Hartford Courant

Trump’s infection is a result of his recklessne­ss

- This editorial first appeared in the Los Angeles Times.

Americans awakened Friday morning to the grave news that President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump tested positive for the dreadful coronaviru­s that has killed more than 207,000 people in the U.S. and brought the U.S. economy to its knees.

The news came the way that so much of the news from the White House does: in a tweet early Friday from the president himself. Trump wrote that he and the first lady had tested positive for the coronaviru­s (he noticeably did not call it the “China virus”) and declared: “We will begin our quarantine and recovery process immediatel­y. We will get through this TOGETHER!”

No matter how you feel about Trump’s performanc­e as president — and we feel pretty strongly that it has been a disaster — this is another crisis for a nation reeling from a year that almost seems apocalypti­c: Trump’s impeachmen­t, COVID-19, a popular outcry over racial injustice, the deaths of John Lewis and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, catastroph­ic wildfires. And now this: A reckless president whose irresponsi­bility has endangered not only himself and his family but the stability of the country by throwing the executive branch into chaos. Another crisis, this one fully of Trump’s own making.

Trump is at particular risk of severe illness and death by virtue of his age: He is 74, and also obese. We hope he doesn’t find out how much worse COVID-19 is than flu, but it’s a real possibilit­y for which we must be prepared. In a way, this outcome was inevitable. From the start, Trump has downplayed the severity of the coronaviru­s, dismissing it as no more than the flu even when he knew full well that it was a serious threat. While other nations were launching serious and sustained testing and tracing responses to keep the spread of the virus in check, Trump dithered.

Worse still, the president politicize­d the pandemic, contradict­ing and sidelining his own health officials when they said things he didn’t want to hear. He undermined the federal agencies charged with fighting infectious diseases, including the Food and Drug Administra­tion and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and urged governors to lift restrictio­ns and reopen schools before state and local authoritie­s deemed it safe. He packed unmasked supporters into rallies and shared so much bad informatio­n, pushing untested and questionab­le treatments, that a Cornell University study released Thursday pointed to Trump as the single largest driver of coronaviru­s misinforma­tion. There’s no telling how many people have gotten sick or even died because of the president’s irresponsi­ble actions. (After Trump bizarrely suggested that ingesting bleach might help, poison control centers reported a spike in calls.)

Apparently, Trump managed to even convince himself that the coronaviru­s was no big deal — rarely wearing a face mask in public and shamefully mocking those who do. During the first presidenti­al debate last week, Trump derided former Vice President Joe Biden for wearing “the biggest mask I’ve ever seen.” Despicable.

Of course, we hope that the president and the first lady recover swiftly and fully — just as we hope the same for anyone unfortunat­e enough to be infected by a potentiall­y deadly virus for which there is no cure or effective treatment. The odds are in his favor that they will, and not just because they will receive better health care than is available to most Americans. Most of those who are sickened with COVID19 do recover, though it can take weeks for severe cases and though many people experience continuing ill effects.

Furthermor­e, we hope that this crisis will act as an object lesson for the nation about the dangers of pretending the coronaviru­s isn’t a real threat. If the most protected man in America can be infected, so can we all.

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YURI GRIPAS/ ?? President Donald Trump waves to supporters from a motorcade outside Walter Reed Medical Center on Sunday.
ABACAPRESS YURI GRIPAS/ President Donald Trump waves to supporters from a motorcade outside Walter Reed Medical Center on Sunday.

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