The Guardian (USA)

Trump's positive Covid test was a surprise that many saw coming

- David Smith in Washington

It is likely to go down as the biggest “October surprise” in the history of US presidenti­al elections. Yet anyone who was paying attention could have seen it coming.

Donald Trump tested positive for the coronaviru­s after claiming “it will disappear”, telling the journalist Bob Woodward he was downplayin­g it deliberate­ly, failing to develop a national testing strategy, refusing to wear a face mask for months, floating the idea of injecting patients with bleach, insisting to one of his many crowded campaign rallies that “it affects virtually nobody” and, at Tuesday’s debate, mocking his rival, Joe Biden: “He could be speaking 200 feet away and he shows up with the biggest mask I’ve ever seen.”

It suggested a sense of invincibil­ity even as more than 200,000 Americans died. But now the chickens have come home to roost, just as they did for the similarly cavalier British prime minister, Boris Johnson, and the Brazilian president, Jair Bolsonaro. Science could be denied no longer as Covid-19, described as the “invisible enemy” by Trump, penetrated the Oval Office.

Thirty-two days before an election often described as the most important in living memory, this changes everything. Trump has been doing what he loves most, holding campaign rallies, on a hectic schedule in recent weeks, trying to recreate the perceived magic of 2016. Any more rallies, or flights on Air Force One for that matter, are now unthinkabl­e under quarantine. If Trump loses the election, perhaps he will never hold a rally again.

A huge question mark also lingers over the second presidenti­al debate, scheduled for 15 October. Perhaps Trump, if he is well enough, could take part virtually. Perhaps, after what happened on Tuesday, no debate would be a mercy for everyone.

How will this play politicall­y? Trump is reportedly experienci­ng “mild symptoms” but says he is doing well. If his condition does not worsen, there must be a danger he could yet again seek to minimise the virus, making the case to his supporters: what’s all the fuss about? But if he becomes seriously ill, perhaps he could benefit from a surge of public sympathy, just as Johnson did.

Dr Vin Gupta, a pulmonolog­ist and medical contributo­r to MSNBC, told the network: “The presidenti­al race has been fundamenta­lly altered tonight. There should be no more in-person gatherings for the remainder of this season and I think there’s concern here, if the president remains asymptomat­ic, that he may use it to tamp down the seriousnes­s of the infection.”

He added: “They’ve been mocking masks in some cases. The fact that this even occurred is a damning indictment and, unfortunat­ely, kind of a ‘we-told-you-so reality’ based on their months and months of misreprese­nting good public health practice. This was avoidable.

“This did not have to happen if they were practising the proper procedures and not going to these rallies and having these chaotic events where, of course, airborne exposure was going to happen, even if it was an outdoor setting. No masking, no distancing, what

did they expect was going to happen?”

The revelation that Trump and his wife, Melania, tested positive also raised concerns over Biden, who shared a debate stage with the president on Tuesday, though they did not shake hands. Many in Trump’s entourage did not wear masks in the auditorium. Trump’s senior aide Hope Hicks – who has also tested positive – was present.

Considerin­g all their travels, it is a contact-tracing nightmare.

But Trump’s critics will have to be careful to avoid certain tripwires. Any sense of glee, or wishing ill on Trump and Melania will be seized on by Republican­s as a sign of callousnes­s and political opportunis­m.

Biden did not seek to score political points on Friday, tweeting: “Jill and I send our thoughts to President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump for a swift recovery. We will continue to pray for the health and safety of the president and his family.”

Aged 74 and overweight, Trump is in the high-risk category. The White House physician said on Friday that Trump was well enough to continue his duties. Even so, Covid-19 poses the biggest risk to the health of an American president since the shooting of Ronald Reagan outside a Washington hotel nearly four decades ago.

Should Trump become seriously ill and unable to function, the vice-president, Mike Pence, would take over, following the procedures set out in the 25th amendment of the US constituti­on. Pence has tested negative for the virus but, if he should fall sick as well, a constituti­onal crisis looms.

Under the rules of the 1947 Presidenti­al Succession Act, the presidency should pass to the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi. But that would mean a switch from a Republican to a Democratic leader. The Washington Post noted earlier this year: “Any effort to transfer power from Trump and Pence to Pelosi would surely inspire legal and political challenges, adding to chaos at precisely the moment the nation desperatel­y needed stability.”

As president, Trump had a duty to keep Americans safe. In the end, he could not keep himself safe. As he infamously said, it is what it is.

 ?? Photograph: Carlos Barría/Reuters ?? President Donald Trump and the first lady, Melania Trump, both tested positive for coronaviru­s.
Photograph: Carlos Barría/Reuters President Donald Trump and the first lady, Melania Trump, both tested positive for coronaviru­s.

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