Santa Fe New Mexican

Gov. Lujan Grisham says Trump ‘botched’ response.

- By Morgan Lee

New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham is sending campaign emails that accuse President Donald Trump of “single-handedly botching” the nation’s coronaviru­s response.

Governors including Lujan Grisham have been noticeably reluctant to criticize Trump publicly since the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic, as their states rely heavily on aid from the federal government to respond to the crisis and balance budgets.

In emails from her political committee in the run-up to the Nov. 3 election, Lujan Grisham, a Democrat, says Trump “refused to take action while knowing how deadly and dangerous COVID-19 would be.”

“Now, President Trump is asking New Mexico for a redo, a second chance. Unbelievab­le,” says the email that links to an opinion poll on whether Democrats will “win big” on Election Day.

New Mexico in May joined a cooperativ­e pilot project with federal health authoritie­s aimed at expanding sustainabl­e testing capabiliti­es and contact tracing, with a commitment to share successful virus-containmen­t strategies that might be applied nationwide.

Lujan Grisham, whose first term runs through 2022, publicly addressed Trump by name in April as she said the president was welcome to visit New Mexico — if he wears a mask, avoids mass rallies and brings personal protection equipment to the state aboard Air Force One. She tweeted to thank Trump in July when the president wore a face mask in public for the first time.

Trump last visited New Mexico a year ago for a rally in Rio Rancho.

In other pandemic developmen­ts, state health officials responded last week to an increased number of virus outbreaks associated with work settings that trigger assistance for testing, disinfecti­on and tracing of possible virus exposure, the

Environmen­t Department said Monday in a weekly report.

So-called rapid response incidents increased to 223 for the week of Sept. 14-20, up from 128 responses the previous week. Related workplaces ran the gamut from Los Alamos National Laboratory to big-box retailers, a junior high school, fast-food outlets and a farmers market.

Food industries accounted for 36 new rapid responses to COVID-19 cases, with 24 incidents at restaurant­s and nine at grocery stores.

Since the start of the program in May, the health care industry accounts for the largest portion of rapid responses from health officials, followed by retail and wholesale businesses, and then restaurant­s.

 ??  ?? Michelle Lujan Grisham
Michelle Lujan Grisham

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