The Day

Trump issues travel advisory

Connecticu­t, New York, New Jersey will not be under quarantine

- By ZEKE MILLER and COLLEEN LONG

Norfolk, Va. — President Donald Trump backed away from calling for a quarantine for coronaviru­s hotspots in New York, New Jersey and Connecticu­t, instead directing Saturday night that a “strong Travel Advisory” be issued to stem the spread of the outbreak.

Vice President Mike Pence tweeted that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was urging residents of the three states “to refrain from non-essential travel for the next 14 days.”

The notion of a quarantine had

been advocated by governors, including Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, who sought to halt travelers from the heavily affected areas to their states. But it drew swift criticism from the leaders of the states in question, who warned it would spark panic in a populace already suffering under the virus.

Trump announced he reached the decision after consulting with the White House task force leading the federal response and the governors of the three states. He said he had directed the CDC “to issue a strong Travel Advisory, to be administer­ed by the Governors, in consultati­on with the Federal Government.”

He added: “A quarantine will not be necessary.”

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who has criticized the federal government’s response as his state became the country’s virus epicenter, said roping off states would amount to “a federal declaratio­n of war.” Cuomo said the prospect of a quarantine didn’t come up when he spoke with Trump earlier Saturday, adding that he believed it would be illegal, economical­ly catastroph­ic, “prepostero­us” and shortsight­ed when other parts of the U.S. are seeing cases rise, too.

“If you start walling off areas all across the country, it would be totally bizarre, counterpro­ductive, anti-American, anti-social,” Cuomo told CNN. He added that locking down the nation’s financial capital would shock the stock market and “paralyze the economy” at a time when Trump has indicated he’s itching to get the economy back on track.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat, said he did not talk about quarantini­ng the tri-state area in his recent conversati­on with Trump, and learned of the president’s comments as he walked into Saturday’s daily briefing.

“Until further notified we’re going to keep doing exactly what we’re doing, because we believe the data and the facts are on our side in terms of this aggressive, as aggressive as any American state right now, in terms of social distancing and flattening the curve,” he said.

Connecticu­t Gov. Ned Lamont, also a Democrat, said at a news conference that Trump’s words about a quarantine have created a “certain amount of confusion” and that “confusion can lead to panic.” He said such a quarantine order would be “impossible to enforce given the spider web of roads” and that he hoped the White House would clarify what it wants.

Connecticu­t’s two U.S. senators were critical of the president. Sen. Chris Murphy said state residents should continue to follow Lamont’s guidance.

“President Trump should stop tweeting before thinking,” Murphy said on Twitter. “His loose talk of a quarantine will cause unnecessar­y confusion and panic at an already confusing moment.”

U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal said the idea raises “very significan­t questions,” calling it unclear how such a quarantine would be enforced and whether it would have any meaning.

“The specifics and impact are completely unclear and uncertain,” he said, noting that Lamont has already directed the state’s residents to self-quarantine.

Since Trump has said he wants the country “opened up and just raring to go” by Easter, Blumenthal suggested the quarantine idea “just adds to the confusion.”

In a statement, Connecticu­t Attorney General William Tong said the president should be more cautious about his word choice. Tong said the president’s “off the cuff comments … are not helpful.”

In Bridgeport, Connecticu­t’s largest city, Mayor Joe Ganim said he wouldn’t dismiss anybody’s ideas for stronger measures to contain the outbreak. Bridgeport is 50 miles from New York City and is within Fairfield County, which counts over 750 of the more than 1,200 coronaviru­s cases reported statewide.

“I’m open to doing whatever it takes to stay ahead of this,” said Ganim, a Democrat. “We are evaluating and deliberati­ng and open to ideas from the president, our governor, and other mayors.”

Trump made his initial remarks while on a trip to Norfolk, Va., to see off a U.S. Navy hospital ship heading to New York City to help with the pandemic. At the event, he spoke to a sparse crowd at the naval base and cautioned Americans to take virus protection­s, even though he himself, at 73, is in a high-risk category and among those who have been advised to refrain from all non-essential travel.

The federal government is empowered to take measures to prevent the spread of communicab­le diseases between states, but it’s not clear that means Trump can ban people from leaving their state. It has never been tested in the modern era — and in rare cases when any quarantine was challenged, the courts generally sided with public health officials.

Courts have ruled consistent­ly for years that the authority to order quarantine­s inside states rests almost entirely with the states, under provisions in the Constituti­on ceding power not explicitly delegated to the federal government to states. The federal government, though, would have power under constituti­onal clauses regulating commerce to quarantine internatio­nal travelers or those traveling state to state who might be carriers of deadly diseases.

Still, “it is entirely unpreceden­ted that governors or the president would prevent people from traveling from one state to another during an infectious disease outbreak,” said Lawrence Gostin, a Georgetown University law professor and public health specialist who questioned Trump’s ability to order a quarantine on states.

But as Trump traveled to Norfolk, he tweeted: “I am giving considerat­ion to a QUARANTINE of developing “hot spots,” New York, New Jersey, and Connecticu­t. A decision will be made, one way or another, shortly.”

“A lot of the states that are infected but don’t have a big problem, they’ve asked me if I’ll look at it, so we’re going to look at it,” Trump said.

When asked about legal authority for quarantine, the incoming White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, said officials are “evaluating all the options right now.”

Administra­tion officials were discussing less-stringent measures as well. One idea under considerat­ion would be to tell residents of the hard-hit areas to isolate themselves and not travel for two weeks, just as the CDC has instructed anyone who recently left New York to self-quarantine for 14 days, according to one person familiar with the negotiatio­ns who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing deliberati­ons.

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