San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Despite pandemic, Pence to speak at Dallas church

- By Patrick Svitek

Vice President Mike Pence is moving forward with his trip to Texas today as the state rushes to respond to a coronaviru­s surge.

For over a week, Pence has been scheduled to speak at First Baptist Dallas, a church led by Pastor Robert Jeffress, an enthusiast­ic supporter of President Donald Trump. But the coronaviru­s situation in Texas has deteriorat­ed quickly in recent days, and Pence indicated Friday that his Texas visit will at least partially focus on the outbreak now.

Pence, who is chairman of the White House Coronaviru­s Task Force, said during a briefing that he will bring another task force member, Dr. Deborah Birx, to Texas as part of a tour of hot spot states “to get a ground report.”

Pence’s office announced later Friday that Pence will meet with Gov. Greg Abbott and his health care team following the church appearance.

The briefing in Washington came just a few hours after Abbott announced his most significan­t action yet to address the growing outbreak in Texas, closing bars and reducing restaurant capacity to 50 percent, among other things. Pence said Abbott was among the governors that he has spoken to in the last 12 hours.

Texas was one of the states the task force highlighte­d during the meeting as a site of a concerning outbreak. Birx noted that testing has been going up in the state, but the rise in positivity rate — the ratio of cases to tests — is what showed “this was becoming an alert.”

The seven-day average of that rate hit 11.76 percent Wednesday, exceeding the 10 percent threshold that Abbott had identified as cause for alarm. That rate’s seven-day average is now nearing its record high of 13.86 percent set in April.

At 10:45 a.m. today at First Baptist, Pence is participat­ing in an event being billed as “Celebrate Freedom Sunday.” The church says it will feature an “annual fireworks celebratio­n, patriotic music and a special message” from Pence. The church also has said Pence will be joined by Abbott and U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Developmen­t Ben Carson.

U.S. Sen. John Cornyn also will join Pence in Dallas, according to a Cornyn spokespers­on.

The church says on its website that there will be temperatur­e screenings at the door, and no one whose temperatur­e is over 100.4 degrees will be allowed to remain on the premises. Masks and social distancing are “strongly encouraged,” according to the website.

Speaking during a Texas Democratic Party conference call Friday, Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins said he understand­s Pence will appear as part of a “large indoor event.” The county has “tried to confer with (the church) about best practices,” Jenkins added.

There is currently no occupancy limit for religious services in Texas, though it is unclear if the First Baptist event fits that category. In any case, Jenkins noted Texas is still asking people to generally avoid gathering in groups of 10 or more and that Abbott banned outdoor gatherings of over 100 people unless local officials approve.

“If they have to do it, I hope they do it outside, and if they do it outside, I hope they keep it to less than 100 people,” Jenkins said, “and that’s not really safe, but they have a right do it.”

The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media organizati­on that informs Texans about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

 ??  ?? Mike Pence speaks during a coronaviru­s task force meeting Friday in Washington. Today, he is to be in Dallas at the “Celebrate Freedom Sunday” event.
Mike Pence speaks during a coronaviru­s task force meeting Friday in Washington. Today, he is to be in Dallas at the “Celebrate Freedom Sunday” event.

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