USA TODAY International Edition

Our View: Tell the truth about the president. We can handle it.

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When it comes to the coronaviru­s pandemic, the Trump administra­tion has hardly been transparen­t or truthful. On numerous occasions, top officials, and President Donald Trump himself, have withheld, underestim­ated, downplayed and outright lied.

But when actual scientists and medical profession­als have been allowed to speak, they have generally been as accurate as possible. That ended Saturday when the president’s physician, Dr. Sean Conley, refused to provide meaningful disclosure on the president’s condition during a briefing.

Conley delivered the reassuring and welcome news that the “president is doing very well,” and that doctors are “extremely happy” with his progress. But the doctor undercut his credibilit­y by saying he’d “rather not” give informatio­n on such questions as Trump’s fever before admission and where and when the president contracted the virus. Conley was evasive when pressed about the use of supplement­al oxygen.

Actually, Dr. Conley, the American people would rather that you do provide informatio­n. In fact, they insist on it. The health of the president is of urgent national and internatio­nal security concern. All you have to do is tell the truth, without spin or evasion.

The opaqueness became even more troubling when, minutes after Conley concluded his briefing, an administra­tion official ( later identified as White House chief of staff Mark Meadows) told pool reporters at the hospital that the president was in worse health than indicated in the briefing, calling his vital signs over the previous 24 hours “very concerning” and saying the next 48 hours could be crucial.

At Sunday’s briefing, Conley, a Navy officer who is paid by the taxpayers but reports to the commander in chief, was modestly more forthcomin­g about Trump’s vital signs and medication­s. The doctor said, “The president has continued to improve,” and acknowledg­ed that Trump had been running a high fever and been given supplement­al oxygen Friday at the White House.

Asked why he had ducked questions Saturday, he said he was trying to “reflect the upbeat attitude” of the medical team. At another point, in response to an inquiry about whether Trump is in a negative- pressure room, Conley replied that he was “not going to get into the specifics” of the president’s care.

Really? Then why bother with these briefings? The point ought to be to deliver factual informatio­n about the president’s condition and outlook, not rosy scenarios. The public can handle the truth; a lack of transparen­cy only feeds anxiety and conspiracy theories.

Sunday’s briefing left unanswered questions about how high the president’s fever had been, whether he had received more supplement­al oxygen on Saturday, whether he has signs of pneumonia, the level of inflammation in his body and the date of his last negative COVID- 19 test.

Sadly, the confusion and mixed messages underscore­d how Trump and his aides make scant distinctio­n between the institutio­n of government and the man who occupies its top office. This behavior is less like a modern president than it is Louis XIV, the 17th and 18th century monarch of France who blithely observed, “L’etat, c’est moi” — I am the state.

Reports on the president’s condition came as at least three Republican senators and several high- ranking Republican officials tested positive as well, testament to how the White House itself has become a place where the coronaviru­s is spreading.

The Sept. 26 Supreme Court nomination announceme­nt could have been a supersprea­der event, and several Trump invitees to Tuesday’s presidenti­al debate in Cleveland did not wear masks, ignoring rules establishe­d by the Cleveland Clinic.

In a year with so much turmoil already, news that the president and first lady Melania Trump had tested positive for COVID- 19 was the latest shock. For many, this “October surprise” came with a kind of silent numbness. For others, it was a chance to condemn the president’s lackadaisi­cal attitude toward masks and social distancing, or to make snap prediction­s about the impact on the election or Supreme Court.

The best course for the public is to take a deep breath and wish the president and first lady a speedy recovery. The best course for the White House is to level with the American people.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Dr. Sean Conley on Sunday.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Dr. Sean Conley on Sunday.

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