]
COVID-19 pandemic: Kentucky and New Jersey report new single-day records for new cases.[ 408] [ 409]
November 16
November 17
COVID-19 pandemic:
Wisconsin reports a record 92 new fatalities within the previous 24 hours, bringing the death toll to 2,741. A record 318 hospitalizations are also reported.[ 413]
Maine , Idaho , and New Mexico report new single-day records for new cases.[ 414] [ 415] [ 416]
Pennsylvania announces that out-of-state travelers will be required to either quarantine or present a negative COVID-19 test result to enter the state.[ 417]
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine orders a three-week night time curfew from 10:00 pm until 5:00 am EST beginning November 19.[ 418]
U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) tests positive for COVID-19.[ 419]
The FDA grants emergency use authorization to a home testing kit by Lucira Health, Inc. that provides COVID-19 results in 30 minutes.[ 420]
November 18
November 19
By this date, one-third of the Cincinnati City Council has been arrested this year on bribery charges.[ 426]
2020 presidential election: Joe Biden's win in Georgia is upheld and reaffirmed following a hand recount, making him the first Democrat to win the state since Bill Clinton in 1992.[ 427]
COVID-19 pandemic:
Utah reports a record number of new COVID-19 daily cases and deaths.[ 428]
Pennsylvania and Maryland report new daily records for new cases.[ 429] [ 430]
California Governor Gavin Newsom orders a 10:00 p.m. to 5:00 a.m. PST curfew for 41 counties beginning November 21, affecting more than 90 percent of the state population.[ 431]
November 20
November 21
COVID-19 pandemic:
Nationwide COVID-19 cases surpass 12 million, six days after surpassing 11 million cases. More than 200,000 new cases have been reported in recent days.[ 439]
Michigan and New Jersey both surpass 300,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19.[ 440] [ 441] New Jersey, Mississippi , Oregon, and California report a record number of new daily cases.[ 441] [ 442] [ 443] [ 444]
U.S. Senator Kelly Loeffler (R-Georgia) enters quarantine after testing positive for COVID-19.[ 445]
The FDA grants emergency use authorization for Regeneron Pharmaceuticals ' antibody cocktail to treat COVID-19 patients.[ 446]
November 22 – The United States withdraws from the Open Skies Treaty .[ 447]
November 23
2020 presidential election:
November 24
Elon Musk overtakes Bill Gates to become the second richest person in the world, with a net worth of $127.9 billion, behind only Jeff Bezos .[ 451]
The Dow Jones increases by 500 points to surpass 30,000 for the first time.[ 452]
November 25
President Trump pardons ex-National Security Adviser Michael Flynn .[ 453]
COVID-19 pandemic:
November 27
2020 presidential election: A recount in Wisconsin 's largest county results in Joe Biden achieving a net gain of 132 votes.[ 456]
COVID-19 pandemic:
Nationwide COVID-19 cases surpass 13 million cases, six days after surpassing 12 million cases, the fourth million-milestone of the month.[ 457]
Minnesota reports a new daily record for new deaths.[ 458]
New York reports its highest daily new case total since April 24.[ 459]
November 28
November 29
November 30 – Arizona Proposition 207 comes into effect, making Arizona the 12th state to legalize recreational cannabis .[ 467]
December 1
December 2
Former astronaut Mark Kelly is sworn in as a U.S. Senator after a special election in Arizona.[ 472]
COVID-19 pandemic:
New nationwide COVID-19 cases surpass 200,000 as the number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients surpasses 100,000.[ 473]
Massachusetts reports record new daily cases and Illinois reports a record number of new deaths.[ 474] [ 475]
New Mexico surpasses 100,000 COVID-19 cases.[ 476]
December 3
December 4
December 6
December 7
