The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

History will blame Trump for catastroph­e

- Eugene Robinson Eugene Robinson’s email address is eugenerobi­nson@ washpost.com.

The COVID-19 pandemic is getting worse in this country.

As we celebrated Independen­ce Day last weekend, we were forced to see the concept of American exceptiona­lism in a new and shameful light. In confrontin­g this global menace, the United States is not first and best. We are much closer to last and worst.

History will place the blame for this catastroph­e squarely on one ignorant, incompeten­t, selfish man: President Donald Trump.

On a single day this week, the nation recorded more than 50,000 new cases of the disease. Trump, for the umpteenth time, irresponsi­bly promised the disease will somehow just “disappear.”

Governors who reopened their economies too quickly saw their state’s hospital systems buckle under the strain. Some of them, including Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, scrambled to reimpose restrictio­ns. Trump, by contrast, invited crowds to a Mt. Rushmore fireworks show, no masks or social distancing required.

Officials at all levels of government pleaded with the American people to wear masks. Trump still won’t set an example by publicly wearing one, though finally he says he might, as long as it makes him look “like the Lone Ranger.”

We are indeed fortunate that the daily death toll has not returned to the levels we saw two months ago, when the pandemic was raging out of control in the New York metropolit­an area. But U.S. COVID-19 deaths have stopped declining - we lose between 500 and 600 Americans to the disease each day - and medical experts fear the number will soon begin to rise. We have already seen more cases and more deaths, by far, than any other nation on the planet.

Rather than even make a serious attempt to banish this plague, we have invited it to settle in.

The European Union, which was ravaged by the pandemic, now is in a position to send children back to school and to ease travel restrictio­ns to allow visitors from countries that have the pandemic under control. If you live in, say, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Uruguay or Rwanda, you are most welcome to vacation in Europe. If you live in the United States, you are not.

It is clear at this point that we would have fared better with no president at all than the one we have.

From the beginning, Trump has not only failed to make Americans safer from COVID-19 but actively put all of us in greater peril. Any positive impact from the travel bans he implemente­d against visitors from China and Europe has long been nullified by his stubborn denial of even the most common-sense responses to the pandemic.

A good president, or even a mediocre one, would have believed world-renowned experts like Dr. Anthony Fauci when they warned that the first few cases of COVID-19 had the potential to mushroom into a global crisis. Any reasonably competent president would have seen the way the pandemic gripped northern Italy and resolved to take any available steps to avoid such devastatio­n in the United States.

Any president with an ounce of empathy or compassion would have realized that swift, bold, nationwide action, rather than a lackadaisi­cal federalist approach, was the only way to minimize suffering and death. Any president with rudimentar­y knowledge of science, or willingnes­s to listen to his own top scientists, would have understood that the goal had to be to reduce infections, hospitaliz­ations and deaths as close to zero as possible, then keep them there.

But we don’t have even a mediocre president.

We have Trump, focused more on minimizing damage to the economy, and his reelection hopes, than on saving lives. Trump essentiall­y abdicated federal leadership, diverting both responsibi­lity and political exposure to governors, which was bound to create a loose patchwork of restrictio­ns that gave the virus ample freedom to circulate. Then he hectored those governors to give their citizens “freedom” to congregate in ways that scientists knew were unsafe.

Now, Republican Govs. Abbott of Texas and Doug Ducey of Arizona - who listened to Trump and reopened too soon - are franticall­y trying to contain COVID outbreaks of their own creation. And who knows what Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida thinks he’s doing in announcing that the state will not impose new lockdowns, even as Florida reported 10,000 new cases last week.

The impact of COVID-19 in the United States was bound to be bad.

No leader could have avoided that, given how infectious the coronaviru­s that causes it appears to be, and how long it was spreading while officials and citizens were largely unaware of the threat. But it didn’t have to be the worst in the world. American exceptiona­lism under Trump, tragically, amounts to epic failure.

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