The Reporter (Vacaville)

Trump campaign’s next steps unclear

- Cy Jonathan Lemire, Zeke Miller and Cill Carrow

WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump’s return to the White House is poised to reshape the campaign’s final four weeks as aides debated Tuesday how to move past an extraordin­ary setback while grappling with how to send an infected president back on the road.

A race that had remained steady throughout the tumult of 2020 now threatens to slip away from the president after he spent 72 hours hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19, the very disease that has fundamenta­lly altered the country he leads and the campaign he wanted to run. And as Democrat Joe Biden stood on one of the nation’s most hallowed grounds to call for national unity, the president, in his first full day back in the executive mansion, plunged Washington into further chaos by abruptly ending coronaviru­s relief talks.

Trump had stage-managed his dramatic, if reckless, reentry to the White House — tearing off his mask before stepping back inside Monday — and was pushing aides to return to the campaign trail as soon as possible, including to next week’s second debate against Biden. But as the president remained contagious, his health under careful watch, a division emerged between aides over how to manage the fallout.

Some believed the moment could act as a late reset, allowing the president to draw from his own experience­s to at last show empathy for those affected by a pandemic that has killed more than 210,000 Americans, left millions unemployed and sent his poll numbers tumbling.

But others believed that abruptly changing course after seven months of projecting strength over the virus wouldn’t work and instead advocated for intensifyi­ng the message as a means to

further fire up the president’s supporters to turn out.

Trump made clear want he wanted.

“I am looking forward to the debate on the evening of Thursday, October 15th in Miami. It will be great!” he tweeted Tuesday, after previously posting an erroneous comparison between the dangers posed by COVID-19 and the flu.

“Will be back on the Campaign Trail soon!!!” Trump tweeted.

For months, the president had tried to make the race a choice election between himself and Biden, but his diagnosis ensured, again, that his two safe harbors, the economy and the Supreme Court, were cast off the stage.

Trump added to that Tuesday by suddenly announcing that he was pulling out White House representa­tives from congressio­nal COVID-19 relief negotiatio­ns, blasting House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and seeming to accept the politicall­y damaging responsibi­lity for ending talks that were already on life support. Almost immediatel­y, the stock market fell.

The virus cast a long shadow over the White House, where more positive cases among staff were reported Tuesday and rooms in the residence were being converted into workspaces for the president. Aides have noticed that while Trump was

receiving wishes for his recovery, including from Democrats, there was little sympathy amid a sense that he had brought the virus on himself.

Trump has again played solely to his base, being the driving force behind a quick trip outside the hospital Sunday afternoon to greet fans from his armored SUV — a sojourn that energized supporters but unnecessar­ily jeopardize­d the health of the Secret Service agents guarding him. Likewise, Trump was intimately involved in the planning for his evening return to the White House, turning it into a made-forTV moment that dominated evening newscasts.

Trump was eager to return to the campaign trail, telling aides that he wanted a series of mega rallies in Republican-friendly areas in battlegrou­nd states to mark his recovery. But it remained to be seen when Trump would be cleared to set foot on Air Force One again.

The president was still contagious, and the White House doctor, Navy Cmdr. Sean Conley, said they were regularly testing Trump to determine whether he still posed a risk to others. And even once he’s no longer actively shedding the virus, Trump could still test positive for some time, putting his participat­ion in next week’s debate in doubt despite his avowed plans to attend.

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 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump removes his mask as he stands on the balcony outside of the Blue Room as returns to the White House in Washington after leaving Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Md.
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump removes his mask as he stands on the balcony outside of the Blue Room as returns to the White House in Washington after leaving Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Md.

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