2020 presidential election: Georgia re-certifies Joe Biden as the winner of the state following a second recount.[ 487]
Joe Biden nominates retired Army General Lloyd Austin to be the first African American Secretary of Defense .[ 488]
The National Football League announces an investigation into the Washington Football Team for allegations of workplace sexual harassment.[ 489]
COVID-19 pandemic:
Michigan extends its statewide partial shutdown on businesses, indoor dining in restaurants, and in-person instruction at high schools and colleges through December 20 after surpassing 400,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases.[ 490] [ 491] The same day the Michigan House of Representatives announce that they will cancel a voting session scheduled for December 8 (and later 9 and 10) after a legislative aide tested positive for COVID-19.[ 492]
Wyoming issues new containment procedures, including a statewide mask mandate for indoor public spaces lasting from December 9 to January 8.[ 493]
December 8
COVID-19 pandemic:
Nationwide COVID-19 cases surpass 15 million, with about one out of every 22 Americans having tested positive since the pandemic began.[ 494]
Michigan surpasses 10,000 confirmed deaths from COVID-19.[ 495] Governor Gretchen Whitmer orders flags to fly at half staff for the next 10 days, one day for every 1,000 victims.[ 496]
December 9
Vice President Mike Pence announces the 18 Artemis astronauts at the eighth meeting of the National Space Council .[ 497]
COVID-19 pandemic:
The U.S. surpasses 3,000 nationwide COVID-19 deaths in a single day for the first time.[ 498]
Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf tests positive for COVID-19.[ 499]
Nearly 30 members and staffers of the Michigan House of Representatives test positive for COVID-19.[ 500]
Alabama Governor Kay Ivey announces that the statewide mask mandate and stay-at-home order will be extended until January 22.[ 501]
December 11
2020 presidential election: The Supreme Court denies a lawsuit to overturn Joe Biden's victory in four battleground states.[ 502]
COVID-19 pandemic:
Nationwide COVID-19 cases surpass 16 million and a new one-day record of 3,309 deaths are reported.[ 503] [ 504]
California reports 35,468 new cases in the previous 24 hours, a new single-day record, and reports a record number of 2,013 hospitalized patients and 2,669 intensive care patients.[ 505]
The FDA grants emergency authorization of the Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine .[ 506] The vaccine begins shipment to all 50 states on December 13,[ 507] with the first doses administered on December 14.[ 508]
December 12
December 14
December 15 – President-elect Joe Biden nominates Pete Buttigieg to be Secretary of Transportation , becoming the first openly gay person appointed to a cabinet-level position if confirmed.[ 515]
December 16
December 17
Joe Biden nominates Deb Haaland for Secretary of the Interior, becoming the first Native American appointed to a cabinet-level position if confirmed.[ 522]
COVID-19 pandemic:
California reports new single-day records for new cases and new deaths, also breaking national records.[ 523]
Texas reports a daily record for new cases.[ 524]
December 18
Roy Charles Waller , also known as the NorCal Rapist, is sentenced to 897 years in prison for a series of rapes that spanned from 1991 to 2006.[ 525]
COVID-19 pandemic:
December 21
COVID-19 pandemic:
Congress passes the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 , a packaged $2.3 trillion pandemic relief and omnibus spending bill. At 5,593 pages, it is the longest bill ever passed by Congress.[ 529] [ 530] [ 531] [ 532] After initial objections, President Trump signs the bill into law on December 27, averting a partial government shutdown.[ 533]
