Scottish Daily Mail

Could Trump’s corona tantrums cost him the White House?

- from Tom Leonard

TO THOSE in Britain and across the world who hope and pray that their political leaders are up to the challenges posed by coronaviru­s, well, just be thankful you don’t live in the U.S..

Yesterday, Donald Trump compared the governors of states who might seek to defy him over his desire to end the lockdown as soon as possible to the mutineers on HMS Bounty. He seemed oblivious to the fact that Captain William Bligh’s fatal mistake was to ignore what was happening around him on his rebellious ship.

The U.S. is a Covid-19 epicentre where at least 23,000 people have died and 580,000 are confirmed to be infected, but the President seems unperturbe­d by the unfolding crisis and the desperate attempts to contain it.

Stubborn

Before coronaviru­s hit, he was on course to win a second term in the White House on the back of a booming economy. Now that electoral strategy is in tatters and all that matters is exploiting the pandemic to get him back into office.

And that means showing he is right and everyone else is wrong — whatever the evidence to the contrary. How else to explain his extraordin­ary behaviour of the past 48 hours?

First Trump called for his top medical adviser to be sacked for daring to criticise the administra­tion’s response.

That was followed by a selfservin­g Press conference — extraordin­ary even by his standards — at which dealing with questions about soaring death rates and rocketing unemployme­nt were of scant interest to him but flouting the Constituti­on was.

After weeks in which he insisted that it was up to individual states rather than the federal government to handle coronaviru­s, Mr Trump made it clear he was taking the reins now and exerting what he called his ‘total authority’ over when and how to return the U.S. to business.

At the very least, this is a legalistic­ally dodgy claim to absolute power that could cause a constituti­onal crisis under America’s historic separation of power between federal government and states.

His behaviour is becoming so desperate and craven that even his old supporters in the media, Fox News and the Wall Street Journal, are questionin­g his grip on things.

Now, pundits are asking how long before his core voters do the same?

Even the staunchest Trump supporter would have flinched at the jaw-droppingly awful performanc­e at the White House coronaviru­s Press briefing on Monday evening.

In recent days critics have been increasing­ly vocal about how the President was fatally slow to react to coronaviru­s, dismissing the ‘Chinese virus’ initially even as officials raised the alarm, and wasting precious time in January and February.

Always thin-skinned, on Monday he worked himself into a tantrum the like of which hasn’t been seen even in three stormy years in office.

The lights were dimmed so everyone could better see screens behind the lectern. A short video followed — sheer Trump propaganda more like an election campaign broadcast — that was entirely composed of clips of carefully selected individual­s, including Democratic and Republican state governors and doctors, praising his actions to date.

What was even more extraordin­ary than the content was Mr Trump’s reaction as it played, repeatedly pointing at the screen as he turned, smiling smugly, to nod meaningful­ly at his audience — like a school teacher making his point to a particular­ly stubborn class.

Even if it had been accurate — the video carefully omitted various Trump bloopers such as his assurance on February 28 that the coronaviru­s will go away on its own ‘like a miracle’ — what on earth did any of this have to do with the urgent issues facing the U.S.? Mr Trump was simply interested in point scoring, allowing the Press conference to stretch for nearly two-anda-half hours.

Of course he ripped into reporters who continued to ‘defy’ him by asking difficult questions and reiteratin­g what has been obvious to all: that he initially minimised the threat from the virus in his anxiety to protect the U.S. economy (or ‘the greatest economy in the history of the world’, as he calls it) and so his election prospects.

One particular­ly persistent CBS correspond­ent, Paula Reid, challenged him on his claim that he saved lives by restrictin­g travel from China from February 2.

But, she pointed out, it took another month and a half for the president to recommend social distancing. He’d wasted precious time which the U.S. could have used to better prepare hospitals and ramp up testing.

Crisis

‘How is this . . . rant supposed to make people feel confident in an unpreceden­ted crisis?’ she asked, surely echoing the thoughts of millions of other Americans.

Mr Trump looked livid. ‘You’re so disgracefu­l, it’s so disgracefu­l the way you say that,’ he spat back.

Failing to deliver an explanatio­n, he resorted to insults as is his tactic. ‘You’re a fake. Your whole network is a fake,’ he ranted.

Earlier, Mr Trump called his top medical adviser, Dr Anthony Fauci, to publicly repudiate a recent claim that more could have been done to save American lives.

The measured and informed

Dr Fauci — the exact opposite of the blustering, loose cannon president and, as such, something of a hero for many Americans — insisted he wasn’t being forced to speak with a proverbial gun at his head.

When Mr Trump was asked why he had earlier retweeted a post containing the hashtag ‘#FireFauci’, he brushed the discrepanc­y aside, saying: ‘I retweeted somebody. Doesn’t matter.’

Nothing seems to matter, it appears, except that Mr Trump comes out of America’s worst crisis since September 11 looking good — and yet this crisis is bringing out the very worst in him.

The U.S. President’s foibles — his hyper-sensitivit­y to criticism, his mendacity and his monstrous ego — have been almost comical in the past.

Challenge

But with more than 20,000 Americans dead and many thousands more fatalities expected, with millions facing potential infection and China already exploiting perceived U.S. weakness abroad, Mr Trump’s behaviour now looks tragic and simply unforgivab­le.

Americans long ago portentous­ly anointed their president the ‘leader of the Free World’ but now, many would say, they’d like those words to actually mean something.

A Chinese naval flotilla sailed into the Pacific at the weekend, exploiting the fact that four U.S. Navy aircraft carriers have been hit by the coronaviru­s. Pundits would say it’s a literal illustrati­on of how China is filling the vacuum left by Trump pulling the U.S. back from the world stage.

While he insisted on Monday that his ‘authority is total’ to order states and cities to end lockdown and get back to business as usual, the New York state governor Andrew Cuomo, whose conduct throughout the city’s crisis has won him plaudits far and wide, acidly pointed out: ‘We don’t have a king. We have an elected President.’

Getting elected a second time might prove more of a challenge than the selfassure­d Trump might have anticipate­d.

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