The Political Page - Coronavirus (Covid-19)
Donald John Trump - Deflector in Chief
We Are Doing Great!
As of March 23rd - The United States of America
Confirmed 43,224 - Deaths 583 - Recovered 178
Trump calls coronavirus Democrats' 'new hoax'
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Trump's coronavirus response highlights why his White House is always in disarray
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Trump spent the past 2 years slashing the government agencies responsible for handling the coronavirus outbreak
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Trump Tells Americans Not to Worry About Coronavirus as CDC Says U.S. Outbreak a Certainty
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Trump says he's not responsible for testing problems
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Trump's coronavirus response is worse than incompetent
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Poll: Most Americans don't trust Trump on coronavirus information
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Trump reportedly tried to poach German scientists working on a coronavirus vaccine and offered cash so it would be exclusive to the US
President Donald Trump tried to recruit German scientists working on a coronavirus vaccine and offered large sums of money to secure exclusive rights to their work for the US, according to a report said to be confirmed by the German government.
The prominent German newspaper Welt am Sonntag reported that Trump had offered large sums of money to lure the Germany-based company CureVac to the US and to secure exclusive rights to a vaccine.
… A German government source told the newspaper Trump was trying hard to find a coronavirus vaccine for the US, "but only for the USA."
The newspaper said the German government was fighting back by offering financial incentives to the company if it remained in Germany.
A German health ministry representative told Welt am Sonntag the government was involved in "intensive" discussions with CureVac about keeping the company headquartered in Germany.
"The German government is very interested in ensuring that vaccines and active substances against the new coronavirus are also developed in Germany and Europe," the newspaper quoted a health ministry official as saying.
In a separate statement, the health ministry told Reuters the Welt am Sonntag report was accurate: "We confirm the report in the Welt am Sonntag," a representative said … "We are very confident that we will be able to develop a potent vaccine candidate within a few months," Menichella said in a statement.
Karl Lauterbach, a senior German politician and professor of health economics and epidemiology, tweeted in response to the story: "The exclusive sale of a possible vaccine to the USA must be prevented by all means. Capitalism has limits."
Snopes: Fact Check - Politics
As a new coronavirus spread in 2020, so did concerns about the United States' preparedness for a potential pandemic.
Question:
Did the Trump Administration Fire the United States Pandemic Response Team?
Claim:
The Trump administration fired the United Sstatees pandemic response team in 2018 to cut costs.
Rating: True
Analysis: Trump's war on truth takes a dangerous turn as he attacks the media's coronavirus coverage
Analysis by Brian Stelter, CNN Business
Since the dawn of the Trump presidency, countless experts have warned that the president's lack of credibility would imperil the country in the event of an emergency.
With the worsening coronavirus outbreak, those fears may be coming true.
President Trump's political allies have made overly optimistic statements only to be contradicted by the government's top scientists and doctors. For example, Trump claimed on Monday that the coronavirus was "very much under control in the USA." A day later, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the virus' spread to the US was inevitable. He said the stock market is "starting to look very good" even as the Dow was nosediving amid coronavirus anxiety.
And the president has been blaming the media for this predicament, reverting to the same tactics that he has employed ever since taking office.
On Wednesday, in a widely-criticized tweet, he claimed that CNN and MSNBC "are doing everything possible to make the Caronavirus look as bad as possible, including panicking markets, if possible."
He misspelled coronavirus and the typo is still visible on his Twitter profile more than eight hours later.
But misspelling the name of the virus is the least of the government's problems. President Trump has systematically undermined trust in the media and other institutions that play important roles in public health emergencies. He has explicitly said not to trust sources that he doesn't personally approve.
He has engaged in what several columnists have called a "war on expertise." Scientists have been among those adversely affected. Last December an investigation by The New York Times concluded that science is "under attack" by Trump appointees.
"Trump's disdain for science and his cuts to science and public health programs have subverted preparedness for emergencies like the coronavirus," said Michiko Kakutani, the famous literary critic and author of "The Death of Truth."
Trump has also contradicted accurate information from government agencies, like the National Weather Service, as when he insisted that Alabama was threatened by a hurricane last year. The so-called Sharpiegate caused anger and consternation inside the federal agencies responsible for weather forecasting.
Now health agencies like the CDC are in the spotlight. High-minded warnings about breakdowns in trust and the death of truth have more impact when deaths from the coronavirus are being reported every day.
"When you learn you have a dangerous disease, you need to be able to trust your doctor. When entire populations face a dangerous public health crisis, they need to be able to trust their governments," Dr. Leana S. Wen, a visiting professor at George Washington University's Milken Institute School of Public Health, wrote in a Washington Post op-ed last month.
That's a problem in this environment, where trust is in short supply. Multiple polls have shown that only one in three Americans believe he is honest and trustworthy.
The President's lies have given the public ample reason to distrust what he says -- and this has negatively affected perceptions of his administration as a whole.
"This president has lied about everything from trade deficits to Russian interference in US elections. He has disparaged experts at almost every opportunity," said Daniel W. Drezner, professor of international politics at Tuft University's Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and author of the forthcoming book "The Toddler in Chief."
"At a time when people are looking to the federal government for reassurance," Drezner said, "he will be hard-pressed to provide any."
Ultimately, Kakutani said, Trump's free-flowing falsehoods undermine the credibility of the government leaving the public unsure of who or what to trust.
"Truth and an informed public are essential to the functioning of a democracy -- and essential, too, for a practical and reasoned response to an emergency," she said.