President-elect Joe Biden and incoming First Lady Jill Biden receive the Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine.[ 534]
December 22
December 24
COVID-19 pandemic:
California is the first state to surpass two million COVID-19 cases.[ 541]
Arkansas reports a new one-day record for new cases.[ 542]
December 25 – A suicide car bomb explosion in downtown Nashville, Tennessee leaves multiple people injured.[ 543]
December 27 – COVID-19 pandemic: Nationwide COVID-19 cases surpass 19 million, having averaged 185,000 daily cases over the previous week.[ 544]
December 29
December 31
Neil Peart
Edd Byrnes
Buck Henry
Rocky Johnson
Jimmy Heath
Pete Stark
Kobe Bryant
Mary Higgins Clark
January 1
January 2
January 3
January 4
January 5 – Betty Pat Gatliff , forensic artist (b. 1930 )[ 567]
January 6
January 7
January 8
January 9
January 10 – Ed Sprague Sr. , baseball pitcher (b. 1945 )[ 582]
January 11
January 12
January 14 – Steve Martin Caro , pop vocalist (b. 1948 )[ 587]
January 15 – Rocky Johnson , Canadian professional wrestler (b. 1944 )
January 19 – Jimmy Heath , jazz saxophonist (b. 1926 )
January 23 – Jim Lehrer , journalist, novelist and screenwriter (b. 1934 )[ 588]
January 24 – Pete Stark , businessman and politician (b. 1931 )[ 589] [ 590]
January 26
January 28 – Chris Doleman , American Hall of Fame football player (b. 1961 )[ 595]
January 31 – Mary Higgins Clark , author (b. 1927 )[ 596] [ 597]
Kirk Douglas
Katherine Johnson
Freeman Dyson
February 3
February 5
February 7 – Orson Bean , actor and comedian (b. 1928 )[ 604]
February 8 – Robert Conrad , actor (b. 1935 )[ 605]
February 9 – Paula Kelly , dancer, singer, and actress (b. 1943 )[ 606]
February 10 – Lyle Mays , jazz pianist and composer (b. 1953 )[ 607]
February 14 – Lynn Cohen , actress (b. 1933 )[ 608]
February 16 – Larry Tesler , computer scientist (b. 1945 )[ 609]
February 17
February 19 – Pop Smoke , rapper (b. 1998 )[ 612]
February 24
February 27
February 28 – Freeman Dyson , British-born American physicist and mathematician (b. 1923 )[ 618]
February 29 – Bill Bunten , politician (b. 1930 )[ 619]
James Lipton
Kenny Rogers
Bill Withers
March 1 – Jack Welch , businessman, engineer and writer (b. 1935 )[ 620]
March 2 – James Lipton , television host (b. 1926 )[ 621]
March 6 – McCoy Tyner , jazz pianist (b. 1938 )[ 622]
March 11 – Charles Wuorinen , American composer (b. 1938 )[ 623]
March 16 – Stuart Whitman , American actor (b. 1928 )[ 624]
March 17
March 20 – Kenny Rogers , country singer and songwriter (b. 1938 )[ 628]
March 24
March 26 – Curly Neal , American basketball player with the Harlem Globetrotters (b. 1942 )[ 631]
March 27 – Joseph Lowery , minister and civil rights activist (b. 1921 )[ 632]
March 28 – Tom Coburn , politician and physician (b. 1948 )[ 633]
March 29
March 30
James Drury
Brian Dennehy
Shirley Knight
Sam Lloyd
April 1
April 4 – Tom Dempsey , American professional football player (b. 1947 )[ 646]
April 5 – Bobby Mitchell , American Hall of Fame professional football player. (b. 1935 )[ 647]
April 6
April 7
April 8 – Norman I. Platnick , American arachnologist and curator (b. 1951 )[ 653]
April 12 – Tarvaris Jackson , NFL Quarterback (b. 1983 )[ 654] [ 655]
April 14 – Hank Steinbrenner , American businessman and part owner of the New York Yankees (b. 1957 )[ 656]
April 15
April 16
April 18 – Paul H. O'Neill , American politician (b. 1935 )[ 662]
April 20 – Tom Lester , American actor and evangelist (b. 1938 )[ 663]
April 21 – Dimitri Diatchenko , American actor (b. 1968 )[ 664]
April 22
April 27
April 30 – Sam Lloyd , American actor, singer, and musician (b. 1963 )[ 669]
Little Richard
Jerry Stiller
Fred Willard
Oliver E. Williamson
Christo
May 3 – John Ericson , German-American actor (b. 1926 )[ 670]
May 4
May 7 – Mike Storen , American sports executive in basketball , baseball , and football .(b. 1935 )[ 673]
