The Morning Call

Trump plans event at White House

Fla. rally also eyed amid fears of his COVID-19 status

- By Zeke Miller, Jonathan Lemire and Jill Colvin

WASHINGTON — Looking to get his campaign back on track, President Donald Trump and his team laid out an aggressive return to political activities on Friday, including a big Saturday White House event and a rally in Florida on Monday, a week after his hospitaliz­ation for the coronaviru­s that has killed more than 213,000 Americans.

As questions linger about his health — and as Democratic opponent Joe Biden steps up his own campaignin­g — Trump is planning to leave Washington for the first time since he announced his diagnosis.

He is also increasing his radio and TV appearance­s with conservati­ve interviewe­rs, hoping to make up for lost time with just 24 days until Election Day and millions already voting.

The president has not been seen in public — other than in White House-produced videos — since his return days ago from the military hospital where he received experiment­al treatments for the virus.

Two weeks after his Rose Garden event that has been labeled a “supersprea­der” for the virus, Trump is planning to convene another large crowd outside the White House on Saturday on his law-and-order theme. More than two dozen people linked to the White House have contracted COVID-19 since the president’s Sept. 26 event announcing Judge

Amy Coney Barrett as his nominee to the Supreme Court.

Trump will address the group, expected to be at least several hundred supporters, from the White House balcony, according to an official. A person with knowledge of the planning said all attendees must bring masks or will be provided with them, and also will be given temperatur­e checks and asked to fill out a brief questionna­ire.

Following guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which include maskwearin­g and social distancing,

will be strongly encouraged.

Trump’s Monday rally in Sanford, Florida, was originally scheduled to be held Oct. 2, the day after he tested positive.

Announceme­nt of the event came as Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious disease expert, cautioned the White House again to avoid large-scale gatherings of people without masks.

“I was not surprised to see a supersprea­der event given the circumstan­ces,” he said of the Barrett gathering.

Trump tweeted on Friday that

he would be in Sanford “for a very BIG RALLY!”

Meanwhile, he was making the rounds of conservati­ve media, calling in to Fox News host Sean Hannity on Thursday night and spending two hours live on air with radio host Rush Limbaugh on Friday in what his campaign billed as a “radio rally.”

Holding court on his reelection battle, his fight against the coronaviru­s and revived negotiatio­ns with Democrats to pass an economic stimulus bill, Trump was making a direct appeal to his base of loyal supporters, whom

he needs to turn out to the polls in droves.

He was to follow that with a taped appearance for Tucker Carlson’s Fox News show Friday evening.

While concerns about infection appeared to scuttle plans for next week’s presidenti­al debate, Trump said he believes he’s no longer contagious.

“My voice is now perfect,” he told Limbaugh.

Fauci said in his AP interview, “Let me just tell you what the CDC guidelines are for getting people to be able to go back into society. It generally is 10 days from the onset of your symptoms.”

That onset for Trump was Oct. 1, according to his doctors. The president’s White House doctor, Navy Cmdr. Sean Conley, said that means Trump, who has been surrounded by minimal staffing as he works out of the White House residence and the Oval Office, could return to holding events on Saturday.

Conley added that Trump was showing no evidence of his illness progressin­g or adverse reactions to the aggressive course of therapy he has received.

While reports of reinfectio­n in COVID-19 victims are rare, the CDCrecomme­nds that even people who recover from the disease continue to wear masks, stay distanced and follow other precaution­s.

It was unclear if Trump, who has refused mask wearing in most settings, would abide by that guidance.

In the interview with Limbaugh, Trump again credited the experiment­al antibody drug he received with speeding his recovery.

“I was not in the greatest of shape,” he said. “A day later I was fine.”

He promised to expedite distributi­on of the drug to Americans in need, though that would require action by the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

He speculated to Limbaugh that without the drug, “I might not have recovered at all.”

Despite public and private surveys showing him trailing Biden, Trump predicted a greater victory in 2020 than four years ago. He won a majority in the Electoral College in 2016, though he lost the national popular vote to Democrat Hillary Clinton.

 ?? OLIVER CONTRERAS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Signs on seats encourage social distancing Friday in a nearly empty James S. Brady Briefing Room at the White House.
OLIVER CONTRERAS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Signs on seats encourage social distancing Friday in a nearly empty James S. Brady Briefing Room at the White House.

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