Panic and confusion permeate White House
following Trump's Covid diagnosis
Concerns mount over spread of the virus within the
building, and whether it could disrupt the functioning of government
David Smith
David Smith
in Washington
@smithinamerica
Sun 4 Oct
2020 07.30 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/oct/04/trump-covid-white-house-panic-confusion
Golden
autumn sunshine shone down on Washington on Saturday to illuminate a US capital
upended as Donald Trump began his first full day in hospital battling
coronavirus amid a presidential election thrown into chaos.
Just hours
earlier, on Friday evening after an excruciating wait for news, the president
had emerged from the White House with a lacklustre wave and thumbs up, but
ignoring reporters’ shouted questions about the state of his health.
Trump
stalked slowly across the south lawn and boarded the US presidential helicopter.
The only visual clue that something profound had changed was Trump’s face: he
was wearing a mask.
As Marine
One lifted into the sky just before sunset, the president left behind a White
House staff suddenly rudderless, fearful and unsure how the story will end. The
reality TV star turned president has delivered his greatest moment of suspense
and the presidential election with its first “October surprise” but maybe not
its last.
Trump, 74,
is spending the weekend at a military hospital near Washington after
discovering that not even the commander in chief of the world’s most powerful
country is immune to the coronavirus. Said to be feverish and fatigued, there
is huge uncertainty over his condition, its potential to deteriorate and
whether he might become incapacitated.
In his
absence, the mood in the White House was said to be one of panic, with growing
concern over the extent of the spread of the virus within the building and
whether it could disrupt the functioning of government.
Staff have
taken their lead from Trump’s bubble of denial for months, eschewing face masks
and congregating in the west wing’s cramped spaces and narrow hallways. The
president’s positive test was chilling proof of what the rest of the country
has long known: no one is safe.
“People are
losing their minds,” one source told the Washington Post newspaper.
As Friday
wore on and Trump’s conditioned worsened, staff were also forced to confront
the possibility that his health could be at serious risk. An information vacuum
filled with rumour and speculation and did little to calm nerves, with media
outlets forced to depend on leaks from anonymous officials or presidential
tweets such as: “Going welI, I think! Thank you to all. LOVE!!!”
The heavily
guarded White House is one of the world’s most secure properties with a new
13ft tall fence to keep out intruders, protesters and terrorists. Yet it too
was breached by the invisible pathogen that has killed more than 205,000
Americans. Commentators said there could be no greater proof of the administration’s
failure to combat the pandemic.
How, when
or from whom Trump became infected remains a mystery. But the myth of
invulnerability may have been finally shattered by an event in the White House
Rose Garden last Saturday in which he nominated judge Amy Coney Barrett to the
supreme court. More than 150 guests sat close together without face masks,
apparently lulled into thinking it was safe to do so in the open air.
But eight
attendees – Trump, the first lady Melania Trump, senior aide Hope Hicks, former
White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, Senators Mike Lee and Thom Tillis,
University of Notre Dame president John Jenkins and junior staffer – have all
since tested positive for the virus.
On Saturday
morning it emerged that the Trump re-election campaign manager Bill Stepien had
also tested positive, fueling more chaos into the election. Deputy campaign
manager Justin Clark is set to run the Trump campaign headquarters in Stepien’s
absence.
After last
Saturday’s Rose Garden celebration, an event which continued with receptions
indoors at the White House, Trump spent a whirlwind week campaigning for the 3
November presidential election.
On Tuesday
there was a chaotic and dismal debate with rival Joe Biden in Cleveland, Ohio,
where many of his entourage sat unmasked in contrast to the Democrat’s team,
who strictly followed the protocols.
On
Thursday, Trump attended a political fundraiser at his golf club in
Bedminister, New Jersey, even though he was aware he had been exposed to the
infected Hicks. That night, sounding unconcerned, he gave an interview to Sean
Hannity of Fox News, apparently blaming the military or law enforcement for
violating physical distancing: “They want to hug you and kiss you because we
really have done a good job for them. You get close, and things happen.”
