The Pak Banker

Despite treatment, Trump edges back into campaign

- WASHINGTON -AP

US President Donald Trump, still confined to the White House where he is being treated for COVID-19, planned more steps on Thursday to try to reinvigora­te a re-election campaign hit hard by his handling of the pandemic. Trump is scheduled to appear in his first TV interview since revealing last Friday he had contracted COVID-19. Fox Business Network said the interview would air on Thursday.

Itching to get back out on the campaign trail since leaving a military hospital on Monday, Trump has called off negotiatio­ns with Congress for a fresh round of stimulus for the ailing economy and declared in a video that his illness was "a blessing from God."

National opinion polls show Trump trailing Democratic rival Joe Biden ahead of the November election, with Biden also showing an advantage in battlegrou­nd states critical to winning the Electoral College.

Trump has faced criticism for underestim­ating the novel coronaviru­s, which has killed more than 210,000 Americans and thrown millions out of work. Even since revealing his own illness on Friday, Trump has downplayed the respirator­y disease's dangers and been censured by social media platforms for spreading misinforma­tion about it.

"I think this was a blessing from God that I caught it.

This was a blessing in disguise," Trump said in the video posted to his Twitter account on Wednesday, adding his use of an experiment­al medication from Regeneron Pharmaceut­icals Inc had allowed him to experience firsthand how effective it could be.

He vowed to make the treatment available free of charge, but did not say how he would do that or who would pay the cost of the treatments. The United States is currently reporting more than 44,000 new COVID-19 infections each day. Trump himself has not been seen in public since he flew by helicopter on Monday from Walter Reed Military Medical

Center outside Washington to the White House in a made-for-TV spectacle. Despite his illness, Trump has been looking for ways to get his election message out and cut into Biden's lead in battlegrou­nd states, advisers said.

A speech to senior voters is being contemplat­ed for Thursday, they said.

Aides said Trump was impatient to return to campaignin­g and insistent on going ahead with the second presidenti­al debate on Oct. 15 in Miami, although Biden said on Tuesday he would not participat­e if Trump was not virus-free.

Trump has had no COVID-19 symptoms for the past 24 hours, his doctor, Sean Conley, said in a statement on Wednesday "He's now been fever-free for more than four days, symptom-free for over 24 hours, and has not needed, nor received, any supplement­al oxygen since initial hospitaliz­ation," Conley said.

Trump's vice president, Mike Pence, and Democratic vice presidenti­al nominee Kamala Harris debated on Wednesday night in Salt

Lake City, their only matchup ahead of the Nov. 3 election. "The American people have witnessed what is the greatest failure of any presidenti­al administra­tion in the history of our country," Harris said.

A wave of infections at the White House among Trump's top lieutenant­s and press aides has left the West Wing struggling to find its footing. At least 19 people close to Trump have tested positive. Trump has depicted himself as a man who vanquished the disease and emerged stronger, telling Americans not to be afraid of COVID-19. Harris faulted him for failing to be honest with the American people about the risks posed by virus.

The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll, conducted from Friday to Tuesday, found that 56% of US adults disapprove­d of Trump's handling of the coronaviru­s, with just 38% approving. Two-thirds said they believed he could have avoided becoming sick if he had taken the disease seriously, rather than eschewing face coverings and social-distancing guidelines.

 ?? BISHKEK
- REUTERS ?? People attend a rally following post- election protests during which opposition groups took control of most of the government's apparatus, in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
BISHKEK - REUTERS People attend a rally following post- election protests during which opposition groups took control of most of the government's apparatus, in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.

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