Toronto Star

U.S. virus deaths top 400,000 as Trump exits

- ADAM GELLER AND JANIE HAR

As President Donald Trump entered the final year of his term last January, the U.S. recorded its first confirmed case of COVID-19. Not to worry, Trump insisted, his administra­tion had the virus “totally under control.”

Now, in his final hours in office, after a year of presidenti­al denials of reality and responsibi­lity, the pandemic’s U.S. death toll has eclipsed 400,000. And the loss of lives is accelerati­ng.

“This is just one step on an ominous path of fatalities,” said Dr. Irwin Redlener, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedne­ss at Columbia University and one of many public health experts who contend the Trump administra­tion’s handling of the crisis led to thousands of avoidable deaths.

The 400,000-death toll, reported Tuesday by Johns Hopkins University, is greater than the population of New Orleans, Cleveland or Tampa, Fla. It’s nearly equal to the number of American lives lost annually to strokes, Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, flu and pneumonia combined. With more than 4,000 deaths recorded on some recent days — the most since the pandemic began — the toll by week’s end will probably surpass the number of Americans killed in the Second World War.

“We need to follow the science and the 400,000th death is shameful,” said Cliff Daniels, chief strategy officer for Methodist

Hospital of Southern California, near Los Angeles. With its morgue full, the hospital has parked a refrigerat­ed truck outside to hold the bodies of COVID-19 victims until funeral homes can retrieve them.

President-elect Joe Biden, who will be sworn in on Wednesday, took part in an evening ceremony Tuesday near the Lincoln Memorial in Washington to honour the 400,000 dead. The bell at the Washington National Cathedral was set to toll 400 times. Other cities around the U.S. also planned tributes.

The U.S. accounts for nearly one of every five virus deaths reported worldwide, far more than any other country despite its great wealth and medical resources. The coronaviru­s would almost certainly have posed a crisis for any president given its rapid spread and power to kill, experts on public health and government said. But Trump seemed to invest as much in battling public perception­s as he did in fighting the virus itself, repeatedly downplayin­g the threat and rejecting scientific expertise while fanning conflicts ignited by the outbreak.

Many voters considered the federal government’s response to the pandemic a key factor in their vote: 39 per cent said it was the single most important factor, and they overwhelmi­ngly backed Biden over Trump, according to AP VoteCast.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A GETTY IMAGES ?? Douglas Emhoff, left, U.S. vice-president-elect Kamala Harris, Jill Biden and president-elect Joe Biden attend a memorial service to honour the victims of the coronaviru­s pandemic in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A GETTY IMAGES Douglas Emhoff, left, U.S. vice-president-elect Kamala Harris, Jill Biden and president-elect Joe Biden attend a memorial service to honour the victims of the coronaviru­s pandemic in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday.

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