The Columbus Dispatch

Trump rips Biden’s call for state mask mandates

- Alexandra Jaffe and Will Weissert

WILMINGTON, Del. — President Donald Trump is attacking Joe Biden for calling on governors to mandate that all Americans wear masks for the next three months, accusing the Democratic presidenti­al candidate of politicizi­ng an issue that Trump himself has used for political gain in recent months.

Trump claimed that Biden has been wrong about the coronaviru­s pandemic at every turn, “ignoring the scientific evidence and putting left-wing politics before facts and evidence.”

Trump went on to falsely say that Biden was advocating for the president to use executive power to institute a nationwide mask mandate and that Biden was in favor of “locking all Americans in their basements for months on end.”

“To Joe, I would say, stop playing politics with the virus,” the Republican president said at a White House press briefing.

Biden did not call for an executive order, but he did at an earlier campaign event call for the institutio­n of “a mask mandate nationwide, starting immediatel­y.”

Biden clarified, however, that the decision to make mask-wearing mandatory should be left up to the governors. He said nothing about keeping Americans indoors, but he has argued that economic reopenings in states have been rushed and without proper guidance from the federal government to keep Americans safe.

Trump spent the early months of the pandemic refusing to wear a mask during public appearance­s, ridiculing reporters who wore them and retweeting messages making fun of Biden for wearing a mask and implying that he looked weak. Trump first wore a mask in public about a month ago, during a visit to a military hospital, and he has since expressed support for them at times.

On Thursday, he said it’s patriotic for

Americans to wear masks, but he added, “maybe they’re great, and maybe they’re just good. Maybe they’re not so good.”

Biden, at his earlier event, said all Americans should wear masks, citing health experts’ prediction­s that it could save 40,000 lives from the coronaviru­s over the next three months. The Democratic presidenti­al candidate also responded to those who push back against such mandates.

“This is America. Be a patriot,” he said. “Protect your fellow citizens. Step up. Do the right thing.”

The back-and-forth marked a new line of attack from Trump, who is trailing Biden significan­tly in most nationwide and swing state surveys. Biden has made what he says is Trump’s mishandlin­g of the pandemic — which has now caused the deaths of at least 167,000 people in the United States — a centerpiec­e of his attacks on the president.

While Trump has charged that if Biden were elected, he would cause everything from a stock market crash to a surge of crime in the suburbs, he has largely avoided taking Biden on when it comes to the pandemic, choosing instead to deflect blame for the deaths and economic damage.

On Wednesday, when the U.S. reported 1,499 new coronaviru­s deaths, the highest number in a day since May, Trump pushed for schools and businesses to continue opening and called for college football to go on despite several leading leagues deciding to cancel this year’s season.

On Thursday, he again dismissed critics who say he was too slow to react to the pandemic in the U.S., claiming on Fox Business Network that “nobody blames me.”

 ??  ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden, shown with running mate Sen. Kamala Harris, wore masks at a news conference at Alexis Dupont High School in Wilmington, Del., on Wednesday.
Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden, shown with running mate Sen. Kamala Harris, wore masks at a news conference at Alexis Dupont High School in Wilmington, Del., on Wednesday.

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