New York Daily News

Don the real boss on bug, Jared said

- BY DAVE GOLDINER

Jared Kushner wanted to declare victory over coronaviru­s way back in April — when the death toll was 40,000 and rising.

The presidenti­al son-in-law and top adviser boasted to journalist Bob Woodward that President Trump had decided to roll back public health restrictio­ns because the pandemic had been effectivel­y defeated.

“Trump’s now back in charge. It’s not the doctors,” Kushner said in an April 19 interview for Wo o d w a r d ’ s book “Rage” that was revealed by CNN Wednesday.

Kushner (inset) claimed that the U.S. had put the worst of the COVID-19 crisis behind it as Trump started urging states to rapidly reopen their economies, regardless of the public health consequenc­es.

“There were three phases. There’s the panic phase, the pain phase and then the comeback phase,” Kushner told Woodward. “I do believe [we’re at] the beginning of the comeback phase.”

In a candid admission, Kushner conceded that Trump’s strategy for dealing with the pandemic focused on taking credit for good news — while blaming any missteps on medical experts or governors of hard-hit states.

“[Trump] is very smart politicall­y ... to basically say, ‘No, no, no, no, I own the opening,’” Kushner said. “Because again, the opening is going to be very popular. People want this country open.”

He derided making contingenc­y plans for public health, saying, “If you’re planning for the worstcase scenario, that will become a self-fulfilling prophecy.”

“One of the things that the president’s great at is, he’s a cheerleade­r,” Kushner said. “He’s trying to make people feel good about the outcome.”

Kushner’s remarks flesh out Trump’s remarkable shift in the early days of the pandemic away from tough public health restrictio­ns.

They also lay out the roots of the president’s feud with Dr. Anthony Fauci and other public health experts, who have waged a mostly losing battle to get Trump and other leaders to embrace measures to limit the spread of COVID-19.

Kushner spoke to Woodward by telephone twice for the Watergate scribe’s book.

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