A20 eZ re the washington post.friday, march 13 , 2020
The coronavirus outbreak
tanking stock markets. The
Washington Post reported
Wednesday that an angry
president ordered Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin to
press Powell to take more-
aggressive action to stimulate the
economy. Never mind that the
Fed’s first attempt to do so
recently did nothing to prevent
the markets from falling further.
The president spoke
Wednesday night about
forthcoming economic proposals
designed to aid companies and
individuals as they cope with the
financial burdens of the crisis.
Some things he can do by
executive action; others, such as
his call for payroll tax relief,
would require congressional
action and coordination with
congressional Democrats. On
Wednesday, House Democrats
outlined their own package of
economic assistance.
There is no more important
priority for the president now
than dealing with the
coronavirus. By his tweets, it is
evident he finds regular
distractions, including the
contest for the Democratic
presidential nomination. He has
chosen to be a frequent
commentator about the
Democratic race, a kibitzer and a
disrupter.
He has suggested that the
Democratic establishment has
robbed Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-
Vt.) of the nomination. He has
claimed that Sen. Elizabeth
Warren (D-Mass.) has helped
weaken Sanders and thereby
strengthened Joe Biden.
His Ukraine intervention was
designed to harm Biden, and now
it is all but certain that Biden will
be his opponent in the general
election. But before he gets to
that confrontation, he must deal
with the threats posed to the
country by the deadly
coronavirus.
“This is just a temporary
moment of time that we will
overcome together as a nation
and as a world,” Trump said from
the Oval Office on Wednesday
night.
That is everyone’s hope. And
along with that hope is a desire
for the president to provide the
leadership the moment
demands.
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president for more “historic”
steps.
Pence and those on the team
tasked with coordinating the
response are working
cooperatively with state and local
leaders, which is critical at this
moment. Meanwhile, the
president has called Gov. Jay
Inslee (D) of Washington, where
the outbreak has brought more
deaths than anywhere in the
country, “a snake.”
The president looks to blame
others. It’s correct that the
Chinese government made all
this worse by initially trying to
cover up the outbreak, which
contributed to the virus’s rapid
spreading there and now
around the world. But trying to
make this into some kind of
foreign invasion belies the
nature of the pandemic.
Trump blames Federal Reserve
Chair Jerome H. Powell for the
his impeachment and acquittal.
“The tests are all perfect, like the
letter was perfect,” he said. “The
transcription was perfect.”
Vice President Pence, who is in
charge of the overall federal
response to the pandemic, has
tried to project a sense of calm
and knowledgeability. He defers
as is necessary to the experts in
the government. But he also feels
a need constantly to praise the
president, as if Trump has truly
been the stable, guiding hand in
all this.
Immediately after Trump
spoke Wednesday night, the
White House and an official at
the Department of Homeland
Security clarified misleading or
incorrect statements made
during the speech. Asked about
this on Thursday morning on
CNN, Pence replied, “I don’t
think there was confusion,” a nd
he went on to praise the
response to it. He is a cheerleader
by nature, a president who is
more comfortable dealing in
exaggerations than facts. Trained
scientists and medical doctors in
government have sought to
provide realistic assessments to
the public. Trump has made false
predictions and statements that
contradict the experts.
Visiting the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention
last Friday, he said tests for the
virus were available to anyone
who wanted one, a demonstrably
false s tatement at a time when
the government was rushing to
get more tests out and available,
as other officials were
acknowledging.
Trump went on to say those
tests were totally reliable and, in
a statement that revealed his own
state of mind, drew a comparison
with his telephone call to the
Ukrainian president that led to
ban was taken unilaterally and
without consultation,” s aid the
statement signed by two leaders
of the E.U.
This has been described as
akin to President George W.
Bush’s “Katrina moment,” t he
botched response to the 2005
hurricane that flooded parts of
New Orleans. But for all the
devastation caused by that storm,
the coronavirus is far worse in its
impacts and disruptions, and the
consequences for Trump are
potentially enormous. Daily life
has been upended across the
country in ways unimaginable
when the virus began to hit
people. The president’s tweets,
meanwhile, swing from upbeat
claims to dire warnings to
medical advice.
This is a crisis not of the
president’s making, but Trump
has become the government’s
least credible leader in the
In times of
national crisis,
people look to the
president for
direction,
reassurance and
confidence.
President Trump’s
Oval Office speech
on Wednesday
night provided precisely the
opposite.
From the misstatements to the
omissions to his labored
demeanor, the president sent a
message that shook financial
markets, disrupted relations with
European allies, confused his
many viewers and undermined
the most precious commodity of
any president, his credibility.
With the stock markets
plunging into bear territory, the
health-care system struggling to
keep pace with the spreading
novel coronavirus and Americans
wondering what’s next, Trump is
dealing unsteadily with the
greatest crisis of his presidency.