May 8 – Roy Horn , German-American magician (b. 1944 )[ 674]
May 9 – Little Richard , American singer, songwriter, and musician (b. 1932 )[ 675]
May 10 – Betty Wright , American soul and R&B singer (b. 1953 )[ 676]
May 11 – Jerry Stiller , American actor and comedian (b. 1927 )[ 677]
May 14
May 15
May 17
May 19 – Ravi Zacharias , Indian-born Canadian-American Christian apologist (b. 1946 )[ 684]
May 21 – Oliver E. Williamson , American economist (b. 1932 )[ 685]
May 22 – Jerry Sloan , American basketball player and coach (b. 1942 )[ 686]
May 24 – Jimmy Cobb , American jazz drummer (b. 1929 )[ 687]
May 25 – George Floyd , American truck driver and security guard, murder victim (b. 1973 )[ 688]
May 26 – Richard Herd , American actor (b. 1932 )[ 689]
May 27 – Larry Kramer , American author and LGBT rights activist (b. 1935 )[ 690]
May 30 – Bobby Morrow , American athlete (b. 1935 )[ 691]
May 31 – Christo , Bulgarian-American artist (b. 1935 )[ 692]
Wes Unseld
Carlos Ruiz Zafón
Freddy Cole
Carl Reiner
June 1 – Pat Dye , American football player, coach, and college athletics administrator (b. 1939 )[ 693]
June 2
June 4 – Pete Rademacher , Olympic boxing champion (b. 1928 )[ 696]
June 6 – Reche Caldwell , NFL Wide Receiver (b. 1979 )[ 697]
June 10 – Claudell Washington , American professional baseball outfielder (b. 1954 )[ 698]
June 11
June 13 – Dick Garmaker , basketball player (b. 1932 )[ 702]
June 17
June 19 – Carlos Ruiz Zafón , Spanish novelist (b. 1964 )[ 705]
June 26
June 27 – Freddy Cole , jazz singer and pianist (b. 1931 )[ 708]
June 28 – Rudolfo Anaya , author (b. 1937 )[ 709]
June 29
Charlie Daniels
Naya Rivera
Kelly Preston
Grant Imahara
John Lewis
July 1 – Hugh Downs , broadcaster and television personality (b. 1921 )[ 712]
July 2
July 5 – Nick Cordero , Broadway actor and singer (Bullets Over Broadway ) (A Bronx Tale ) (Waitress )(b. 1978 )[ 717]
July 6
July 8 – Naya Rivera , actress, model and singer (b. 1987 )[ 721]
July 12 – Kelly Preston , actress and model (b. 1962 )[ 722]
July 13
July 16 – Phyllis Somerville , actress (b. 1943 )[ 725]
July 17
July 20 – Michael Brooks , political commentator and talk show host (b. 1983 )[ 728]
July 21 – Annie Ross , Scottish-American singer and actress (b. 1930 )[ 729]
July 24 – Regis Philbin , actor, singer, and media personality (b. 1931 )[ 730]
July 25 – John Saxon , actor (b. 1936 )[ 731]
July 26 – Olivia de Havilland , British-born American actress (b. 1916 )[ 732]
July 30 – Herman Cain , businessman and politician (b. 1945 )[ 733]
Wilford Brimley
Chadwick Boseman
August 1 – Wilford Brimley , actor and singer (b. 1934 )[ 734]
August 2 – Leon Fleisher , American pianist (b. 1928 )[ 735]
August 3 – Shirley Ann Grau , American writer (b. 1929 )[ 736]
August 4 – Frances Allen , American computer scientist (b. 1932 )[ 737]
August 6 – Brent Scowcroft , diplomat (b. 1925 )[ 738]
August 9 – Kamala , American professional wrestler (b. 1950 )[ 739]
August 11
August 15 – Robert Trump , younger brother of Donald Trump (b. 1948 )[ 743]
August 16 – Xavier , wrestler (b. 1977)[ 744]
August 18 – Jack Sherman , American guitarist (b. 1956 )[ 745]
August 23 – Lori Nelson , American actress and model (b. 1933 )[ 746]
August 26
August 28 – Chadwick Boseman , actor (b. 1976 )[ 749]
August 29 – Clifford Robinson , American basketball player (b. 1966 )[ 750]
August 31 – Tom Seaver , American baseball player (b. 1944 )[ 751]
David Graeber
Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Eddie Van Halen
Conchata Ferrell
Rhonda Fleming
James Randi
MF Doom
October 2 – Bob Gibson , American baseball player (b. 1935 )[ 770]
October 3 – Charlie Haeger , American baseball player (b. 1983 )[ 771]
October 6
October 8
October 11 – Joe Morgan , American baseball player (b. 1943 )[ 776]
October 12
