The Commercial Appeal

Why Corker calls for a speedy end to strict measures

Ex-senator says it’s time to resume work, commerce

- Natalie Allison Nashville Tennessean USA TODAY NETWORK – TENNESSEE

For more than a year since his retirement, former U.S. Sen. Bob Corker has largely kept quiet on national affairs.

The two-term Republican senator from Tennessee left office in January 2019 with a somewhat tumultuous relationsh­ip with President Donald Trump, with whom he had engaged off-and-on in public spats during his final two years in Washington.

But a year out of office and now settled back in his hometown, the former Chattanoog­a mayor is finally speaking up to weigh in on policy again, and this time, he’s siding with Trump on the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Corker contends that it’s time for the country to quickly resume work and commerce.

That’s in an effort, he says, to save the economy from lasting damage imparted by measures intended to slow the spread of COVID-19, a highly contagious virus that has wreaked havoc on healthcare systems and killed nearly 20,000 worldwide. “Should my generation be willing to have a degree of sacrifice and risk so that younger generation­s can have a better life?” Corker, 67, said in an interview Tuesday evening. “I think so.”

Watching the news unfold last week as businesses closed around the nation, the stock market hit record lows and American families began isolating in their homes — as they have been urged to do by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and federal, state and local officials — Corker said he was frustrated that there was a “missing element” in the debate: the long-term impact of shutting down the economy and the effect that will have on livelihood­s.

“The fear that I see in people’s eyes is the fear of small business people watching their entire life’s work vanish,” Corker said. “The fear of the working poor realizing they’re not sure how they’re going to be able to support their families.”

According to a spokespers­on, now that he is out of office, Corker has invested in a number of companies and is once again heavily involved in the Chattanoog­a

community. He previously ran constructi­on, real estate and developmen­t companies and served as Tennessee’s finance commission­er before eventually becoming mayor of Chattanoog­a, a position Corker held from 2001-2005.

Frustrated, Corker has worked the phones for days

He picked up the phone Thursday and called another former senator — one he declined to identify other than the senator served before Corker was in office — and from there decided to spend the coming days working the phones.

“I did feel like I had some credibilit­y,” he said. “I felt like I had some political capital that needed to be burnt at this time.”

Corker called editorial writer after editorial writer to convey his position and urge them to raise the question of what the cost will be if the economy remains at a standstill for months, or even weeks.

That includes the nation’s “standard of living, people’s lives, the misery index we’ll pay for for decades if we get it wrong,” Corker said.

Some listened to his urging. Some weren’t interested.

He said he has in recent days spoken on the phone or texted with advisers close to the president, with former presidenti­al chiefs of staff and with former treasury secretarie­s, among others with influence, urging them to shift the conversati­on.

“I do think that that our input has affected, to the degree one person can, the national debate,” Corker said.

On Thursday evening, the Wall Street Journal published an editorial outlining similar concerns and urging a speedy return to a sense of normalcy and a coronaviru­s strategy that does not amount to a “national lockdown.”

They followed with a similar editorial Tuesday night.

On Sunday, New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman outlined his fears about delaying a return to work and its impact on the economy, stressing the need to expand testing while soon urging those not deemed vulnerable to the virus to return to work.

That night, Trump tweeted that the country “cannot let the cure be worse than the problem itself,” using a line, not quite verbatim, from Friedman’s column.

Trump, who last week said he expected that large-scale mitigation and social distancing efforts could be forced to continue until August, on Tuesday changed course, announcing that he intended for much of the American public to be back to their normal lives and jobs by Easter.

“Candidly, I wish it were sooner than that,” Corker said of Trump’s April 12 target date.

Tennessee governor says he wants to protect lives and livelihood­s

Speaking to reporters during a virtual news briefing on Tuesday, Gov. Bill Lee discussed weighing the balance between preserving as many lives as possible and preserving Tennessean­s’ ability maintain their ways of life.

But Lee, who has faced criticism for being slower than some other governors to impose restrictio­ns, was now unapologet­ic about needing to prioritize the saving of lives.

“We have a public health crisis, there’s no doubt about it,” Lee said. “And what motivates me in our decisionma­king process is that if we don’t address this public health crisis, Tennessean­s are going to lose their lives. Some already have. More will.”

Lee also noted the “unfolding economic crisis” that will affect not only health care in the state, but mental health and poverty levels.

While some governors have issued stay-at-home orders and called for all non-essential businesses to close, Lee has not gone that far, despite mayors in the state’s largest cities enacting their own similar orders.

He has urged all schools to remain closed until April 24, required that restaurant­s and bars eliminate dine-in seating and ordered gyms to close.

“We are very thoughtful about the fact that we want to protect Tennessean­s’ lives and their health, and we also want to protect their livelihood­s,” Lee said. “We don’t think you have to sacrifice one for the other, and we don’t think you have to choose. We actually think if we do this right, we can mitigate both to the highest degree possible.”

Tennessee state Senate Minority Leader Jeff Yarbro, D-nashville, has been outspoken about the need for increased testing, among other temporary restrictio­ns, as a major first step in hastening a return to normalcy and a fix to the economy.

“We’re at a point in which doctors are determinin­g how they are going to allocate limited treatment resources to patients that outnumber those resources,” Yarbro said. “You can’t talk about opening up the economy overly quickly without grappling with the life and death ethical choices we will face as a country.”

To those who are speaking up in favor of returning to normal life without the country having the spread of the coronaviru­s under control, Yarbro said he would ask how they, personally, feel doctors should decide how to use finite resources and supplies in the face of growing numbers of sick patients.

“If we’re going to have a debate about rushing to reopen the country contrary to medical experts’ advice, the people pushing that agenda have to answer the question about who gets to live and who is going to be denied treatment,” Yarbro said.

Corker argues that different regions of the country can be dealt with differently, depending on the severity of a certain area’s COVID-19 outbreak.

Focusing on identifyin­g the vulnerable population and continuing to put safeguards in place for them, while allowing younger people to return to work could provide a gradual transition back to normal life, Corker suggested.

“I would say I absolutely value human life,” Corker said.

Other conservati­ves who have made comments similar to his, including Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick — who on Monday had urged older adults to be willing to risk their health to allow the country to get back to work — have been rebuked for prioritizi­ng the economy over people. “I value human life for all of those people who are coming after me,” Corker said. “And that’s why this debate is so important.”

Reach Natalie Allison at nallison@ tennessean.com. Follow her on Twitter at @natalie_allison.

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