'He just thinks about himself': America's
reckless, ill president
Trump and his circle have disregarded basic health
protections and shown willful indifference towards the safety of others
Ed
Pilkington
@edpilkington
Mon 12 Oct
2020 08.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/oct/12/donald-trump-covid-reckless-president
Illustration:
Francisco Navas/Guardian Design
Of all the
cornucopia of tone-deaf and offensive remarks made by the president of the
United States in almost four years in office, one proposition he made to the
American people last week must surely rank among the top 10.
“Don’t be
afraid of Covid,” he said in a tweet. “Don’t let it dominate your life.”
Donald
Trump posted those words at 2.37pm on 5 October from the luxury of his
four-room suite in Walter Reed medical center. He was surrounded by a team of a
dozen world-class doctors infusing him with a unique cocktail of experimental
drugs for Covid-19 that would have cost an ordinary American hundreds of
thousands of dollars to procure.
About an
hour earlier, data scientists at Johns Hopkins University released their latest
figures for the pandemic. They showed that at least 7.5 million Americans had
contracted the disease, and that 209,881 had died – a death rate towering over
most developed countries and 2,000 times that of humble Vietnam.
At that
same moment, more than half of US states were reporting upticks in infection
rates that are almost certain to spike further as winter sets in. Meanwhile,
the New England Journal of Medicine was preparing to publish a brutal editorial
that would hold the Trump administration directly responsible for tens of
thousands of needless Covid-19 deaths, concluding that “anyone else who
recklessly squandered lives in this way would be suffering legal consequences”.
As the
president said, don’t let Covid dominate your life, don’t be afraid.
Jonathan
Reiner, a professor of medicine and surgery at George Washington University
medical center, had a visceral reaction when he heard those words. “I was
angry. So 210,000 Americans have died, most of them alone. I’m sad to say that
they were almost certainly afraid,” he said.
Over the
past two weeks, the president and his cohorts have shown a reckless disdain for
basic health protections that overshadows even the administration’s past
negligence in its response to coronavirus. This time, though, the virus has
reared back to bite not just the wider American public but also the inner cadre
of the Trump administration.
According
to a leaked Fema memo, the number of White House staffers, Republican US
senators and top conservative dignitaries who have tested positive for the
disease has reached 34. That includes at least 10 members of the Trump
administration, headlined by the president and first lady, senior advisers Hope
Hicks and Stephen Miller, and five members of the White House press team.
210,000
Americans have died, most of them alone. I’m sad to say that they were almost
certainly afraid
Jonathan Reiner
Beyond
that, three Republican senators have gone down with the disease. The positive
test of Charles Ray, the US coast guard admiral, has sent seven out of eight of
the joint chiefs of staff – the country’s top military brass – scurrying into
quarantine.
It’s hard
to know when the current White House Covid outbreak began, because officials
have refused to divulge when Trump received his last negative coronavirus test.
Given the symptoms that he clearly displayed on a fundraising trip to New
Jersey last week, it seems highly likely he was already infected at the first
televised presidential debate with Joe Biden at which several members of the
Trump family and crew turned up ostentatiously unmasked.
The maskless
theme stretched further back to a series of events at the White House the
previous weekend, which appear to have acted as incubators – or super-spreaders
– of the illness. On Saturday 26 September, about 250 of the elite of the
Republican party gathered shoulder-to-shoulder in the Rose Garden to mark
Trump’s nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to the US supreme court, with a smaller
indoors reception held earlier in the Diplomatic Room.
The next
day, 27 September, senior military officers gathered indoors in the East Room
of the White House to mark Gold Star Mother’s Day. All of these events were
largely without masks, in a brazen violation of recommendations from the
administration’s own public health agency, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC).
At the Rose
Garden event, guests were also in aggressive violation of social distancing
protocols, spending time in close proximity and even hugging each other. Trump
also attended debate preparation sessions in the run-up to his encounter with
Biden that took place in a cramped indoor space – again maskless.
The
sessions involved Hicks, Miller, Trump’s presidential campaign manager Bill
Stepien and the former governor of New Jersey, Chris Christie. All later tested
positive.
It is hard
to overstate the willful indifference towards the health and safety of those
around them – and of themselves – that such behavior entailed. In a wider
sense, it also exuded a disregard for the security of the American people,
sending a message that health protocols are for wimps, even within the beating
heart of the US government.
As Carol
Anderson, professor of African American studies at Emory University, put it:
“The Republicans are suicide bombers aimed at our ship of state.”
Public
health experts were even more aghast by the White House decision to forgo any
effort at contact tracing of the Rose Garden event. Alongside testing, contact
tracing is the basic building block of any effort to contain the virus,
allowing officials to identify who has been exposed and get them into
isolation; without contact tracing, the disease is as free to roam as a wild
horse on the Texas plains.