The pandemic is a physical and
economic threat to the well-being
of millions of Americans. It also
has become a political threat to
the president’s hopes for a second
term.
Historians will eventually
assess the president’s prime-time
effort to calm a scared and
nervous nation that is taking
unprecedented steps to deal with
the coronavirus pandemic. In the
moment and in the immediate
aftermath of the speech, the
judgments were as harsh as at
any time in Trump’s presidency.
Almost everything that could
have gone wrong with the speech
did go wrong. Stock futures
began to crater as the president
was speaking. Government
officials were forced to correct
the mistakes Tr ump made in
describing the travel ban he was
imposing. Anyone looking for
information about the health-
care system’s capacity to respond
was left wanting.
Trump said that “we have been
in frequent contact with our
allies” a bout the crisis, but
European leaders were caught off
guard by the new travel
restrictions and issued a harsh
statement in response.
“The European Union
disapproves of the fact that the
U.S. decision to impose a travel
Trump’s O val O∞ce s peech was meant to calm and reassure. It did the opposite.
Dan Balz
The Take
Jason redmond/reuters
Bar patrons i n Seattle watch President T rump’s televised address to the nation Wednesday about the coronavirus crisis.
BY DAVID NAKAMURA,
LENA H. SUN
AND WILLIAM WAN
When President Trump an-
nounced n ew t ravel restrictions o n
Europe in a prime-time Oval Office
address Wednesday, many nation-
al-security experts, including
some who worked in his White
House, declared the move proba-
bly would do little to contain the
spread of the novel coronavirus
already confirmed i n 44 states and
the District of Columbia.
When he floated a payroll-tax
cut to juice the economy as stock
markets plummeted, many finan-
cial analysts said it would not be
enough help for the hourly work-
ers hit hardest by the slowdowns
in major i ndustries and the low-in-
come families burdened by the
closings o f schools.
And as he has repeatedly s ought
to play down t he threat o f the virus
— calling it “very, very low” in his
Wednesday address and empha-
sizing that the United States has
fewer cases than other nations —
Trump has gone against the warn-
ings of his administration’s medi-
cal experts, who have bluntly stat-
ed that the numbers are likely to
grow significantly.
Trump’s response to the global
pandemic has represented the
most serious crisis of his p residen-
cy, one with widespread ramifica-
tions for public safety, national
prosperity and his own reelection
chances. But the solutions his
White House has proposed have in
many cases fallen short of what
experts say has shown promise in
China and South Korea, raising
alarms that the nation has lost
crucial time in meeting the chal-
lenge.
The spread of the virus has also
left Trump vulnerable to political
attacks from rivals such as leading
Democratic presidential candi-
date Joe Biden, who laid out his
own plans Thursday and said “the
virus laid bare the severe short-
comings of the current adminis-
tration.”
Trump aides have countered
that the administration has
mounted a robust, all-of-govern-
ment response to a massive inter-
national crisis that has caught the
world by surprise. Production of
testing kits has been ramped up
after initial missteps, and officials
have convened roundtables to con-
sult key stakeholders, including
tourism and service industry exec-
utives, private health insurance
providers and banking e xecutives.
During a meeting Thursday
with Irish Prime Minister Leo Var-
adkar at the White House, Trump
said the administration was con-
sidering invoking emergency pow-
ers under the Stafford Act that
could allow federal officials to tap
more r esources.
“The United States, because of
what I did and what the adminis-
tration did with China, we have 32
deaths at this point,” Trump said,
referring to an earlier move limit-
ing flights from China, where the
novel coronavirus originated.
“Other countries that are smaller
countries have many, many
deaths. Thirty-two is a lot. Thirty-
two is too many. B ut when y ou look
at the kind of numbers that you’re
seeing coming out of other coun-
tries, it’s pretty amazing when you
think of it.”
By Thursday night, the number
of deaths had c limbed to 41.
But for Trump, t he rapid spread
of the illness in the United States
since those early steps with China
has undermined his chief talking
point that he has handled the out-
break with decisive action. More
than 1 ,600 cases have been con-
firmed in the United States since
then, and the numbers are expect-
ed to spike further as testing
ramps up.
The president’s biggest initia-
tive this week — the ban on for-
eigners coming to the United
States from 26 European countries
— was one that World Health Or-
ganization officials a nd other lead-
ing health experts have warned
against, saying it complicates a
coordinated global response.
Such bans can cause people to
keep their travel surreptitious,
making it harder to do crucial
contact-tracing of the infected, ex-
perts say. It also can choke the
supply chain of health workers,
expertise and medical supplies.
Travel bans, experts also point out,
can caused friction, hampering i n-
formation-sharing and interna-
tional efforts — as has happened
between the United States and
China a t a time when coordination
and transparency has been c rucial
to fighting the virus.
