Los Angeles Times

His own version of truth

Trump’s response to the coronaviru­s may be making things worse

- By Eli Stokols and Noah Bierman Times staff writer Jennifer Haberkorn contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — President Trump’s inattentio­n to detail, distaste for experts, need for validation and belief that he can create his own set of alternativ­e facts have been hallmarks of his political rise.

But after three years in which daily headlines about chaos in Washington often have contrasted with a robust market on Wall Street and tranquilit­y in much of the country, the president’s unorthodox approach to his job has suddenly been cast in a harsher light by a spiraling and potentiall­y catastroph­ic global public health crisis.

Determined to convince the public and the markets that his administra­tion has the threat posed by the new strain of coronaviru­s under control, Trump’s public statements have more often added to the panic than calmed it.

“Lack of informatio­n, not being forthright, sugarcoati­ng informatio­n — ‘We don’t want people to panic!’ — leads to credibilit­y problems,” said Craig Fugate, who served as a top emergency manager for Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and then as the administra­tor of the Federal Emergency Management Agency under President Obama. Telling the public what you don’t know and what level of confidence you have in the informatio­n you have, he continued, is also crucial.

“I tell people in public service: This is your moment of truth.”

Trump, however, is imposing his own version of truth on the situation. Even as advisors have sought to convince him of the seriousnes­s of the public health threat, he has continued to minimize the impact, repeatedly saying that only the elderly are at real risk.

“Stay calm; it’ll go away,” he said after a visit to Capitol Hill this week.

But Trump is learning that the virus won’t be contained by wishing it away. Over the weekend, he played golf at Mar-a-Lago and dined with Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro.

Bolsonaro’s spokespers­on, who after the dinner posted a photo of himself standing next to Trump, tested positive Thursday for the virus. That news, however, has yet to compel the president to be tested for the virus himself, according to White House Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham. She said he had displayed no symptoms of illness.

It was not until Thursday that Trump agreed to quit shaking hands and start canceling campaign rallies, following cancellati­ons by major sports leagues and corporate convention­s as well as his Democratic rivals.

One of the areas on which Trump has most conspicuou­sly made statements that don’t square with reality involves testing for the virus.

“We’ve done a good job on testing,” he insisted Thursday.

Almost simultaneo­usly, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told lawmakers on Capitol Hill that the dearth of available tests in the U.S. as the outbreak spreads amounts to “a failing.”

“The system is not really geared to what we need right now,” Fauci said in testimony to the House Oversight Committee. “That is a failing.... Let’s admit it.”

“The idea of anybody getting [tested] easily, the way people in other countries are doing it — we’re not set up for that,” he said. “Do I think we should be? Yes.”

The lack of easily accessible tests has become a major line of attack from Democrats and has generated rising bipartisan frustratio­n. It has increasing­ly become a devastatin­g symbol of the administra­tion’s overall response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We have a lot of work to do,” Sen. Richard M. Burr (R-N.C.) said Thursday.

Asked whether he was confident the work would get done to ensure coronaviru­s tests are more readily available to meet the soaring demand, the senator paused for nearly 10 seconds before answering, “It would be better if we could rewind about six weeks, but we don’t have that luxury.”

Inattentio­n to detail has also hurt. Wednesday evening, as he read prepared remarks from a TelePrompT­er during an Oval Office address, Trump made several factual errors, including a declaratio­n that the new ban on travel from Europe would apply to trade, which he corrected in a tweet minutes after the speech.

His failure to make clear what was covered by his ban on travel from Europe to the U.S. helped generate a crush of travelers at European airports as some American citizens rushed to flights under the mistaken impression that they might not be able to return home.

Trump avoided any mention of the meager testing in the U.S. and assured the country that the decline in financial markets wasn’t a crisis but “just a temporary moment in time.”

That immediatel­y sparked another massive sell-off.

Earlier in the crisis, Trump stated that a vaccine would soon be available, forcing his own health experts to explain that it would not be available for roughly 18 months. He also tipped his hand on the degree to which public perception drives his decisions, saying that he didn’t want to allow a cruise ship with many infected passengers to dock because that would drive up the number of reported coronaviru­s cases in the U.S.

On Monday, while returning to Washington from Florida, Trump made a point of shaking hands with supporters gathered on the airport tarmac, despite warnings to avoid close contact with others who could spread the virus. Before reporters and cameras in the Oval Office on Thursday, Trump joked that he was uncertain about shaking hands with the visiting Irish taoiseach, Leo Varadkar.

But the president continued to put a positive gloss on an increasing­ly dire situation, stating that the sudden drop in gasoline prices resulting from sharply lower crude oil prices and a growing reluctance to travel is “like a tax cut.”

The persistent nonchalanc­e from the president of the United States, increasing­ly off-key amid growing national concern, has complicate­d efforts by public health officials to deliver more essential informatio­n. That effort gets even harder because of the unofficial requiremen­t for anyone serving in the administra­tion not to contradict Trump publicly.

During an off-camera briefing with reporters this weekend, Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar was asked about Trump’s false statement that anyone who needs a test for the virus can have one.

Rather than simply correct the error and move on, Azar, whose standing in the White House is fragile, tried to square Trump’s bluster with reality.

“It’s just different ways of phrasing it,” he said. “He’s using a shorthand. What he meant to say is, ‘We’re not in the way of that.’ ”

Inside the West Wing, several officials are “nervous that some of the things being said on television are less than duly vetted,” said a person close to the White House who did not want to be identified to avoid burning bridges.

“Everyone is answering to an audience of one,” the person added.

Vice President Mike Pence, tapped by Trump to lead the response to the coronaviru­s crisis, has prefaced almost all of his public comments with praise for the president. During one appearance, he even backed Trump’s decision to shake hands as appropriat­e “for someone in our line of work.”

As Fugate says, “You’ve got public officials put in an awkward position where they’re either having to testify or put out statements that are correcting the president, and now it’s looking like they’re disagreein­g with the president.”

Many of the administra­tion’s health officials and political appointees share a sense that Trump and some of his closest aides have been slow to appreciate the seriousnes­s of the threat, multiple White House staffers said. But there are some signals that may finally be changing, even though the window for containing the spread of the pandemic has likely passed.

“They’ll never admit to any sort of wrongdoing, but I think they’re pivoting to, ‘Here’s the real story and this is what we know,’” said the person close to the White House.

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP has minimized the COVID-19 pandemic even as advisors have sought to convince him that it is a serious threat to public health.
Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESIDENT TRUMP has minimized the COVID-19 pandemic even as advisors have sought to convince him that it is a serious threat to public health.

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