October 14 – Rhonda Fleming , American actress (b. 1923 )[ 779]
October 20 – James Randi , Canadian-American magician and skeptic (b. 1928 )[ 780]
October 21 – Marge Champion , American dancer and actress (b. 1919 )[ 781]
October 23 – Jerry Jeff Walker , American singer-songwriter (b. 1942 )
October 25 – Diane di Prima , American poet (b. 1934 )[ 782]
October 28 – Leanza Cornett , model (Miss America 1993), TV host and actress (b. 1971 )[ 783]
October 29 – Angelika Amon , Austrian-American molecular and cell biologist (b. 1967 )[ 784]
October 31 – MF Doom , British-born American rapper and record producer (b. 1971 )[ 785]
Alex Trebek
November 1
November 2 – Robert Sam Anson , journalist and author (b. 1945 )[ 788]
November 3 – Elsa Raven , actress (b. 1929 )[ 789]
November 4 – John Meyer , football player and coach (b. 1942 )[ 790]
November 5 – Len Barry , singer (b. 1942 )[ 791]
November 6
November 7 – Norm Crosby , actor and comedian (b. 1927 )[ 794]
November 8 – Alex Trebek , Canadian-born game show host (Jeopardy! ) (b. 1940 )[ 795]
November 10 – Tom Heinsohn , Hall of Fame basketball player, coach, and broadcaster (b. 1934 )[ 796]
November 17 – Walt Davis , American athlete (b. 1931 )[ 797]
November 23
November 27 – Tony Hsieh , Internet entrepreneur (b. 1973 ) [ 801]
Chuck Yeager
Charley Pride
December 1 – Arnie Robinson , American athlete (b. 1948 )[ 802]
December 2
December 4 – David Lander , American actor (Laverne & Shirley ) (b. 1947 )[ 806]
December 5 – Martin Sandoval , politician (b. 1964 )[ 807]
December 6 – Paul Sarbanes , American politician and attorney (b. 1933 )[ 808]
December 7
December 9 – Ray Perkins , American football player and coach (b. 1941 )[ 811]
December 10
December 12 – Charley Pride , American singer, musician and guitarist (b. 1934 )[ 814]
December 16 – Lorenzo Taliaferro , football player (b. 1991 )[ 815]
December 20 – Ezra Vogel , American sociologist (b. 1930 )[ 816]
December 21 – Kevin Greene , hall of fame football player (b. 1962 )[ 817]
December 22 – Leslie West , guitarist and songwriter (b. 1945 )[ 818]
December 23 – Frankie Randall , boxer (b. 1961 )[ 819]
December 25 – Barry Lopez , author (b. 1945 )[ 820]
December 26 – Brodie Lee , professional wrestler and actor (b. 1979 )[ 821]
December 29 – Joe Louis Clark , educator (b. 1938 )[ 822]
December 30 – Samuel Little , American serial killer; the confirmed most prolific serial killer U.S. history (b. 1940 )[ 823]
December 31 – Dick Thornburgh , Governor of Pennsylvania (1979–1987) and United States Attorney General (1988–1991) (b. 1932 )[ 824]
Specific situations and issues [ edit ]
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^ Falih Hassan; Alissa J. Rubin (January 1, 2020). "Iraqi Protesters Ending Standoff at U.S. Embassy, on Orders From Militia Leaders" . The New York Times .
^ Brenden O'Brien (December 24, 2019). "Recreational marijuana becomes legal in Illinois on New Year's Day" . Reuters .
^ "Overtime rules, lower Chinese tariffs and more: 6 new regulations taking effect Jan. 1" . finance.yahoo.com . December 30, 2019.
^ "Public Domain Day 2020" . web.law.duke.edu . Retrieved March 22, 2021 .
^ "Twitter Trends with World War III after Assassination of Iraqi Commander in US Airstrike" . News18 . January 3, 2019.
^ Golden Globes 2020: Where to watch, date, start time and nominations Jennifer Bisset, Cnet.com, retrieved December 31, 2019
^ "On eve of Manhattan sex assault trial, Harvey Weinstein charged with 2013 attacks on women in Los Angeles" . January 6, 2020.
^ "Number of US troops wounded in Iran attack now at 110: Pentagon" . France 24 . February 22, 2020. Retrieved February 28, 2020 .
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^ "House passes War Powers Resolution in rebuke of Trump's actions against Iran" . Fox News . January 9, 2020.
