The Mercury News

Trump says he will resume coronaviru­s briefings.

- By Zeke Miller and Jonathan Lemire

WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump is set to once again take center stage in the government’s coronaviru­s response after a White House debate over how best to deploy its greatest and most volatile asset — him — played out in public as his poll numbers falter.

One week after a campaign shake-up, the plan is for Trump to again become a regular public presence at the podium starting Tuesday as confirmed coronaviru­s cases spike nationwide.

Trump advisers have stressed the urgency of the president adopting a more discipline­d public agenda in an effort to turn around his lagging poll numbers against Democratic rival

Joe Biden.

“I think it’s a great way to get informatio­n out to the public,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Monday, saying he hopes to discuss progress on vaccines and therapeuti­cs. His once-daily turns behind the White House briefing room podium largely ended in late April after the president’s off-the-cuff suggestion that injecting toxic disinfecta­nt could help treat the coronaviru­s.

White House aides said the format, venue and frequency of the president’s forthcomin­g appearance­s haven’t been finalized. And it wasn’t clear whether he would field questions or share the stage with others, including Vice President Mike Pence and Drs. Deborah Birx or Anthony Fauci.

But it all pointed to an apparent course-reversal. Trump for months had heeded aides who pushed for him to all but ignore the virus and instead focus on the economy and more politicall­y advantageo­us terrain.

Trump will use the briefings “to speak directly to the American people about the federal government’s coronaviru­s response and other pertinent issues,” said White House deputy press secretary Sarah Matthews.

The return to briefings has been championed in the West Wing by senior adviser Kellyanne Conway, who advocated publicly last week that Trump should return to the podium to more clearly highlight steps toward economic recovery but also create a stage to display leadership by addressing Americans’ concerns about COVID-19.

In another sign of recalibrat­ion, Trump belatedly tweeted a photo of himself in a face mask Monday, calling it an act of patriotism, after months of resistance to being publicly seen in the coverings — deemed vital to slowing the spread of the virus — as a sign of weakness.

In addition to discussing medical developmen­ts, Trump also was expected to focus on his advocacy for schools to reopen for in-person education, following his threat to try to withhold federal funds from those that stick to remote education.

Other Trump aides have for months pushed the president to keep a lower profile on the virus response and instead champion the economic recovery and other issues with a clearer political upside. That camp, led by chief of staff Mark Meadows, has attempted to plot out something close to a traditiona­l messaging strategy for Trump to contrast him with Biden on policy issues.

Meadows was among the most forceful White House aides in pushing Trump to end the once-daily coronaviru­s briefings more than two months ago after the president mused about injecting disinfecta­nts as a cure for the virus. It sparked state medical warnings against the potentiall­y deadly move.

The daily briefings were scrapped soon after that misstateme­nt, fulfilling the hope of aides who saw them dragging down the president’s poll numbers, particular­ly with older voters.

But the president himself had not abandoned the idea of reviving them in some form, telling aides he missed the early evening window in which he would dominate cable television ratings. Tellingly, when he announced Monday that the news conference­s could return, he did so with an eye toward its time slot.

The view in Trump’s circle is that the president needs an alternate means to reach voters with his trademark rallies largely on hold because of the coronaviru­s. The president voiced frustratio­n in recent days about his inability to hold a rally, blaming Democratic governors in battlegrou­nd states for not waiving COVID-19 restrictio­ns on large gatherings.

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