Royal Oak Tribune

Trump’s hospital stay rocks campaign

Biden: ‘This cannot be a partisan moment’

- By Steve Peoples and Bill Barrow

An election year already defined by a cascade of national crises descended further into chaos, with President Donald Trump quarantine­d at amilitary hospital with the coronaviru­s after consistent­ly playing down the threat.

Democratic challenger Joe Biden took down his attack ads Friday and pressed a bipartisan message in battlegrou­nd Michigan after he and his wife tested negative.

“This cannot be a partisan moment. It must be an American moment. We have to come together as a nation,” Biden declared at a speech in Grand Rapids, warning that the virus “is not going away automatica­lly.”

While Biden vowed to continue his cautious approach to campaignin­g during the pandemic, the president’s diagnosis injected even greater uncertaint­y into an election already plagued by crises that have exploded under Trump’s watch: the pandemic, devastatin­g economic fallout and sweeping civil unrest. With millions of Americans already voting, the country on Friday entered uncharted territory that threatened to rattle global markets and political debates around the world.

The developmen­t focuses the campaign right where Biden has put his emphasis for months— and where Republican­s don’t want it: on Trump’s uneven response to a pandemic that has killed more than 205,000 people in the U.S. And for the short term, it’s grounded Trump under quarantine at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, denying him the large public rallies that fuel his campaign just amonth before the election.

Biden and other Democratic officehold­ers wished Trump well in the wake of his diagnosis, although some could not help but admonish the Republican president, who openly ignored his own administra­tion’s social safety recommenda­tions for much of the year.

“Going into crowds unmasked and all the rest was sort of a brazen invitation for this to happen,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on MSNBC.

The White House reported Friday evening that Trump will spend “a few days” at the military hospital; the president’s doctor reported that Trump was “fatigued” and had been injected with an experiment­al antibody drug combinatio­n still in clinical trials. His campaign announced that all of Trump’s scheduled campaign events were being moved online or temporaril­y postponed. Trump’s family, a steady presence on the campaign trail, was also grounded.

Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien and Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel have tested positive for the virus as well. But Vice President Mike Pence, who has tested negative, will attend his campaign events as planned.

Other world leaders, including Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson, have contracted the virus and made full recoveries. But strategist­s in both parties acknowledg­ed the timing is bad.

Millions of Americans have already begun voting in several key states, and tens of millions more will receive absentee mail-in ballots or begin in-person early voting in the coming weeks.

“Trump’s main advantages, including incumbency, have been removed. Rallies, hismain vehicle for mobilizing his base, will no longer be possible. Fly-bys with Air Force One as a backdrop are gone,” said Republican strategist Rick Tyler, a frequent Trump critic.

He said that Trump’s infection also “fundamenta­lly undercuts his entire campaign strategy, which was to ignore the pandemic and make unsubstant­iated claims that we’ve turned the corner and are making an economic comeback.”

Biden, meanwhile, moved to take down his ads attacking Trump, according to deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfiel­d, who noted that the campaign would continue running positive ads. The decision wasmade before news surfaced that Trump would be moved to amilitary hospital.

 ?? STEVE RUARK— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at Harrisburg Internatio­nal Airport, Saturday, Sept. 26, in Middletown, Pa.
STEVE RUARK— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at Harrisburg Internatio­nal Airport, Saturday, Sept. 26, in Middletown, Pa.

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