Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

TRUMP’S FATEFUL TURNS

- By David Lauter

Joe Biden’s victory over Donald Trump was, oddly, both robust and slim. Robust because Biden defeated Trump by more than 7 million votes, about 4.5% of the record-setting 158 million cast — no landslide, but hardly a squeaker.

Slim because of the quirks of the electoral college. There, Biden won by just a little more than 43,000 votes — the combined margins in Arizona, Georgia and Wisconsin, his three closest states. Flip just those three to red, and the electoral college would have landed in a 269-269 tie, sending the contest to the House of Representa­tives, a likely Trump victory and a true constituti­onal crisis.

With so much riding on so small a total, one can’t help but wonder: What could Trump have done — what, that is, other than his tragicomic efforts to subvert the election after the fact — to produce a different outcome?

That question leads directly to March 18.

That day, the number of confirmed coronaviru­s cases nationwide passed 8,000 and deaths hit 143, mostly in New York. The numbers, so small now in retrospect, seemed so deeply troubling at the time that they sent the stock market into a downspin in which the S&P index dropped 5%.

Trump started the day in a telephone call with airline executives who wanted help for an industry hit hard by travel restrictio­ns. Later, he held a teleconfer­ence with business leaders.

Outside on the White House driveway, his counselor, Kellyanne Conway, defended Trump’s use of the term “China virus” to refer to the pandemic.

Inside, a far more consequent­ial debate had been taking place.

For weeks, since he first learned of the virus, Trump had been downplayin­g its severity. But lately, aides had been showing him estimates of what might happen if the government failed to act to slow the spread of the disease — frightenin­g projection­s of poten

tially millions of deaths.

Those charts, plus the sudden stock market plunge, spurred the president to a sudden shift.

Around noon, Trump stepped to the lectern in the White House briefing room. He said that he would invoke the Defense Production Act to spur production of protective gear and that he was sending hospital ships to Los Angeles and New York. He and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had spoken and agreed to close the border to slow spread of the virus, he announced.

What prompted headlines, however, was Trump’s declaratio­n that he saw himself as a “wartime president” who was asking the country to make sacrifices for the common good.

“Every generation of Americans has been called to make shared sacrifices for the good of the nation,” he said. “Now it’s our time.”

“We must sacrifice together

because we are all in this together, and we will come through together. It’s the invisible enemy.”

So incongruou­s do those words sound in light of all that Trump has said and done since that they seem to have come from a different president. Even then, they ran up against the instincts of a man who had spent his life as a promoter and marketer.

The next day, sitting down for an interview with Bob Woodward that only became public months later, Trump admitted his inclinatio­n to minimize the seriousnes­s of the disease.

“I wanted to always play it down,” Trump told Woodward. While he had invoked “wartime” rhetoric the day before, he told Woodward that “I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic.”

Trump’s brief flirtation with taking the pandemic seriously ran against his political instincts, too.

Throughout his presidency,

Trump never willingly strayed from the desires of his core supporters, “my base,” as he lovingly called them.

Less than a year after he took office, in September 2017, Trump almost negotiated a deal with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) that would have given him money for his border wall in return for a legislativ­e solution to the status of so-called Dreamers — young people who entered the country illegally as children.

After brief thunder on the right, Trump panicked and called the deal off.

A little over a year later, another panic over conservati­ve opposition led to another aborted deal and a 35-day shutdown of government agencies, the longest in history.

On the virus, Trump’s rhetoric of “shared sacrifices” ran up against protests by his followers, who objected to restrictio­ns imposed by state governors. The reversal didn’t take long.

The “wartime president” announceme­nt had come on a Wednesday. By Sunday, Trump was already tweeting, in all caps, that “THE CURE MAY BE WORSE THAN THE PROBLEM ITSELF.”

A few days later, he was comparing the coronaviru­s to the seasonal flu and saying he wanted the country “opened up” in time for churches to be full on Easter.

From there, Trump never really looked back. By the fall, as the campaign hit its peak, he was preaching full-blown COVID denial, denouncing the news media for talking so much about the illness.

“All you hear is COVID, COVID, COVID, COVID, COVID, COVID, COVID, COVID, COVID, COVID, COVID,” he declared at a rally in Gastonia, N.C. “That’s all they put on, because they want to scare the hell out of everyone.”

Even the president’s own COVID-19 illness, which he announced via Twitter on Oct. 2 and which required his hospitaliz­ation at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for three days, did not bring him to acknowledg­e the disease’s severity.

But for one brief period — no more than a week — Trump tested out a different tack. Might the election have turned out differentl­y if the “wartime president” had stuck?

Such questions are inherently unanswerab­le. Perhaps Trump was right that his conservati­ve base would have turned against him had he responded more aggressive­ly. Perhaps by 2020, opinions of Trump were so deeply set that nothing would have changed them.

But Brad Parscale, Trump’s campaign manager until mid-July, doesn’t think so.

“People were scared. I think if he had been publicly empathetic he would’ve won,” he said in a recent interview on Fox News as he promoted his new book.

“By a landslide,” he said. “I think he could’ve leaned into it instead of run away from it.”

 ?? Nicholas Kamm AFP/Getty Images ?? BACK AT the White House after hospitaliz­ation for COVID-19, President Trump removed his mask, a clear signal to his core supporters, whose desires he has never willingly neglected.
Nicholas Kamm AFP/Getty Images BACK AT the White House after hospitaliz­ation for COVID-19, President Trump removed his mask, a clear signal to his core supporters, whose desires he has never willingly neglected.
 ??  ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP, with First Lady Melania Trump, arrives to deliver his nomination acceptance speech on the White House South Lawn in late August. Had he taken
PRESIDENT TRUMP, with First Lady Melania Trump, arrives to deliver his nomination acceptance speech on the White House South Lawn in late August. Had he taken
 ?? Doug Mills Pool Photo ?? the pandemic more seriously or shown some empathy, might he have avoided an election loss some 10 weeks later that, by one important measure, was relatively close?
Doug Mills Pool Photo the pandemic more seriously or shown some empathy, might he have avoided an election loss some 10 weeks later that, by one important measure, was relatively close?
 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? BY FALL,
Trump was decrying the news media’s focused coverage of COVID-19. “That’s all they put on, because they want to scare the hell out of everyone,” he said.
Evan Vucci Associated Press BY FALL, Trump was decrying the news media’s focused coverage of COVID-19. “That’s all they put on, because they want to scare the hell out of everyone,” he said.
 ?? Associated Press ?? Andrew Harnik
“I WANTED to always play it down,” Trump told journalist Bob Woodward.
Associated Press Andrew Harnik “I WANTED to always play it down,” Trump told journalist Bob Woodward.
 ?? AFP/Getty Images ?? Brendan Smialowski
DR. DEBORAH BIRX’S notes on the deepening crisis on March 19.
AFP/Getty Images Brendan Smialowski DR. DEBORAH BIRX’S notes on the deepening crisis on March 19.
 ?? AFP/Getty Images ?? STOCKS plunged March 18 on news of 8,000 total cases and 143 deaths.
AFP/Getty Images STOCKS plunged March 18 on news of 8,000 total cases and 143 deaths.
 ?? Washing ton Post ?? TRUMP’S notes show a change from “Corona Virus” to “Chinese Virus.”
Washing ton Post TRUMP’S notes show a change from “Corona Virus” to “Chinese Virus.”

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