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Coronavirus US live: Fauci testifies before Senate on how to safely reopen America Coronavirus US live: Fauci testifies rush to reopen would have 'serious' consequences
(32 minutes later)
Fauci summarizes fourfold strategic plan public health experts are executing and says clinical trials of a vaccines are underway in the US now Public health expert tells Senate if US opens prematurely, there will be ‘spikes’ in coronavirus cases that could turn into larger outbreaks
Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders just asked Dr Anthony Fauci about the death toll from teh coronavirus in the US, which now officially stands a little over 80,000.
To begin with, however, Sanders, who recently dropped out of the 2020 election race to be the Democratic nominee, said: “It is sad to say we have a president who from Day One downplayed the dangers of the pandemic.”
He added that Donald Trump “told us the crisis would be over in a few months and we didn’t need to worry, he fired members of the government who wanted to move aggressively and he cut funding to the World Health Organization (WHO).”
Sanders then said that the official statistic is that 80,000 Americans have died, but there are some leading epidemiologists who believe the real death toll is higher, perhaps even 50% higher, what did Fauci think of that, he asked.
Fauci said: “I’m not sure if it’s going to be 50% higher, but most of us feel the number of deaths are likely to be higher.”
Fauci said that especially in New York City [where the official death toll has surpassed 20,000] there may have been people who died at home who died of Covid-19 but were not counted as Covid deaths.
“The number is almost certainly higher,” Fauci said.
Washington state Senator Patty Murray just said to Anthony Fauci: “You’ve warned of needless suffering and death but the president is giving the opposite message” and asked him for his view on reopening the US.
Fauci said: “What we have worked out is a guideline framework for how you safely open America again ... I get concerned if you have a situation where you are not seeing gradual, over 14-day, decrease [in new cases of coronavirus].”
If such a decrease is seen, that may allow an early phase of gradual reopening, Fauci said, with further phases and “checkpoints” on elements such as hospital capacity, testing and other measures to deal with a subsequent new outbreak.
“If places jump over those checkpoints and prematurely open up without being able to respond, we will start to see little spikes” that could turn into larger outbreaks, Fauci warned.
Murray asked: “So if they don’t go by the guidelines consequences could be dire?”
Fauci said: “The consequences could be serious.”
Senate health committee chairman, Lamar Alexander, just asked public health expert Anthony Fauci: “Let’s look down the road three months”, what should happen when there will be about 5,000 campuses across the country and 20,000 public schools waiting to welcome millions of students back in August?
Fauci: “I would have to be very realistic...in this case the idea of having treatments available or a vaccine to facilitate the re-entry of students would be a bit of a bridge too far.”
Fauci said that remdesivir, the drug recently given emergency approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), showed some efficacy but it was “modest” and used in patients severely ill in hospital.
So Fauci has no definitive solution for students and teachers eager to get back to a normal education system.
Even as Donald Trump urges getting people back to work and reopening the economy, analysis shows thousands of people are getting sick from Covid-19 on the job.Even as Donald Trump urges getting people back to work and reopening the economy, analysis shows thousands of people are getting sick from Covid-19 on the job.
Recent figures show a surge of infections in meatpacking and poultry-processing plants, The Associated Press reports.Recent figures show a surge of infections in meatpacking and poultry-processing plants, The Associated Press reports.
There’s been a surge of new cases among construction workers in Austin, Texas, where that sector recently returned to work.There’s been a surge of new cases among construction workers in Austin, Texas, where that sector recently returned to work.
The White House has proved vulnerable, with staff testing positive.The White House has proved vulnerable, with staff testing positive.
The developments underscore the high stakes for communities nationwide as they gradually loosen restrictions on business.The developments underscore the high stakes for communities nationwide as they gradually loosen restrictions on business.
“The people who are getting sick right now are generally people who are working,” Dr. Mark Escott, a regional health official, told Austin’s city council. “That risk is going to increase the more people are working.”“The people who are getting sick right now are generally people who are working,” Dr. Mark Escott, a regional health official, told Austin’s city council. “That risk is going to increase the more people are working.”
There are plenty of new infections outside the workplace in nursing homes, and among retired and unemployed people, particularly in densely populated places such as New York City, Chicago, Philadelphia and urban parts of New Jersey and Massachusetts.There are plenty of new infections outside the workplace in nursing homes, and among retired and unemployed people, particularly in densely populated places such as New York City, Chicago, Philadelphia and urban parts of New Jersey and Massachusetts.
