A grim-faced Donald Trump arrives with
Vice-President Mike Pence to address and uncharacteristically curt coronavirus
taskforce media briefing on Friday.
Debacle of Trump's coronavirus disinfectant
comments could be tipping point
The US president plans to ‘pare back’ his daily
coronavirus briefings after falsely claiming his suggestion to ingest cleaning
products had been ‘sarcastic’
A
grim-faced Donald Trump arrives with Vice-President Mike Pence to address and
uncharacteristically curt coronavirus taskforce media briefing on Friday.
David Smith
and Kari Paul
For Donald
Trump, it was the strangest and most news-making thing he could have done:
instead of taking questions from journalists, dominating the nation’s airwaves
yet again, the US president gave a short pre-written statement and then stalked
off the stage.
The abrupt
end of Friday night’s daily press conference, which has become a ribald, unruly
and often shocking ritual in America during the coronavirus pandemic, was
probably the clearest sign yet of how badly Trump’s bizarre statements over
disinfectant have shaken his administration.
Instead of
going on the offensive after the world reacted with shock and horror to his
Thursday night suggestion that the coronavirus might be treated by injecting
disinfectant into a human body, Trump claimed he was being “sarcastic” and then
retreated from public view.
The New
York Times reported that some officials in the White House thought “it was one
of the worst days in one of the worst weeks of his presidency.”
But it was
Trump’s silence on Friday night that spoke volumes.
White House
coronavirus taskforce briefings are often two-hour primetime marathons but on
Friday Trump turned on his heel as reporters shouted questions in vain. Perhaps
it was a fit of pique, or perhaps revenge on the reporters that he sees as
persecutors. He may also have reached a tipping point with his own advisers
warning that the televised briefings are hurting him far more than they help.
Right on
cue, minutes later, the Axios website reported that Trump plans to “pare back”
his coronavirus press conferences, according to four of its sources. Next week,
it said, “he may stop appearing daily and make shorter appearances when he
does”.
If he does
that then Trump’s remarks over disinfectant will have been the straw that broke
the camel’s back over the nightly ritual of the virus briefings. For weeks they
have dominated the US headlines as the nation struggles to come to terms with a
pandemic that has cost 50,000 American lives. They have provided a canvas for
Trump’s rage, a platform from which he can attack his enemies and – only
occasionally – a place where an American president can seek to reassure a
scared and besieged public enduring stay-at-home orders to curb the virus.
But Trump’s
remarks over disinfectant changed all that.
On
Thursday, Trump had suggested that doctors study the idea of people receiving
injections of disinfectant to combat the virus. He also extolled the potential
and unproven benefits of ultraviolet light. Medical experts, politicians and
even disinfectant makers denounced the suggestion and warned the public against
consuming the product. Trump’s comments generated internet memes and headlines
around the world.
His old
nemesis from 2016, Hillary Clinton, chimed in with a quick jab on Twitter.
“Please don’t poison yourself because Donald Trump thinks it could be a good
idea,” she said. His new nemesis for the 2020 election, former vice-president
Joe Biden, also pitched in. “I can’t believe I have to say this, but please
don’t drink bleach,” he said, mixing mockery with a public service
announcement.
From almost
the moment the words left Trump’s mouth it was clear some sort of damage
limitation was needed.
But, as
shock and amazement traversed the globe, it was slow in coming. When it did
arrive, on Friday lunchtime, it was a clean-up attempt that clearly could have
gone better. At a White House event Trump tried on Friday to justify his
dangerous comments, falsely claiming that he was “asking a question
sarcastically to reporters”.
On Friday,
even as the US death toll topped 50,000 and the grim milestone of 1 million
coronavirus cases grows nearer, Trump tried to make what critics saw as a
desperate and dishonest U-turn.
“I was
asking a question sarcastically to reporters like you just to see what would
happen,” the president, sitting at the Resolute desk in the Oval Office, told
reporters as he signed emergency funding legislation.
“When I was
asking a sarcastic – a very sarcastic question – to the reporters in the room
about disinfectant on the inside, but it does kill it, and it would kill it on
the hands and that would make things much better. That was done in the form of
a sarcastic question to a reporter.”
But video
of the briefings clearly demonstrated otherwise. There was no hint of sarcasm
and Trump’s attempts to rewrite the immediate past were undermined by the
evidence just a simple Google search away.
When Trump
posed the question about the efficacy of disinfectant injections, he had turned
to his right and was looking in the direction of Bill Bryan, the acting
homeland security undersecretary for science and technology, and Deborah Birx,
the coronavirus taskforce coordinator.
Donald
Trump turns to the homeland security official William Bryan during the briefing
at which the president extolled the virtues of ingested disinfectant.
Donald
Trump turns to the DHS official William Bryan during the briefing at which the
president extolled the virtues of ingesting disinfectant. Photograph: White House/Zuma
Wire/Rex/Shutterstock
But Trump –
in his attempt at damage limitation – gamely pressed on. The Reuters reporter
Jeff Mason asked if Trump wanted to clarify that he was being sarcastic and
ensure no one misunderstood him.
He replied:
“Yes. I do think that disinfectant on the hands could have a very good effect.
Now, Bill is going back to check that in the laboratory. You know, it’s an
amazing laboratory, by the way. It’s amazing the work they do.”
One more
time, Mason gamely pressed: “Just to clarify, you’re not encouraging Americans
to inject disinfectant?”
Trump: “No.
Of course not. Interior-wise, it was said sarcastically. It was put in the form
of a question to a group of extraordinarily hostile people, namely the fake
news media.”
But Trump’s
familiar turf of attacking the media was not working any more. In the middle of
a pandemic, with Americans dying in their hundreds every day, the leader of the
administration trying to guide the nation back to safety and normality had put
even more lives at risk. His jumbled, inaccurate assertions only deepened concerns
about Trump’s embrace of flawed science that could endanger public health.
Scott
Gottlieb, Trump’s own former Food and Drug Administration director, was among
those many people now forced to warn Americans not to follow their own
president’s advice. He told a CNBC interviewer: “I think we need to speak very
clearly. There’s no circumstance under which you should take a disinfectant or
inject a disinfectant for the treatment of anything, and certainly not the
treatment of coronavirus.”
The scandal
exploded just a day after a New York Times report that detailed how Trump is
coping with the pressures and isolation caused by the coronavirus pandemic. In
a lengthy piece it portrayed a US president who has become cut off from many of
his former friends and associates as he lives and works in the White House,
unable to leave and travel and hold the campaign rallies that he appears to
crave.
It
portrayed a president who binges on cable news for many hours each morning and
often late into the night, surveying the wreckage of a once-booming economy
that he had planned on being the main plank of his re-election strategy.
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