Los Angeles Times

Trump says risk from virus ‘remains very low’ for U.S.

As he names Pence to lead administra­tion’s COVID-19 response, public health officials reiterate warnings.

- By Noah Bierman, Jennifer Haberkorn and Noam N. Levey

WASHINGTON — Desperate to stanch anxieties on Wall Street and public fears that the White House is unprepared for a major coronaviru­s outbreak, President Trump on Wednesday named Vice President Mike Pence to coordinate the administra­tion’s response while asserting that “the risk to the American people remains very low.”

Public health officials who flanked Trump at a rare news conference in the White House briefing room were noticeably less upbeat, repeatedly warning of the risk that the deadly COVID-19 virus — which has infected 60 Americans, including a newly confirmed case Wednesday in California — could still spread quickly in the United States.

“The trajectory we’re looking at in coming weeks and months is very uncertain,” said Dr. Anne Schuchat, principal deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We can expect to see more cases in the United States,” said Alex Azar, the secretary of Health and Human Services.

Minutes after Trump spoke, the CDC confirmed a new case of the virus in California in a person who reported no travel to an affected country or exposure

to another known patient. The CDC did not say where the person lived, but said the case could be the first socalled community transmissi­on of the disease in the United States.

Officials urged Americans to take basic precaution­s, such as washing hands and staying home if sick. And Trump acknowledg­ed that the administra­tion has plans for “large scale” quarantine­s should they be needed.

“Whatever happens, we’re totally prepared,” he said, but later suggested schools, hospitals and other facilities needed to take their own precaution­s.

“I think schools should be preparing just in case” of a major outbreak, he said. “Every aspect of our society should be prepared,” he added. “I don’t think it’s going to come to that.”

Trump, who has downplayed the coronaviru­s threat for weeks, sought to reassure Americans and to calm stock markets, which have plunged more than 6.5% in the last three days on fears of the disease.

“I think the stock market will recover,” Trump said, although he later conceded that the disease “will have an impact” on the nation’s gross domestic product.

Trump did not rule out possibly barring visitors from South Korea, Italy and other countries with confirmed outbreaks. The U.S. already has stopped accepting visitors from China, where the epidemic has spread widely.

All told, more than 80,000 people in some three dozen countries are known to be infected. More than 2,700 have died.

Trump blamed Democrats and the media for stoking public fear, accusing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of “trying to create a panic,” even as his administra­tion faces bipartisan concern over its disjointed response.

The fast-spreading COVID-19 virus appears on track to test the competency of an administra­tion that has proposed large budget cuts to the CDC, shut down an office assigned to track deadly diseases around the world and is rocked by constant turnover in top positions responsibl­e for handling emergencie­s and potential emergencie­s.

Trump, who has claimed credit for the rising stock market of the last three years, has been preoccupie­d with its abrupt drop, complainin­g to business leaders during his trip to India this week that the stomachchu­rning fall-off was beyond his control.

CDC officials warned Tuesday that it’s virtually certain the coronaviru­s outbreak will spread to pockets in the U.S. and that Americans should brace for major disruption­s to everyday life, possibly including restricted travel, closed schools and work slowdowns.

Allies counseled Trump to put his political and economic frustratio­ns aside to focus on the public health threat, arguing that ancillary problems will fix themselves once the public is convinced the administra­tion is prepared for what may prove a significan­t crisis.

“This is not a garden-variety routine event,” said Ari Fleischer, former press secretary for President George W. Bush, who saw his popularity plummet after a botched response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005. “This can grow into people being legitimate­ly scared into wondering what to do to protect their health, to protect their family’s health.”

Fleischer was among many experts and former officials jarred by the administra­tion’s sluggish reaction so far and conflictin­g messages from the White House, which says the situation is under control, and federal health officials, who have issued increasing­ly dire warnings.

“A situation like this is extremely volatile and dynamic,” said Dr. Irwin Redlener, who heads the National Center for Disaster Preparedne­ss at Columbia University. “And to have all these mixed messages from the administra­tion is mind-boggling. It seems they are so muddled at the White House about the political and economic consequenc­es of this that they’ve resorted to just making stuff up.”

He warned that until the government issues clear guidance, state and local health officials are unable to make plans for a potential public health emergency.

Tom Ridge, who served as the nation’s first Homeland Security secretary under Bush and co-chairs a bipartisan commission on biodefense, faulted Trump for his breezy response to the threat and Democrats for what he called their “sky is falling” complaints.

“I just don’t recall when public health issues have ever been politicize­d like they are now,” Ridge said. “It is a real crisis” worldwide.

Underscori­ng the political risks for the president, new polling shows substantia­l public anxiety about the risk of an epidemic.

More than half of Americans expressed concern that there will be a widespread U.S. outbreak of coronaviru­s, according to a survey by the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation, which was conducted Feb. 13-18, before the recent stock market declines.

More than 4 in 10 said they were concerned they or someone in their family will get sick from the virus.

“People don’t do well with the unknown,” said Craig Fugate, who led emergency response efforts for President Obama. “Tell them what you know. Tell them what you don’t know,” he advised.

In November, a task force at the nonpartisa­n Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, which included five current and former GOP senators and House members, warned of gaping holes in the country’s defenses against a major health crisis. “The American people are far from safe,” the report concluded. “To the contrary, the United States remains woefully ill-prepared to respond to global health security threats.”

It recommende­d the reinstatem­ent of a National Security Council official to coordinate pandemic response, and renewed funding and attention to global health problems

Earlier Wednesday, Azar testified on Capitol Hill for the second day and defended the administra­tion’s response so far, saying he was overseeing “the smoothest interagenc­y process I’ve experience­d in my 20 years of dealing with public health emergencie­s.”

But other officials told Congress that they lack basic supplies such as respirator­y masks and functionin­g testing kits. Only about a dozen state and local laboratori­es can run tests outside of the CDC in Atlanta because the kits it sent out nationwide this month included a faulty component.

Democrats warned that the administra­tion’s response is insufficie­nt — citing prior cuts to the CDC — and that its request to Congress for $2.5 billion in special funding doesn’t address the scope of the problem.

Sen. Kamala Harris (DCalif.) said Trump has “not done nearly enough” and said California communitie­s are responding to the virus “despite poor coordinati­on and vague guidance from the federal government.”

Republican­s suggested that Democrats were too eager to criticize the administra­tion. No sooner did the White House release the funding request “than some politician­s were on the air criticizin­g you for not asking for enough,” said Rep. Greg Walden (R-Ore.).

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP suggested schools and hospitals take their own precaution­s against the virus.
Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESIDENT TRUMP suggested schools and hospitals take their own precaution­s against the virus.

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