Yet of the 15 US counties with the highest per-capita infection rates between April 28 and May 5, all are homes to meatpacking and poultry-processing plants or state prisons, according to data compiled by the AP.Yet of the 15 US counties with the highest per-capita infection rates between April 28 and May 5, all are homes to meatpacking and poultry-processing plants or state prisons, according to data compiled by the AP.
The county with the highest per-capita rate was Tennessee’s Trousdale County, where nearly 1,300 inmates and 50 staffers recently tested positive at the privately run Trousdale Turner Correctional Center.The county with the highest per-capita rate was Tennessee’s Trousdale County, where nearly 1,300 inmates and 50 staffers recently tested positive at the privately run Trousdale Turner Correctional Center.
The No. 2 county on AP’s list is Nobles County in Minnesota, which now has about 1,100 cases, compared to two in mid-April. There and Nebraska’s Dakota County and Indiana’s Cass County are home to huge meat-processing industries.The No. 2 county on AP’s list is Nobles County in Minnesota, which now has about 1,100 cases, compared to two in mid-April. There and Nebraska’s Dakota County and Indiana’s Cass County are home to huge meat-processing industries.
Also hard hit by recent infections are counties in Virginia, Delaware and Georgia where poultry-processing plants are located.Also hard hit by recent infections are counties in Virginia, Delaware and Georgia where poultry-processing plants are located.
In New York, the hardest-hit state during most of the pandemic, people staying at home are still getting sick.In New York, the hardest-hit state during most of the pandemic, people staying at home are still getting sick.
Meanwhile in Pennsylvania, of 2,578 new cases between May 4 and May 6, more than 40% were people living in long-term care facilities.Meanwhile in Pennsylvania, of 2,578 new cases between May 4 and May 6, more than 40% were people living in long-term care facilities.
And across the country many health workers were among the earliest Americans to test positive. They continue to be infected in large numbers.And across the country many health workers were among the earliest Americans to test positive. They continue to be infected in large numbers.
CDC director Robert Redfield says about the US’s coronavirus crisis: “We are not out of the woods yet.”CDC director Robert Redfield says about the US’s coronavirus crisis: “We are not out of the woods yet.”
He said the CDC has conducted a state by state examination of testing capacity. “We’re working directly with the states’ public health leaders” to find out what they’re doing and what they need, Redfield said.He said the CDC has conducted a state by state examination of testing capacity. “We’re working directly with the states’ public health leaders” to find out what they’re doing and what they need, Redfield said.
This may be an allusion to reports last week that after the Trump administration shelved the CDC’s big report on recommendations for how to reopen the US safely, especially in relation to businesses and schools, that CDC officials were prepared to skirt Washington and take their advice direct to state governors and their public health departments - presumably those that were willing to listen, at least.This may be an allusion to reports last week that after the Trump administration shelved the CDC’s big report on recommendations for how to reopen the US safely, especially in relation to businesses and schools, that CDC officials were prepared to skirt Washington and take their advice direct to state governors and their public health departments - presumably those that were willing to listen, at least.
“Rapid, extensive, widely available and timely testing is essential,” Redfield said.“Rapid, extensive, widely available and timely testing is essential,” Redfield said.
Fauci said that clinical trials are underway in the US now. They will move to the next phases of testing in the lates spring and early summer.Fauci said that clinical trials are underway in the US now. They will move to the next phases of testing in the lates spring and early summer.
“If we are successful, we hope to know that by late fall or early winter,” he said.“If we are successful, we hope to know that by late fall or early winter,” he said.
That doesn’t mean a vaccine is ready for the public, that means results from the clinical trials.That doesn’t mean a vaccine is ready for the public, that means results from the clinical trials.
Fauci just avoided repeating his warnings from last night about opening the country up too soon.Fauci just avoided repeating his warnings from last night about opening the country up too soon.
Now it’s onto the CDC director Robert Redfield’s opening statement.Now it’s onto the CDC director Robert Redfield’s opening statement.
