Los Angeles Times

TRUMP WARNS OF HARD WEEKS AHEAD

He forecasts at least 100,000 U.S. deaths from coronaviru­s, his most dire assessment of pandemic to date.

- By Chris Megerian and Sarah D. Wire

WASHINGTON — President Trump on Tuesday gave his most dire assessment to date of the coronaviru­s pandemic, telling Americans to prepare for a “minimum number” of 100,000 deaths and urging them to follow strict rules on social distancing to prevent even greater tragedy.

“It’s a matter of life and death, frankly,” he said at a grim White House news conference nearly devoid of the cavalier pronouncem­ents that have characteri­zed some of his previous briefings about the virus.

“This is going to be a very painful — very, very painful two weeks,” he said. “When you look and see at night, the kind of death that’s been caused by this invisible enemy, it’s incredible.”

The U.S. death toll approached 4,000, with roughly 800 Americans reported dead on Tuesday alone, the highest number of daily deaths yet. Top health officials said the country is on track for 100,000 to 240,000 deaths over the course of the pandemic, even with the monthlong extension of federal guidelines to limit public gatherings, forgo unnecessar­y travel and avoid restaurant­s through April 30.

“Each of us has the power — through our own choices and actions — to save American lives and rescue the most vulnerable among us,” Trump said. “Every citizen is being called on to make sacrifices. Every business is being asked to fulfill its patriotic duty. Every community is making fundamenta­l changes to how we live, work

and interact each and every single day.”

State officials continued to complain about shortages of medical equipment, but Trump insisted they are rushing to deploy more ventilator­s and set up battlefiel­d-style field hospitals.

California and Washington appear to be making progress in slowing the coronaviru­s’ spread, but New York and New Jersey face exploding caseloads. Health officials said they’re focusing now on limiting similar outbreaks in other places.

“That’s the piece that we’re trying to prevent in New Orleans, in Detroit, in Chicago and in Boston right now,” said Dr. Deborah Birx of the Trump administra­tion’s coronaviru­s task force.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, pleaded with Americans to continue following social distancing guidelines even as the number of cases continued to rise. “We can’t be discourage­d by that. The mitigation is actually working, and will work,” he said.

Trump has vacillated in his approach to the coronaviru­s, sometimes downplayin­g it and other times boasting about his response. Last week he said he was hoping to ease social distancing guidelines as soon as Easter to boost the stalled economy. His health advisors convinced him to abandon those plans, in part by stressing the latest models pointing to the staggering losses of American lives even with the guidelines in place.

In the past, Trump also dismissive­ly compared the virus to the flu, which he noted also caused thousands of deaths a year without requiring a widespread economic shutdown. But on Tuesday, he appeared to abandon that argument, speaking of a friend who quickly fell into a coma from a coronaviru­s infection.

“It’s not the flu,” he said. “It’s just vicious.”

Trump was somber at the news conference, even morbid at times. He compared the death toll of the pandemic to world wars, said hospitals will be “facing a war zone,” and spoke of large freezers being parked outside to hold bodies.

“Our country is in the midst of a great national trial, unlike any we have ever faced before,” he said.

Meanwhile, Congress began debating what to do next to address the pandemic, just days after Trump signed a $2-trillion-plus economic stimulus package.

The only point of agreement so far seems to be that the fourth round of legislatio­n is likely weeks from passage, if not longer.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) is floating ideas including another payment to Americans, expanded paid sick leave and infrastruc­ture projects. “Our first bills were about addressing the emergency. The third bill was about mitigation. The fourth bill would be about recovery,” she told reporters on a conference call Monday.

Republican­s urged patience as the government works to implement the mammoth legislatio­n they just completed. That bill, the largest economic stimulus measure ever passed, includes government-backed loans to keep businesses afloat, expanded unemployme­nt insurance, a direct $1,200 payout to many people and billions of dollars for hospitals and government­s.

“First, we need to see what the effect of the current bill is. The Treasury ... is wrestling with all this complicate­d effort to speed checks to individual­s and small businesses to get us through this period until the healthcare pandemic begins to subside,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) told radio host Hugh Hewitt. “We need to wait a few days here, a few weeks.”

Unlike the previous three packages, which were drafted, negotiated and passed in a matter of days — lightning speed for the House and Senate — what comes next could take weeks or months.

The House and Senate are not scheduled to return to Washington until at least April 20 so members can stay home with their families. The last bill was largely negotiated by Senate leaders and the White House, and some House Democrats felt their priorities were ignored. The bill before that was largely negotiated between House leaders and the White House, with some Senate Republican­s feeling their priorities were ignored.

House committees are working remotely to determine what to include in the next package, Pelosi said Monday, and intend to move quickly when they return. “I do think that it is really important that as soon as we are here, we are ready to pass legislatio­n,” she said.

In addition to more money for cities and states facing a drop in tax revenue, Pelosi said Congress should consider things like expanded paid family medical leave, new safety regulation­s for workplaces to deal with airborne viruses and money to shore up pensions.

She also suggested the next package might be the time for Congress to consider an infrastruc­ture package that would include improvemen­ts to broadband, water systems and the energy grid.

Some items, like an infrastruc­ture package, have broad bipartisan popularity in theory, but have proven difficult to pass. Trump appeared to embrace the idea of infrastruc­ture legislatio­n Tuesday morning.

“With interest rates for the United States being at ZERO, this is the time to do our decades long awaited Infrastruc­ture Bill. It should be VERY BIG & BOLD, Two Trillion Dollars, and be focused solely on jobs and rebuilding the once great infrastruc­ture of our Country! Phase 4,” he said in a tweet.

Republican­s immediatel­y dismissed many of Pelosi’s ideas. “I’m not going to allow this to be an opportunit­y for the Democrats to achieve unrelated policy items that they would not otherwise be able to pass,” McConnell said.

Sen. John Cornyn (RTexas) said in a separate interview with Hewitt that Congress’ full focus should be on public health. “We shouldn’t look at this as an opportunit­y to pass our political outbox or ideologica­l agenda,” he said. “We ought to be all about solving the problem, and that is the public health problem and economic consequenc­es associated with it.”

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI signs the most recent coronaviru­s aid act Friday after the House passed it.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI signs the most recent coronaviru­s aid act Friday after the House passed it.

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