Business World

Trump tests negative for coronaviru­s

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WASHINGTON/NEW YORK — US President Donald Trump tested negative for the coronaviru­s, his doctor said on Saturday, as the US president extended a travel ban to Britain and Ireland to try to slow the spread of a pandemic that has shut down much of the daily routine of American life.

After White House officials took the unpreceden­ted step of checking the temperatur­es of journalist­s entering the briefing room, Mr. Trump told reporters he took a test for the virus on Friday night. On Saturday evening, his physician, Sean Conley, said the results were negative.

The US president met with a Brazilian delegation last week, at least one member of which has since tested positive.

Mr. Trump said Americans should reconsider non-essential travel, and that his administra­tion was also considerin­g domestic travel restrictio­ns.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said the country has recorded 2,226 cases of the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) but has not yet reached the peak of the outbreak.

“This will get worse before it gets better,” Surgeon General Jerome Adams said at the briefing. But, he added, “99% of people will recover and people need to know that.”

Critics have accused Mr. Trump of focusing too much on markets, which on Friday saw the three major Wall Street indexes gain more than 9% after having had their worst day since 1987 on Thursday.

All three indexes were neverthele­ss down at least 8% for the week and about 20% below midFebruar­y record highs.

At the briefing, Mr. Trump told reporters he was “honored to see that the stock market set a record in a short period of time over a 45-minute period.” He called it an “all-time record” that he hoped would be repeated daily.

“They said, ‘Sir, you just set a record in the history of the stock market. That was pretty good. Those great companies that were there, they couldn’t have been too unhappy about it ... They are all big, publicly listed companies, so they did a good job,” he said before turning the microphone over to Vice-President Mike Pence, who is running the White House’s response to the outbreak.

Mr. Pence said the administra­tion was extending to Britain and Ireland travel restrictio­ns that were first imposed on China and expanded this week to continenta­l Europe.

Mr. Trump spoke to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Saturday about the new restrictio­ns, the White House said.

AIRLINES PLAN FLIGHT CUTS

US airlines, which have already been battered by the restrictio­ns and a steep drop in demand, said on Saturday that they were preparing more flight cuts. Mr. Pence said the new restrictio­ns will take effect at midnight on Monday.

Chad Wolf, acting secretary of the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS), said Mr. Trump decided to add Britain to the travel ban because of the rising number of coronaviru­s cases there. Health authoritie­s in England announced on Saturday a further 10 deaths caused by COVID-19, almost doubling the number of fatalities in Britain since Friday.

A senior DHS official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Britain and Ireland were added because the United States was not able to effectivel­y determine whether travelers from those countries were trying to sidestep the European travel ban.

“The travel investigat­ion couldn’t be effectivel­y managed on our side,” the senior DHS official said.

US citizens and legal residents will still be able to return home and will be funneled through certain airports, Mr. Pence said.

The vice-president also told reporters that visits to nursing homes were being suspended to protect the most vulnerable. A nursing home in Washington state has been the site of most of the US deaths caused by the coronaviru­s.

On Saturday, officials in New York confirmed that state’s first two fatalities from the outbreak: an 82-year-old woman in New York City’s borough of Brooklyn, and a man in his ’60s in Rockland County, north of the city. Both had underlying health problems, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said.

Nationwide, at least 58 people have died. —

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