Fauci has opened by summarizing the fourfold strategic plan the public health experts are executing: improve knowledge, develop new diagnostics, finding new therapeutic treatments, and develop a vaccine.Fauci has opened by summarizing the fourfold strategic plan the public health experts are executing: improve knowledge, develop new diagnostics, finding new therapeutic treatments, and develop a vaccine.
There are a number of vaccine programs working hard to find a way to inoculate against Covid-19.There are a number of vaccine programs working hard to find a way to inoculate against Covid-19.
He’s now going into some medical details.He’s now going into some medical details.
Patty Murray, Democratic Senator of Washington State, has opened with a blistering statement. She said that families across America are counting on Congress to tell them the truth about coronavirus.Patty Murray, Democratic Senator of Washington State, has opened with a blistering statement. She said that families across America are counting on Congress to tell them the truth about coronavirus.
“It’s clear they will not get it from President Trump. Lives are at stake. The president is not telling the truth,” she said“It’s clear they will not get it from President Trump. Lives are at stake. The president is not telling the truth,” she said
She called on Congress to “dig into the facts” of what went wrong in the handling of the coronavirus crisis in the US.She called on Congress to “dig into the facts” of what went wrong in the handling of the coronavirus crisis in the US.
She called the federal government’s response “a disaster on its own”, citing “delay, allowing inaccurate antibody tests to flood the market” as well as “political interference’ in the procurement of medical equipment, and an administration that “promoted dangerous, unproven treatments” - by which she probably means the president touting hydroxychloroquine as a “miracle” treatment and then musing at a White House press briefing whether taking disinfectant internally could be looked at by his health experts as a treatment - which disinfectant manufacturers promptly warned is potentially deadly.She called the federal government’s response “a disaster on its own”, citing “delay, allowing inaccurate antibody tests to flood the market” as well as “political interference’ in the procurement of medical equipment, and an administration that “promoted dangerous, unproven treatments” - by which she probably means the president touting hydroxychloroquine as a “miracle” treatment and then musing at a White House press briefing whether taking disinfectant internally could be looked at by his health experts as a treatment - which disinfectant manufacturers promptly warned is potentially deadly.
She then added that the CDC spent weeks preparing guidance for safely reopening the county “and the Trump administration tossed it in the trash can for being ‘too prescriptive’.She then added that the CDC spent weeks preparing guidance for safely reopening the county “and the Trump administration tossed it in the trash can for being ‘too prescriptive’.
“Since the committee last heard from these witnesses on March 13 we have seen over 80,000 deaths nationally...still Trump continues to ignore the facts and the experts who say we are nowhere near where we need to be to safely reopen,” she said.“Since the committee last heard from these witnesses on March 13 we have seen over 80,000 deaths nationally...still Trump continues to ignore the facts and the experts who say we are nowhere near where we need to be to safely reopen,” she said.
That’s what Senate committee chairman Lamar Alexander just said. He warned against “finger pointing”, saying that “most of us” underestimated the viciousness of coronavirus and just how very contagious it is.That’s what Senate committee chairman Lamar Alexander just said. He warned against “finger pointing”, saying that “most of us” underestimated the viciousness of coronavirus and just how very contagious it is.
CNN flashed up a stark note last night. On March 11, the death toll from coronavirus in the US was 38. In just two months it went from that number to the death toll by May 11 of 80,000 souls in America.CNN flashed up a stark note last night. On March 11, the death toll from coronavirus in the US was 38. In just two months it went from that number to the death toll by May 11 of 80,000 souls in America.
“Even the experts underestimated Covid-19,” Alexander said.“Even the experts underestimated Covid-19,” Alexander said.
“We also intend to prepare for the next pandemic, which we know is coming.”“We also intend to prepare for the next pandemic, which we know is coming.”
The hearing has begun. Committee chairman Senator Lamar Alexander is chairing the hearing remotely, from home in Tennessee, and has just popped up on our screens.The hearing has begun. Committee chairman Senator Lamar Alexander is chairing the hearing remotely, from home in Tennessee, and has just popped up on our screens.
Weirdly, the screen just flashed to Bernie Sanders trying to jam earphones into his ears in order, like the rest of us, to tune in remotely. There are no members of the public permitted in the hearing room on Capitol Hill, which looks sparse and sad!Weirdly, the screen just flashed to Bernie Sanders trying to jam earphones into his ears in order, like the rest of us, to tune in remotely. There are no members of the public permitted in the hearing room on Capitol Hill, which looks sparse and sad!
