Trump could salvage a shred of his COVID legacy
WASnINiTON >> President Donald Trump’s shameful legacy will be the needless death and vast devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic.
More than 3,100 Americans died from the novel coronavirus on Wednesday, a shocking all-time high, with the virus presently the nation’s leading cause of death. The health and economic impacts of COVID-19 were always going to be brutal, but Trump made everything much worse than it had to be. And he has capped his mismanagement of the crisis by making it more difficult not just to convince Americans to comply with life-saving preventative efforts but by also sowing doubt about the vaccines that are the way out of this crisis.
The worst thing Trump did — and continues to do — is to treat the virus less like a threat to the nation and more like a danger to his own political and psychological well-being. From the beginning, he listened to the advisers who told him what he wanted to hear — that it wouldn’t be so bad (though epidemiologists said otherwise), that we could achieve some sort of herd immunity (though infectious-disease specialists said this was madness), that the disease would magically “go away” in time for the election (though all realistic people said this was pure fantasy).
Trump could have used his megaphone and his dominance of the Republican Party to push for consistent, nationwide rules for mandates and shutdowns. If he had called last spring for universal mask-wearing, for example, and driven that message home with his loyal MAGA followers, Republican governors such as Ron DeSantis of Florida, Greg Abbott of Texas and even Kristi Noem of South Dakota likely would have had no choice but to go along or face the wrath of constituents who are more loyal to Trump than to them.
Instead, Trump did the opposite. When influential GOP voices began to treat masks and business closures not as public health measures but as threats to liberty, Trump encouraged these self- destructive attitudes because his base liked them. He led his supporters to believe that the refusal to wear a mask was somehow an act of bravery, the refusal to practice social distancing somehow a declaration of independence. Rather than try to contain the virus, he literally encouraged its spread.
So here we are. COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths are climbing rapidly, making the spring’s pessimists seem like winter’s optimists. The measures that could quell the surge — masks and shutdowns — have become politicized. There is only a tenuous chance of more economic aid before Inauguration Day, and then not enough of it.
We should be celebrating the success of the administration’s Operation Warp Speed in shepherding the development of multiple vaccines, some of which involve groundbreaking medical technology, in record time.
Is it fair to blame so much of this on Trump? Unfortunately, yes. Too many of his supporters don’t believe the pandemic is real and seem likely to see vaccines as not just unnecessary but another restriction on their freedoms. And Trump’s treatment of the scientific and regulatory process has undermined many Americans’ trust in the guardrails that are supposed to keep them safe.
That’s still a lot of damage to undo, but Trump was always going to leave an enormous amount of wreckage behind him. The most we can ask of him now is that he clean up a tiny fraction of it, even if only in his own self-interest.