Dayton Daily News

The pandemic persists, despite Trump sidesteppi­ng

- ClarencePa­ge ClarencePa­ge writes for the ChicagoTri­bune.

With less than two months to go until Election Day, the presidenti­al contest increasing­ly reminds me of a 1950s game show; “Who Do You Trust?”

Or, as I feel compelled to add in a salute to my ... English teachers, “Whom Do You Trust?”

Nowadays we could recast the show with our current contestant­s, Republican President Donald Trump and his Democratic challenger, former Vice President Joe Biden.

Lately, that contest has turned into a matter of life and death over who can best handle the coronaviru­s pandemic.

At center stage, Trump has departed from the wisdom of Dr. Robert Redfield, his appointed head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Redfield testified before a Senate committeeW­ednesday that even if the vaccine is announced in November or December, as the president has speculated, it won’t be “fully available” until mid- or late 2021. For one thing, those who are most in need would have to be treated first. He also offended Trump by saying face masks are “more guaranteed to protect me against COVID than when I take a COVID vaccine.”

No, no, no, insisted the president, who rarely wears a face mask, in a public rebuke of both statements. Redfield “made a mistake” Trump said, adding that he had called Redfield.

If so, I’m sure that was a riveting phone call.

Yet Redfield’s projection about the timetable for vaccine approval and distributi­on echoed that of other officials, including Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and Moncef Slaoui, chief scientist of the president’s controvers­ially named Operation Warp Speed.

But, with his reelection on the line and the coronaviru­s death count approachin­g 200,000, this president is not about to let up on his refusal to let mere science get in the way of a favorable campaign narrative.

For many — too many, in my view — face masks have become a political statement.

Videos stream across social networks of men and women who refuse to put on a face covering in food stores and other public places, throwing things in some cases and screaming about their “constituti­onal rights” and how “I woke up in a free country,” as if the Constituti­on guaranteed your right to be a supersprea­der of the COVID-19 virus.

Trump-appointed Attorney GeneralWil­liam Barr only added to the confusion in a Constituti­on Day appearance at Hillsdale College onWednesda­y by comparing the pandemic lockdown to slavery. I wonder how he feels about “no smoking” signs.

But back to the vaccine question, Biden stepped up to offer his side of the “Whom Do You Trust” narrative by insisting simply that, if a vaccine is announced, we should trust the scientists, not the politician­s.

And Trump volleyed back in a typically Trumpian way. He accused his Democratic opponent of being the political and cynical anti-science, antivaxxer in the argument.

But the death toll continues to rise, and the pandemic keeps coming back — along with the president’s remarkably clumsy attempts to get ahead of it. Instead, he just seems to dance around the subject, even attempting this week to make it a “blue state” problem, even as the states with the highest positive rate, according to a New York Times database, tended to be states that Trump won in 2016.

Whom do you trust? As the clock ticks away to Election Day, fellow voters, consider that question as if our lives depend on it. They might.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States