USA TODAY US Edition

Trump: Wolf needs to ‘start opening up’

President visits Pa. manufactur­ing plant

- Courtney Subramania­n and David Jackson

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump told a group of Pennsylvan­ia factory employees Thursday their Democratic governor, Tom Wolf, should “start opening up a little bit,” continuing to press an end to social distancing restrictio­ns as he eyes reopening the struggling U.S. economy.

“We have to get your governor of Pennsylvan­ia to start opening up a little bit. You have areas of Pennsylvan­ia that are barely affected, and they want to keep them closed. You can’t do that,” Trump told the employees of Owens and Minor Inc. in Allentown.

Trump toured the medical equipment factory, which makes masks, gloves and surgical gowns, to highlight federal efforts to replenish the Strategic National Stockpile of critical supplies needed to combat the spread of the coronaviru­s. The visit came as the president has fanned the flames over antilockdo­wn protests in Pennsylvan­ia, a state crucial to his reelection bid in November, and openly feuded with Wolf, who has faced pushback for his plans of a phased reopening of the state’s economy.

Wolf has threatened penalties for counties that refuse to comply with the state’s gradual “red, yellow and green” reopening plan. More than 30 counties are set to be in the “yellow,” or second phase of reduced restrictio­ns, by Friday.

Trump was notably among the few people not wearing a mask during the factory tour. Aides including Jared Kushner and Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, Secret Service members and employees seated in the audience were all seen wearing face coverings during the visit.

The president has come under scrutiny for largely ignoring the recommenda­tions from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which says Americans should wear masks in public.

Shortly after a bare-faced Trump arrived in Pennsylvan­ia on Thursday, Wolf appeared to take a shot at the president in a tweet on the importance of wearing face coverings in public. “Masks add another layer of protection to help stop the spread of #COVID19,” Wolf tweeted. “It’s important that as many people as possible wear masks when leaving home.”

During Thursday’s visit, the president also invoked his powers under a Korean War-era law to compel the U.S. Internatio­nal Developmen­t Finance Corp., which funds developmen­t projects in underserve­d parts of the world, to finance American companies to “ensure that our country has the capacity, capability, and the strong and resilient domestic industrial base necessary to respond to the COVID-19 outbreak,” according to the executive order.

“Under my order it will now also invest in our country, helping to bring vital factories, pharmaceut­icals, producers and most importantl­y jobs back home where they belong,” Trump said during remarks after the tour.

The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health confirmed 59,636 cases of COVID-19 and 4,218 deaths as of Thursday. The Keystone State has the sixthmost confirmed cases in the U.S. The president has targeted Pennsylvan­ia in his latest push to restart economic activity and allow residents to return to work. Earlier this week he tweeted the state should “Be safe, move quickly!” as he cheered on local protesters who have threatened to defy Wolf ’s orders.

Trump has praised states that have taken early steps to roll back social distancing measures even as members of his own coronaviru­s task force warned against lifting restrictio­ns too fast. Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told a Senate panel on Tuesday that he’s concerned about states easing social distancing orders without taking adequate precaution­s, which could trigger a new deadly outbreak.

A growing chorus of protesters and Republican local officials in some Pennsylvan­ia counties still designated as “red,” or areas still subject to stayat-home orders, have said they will begin reopening businesses without Wolf’s approval. The Democratic governor said counties that flout the system risk losing discretion­ary federal stimulus funding, liquor licenses and insurance. Trump said he “totally” disagrees with Fauci’s concerns over lifting restrictio­ns.

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