Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Trump: ‘Toughest’ weeks ahead:

US infections top 308,000 with more than 8,300 deaths

- By Kevin Freking and Colleen Long

U.S. coronaviru­s cases top 308,000 with more than 8,300 deaths.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Saturday returned to the idea of opening up the country’s economy as soon as possible, even as he said the United States was heading into what could be its “toughest” weeks as coronaviru­s cases swell nationwide.

“There will be a lot of death, unfortunat­ely. There will be death,” Trump said in a somber start to his daily briefing at the White House.

Joining Trump were Vice President Mike Pence, virus task force coordinato­r Dr. Deborah Birx and Dr. Anthony Fauci, the U.S. government’s foremost infection disease expert. Each stood far apart from one another on the small stage.

The president initially had suggested the country could reopen by Easter but pulled back after seeing projection­s of a staggering death toll even if restrictiv­e measures remain in place. But just days after extending tough national guidelines through the end of April, staring down historic levels of unemployme­nt and economic standstill, he was talking about opening up the country again.

“This country was not designed to be closed,” he said. “The cure cannot be worse than the problem.”

The number of confirmed cases in the country topped 308,000 Saturday with the death toll climbing past 8,300, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University. More than 3,500 of U.S. deaths are in New York. The global total of confirmed cases reached nearly 1.2 million with more than 64,000 deaths Saturday.

Much of the country is under orders to stay home, but eight states have not issued stay-at-home orders. Those states, all led by Republican governors, are Arkansas, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming.

But health officials offered some hope that social distancing measures were working. Fauci said he saw social distancing efforts as he went out for a walk in Washington, D.C., and saw people waiting six feet apart for restaurant take out.

“As sobering and a difficult as this is, what we are doing is making a difference,” Fauci said.

Trump suggested that some states were asking for more medical supplies than they really needed. He said the goal was to stay several days ahead of critical medical needs in each state.

“The fears of the shortages have led to inflated requests,” he said.

Louisiana officials have said New Orleans is on track to run out of ventilator­s by next week.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, DN.Y.,

whose state is at the epicenter of the national pandemic with over 113,700 confirmed cases as of Saturday, has pleaded for ventilator­s for days and lambasted what he has said is insufficie­nt help from the federal government. New York is poised to get 1,000 ventilator­s from China and 140 from Oregon.

“We’re all in the same battle here,” Cuomo said. “And the battle is stopping the spread of the virus.”

Trump on Saturday continued to tout hydroxychl­oroquine, a drug long used to treat malaria, rheumatoid arthritis and lupus, after small preliminar­y studies suggested it might help prevent the coronaviru­s from entering cells and possibly help patients clear the virus sooner.

But the drug has major potential side effects, especially for the heart, and large studies are underway to see if it is safe and effective for treating COVID-19.

Trump suggested he may consider whether he should start taking the drug, even though he’s not been diagnosed. Some studies are testing whether hydroxychl­oroquine can help prevent infections in health care workers, but none has suggested that others, such as the president, should take it to prevent infection.

Before the briefing,

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., criticized the decision by Trump to nominate “one of his own lawyers,” as an inspector general overseeing federal aid during the coronaviru­s recovery.

Pelosi said the watchdog monitoring “this historic relief package for workers and families must be independen­t from politics.”

Trump nominated Brian Miller to the Treasury Department watchdog post. He currently serves as a special assistant to the president and as senior associate counsel in the White House.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is overseeing the government package that aims to shovel $2.2 trillion into the economy over the next few weeks to try to cushion the fall. The assistance includes $349 billion in loans for small businesses and a $500 billion corporate rescue fund.

The legislatio­n signed by Trump last week created the special inspector general position as well as a panel appointed by Congress to monitor how the aid is deployed.

Pelosi said Trump is disregardi­ng provisions in the act that would hold the administra­tion accountabl­e. She said a new House committee on the virus response would work to ensure “taxpayer dollars are being used wisely and efficientl­y to help workers and not to be exploited by profiteers and price-gougers.”

For most people, the new coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in two to three weeks. But for others, it can cause more severe illness and death.

 ?? BRYAN R. SMITH/GETTY-AFP ?? Funeral home workers arrive to pick up a body Saturday at a hospital in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.
BRYAN R. SMITH/GETTY-AFP Funeral home workers arrive to pick up a body Saturday at a hospital in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States