Santa Cruz Sentinel

After virus test, NBC sets Trump town hall

-

NBC News says it’ll host President Donald Trump for a town hall-styled event on Thursday, after a coronaviru­s test.

NBC News agreed to put President Donald Trump before voters in a town hall event on Thursday after the president submitted to an independen­t coronaviru­s test with the results reviewed by Dr. Anthony Fauci.

T he a n nounc ement Wednesday sets up dueling town halls with Democratic opponent Joe Biden on a night the two candidates were supposed to meet for their second debate. Biden is appearing on a similar town hall event in Philadelph­ia, televised by ABC.

It also subjected NBC News to a sharp backlash on social media, where a call to boycott the network was a trending topic on Twitter.

NBC said Trump would be at least 12 feet from moderator Savannah Guthrie and the audience.

Trump, who tested positive for COVID-19 on Oct. 2 and spent three days at the Walter Reed military hospital, took a coronaviru­s test Tuesday administer­ed by the National Institutes of Health, NBC said.

Both NIH clinical director Dr. Clifford Lane and Fauci reviewed Trump’s medical records and said they had a high degree of confidence that the president is “not shedding infectious virus.”

Trump’s ability to reach a national television audience on Thursday was in part dependent on Fauci, who had expressed anger at the Trump campaign in recent days for using one of his statements in a campaign ad. The coronaviru­s task force member said a quote used in the campaign ad was taken out of context.

A formal matchup between the Republican president and Biden that was scheduled for Thursday in Miami by the nonpartisa­n Commission on Presidenti­al Debate was canceled. In light of the president’s infection, the commission shifted the format to a virtual meeting, and Trump declined to participat­e.

Both town halls will begin at 8 p.m. Eastern, but Biden will have the last word. The ABC event, moderated by George Stephanopo­ulos, will last 90 minutes with an additional half hour of analysis. Trump’s town hall on NBC is scheduled for an hour.

Critics of NBC questioned why the network scheduled Trump for the same time, making viewers have to choose if they were interested in seeing both candidates react live in a similar format.

Veteran journalist Jeff Greenfield called it “indefensib­le” in a Twitter post.

“They rewarded Trump by giving him this time,” Greenfield said in an interview.

He questioned whether NBC acceded to a demand by the president, but the network said in a statement that “the Trump campaign did not dictate or request the time slot nor express any preference.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States