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The campaign against Fauci, who has been one of America’s most highly regarded public health officials for decades and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by George W. Bush, tells an extraordinary tale of administration priorities amid a national crisis and of the brutal approach it uses to discredit any official who challenges Trump’s false narratives.
On Sunday, a White House official told CNN that several top aides to Trump were concerned about “about the number of times Dr. Fauci has been wrong on things” citing his past comments on the threat from the virus and the use of masks. Sources told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins on Monday that the President, who hasn’t met Fauci for weeks, was annoyed with the top infectious disease specialist’s public statements and “good press.”
Fauci has contradicted Trump’s false claims that the United States is leading the world in the coronavirus fight. He’s also refuted the President’s statement that 99% of Covid-19 cases are “totally harmless.” Last week, Fauci said that some states had opened too early — a position supported by the evidence of fast-rising Covid-19 infections.
Fauci’s positions have evolved with the science — including his stance on masks, which he initially said weren’t proven to be beneficial in everyday life and should be reserved for health care workers. The White House apparently sees no irony in attacking his track record when the President spent weeks denying the virus would be a problem, praising China for its handling of it and predicting a “miracle” that would cause it to disappear.
Trump on Monday reacted to the growing calamity across southern states that is causing governors and mayors to slow or reverse openings by retweeting a claim by a supporter that “Everyone is lying” about the pandemic — namely “The CDC, Media, Democrats, our Doctors.” The retweet was emblematic of how Trump has sought to cast blame elsewhere for his negligence during the pandemic rather than following science to address the root causes of the worsening situation.
Trump’s election worries drive opening policy
Trump’s fixation on his electoral prospects and desire to ignite an economic comeback were behind his assurances that it was safe to ease stay-at-home orders without waiting for infection curves to properly flatten. The push was eagerly embraced by some GOP governors, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is now facing heavy criticism as his state sees runaway infection rates.
The alarming acceleration of the pandemic, with average countrywide new cases hitting 60,000 a day, suggests that the dark days endured by New York and New Jersey months ago may not turn out to be America’s most harrowing tussle with the virus.
New reports are emerging of full intensive care units, a shortage of protective equipment for front-line medical workers and problems with an underpowered national testing system — exactly the deficiencies that complicated the early fight against Covid-19.
Trump’s earlier impatience may come back to bite him less than four months from Election Day. Some governors and city mayors are slowing or reversing reopenings. Economic and social damage from the pandemic could therefore last far longer than originally hoped as news of job losses in recent days indicates that furloughs could turn into permanent unemployment for thousands of Americans.
Administration demands school openings without a plan
Every parent in America is fretting that kids could be out of school for many more months, a scenario that would have grave educational, social and economic consequences.
“The rule should be that kids go back to school this fall. And where there are little flare-ups or hot spots, that can be dealt with on a school-by-school or a case-by-case basis,” DeVos told CNN’s Dana Bash, minimizing the scale of the world’s worst single-nation coronavirus outbreak.
“It’s definitely not safe to open schools until we get the caseloads to a decent level. That’s not going to happen any time soon,” said Dr. Uché Blackstock, associate professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at NYU School of Medicine, on CNN’s “New Day” on Sunday.
Trump, belatedly, wears a mask
Trump, meanwhile, was basking in lionizing praise from campaign advisers for allowing himself to appear on camera wearing a mask for the first time after months discrediting calls by medical experts on face-coverings while more than 135,000 Americans died and more than 3 million were infected by the virus.
The White House’s tendency to cast blame spilled over in a tirade by one of the President’s top trade advisers, Peter Navarro, on Sunday.
“We were cruising along, until the Chinese Communist Party basically hit us with that deadly virus, that weaponized virus. And I don’t think it’s any coincidence that the first year that China had a down economy was the same year now that they’re coming after us in all sorts of ways,” Navarro said on Fox News.
“And Joe Biden is the candidate of the Chinese Communist Party.”
Biden’s campaign, meanwhile, blasted Trump’s late adoption of the mask during a visit to wounded service members on Saturday by saying he “wasted four months that Americans have been making sacrifices by stoking divisions and actively discouraging people from taking a very basic step to protect each other. By contrast, Joe Biden has led by example from the start.”
Florida’s grim new record
Florida, which is supposed to host the Republican National Convention next month, reported 15,299 new Covid cases on Sunday, with a test positivity rate of 19.6%. Florida Rep. Donna Shalala, a freshman Democrat and former secretary of Health and Human Services under President Bill Clinton, said the virus was out of control partly because the governor, a Trump ally, would not tell everyone to wear masks, adding, “This is an American tragedy,” in an interview with CNN.
Around 40 hospitals across Florida have no ICU beds available with more than 7,000 people in hospitals statewide with Covid-19.
Another state that is suffering is Georgia, where Republican Gov. Brian Kemp even angered Trump with the speed of his state openings. Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms on Friday rolled back the city’s reopening to Phase One because of an alarming rise in new infections, accusing Kemp of opening the state in a “reckless manner.”
Charts of Georgia’s progression rates show earlier sacrifices amid stay-at-home orders have been squandered. New cases were flat through May and half of June until the curve of infections started to rise sharply. Texas, which also pushed a quick return to business, and reported its own single one-day high in infections on Saturday of 10,351 added another 8,196 cases on Sunday.
These concerning numbers explain growing pessimism about the surprisingly strong jobs and economic rebound in the US in recent weeks — a reality that will dismay Trump, who bought into claims by son-in-law Jared Kushner that the economy could be “rocking” by mid-July well before the election.
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