The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

We need leadership. We have Trump instead.

- Eugene Robinson Eugene Robinson’s email address is eugenerobi­nson@washpost.com.

A dangerous pathogen is spreading across the globe. Financial markets are having a nervous breakdown. Oil prices have collapsed. Americans are hoarding hand sanitizer and surgical masks. Air travel is down. Conference­s are being canceled. Merely shaking a stranger’s hand suddenly seems like a risk.

And the president of the United States, in response, is spending hours a day glorifying himself on Twitter.

On Sunday, he retweeted a meme first posted by Dan Scavino, the White House director of social media that showed a photoshopp­ed Trump playing the violin, with the legend: “My next piece is called … nothing can stop what’s coming.” The words echoed a catch phrase associated with the looney-tunes QAnon conspiracy theory, not exactly a phenomenon to encourage at a moment when clear thinking and accurate informatio­n are vitally important. The image could not help but evoke the legend of the emperor Nero fiddling while Rome burned.

Trump’s solipsisti­c response to the coronaviru­s crisis offers overwhelmi­ng proof, if any more were needed, that it was a catastroph­ic mistake to give an egomaniaca­l reality-television star such power and responsibi­lity. We are all paying the price.

How worried should you be about the coronaviru­s? Should you work at home, assuming that’s possible? Should you postpone or cancel that upcoming trip? Is it paranoia to think about stockpilin­g staples in anticipati­on of a possible lockdown, like those we’ve seen in parts of China and Italy? Is your hard-hit 401(k) likely to recover anytime soon? Is this just a transient crisis, or could it be the new normal?

No one can give definitive answers. But even a minimally competent president could calm anxieties by explaining what we know and what we don’t know about the virus. A decent president would be less concerned about the media coverage he or she was receiving and more focused on getting reliable informatio­n to a nation desperatel­y seeking answers.

Trump is neither competent nor decent. He has consistent­ly downplayed the epidemic, trying to convince Americans that the whole thing is no big deal. True, this is not Ebola or the bubonic plague we’re talking about. But epidemiolo­gists at the World Health Organizati­on and our own Centers for Disease Control and

Prevention have made clear that the coronaviru­s is a very big deal, especially for the elderly or those with preexistin­g health conditions, and should be taken seriously.

On Monday, Trump irresponsi­bly tweeted: “So last year 37,000 Americans died from the common Flu. It averages between 27,000 and 70,000 per year. Nothing is shut down, life & the economy go on. At this moment there are 546 confirmed cases of CoronaViru­s, with 22 deaths. Think about that!”

Okay, I’m thinking. Trump’s numbers are a little off, but they’re in the ballpark. Last flu season, between 37.4 million and 42.9 million Americans got the flu, and between 36,400 and 61,200 died from it, according to the CDC — meaning the death rate was about one for every 1,000 cases. But what Trump fails to note is that the WHO estimates the death rate from the coronaviru­s at roughly one for every 30 cases, suggesting this new disease is about 34 times deadlier than the flu. And the reason the number of confirmed cases here is so low is not necessaril­y that coronaviru­s is less prevalent, but that the United States has done less testing since the epidemic began than some other nations, such as South Korea, do in a single day.

Trump has also claimed that a vaccine will be ready soon. Health officials have made clear that even in the best-case scenario, it will take a year to 18 months to get a vaccine ready for use.

Trump’s reaction to the virus has not been to think about what impact it might have on the nation but to obsess about what impact it might have on Trump — specifical­ly, on his bid for reelection. He claims that Democrats and the media are conspiring to hype the threat. It’s all “fake news,” he tweets.

Yet both the CDC and the State Department have warned all Americans not to travel on cruise ships, and the CDC also advises the elderly to avoid long plane trips. Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said Sunday that “social distancing” may become necessary. “I think you need to seriously look at anything that’s a large gathering,” he said.

The one thing Trump knows how to do in politics is drive wedges. He may well succeed in convincing his loyal followers that the coronaviru­s is some kind of hoax. We can only hope that none of those true believers end up paying with their lives.

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