Without wearing a mask, Trump tours Pennsylvania mask distribution
center
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[May 15, 2020]
By Steve Holland
ALLENTOWN, Pa. (Reuters) - Without wearing
a face mask himself, President Donald Trump toured a mask distribution
center in Pennsylvania on Thursday and announced plans to replenish the
U.S. strategic stockpile of medical equipment depleted by the
coronavirus outbreak.
Trump, a Republican who is running for re-election in November, has
resisted wearing a mask in public despite his administration's guidance
to Americans to wear them and new White House rules requiring that staff
wear them at work.
The president toured the Owens & Minor Inc distribution center, which
the White House said has sent millions of N95 masks, surgical gowns and
gloves to hospitals and surgery centers across the United States.
Company officials wore masks.
Trump visited a mask production facility in Arizona last week, when he
also did not wear a face covering, though he said he tried some on
backstage.
Pennsylvania is a political swing state wooed by both Republicans and
Democrats in presidential elections. Though the Thursday event was
arranged by the White House, it had campaign overtones, with music
similar to what is played at Trump's rallies and a pejorative reference
by the president to his expected Democratic challenger, former Vice
President Joe Biden.
Trump accused the Obama administration of allowing the stockpile to be
depleted. Trump has been in office for three years; the coronavirus
outbreak started hitting the United States earlier this year.
Trump said his administration would seek to have three months' worth of
supplies on reserve rather than one to three weeks' worth.
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President Donald Trump tours medical equipment distributor Owens &
Minor in Allentown, Pennsylvania, U.S., May 14, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos
Barria
"I'm determined that America will be fully prepared for any of the
future outbreaks, of which we hope there's going to be none," he
said during remarks after his tour.
The president has previously sought to downplay the possibility of
the coronavirus returning in the fall, though doctors have said it
is very likely.
A senior administration official told reporters earlier on Thursday
that the Trump administration was seeking to add 300 million N95
masks, the respiratory protective devices that are key to protecting
medical workers fighting the deadly coronavirus, to the U.S.
stockpile by the fall.
The official said the administration hoped ultimately to replenish
its strategic national stockpile, which had only 13 million N95s at
the beginning of the outbreak, to 1 billion in total.
The administration is seeking to shore up medical supplies as part
of a bid to prepare for future flare-ups of coronavirus cases, as
states nationwide begin to reopen after lockdowns aimed at slowing
the spread of the virus.
(Reporting by Steve Holland; additional reporting by Alexandra Alper
and Jeff Mason; writing by Jeff Mason; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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