We’re awaiting Anthony Fauci’s opening statement, in expectation that he is going to double down on his stance, which splits dramatically with Donald Trump (his ultimate boss) on the pace at which the US should reopen for business and societal movements.We’re awaiting Anthony Fauci’s opening statement, in expectation that he is going to double down on his stance, which splits dramatically with Donald Trump (his ultimate boss) on the pace at which the US should reopen for business and societal movements.
Fauci is expected to warn, as he emailed to the New York Times last night, that “needless suffering and death” will result if states open too soon.Fauci is expected to warn, as he emailed to the New York Times last night, that “needless suffering and death” will result if states open too soon.
We’re getting ready to cover the Senate health committee hearing at 10am ET, where public health experts Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Stephen Hahn, commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and Brett Giroir, assistant secretary for health will all testify.
At 2pm ET, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany plans a press briefing.
Yet more from the president:
This tweet may have been sent in response to a Washington Post piece this morning, which said “Governors collectively have been winning widespread praise from the public for their handling of the coronavirus outbreak, often with the kind of bipartisan approval that has eluded President Trump. But a large-scale Post-Ipsos poll finds that some Republican governors who have embraced reopening their states are struggling to achieve that consensus.”
It’s fair to say there isn’t much of a consensus, anywhere, over the federal government being a help to governors facing down the coronavirus crisis.
Just for one example, the Democratic governor of Michigan, Gretchen Whitmer, recently told a Daily Beast podcast, The New Abnormal with Rick Wilson and Molly Jong-Fast, about a call to the White House which convinced her she needed to strike out on her own:
Just for another example, Larry Hogan of Maryland, a Republican, has spoken publicly about having to hide test kits bought from South Korea, in case the federal government tried to take them.
…in case anyone had found themselves distracted by, well, the utter chaos everywhere else.
The justices are working remotely like the rest of us and today they will hear questions regarding attempts by Congress and New York state to obtain Donald Trump’s financial records, regarding whether he is profiting off the presidency and whether hush money payments to women who claim affairs with him involved the falsifying of business records.
Trump’s lawyers say he doesn’t have to surrender such records while in office, and indeed cannot be prosecuted for anything while in office, even shooting someone on Fifth Avenue. It means they think the president is above the law and it’s a, uh, controversial claim.
But the court has a conservative majority and there are off-ramps available short of stoking an all-out constitutional crisis over the power of the presidency in a democracy, as this fine analysis from Amelia Thomson-Deveaux at fivethirtyeight.com points out.
I previewed the day for the Guardian, and contacted Sidney Blumenthal, formerly an aide to Bill Clinton during his impeachment drama, now a biographer of Abraham Lincoln, for comment:
Here’s the whole piece:
Vice President Mike Pence is reportedly to maintaining distance “for the immediate future” from Donald Trump, after consulting with the White House medical unit, a senior administration official told CNN, which adds that it’s not yet clear exactly how long Pence will stay away from the president.
Pence’s office did not respond to a CNN request for comment, the news network reports.
Pence did not turn up to Trump’s press conference in the White House rose garden last evening. Trump apparently will keep in touch with his Veep mainly by telephone.
Meanwhile, there’s this:
And here’s a comment from Jeremy Diamond, who was one of the bylines on the CNN story:
Vice President Mike Pence is going to adjust his movements following the news last Friday that his press secretary Katie Miller tested positive for coronavirus.
It’s emerging right now that Pence will now avoid close contact with Donald Trump, maintaining distance from the president after Pence’s possible exposure. There were reports over the weekend that Pence would go into quarantine, but then reports to the contrary, CNN just reported.
Pence has not been wearing a mask in public around the White House. It’s not clear if he was exempted from the new rule put in place yesterday that those entering the West Wing must wear a mask. Trump was exempted.
Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, has been speaking to ABC News’ Good Morning America.
If there was (were?) ever a gamut of issues to be run, he has been running it.
On Donald Trump’s claims about his administration’s coronavirus response, particularly over the availability of testing: “The truth is the truth … anyone can’t get a test around the country. ... He knew about this crisis all the way back in January and February. He’s been incompetent the way he responded.”