Reiner
described the lack of contact tracing as “inexcusable”. The only explanation
for such an aberrant decision, he now believes, is that the White House feared
that the exercise would discover the individual who was the source of the
outbreak, “patient zero” – and that it would turn out to be Trump himself.
“Not to
carry out formal contact tracing of a large event like the Rose Garden is the
height of irresponsibility,” Reiner said. “The virus has a reproductive number
of about 2.5 which means that each infected person infects two and a half
others. So if there are about 30 people infected in the Trump circle, multiply
that by 2.5 and then again by 2.5 – that’s how quickly the virus could spread.”
It’s not
only the elite of Trump World who have been put in harm’s way by the flagrant
disrespect for basic health guidelines flaunted this week. There are also the
hundreds of people who serve the elite of Trump World – the “forgotten people”
as Trump describes them – who have been equally imperiled.
The most
vivid example of this phenomenon was the two Secret Service agents who drove
Trump, spewing coronavirus from every pore, in an armored presidential
limousine so that he could wave to supporters outside Walter Reed. Trump was
wearing a cloth mask, not an N95, which would have offered greater protection
to the agents who risked their own health by accompanying the president in a
hermetically sealed vehicle.
“The
president placed the health of his Secret Service agents at risk for a photo
op. Why would you do that?” Reiner said. “Secret Service agents didn’t sign up
to take avoidable risks – and this was entirely avoidable.”
The day
after his Walter Reed jaunt, Trump discharged himself from hospital and
returned to the White House. Before he stepped back into the building, he
removed his mask for the benefit of the cameras – so endangering the many
cooks, cleaners, maintenance workers and other “forgotten Americans” who labor
every day to serve him inside the residence.
The president
placed the health of his Secret Service agents at risk for a photo op. Why
would you do that?
Jonathan Reiner
The gesture
provoked a furious response from Everett Kelley, the president of the American
Federation of Government Employees, the largest union for federal workers in
the US. “The actions of Donald Trump over the last few days have been typical
of his administration’s approach to the virus. At nearly every turn, the
mismanagement of the federal response by the president and his appointees has
put workers’ lives at risk,” he said.
Perhaps the
most egregious of all the recent spectacles was Trump’s decision to travel to
his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, on 1 October. He flew there on Marine
One, the presidential helicopter, hours before he was given his positive result
for coronavirus but significantly hours after the White House learned that
Hicks, one of Trump’s closest aides with whom he had been travelling, had been
infected.
Yet no one
at the fundraising event was warned of the exposure, and no masks were worn.
Among those put at potential risk were up to 200 Republican supporters, 19
major donors paying up to $250,000 each for the privilege of spending an hour
cooped up indoors with the president, and a further 19 staff employed by the
Trump Organization who served the guests.
During the
course of the event, several mandatory regulations set by New Jersey’s governor
were openly flouted, including the number of people allowed to congregate in an
enclosed space, the presentation of food buffet-style in contravention of social
distancing rules, and the sheer fact that Trump had not informed participants
that he had been exposed to the virus and should be quarantining. This summer,
a health worker who was looking after older people in a residential home in
Camden, New Jersey, was charged with five criminal counts of endangerment
because she did not tell the people in her care that she had developed symptoms
of Covid.
According
to several eyewitness accounts, Trump also showed symptoms of Covid in
Bedminster, yet appears to be above the law.
The events
at Bedminster were of great personal interest to Sandra Diaz. Until 2014, she
worked for four years as a housekeeper at Bedminster keeping Trump’s personal
residence on the property spotlessly clean as he demanded.
Diaz was at
that time one of many undocumented immigrants who Trump employed (she now has permanent
US resident status). For her efforts, she received no health coverage from the
Trump Organization.
Last week
when she watched the US president bragging about how well he had done after
contracting Covid-19 under the state-of-the-art experimental treatment he was
receiving, she thought back to her time as a low-paid uninsured undocumented
Trump employee at Bedminster. She thought too of the 581 people who have died
from the disease in her New Jersey county and wondered what would have happened
had she been infected without access to any treatment at all.
“A lot of
people have died from this virus in my town,” she said. “A lot of families have
lost fathers, mothers, brothers, uncles.”
Diaz has
two friends who are still working at Trump’s golf course, a housekeeper and a
landscaper. She spoke to them after the president’s fundraising visit last
week, which netted Trump’s re-election campaign $5m.
“My friends are really scared,” she said. “They are really poor people, and when poor people get sick they lose their jobs and the hospitals don’t have beds. Donald Trump, he doesn’t think about them. He just thinks about himself.”




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