^ "Justice Dept. winds down Clinton-related inquiry once championed by Trump. It found nothing of consequence" . The Washington Post . January 9, 2020. Retrieved January 10, 2020 .
^ "Women now outnumber men in the American workforce for the first time since the Great Recession" . Business Insider . January 10, 2020.
^ Quake-stunned Puerto Rico hit by another 5.9-magnitude shock NBC News, January 11, 2020
^ At least 7 dead as storms stretch across South BY TAL AXELROD, The Hill, January 11, 2020
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^ Sanders-Warren tension dominates final debate before Iowa caucuses CBS News, January 15, 2020
^ "Historic" WNBA labor deal to hike average salary to $130,000, provide paid maternity leave CBS News, January 14, 2020
^ 60 People Treated for Skin Irritation After a Plane Dumps Fuel Over School Near LAX By Jonathan Lloyd and Patrick Healy, NBC 4 News, January 14, 2020 California elementary school students hurt after plane dumps fuel over playground; more than 50 people treated By Louis Casiano, Fox News, January 14, 2020
^ Wearden, Graeme (January 15, 2020). "US and China sign Phase One trade deal, but experts are sceptical - business live" . The Guardian .
^ Donnan, Shawn; Wingrove, Josh; Mohsin, Saleha (January 15, 2020). "U.S. and China Sign Phase One of Trade Deal" . Bloomberg.com .
^ Amanda Holpuch (January 16, 2020). "Trump impeachment trial begins as Schiff reads out charges against president – live" . The Guardian . London.
^ "Thousands of gun-rights activists converge in Virginia's capital to protest proposed gun laws" . CBS News . January 20, 2020.
^ "CDC confirms first US case of Wuhan coronavirus" . CNN . January 21, 2020. Retrieved January 21, 2020 .
^ "Raiders officially say goodbye to Oakland, relocate to Las Vegas for 2020 and beyond" . CBSSports.com . January 22, 2020. Retrieved January 27, 2020 .
^ "Trump vows support for anti-abortion movement at March for Life rally" . CNN . January 24, 2020.
^ "NBA, sports worlds mourn the death of Kobe Bryant" . ESPN . January 26, 2020. Retrieved September 21, 2020 .
^ "15-Time Grammy(R) Award Winner Alicia Keys Returns as Host of "The 62nd Annual Grammy Awards(R)" " . The Futon Critic . November 14, 2019. Retrieved March 22, 2021 .
^ "Fotis Dulos, charged with killing his estranged wife, dies 2 days after suicide attempt" . NBC News . January 30, 2020.
^ "Statement from the Press Secretary Regarding the President's Coronavirus Task Force" . whitehouse.gov – via National Archives .
^ "Trump signs US Mexico Canada Agreement" . BBC News . January 29, 2020. Retrieved January 31, 2020 .
^ "CDC confirms first human-to-human transmission of coronavirus in US" . CNBC . January 30, 2020. Retrieved January 30, 2020 .
^ Moritsugu, Ken; Miller, Zeke (January 31, 2020). "US bars foreigners coming from China for now over virus fear" . AP . Retrieved March 24, 2020 .
^ Cheney, Kyle; Bresnahan, John; Desiderio, Andrew (January 31, 2020). "Republicans defeat Democratic bid to hear witnesses in Trump trial" . Politico. Retrieved February 1, 2020 .
^ "US travel ban: Trump puts restrictions on six more countries" . BBC News . January 31, 2020. Retrieved February 1, 2020 .
^ "Trump signs order creating White House position focused on human trafficking" . Fortune . January 31, 2020. Retrieved February 1, 2020 .
^ Democrats’ Iowa caucus result delayed after count chaos by Demetri Sevastopulo & Adam Samson, Financial Times, February 5, 2020
^ "Trump's 2020 State of the Union address" . Politico . February 4, 2020. Retrieved February 4, 2020 .
^ "Trump acquitted of both charges in Senate impeachment trial" . CNBC . February 5, 2020.
^ "Pizza-toting robots: U.S. lets Nuro deploy driverless delivery vehicles" . Reuters . February 6, 2020. Retrieved February 8, 2020 .