On campaigning in a pandemic and whether he should leave his basement in Delaware: “We’re on the campaign trail now. And everybody says you know Biden’s hidin’. Well let me tell you something – we’re doing very well! We’re following the guidelines of the medical professionals.”
On Trump’s attempts to make “Obamagate” a real thing: “I was aware that [the FBI] asked for an investigation [of Michael Flynn] but that’s all I know about it. Think about this, can you imagine any other president focusing on this at a moment when people are just absolutely concerned about their health, the health of their families? … We have an economic crisis, a health crisis, this is all about diverting attention. Focus on what’s in front of us. Get us out of this, Mr President.”
On people who believe Tara Reade, the former Senate staffer who has accused him of sexual assault, and therefore will not vote for him: “That’s their right … At the end of the day, the truth is the truth. And truth is, this never happened.”
Also this morning, former Georgia gubernatorial candidate, voting rights campaigner and contender to be named Biden’s vice-president Stacey Abrams is out with her endorsement of the former veep.
Here’s Daniel Strauss with more on the Reade story and how it is, to a degree, deepening splits in Democratic ranks:
An extraordinary intervention from Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell, who has told former president Barack Obama to “keep his mouth shut” over criticism of Donald Trump.
Last week, remarks by Obama were leaked to Yahoo News.
Speaking to alumni of his administration, the 44th president said he was worried about the “rule of law”, in light of the justice department’s decision to drop its case against former national security adviser Michael Flynn. That’s the issue at the heart of Trump’s attempts to gin up an “Obamagate” scandal, which on Tuesday morning he again claimed “makes Watergate look small time!”
Obama also said the response to the coronavirus pandemic had been “an absolute chaotic disaster”.
McConnell was speaking to Trump’s daughter-in-law Lara Trump in an online fundraiser on Monday night. Asked about Obama “slamming” the administration for its response to the coronavirus outbreak, he said: “I think President Obama should have kept his mouth shut.
“You know, we know he doesn’t like much this administration is doing. That’s understandable. But I think it’s a little bit classless frankly to critique an administration that comes after you.
“You had your shot. You were there for eight years. I think the tradition that the Bushes set up of not critiquing the president who comes after you is a good tradition.”
There is indeed a tradition of former presidents not commenting on or attacking their successors in the Oval Office, but Trump is, to put it lightly, not part of the informal club which currently includes Obama, George W Bush*, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter and has regularly attacked those who went before.
Plus, Obama’s views of Trump are pretty well known, if by indirect routes. For example, in a Hulu documentary about Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign against Trump, the Virginia senator Tim Kaine is seen to say the then president thinks Trump is a fascist.
In the remarks leaked to Yahoo News, Obama said he would be hitting the campaign trail for Joe Biden this fall. Biden leads Trump in swing states and national polls and Obama is a proven campaigner, to say the least. McConnell is presiding over a Republican Senate majority that looks increasingly at risk. Everything is politics, folks.
*Fun George W Bush note: the 43rd president is widely reported, while on the podium at Trump’s inauguration, to have leant over to a neighbour after the new president’s dystopian “American Carnage” speech and labelled it “some weird shit”. Which counts as commenting on a successor, if not, granted, in public
CBS News said it is fully backing its reporter Weijia Jiang, amid controversy after Donald Trump told Jiang, who is Asian American, to “ask China” about coronavirus deaths.
“We fully support Weijia Jiang, the WH team, and every journalist at CBS News,” CBS said in a statement, reported by CNN’s Brian Stelter. Their work is critical to democracy and furthers understanding for the American public every day.”
Trump’s comment to Jiang, which was condemned as racist by some commentators, came after the CBS journalist asked Trump why he continued to claim – wrongly – that the US was performing better than other countries in terms of testing for coronavirus.
“Why does that matter?” asked Jiang, who was born in China. “Why is this a global competition when, every day, Americans are still losing their lives?”
“They’re losing their lives everywhere in the world,” Trump said. “And maybe that’s a question you should ask China. Don’t ask me, ask China that question, OK?”
Shortly after the interchange, Trump abruptly ended the press conference.
On Tuesday morning Trump tweeted, perhaps in response to the incident:
Trump did not provide evidence regarding the anger of Asian Americans, or Chinese Americans.