“It’s entirely unwise. First of all,
it violates WHO recommenda-
tions and treaties that the U. S. has
signed on to. But it doesn’t e ven do
anything to impact the epidemic,”
said Lawrence Gostin, a global
health law professor at George-
town University. “Many of the
countries in Europe besides Italy
have just as many cases or less
than the United States. The idea
this would reduce transmission
here is not based on evidence. The
reality is germs don’t respect bor-
ders.”
One federal official involved in
the response, speaking on the con-
dition of anonymity to avoid an-
gering others in the administra-
tion, said the travel ban on Europe
was too late and should have been
done at the end of February, when
cases began surging in Italy.
To m Bossert, who served as
Trump’s homeland security advis-
er, credited the president for a
“positive step” i n sounding the ur-
gency of the threat during his
prime-time address Wednesday.
But Bossert, in a tweet, called the
travel restrictions of “little value”
and a “Poor use of time and ener-
gy.” H e predicted that in two weeks
the administration might “regret
wasting time.”
Another former administration
official echoed those thoughts in
an interview, saying the White
House should have been making
sure hospitals had adequate re-
sources and guidelines to make
sure they had enough bed space
and capacity for an influx of pa-
tients.
“They should have a standard
playbook on what they should be
recommending,” said the former
official, who spoke on the condi-
tion of anonymity to talk frankly
about the administration’s re-
sponse. “They’re making t his u p as
they go.”
That also seemed true in the
case o f the White House’s o ther b ig
remedy this week, a proposed pay-
roll-tax cut that the president
boasted would offer the public
“substantial relief” — a move he
hoped would bolster investor con-
fidence to stabilize the free-falling
stock market.
In a rare appearance in the
White House briefing room Tues-
day, Trump told reporters he
would present his plan the follow-
ing day to Republican senators.
Employing his flair for showman-
ship, Trump called the tax cut “a
big number,” “very major” and
“very dramatic.”
But Democrats, and some Re-
publicans, have rejected the idea,
and some economists have said its
impact in stemming losses for or-
dinary w orkers amid t he coronavi-
rus scare would be applied un-
evenly and be less effectual than
other options.
Brookings Institution fellow Jay
Shambaugh said a payroll-tax cut
would help higher-wage earners
more than lower-income workers
and that it would mete out assis-
tance slowly rather than deliver a
shorter-term economic jolt that
could bolster investor confidence.
“What would really help give
the markets confidence w ould be a
policy response that is dealing
with the public health issues, as
well as dealing with the economic
issues,” said Shambaugh, who
served on the White House Coun-
cil of Economic Advisers in the
Obama administration. He called
for more money to go to states,
which are on the front lines of
responding to the crisis, as well as
strengthening social safety nets
and sending direct payments to
the public to boost consumer con-
fidence.
O n top of the administration’s
policy struggles, the president has
overseen a disjointed public mes-
saging operation.
Trump initially put Health and
Human Services Secretary Alex
Azar in charge of an interagency
coronavirus task force. But weeks
into the crisis, he moved to install
Vice President Pence as the leader
in a bid to exert more W hite House
control.
T hat has led to conflicting pub-
lic guidance and the muzzling of
key medical experts. O fficials at
the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention hold media brief-
ings twice a week, but those often
are delayed to allow the White
House coronavirus task force to
make its own remarks first. Trump
has often overridden others with
his own remarks; the president
announced three policies during
his Oval Office address that con-
tained errors and were later
cleaned u p by h is a ides.
Trump’s insistence early in the
crisis that the virus w as being con-
tained gave Americans a false
sense of security, said Jeanne Mar-
razzo, director of the division of
infectious d iseases a t the Universi-
ty o f Alabama at B irmingham.
“When you have the chief execu-
tive and the vice president who
clearly say things that are not only
scientifically inaccurate, but oper-
ationally inaccurate, that every-
body can be tested, it’s no wonder
people are confused and they get a
false sense of security,” Marrazzo
said. She pointed to Pence’s an-
nouncement March 3 touting a
new policy allowing “any Ameri-
can” to be tested for the novel
coronavirus with a doctor’s order.
That has created tremendous con-
fusion among doctors and clini-
cians at h ospitals.
To some observers, the chaotic
messaging has been perhaps the
most damaging response of all.
One HHS official, speaking on the
condition of anonymity to discuss
the matter frankly, noted that
when the coronavirus task force
has its daily briefings, the officials
are huddled close together in the
White House briefing room — a
visual image that Trump sees as a
show o f force b ut one that conflicts
with the CDC’s guidance on social
distancing to limit the spread of
the illness.
“They would all be considered
close contacts if one of them was
actually sick,” t he official said.
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Yasmeen abutaleb and Jeff stein
contributed to this report.
Experts question e∞cacy of Trump’s latest prescriptions to address outbreak
Focus on travelers from
Europe, payroll taxes
among misses, critics say
Jabin botsford/the Washington Post
President Trump, shown Thursday visiting with Ireland’s prime minister, is in his tenure’s top crisis.
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