^ Oscars 2020: Everything You Need To Know BY ALLYSSIA ALLEYNE, Vogue Britain, December 3, 2019
^ "First 24-hour news channel "by and for" African Americans set to launch during Black History Month" . NBC News . February 10, 2020. Retrieved February 10, 2020 .
^ "McClatchy, second-largest U.S. newspaper chain, files for bankruptcy" . CBS News . February 13, 2020. Retrieved February 13, 2020 .
^ Morgan Winsor. "14 Americans evacuated from cruise ship in Japan test positive for novel coronavirus" . ABC News .
^ Boy Scouts of America, hobbled by multiple sex-abuse lawsuits, files for bankruptcy protection NBC News, February 18, 2020
^ Pier 1 Is Officially For Sale After Filing For Chapter 11 Bankruptcy by Sergei Klebnikov, Forbes, February 17, 2020
^ Jeff Bezos donates $10B to fight climate change By Chris Ciaccia, Fox News, February 17, 2020
^ "Utah Senate supports bill decriminalising polygamy" . BBC News . February 19, 2020. Retrieved February 19, 2020 .
^ "The Latest: Roger Stone to remain free pending sentencing" . ABC News . The Associated Press. November 15, 2019.
^ Wells Fargo to pay $3 billion over fake account scandal By Pete Williams, NBC News, February 21, 2020
^ "Amazon Prime Video Sets February 21 Debut for Al Pacino Conspiracy Thriller Series "Hunters" " . The Futon Critic . January 3, 2019.
^ Feindt, Casey (May 22, 2020). "GBI: William 'Roddie' Bryan Jr.'s crime 'helped cause the death of Ahmaud Arbery' " . First Coastal News . Retrieved May 25, 2020 .
^ "Harvey Weinstein found guilty at rape trial" . The Guardian . February 24, 2020. Retrieved February 24, 2020 .
^ "Amazon opens its first cashierless grocery store" . Tech Crunch. February 25, 2020. Retrieved February 26, 2020 .
^ "Bob Chapek named Walt Disney Co. CEO, replacing Bob Iger" . Los Angeles Times . February 25, 2020.
^ "California coronavirus case could be first spread within U.S community, CDC says" . Los Angeles Times . February 27, 2020.
^ "Dow plunges 1,100 points as the coronavirus sends the market tumbling into correction territory" . CNBC. February 27, 2020. Retrieved February 27, 2020 .
^ Marine commandant orders removal of Confederate paraphernalia at bases By Justin Wise, The Hill, February 27, 2020
^ "Catherine Pugh Sentenced To 3 Years In Prison In 'Healthy Holly' Scandal" . February 27, 2020.
^ U.S.-Taliban sign landmark agreement in bid to end America's longest war NBC News, February 29, 2020
^ "First coronavirus death in the U.S. happens in Washington state" . NBC News . February 29, 2020. Retrieved February 29, 2020 .
^ Sanders congratulates Biden on South Carolina win, shifts focus to Super Tuesday BY JULIA MANCHESTER, The Hill, February 29, 2020
^ Steyer drops out of 2020 race The Hill, February 29, 2020
^ "Buttigieg ends historic presidential campaign, urges unity" . AP. March 1, 2020. Retrieved March 2, 2020 .
^ Nashville tornado death toll rises to at least 24; dozens still missing Today (NBC News), March 4, 2020 Tennessee couple describes "flying in the air" during deadly tornado By DAVID BEGNAUD, CBS NEWS, March 4, 2020
^ Corasaniti, Nick; Burns, Alexander (March 2, 2020). "Amy Klobuchar Drops Out of Presidential Race and Plans to Endorse Biden" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved March 2, 2020 .
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^ The 2020 Global Presidential Primary Results Are In! posted by DA NEWS, DA NEWS EDITOR, 23 March 2020
^ Coronavirus updates: U.S. death toll rises to 11 with California's first death CBS News, March 4, 2020
^ California governor declares state of emergency over coronavirus The Hill, March 4, 2020
^ After Billionaire Bloomberg Ends Bid to Buy Election, Biden Endorsement Shows 'Where the Big Money Is Going' byJulia Conley, Common Dreams, March 4, 2020
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link )
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