More on Dr Anthony Fauci’s email to the New York Times and the prospects for the top public health expert’s Senate testimony today.
“The major message that I wish to convey to the Senate … committee,” Fauci wrote, “is the danger of trying to open the country prematurely. If we skip over the checkpoints in the guidelines to ‘Open America Again’, then we risk the danger of multiple outbreaks throughout the country. This will not only result in needless suffering and death, but would actually set us back on our quest to return to normal.”
As Sheryl Gay Stolberg put it in her report, “It is a message starkly at odds with the things-are-looking-up argument that President Trump has been trying to put out: that states are ready to reopen and the pandemic is under control.
Remember a few weeks ago, when Fauci confirmed reporting about a White House ignoring warnings about Covid-19 and we all thought the 79-year-old, just about the most trusted man in America having served Democrats and Republicans since 1984, was about to be fired?
I do, just about, and he wasn’t fired then. But as we know, Donald Trump is not a man who likes to be upstaged and to see others’ profiles grow larger than his, let alone see them played on Saturday Night Live by Brad Pitt while the president gets eviscerated by Alec Baldwin, again.
And though Fauci will testify remotely today, due to those White House coronavirus cases, he will be on a very big stage indeed.
Dr Stephen Hahn of the Food and Drug Administration and Dr Robert Redfield of the Centers for Disease Control and Protection will also testify remotely at the hearing, which will be chaired remotely by Lamar Alexander, a Tennessee Republican who had a staffer test positive and who made headlines on Sunday by questioning the administration’s ambitious timeline for a vaccine.
Here’s one Republican response to Fauci. It’s from Andy Biggs, a congressman from Arizona, a state which is pressing on with reopening despite, according to an NYT database, cases continuing to rise:
…and welcome to another day of coronavirus coverage in the US. The politics of it in a minute – the president is up and tweeting – but first as ever the figures from Johns Hopkins University:
US cases: 1,347,765
US deaths: 80,679
New York cases: 337,055
New York deaths: 26,988
I’ve singled out New York as the hardest-hit state but it is getting less hard hit, as Governor Andrew Cuomo said yesterday, outlining reopening plans for some regions, as Lauren Gambino reports here.
There’s news this morning too. As states try to reopen their economies, egged on by the administration, Dr Anthony Fauci, the public health expert who is in isolation after an outbreak of cases at the White House, will testify before the Senate today, remotely of course and to senators in masks, sitting six feet apart.
Fauci has told the New York Times: “The major message that I wish to convey … is the danger of trying to open the country prematurely. If we skip over the checkpoints in the guidelines … then we risk the danger of multiple outbreaks throughout the country. This will not only result in needless suffering and death, but would actually set us back on our quest to return to normal.””
Trump’s not going to like that, but it’s always nice to single out some non-Trump work before I get to him, so here’s Tom McCarthy on the race for a vaccine… and how Trump’s “America First” approach is slowing the global effort.
Try again: Richard Luscombe on the threat to Florida’s greyhounds. And Sam Levin from Los Angeles on a shocking case of death in the US immigration system:
And so to Trump.
He’s tweeting this morning on familiar subjects: “Obamagate” (here’s David Smith’s explainer), how Bill Maher “sucks” and how NBC host Chuck Todd “fails again”, and something about strong borders and “182 miles of Border Wall already built”. (That’s the wall that he said Mexico would pay for and, to put it very simply, isn’t being built along the whole border, which runs nearly 2,000 miles.)
Two key tweets for now: responding to conservative columnist John Solomon, he of the Ukraine affair, noting that Nancy Pelosi would be third in line to the presidency if Trump and Pence fell to Covid-19 – “Then we must be very careful. Crazy Nancy would be a total disaster, and the USA will never be a Communist Country!” – and calling reporters to whom Trump responded in a Rose Garden presser by walking out “Fake Journalists!”
Those were the salient lines of a chaotic Monday in Washington: after a rash of cases and with top experts isolated, the White House has instituted new rules including regarding the wearing of masks, but that does not apply to Trump.
And the press conference – a new low in Trump’s use of such occasions to bully, browbeat, distort or break the truth and attract accusations of racism, or if you support him, another successful battle with a perfidious foe.
It’s an election year, and some reports have Trump worried about his polling and considering campaign shakeups, so it will only get hotter from here.