Trump’s
revelation that he was positive came in perhaps the most momentous tweet of his
entire presidency just before 1am on Friday. At last, critics said, a man
notorious for dealing in disinformation and fantasies had to face a cold
scientific truth he could not wish, insult or tweet away.
He also
referred to it in the tweet correctly as Covid-19, having previously referred
to the disease in public remarks variously as “the China virus”, the plague and
“kung flu”.
Later that
morning, the White House tried to project an air of business-as-usual.
Officials Mark Meadows, Larry Kudlow and Kayleigh McEnany all sought to assure
reporters that Trump was in good spirits and had only mild symptoms.
Yet by the
afternoon, there was evidence of growing gap between spin and reality. It was
announced that Trump had been injected with an experimental drug combination
and, “out of an abundance of caution”, would be flown to hospital. The
otherwise routine Marine One journey gave many in Washington a sense of
witnessing history unfold before their eyes.
Howard
Fineman, a journalist, tweeted: “I’ve seen and heard many indelible moments
here in DC over the years, but nothing like Marine One flying over our
neighborhood bound for Walter Reed, bearing a president struck, like millions
of others, by global pandemic. Unsettling, scary. Politics is stilled for just
a moment.”
Officials
said Trump’s stay of a few days at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center
is precautionary and that he will continue to work from the hospital’s
presidential suite, which is equipped to allow him to keep up his official
duties.
But the
hospitalisation represents the gravest threat to an incumbent US president’s
health since 1981 when Ronald Reagan survived a would-be assassin’s bullet
outside a Washington hotel and received emergency medical attention.
Trump’s
age, sex, obesity and elevated cholesterol put him at greater risk of becoming
seriously ill from a virus that has infected more than 7 million people
nationwide. If he declines sharply and is unable to carry out his
responsibilities, he could transfer power to the vice-president, Mike Pence,
under the 25th amendment to the constitution. Pence tested negative for the
virus on Friday.
Bill
Whalen, a research fellow at the Hoover Institution think tank at Stanford
University in Palo Alto, California, said: “The dominoes are multiple. There’s
the question of his ability to campaign in person moving ahead. There’s the
question of his ability to have the office right now: the 25th amendment. I’ve
talked to some of my conservative friends who think he should be invoking this
right now.
“I hate to
speculate like this, but what if his health did deteriorate rather fast to the
point where either he was unconscious or just delirious? Then the
vice-president, the cabinet, would have to step in and do this, so there’s
actually a school of thought that he should invoke it proactively.”
The US
government has a long history of opacity when it comes to presidents’ health
and the Trump White House, in particular, suffers from a trust deficit.
Kurt
Bardella, a senior adviser to the anti-Trump group the Lincoln Project, said:
“What we’re seeing is a very healthy scepticism about anything that comes from
the White House. These are the same people who have been lying about everybody
else’s health terms of the impact of Covid-19, so why would we expect any
differently when they’re talking about themselves?”
Dan Rather,
a veteran journalist who reported on Richard Nixon’s downfall in 1974, added on
Twitter: “What we don’t know is a lot more than what we do know. And we have an
administration that long ago squandered its credibility. All coverage of this
crisis should keep these truths in mind for context.”
His next
debate with Biden, scheduled for 15 October, is in doubt. As well as Stepien
testing positive for Covid-19, so has key ally Ronna McDaniel, the head of the
Republican National Committee, and former New Jersey governor Chris Christie,
who helped coach Trump for the first debate with Biden. Despite Trump’s
attempts to change the conversation, for example with Barrett’s court
nomination, the pandemic remains the defining issue at the ballot box.
Glen Bolger,
a Republican pollster, told the Associated Press: “It’s challenging. It would
be better if the discussion was about jobs and the economy, or even Joe Biden
is going to ‘be held captive to the left’. But the election is going to be
about coronavirus, and that’s not favourable terrain for Republicans.”

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