Irish Independent

Fake news: Facebook censors Trump as he plays down the virus threat on return to White House

- Rozina Sabur

DONALD TRUMP announced he was ending negotiatio­ns with Congress on a new coronaviru­s economic relief bill until after the election, accusing Democrats of “not negotiatin­g in good faith”.

Instead, the US president said he was asking Republican­s in Congress to “focus full-time” on approving his nominee to the US Supreme Court, the conservati­ve judge Amy Coney Barrett.

US stocks tumbled in the wake of Mr Trump’s announceme­nt. Democrats had been pushing for a $2.2trn package but Republican­s in the House of Representa­tives had baulked at the huge cost. Instead, the Trump administra­tion had endorsed a $1.6trn stimulus plan.

Mr Trump’s decision to end the possibilit­y of stimulus funds, which could have offered a boost to his campaign just a month before the US presidenti­al election, and at a time when many Americans’ jobs are hanging in the balance, has come as a surprise to many.

It came hours after Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, warned America could face economic tragedy as a result of the coronaviru­s pandemic and urged lawmakers to act on fiscal stimulus plans.

“Weakness feeds on weakness,” Mr Powell said as he warned of the consequenc­es of a slow economic recovery.

Meanwhile, Mr Trump was censored by Facebook yesterday for suggesting that Covid19 was “far less lethal” than the flu on his first day back at the White House after a three-day stint in hospital.

The US president claimed he was “feeling great” as he played down the risks of coronaviru­s and encouraged Americans to “learn to live” with the pandemic.

In a message shared to his social media pages, Mr Trump said: “Many people every year, sometimes over 100,000, and despite the Vaccine, die from the Flu. Are we going to close down our Country? No, we have learned to live with it, just like we are learning to live with Covid, in most population­s far less lethal!!!”

Facebook later said it had removed the post for breaking its rules on spreading Covid19 informatio­n that is deemed both wrong and harmful.

Twitter allowed the message to remain, citing “public interest”, but attached a warning to the president’s tweet stating it “violated the Twitter rules about spreading misleading and potentiall­y harmful informatio­n related to Covid-19”.

More than 7.5 million Americans have been infected by coronaviru­s since the outbreak began, and the country has the world’s highest death toll from the pandemic, at more than 210,000.

Sean P Conley, Mr Trump’s doctor, said the president had a “restful” night at the White

At least 13 senior White House officials have Covid

House and reported no symptoms yesterday. However, Mr Trump is expected to be monitored with round-the-clock care for another week, given that he is being treated with a range of therapies typically used for severe coronaviru­s cases and is still in a vulnerable phase for the infection.

It remains unclear how Mr Trump will safely operate from the White House, which is now the centre of a coronaviru­s outbreak. At least 13 senior White House officials, including Mr Trump’s press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, his senior adviser Hope Hicks, and his personal assistant Nicholas Luna, have tested positive for Covid-19.

It was revealed yesterday that the outbreak has also now spread to the country’s military leaders. General Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and several of the Pentagon’s most senior uniformed leaders announced that they were quarantini­ng after being exposed to the virus.

Former first lady Michelle Obama said yesterday that Mr Trump is a “racist” president whose strategy of division could “destroy” America if he is re-elected.

In a 24-minute video, Ms Obama described Mr Trump and his Republican allies as unfairly “stoking fears” about African Americans and for “lying” about how minorities would ruin US suburbs. “What the president is doing is once again patently false, it’s morally wrong, and, yes, it is racist,” she said. (© Daily Telegraph, London)

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 ?? PHOTO: @REAL DONALD TRUMP/ HANDOUT VIA REUTERS ?? Nonchalant: President Donald Trump speaks from the White House, telling people not to be afraid of the virus.
PHOTO: @REAL DONALD TRUMP/ HANDOUT VIA REUTERS Nonchalant: President Donald Trump speaks from the White House, telling people not to be afraid of the virus.

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