U.S. coronavirus crisis takes a sharp political turn
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[April 18, 2020]
By Maria Caspani and Nathan Layne
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. coronavirus
crisis took a sharp political turn on Friday as President Donald Trump
lashed out at four Democratic governors over their handling of the
pandemic after having conceded that states bear ultimate control of
restrictions to contain the outbreak.
The Republican president targeted three swing states critical to his
re-election bid - Michigan, Minnesota and Virginia - where his
conservative loyalists have mounted pressure campaigns challenging those
governors' stay-at-home orders.
Amplifying a theme that his supporters have trumpeted this week in
street protests at the state capitals of Lansing, St. Paul, and
Richmond, Trump issued a series of matching Twitter posts touting the
slogans: "LIBERATE MICHIGAN!" "LIBERATE MINNESOTA!" and "LIBERATE
VIRGINIA!"
Michigan has become a particular focus of agitation to relax
social-distancing rules that rank among the strictest in the nation
after Governor Gretchen Whitmer, widely seen as a potential running mate
for presumed Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden, extended them
through the end of April.
Protesters defying the restrictions from the steps of the state Capitol
on Wednesday shouted "lock her up," a chant that was a staple of Trump's
campaign rallies and originally referred to his 2016 Democratic rival,
Hillary Clinton.
'WHEN IT'S SAFE'
Whitmer said on Friday she was hopeful her state, which suffered one of
the country's fastest-growing coronavirus infection rates, can begin to
restart parts of its economy on May 1. But she urged doing so cautiously
to avoid reigniting the outbreak just as it was being brought to heel.
Responding to Trump's critique later in the day, Whitmer said Michigan
will re-engage its economy when it's safe, adding: "The last thing I
want to do is to have a second wave here."
Trump also took renewed aim at one of his favorite political foils, New
York Governor Andrew Cuomo, suggesting on Twitter that his state, the
U.S. epicenter of the outbreak, had asked for too much assistance that
was never fully used.
At his daily news briefing, Cuomo shot back saying Trump should "maybe
get up and go to work" instead of watching TV, and accused the president
of favoring the airline industry and business cronies in a recent
bailout package that left little for the states.
The flare-up in political sparring came as the number of known
coronavirus infections in the United States surpassed 700,000, the most
of any country. At the same time, the tally of lives lost from COVID-19,
the highly contagious lung disease caused by the virus, has soared to
more than 35,000. New York state accounts for nearly half those deaths.
While the death toll continued to climb, the rate of hospitalizations
and other indicators have been leveling off, a sign that drastic
social-distancing restrictions imposed in 42 of the 50 U.S. states were
working to curtail the outbreak.
Stay-at-home orders and the closure of non-essential businesses have
also strangled U.S. commerce, triggering millions of layoffs and
forecasts that America is headed for its deepest recession since the
economic collapse of the 1930s.
The result has been mounting pressure to ease the shutdowns, leading to
clashes between Trump, who had touted the strength of the U.S. economy
as the best case for his re-election in November, and governors in
hard-hit states who warned against lifting restrictions too quickly.
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President Donald Trump addresses the daily coronavirus task force
briefing at the White House in Washington, U.S., April 17, 2020.
REUTERS/Leah Millis
Trump, who played down the coronavirus threat in its early stages,
had been pressing to restart idled businesses as soon as May 1, at
first declaring "total" authority to do so and branding governors
who resisted his approach, many of them Democrats, as "mutineers."
STATE CONTROL AND TESTING
In the end Trump acknowledged it was up to the governors to decide
when and how to relax the restrictions they themselves had imposed
since last month, presenting new federal guidelines on Thursday as
recommendations.
While the guidelines call for a phased-in, science-based strategy in
keeping with the advice of leading health experts, the plan hinges
on widespread testing to gauge the scope of infections and how many
people might have developed immunity to the virus.
At a White House briefing on Friday, Trump's coronavirus task force
members, through statements and graphics, pushed back against
criticism from some governors and lawmakers that limited testing
ability is impeding the country's return to normalcy.
"We believe today that we have the capacity in the United States to
do a sufficient amount of testing for states to move into phase one
in the time and manner that they deem appropriate," Vice President
Mike Pence told reporters.
Cuomo argued earlier that the Trump administration was foisting
responsibility for a massive testing program on the states without
providing necessary financial resources.
"Is there any funding so I can do these things that you want us to
do? No. That is passing the buck without passing the bucks," Cuomo
said.
Even as Cuomo was addressing reporters, Trump immediately took to
Twitter in Washington to fire back, saying he "should spend more
time 'doing' and less time 'complaining.'"
Trump struck a more conciliatory tone during the White House
briefing. Asked about criticism leveled at him earlier in the day by
Washington state Governor Jay Inslee, a Democrat who accused Trump
of "fomenting domestic rebellion" with his "LIBERATE" tweets, the
president demurred.
Trump denied he was suggesting that Michigan, Minnesota and Virginia
lift their stay-at-home orders altogether, but added, "I think
elements of what they've done are too much."
Of the protesters, Trump said, "These are people expressing their
views." He added, "They seem to be very responsible to me. ... But
they've been treated a little bit rough."
(Reporting by Maria Caspani, Nathan Layne, Susan Heavey and Lisa
Lambert; Writing by Grant McCool and Steve Gorman; Editing by Frank
McGurty, Howard Goller and Daniel Wallis)
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