'Anyone can get it,' Trump supporters shocked at diagnosis, unwavering
in support
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[October 03, 2020]
By Ernest Scheyder and Nick Brown
WARREN, Ohio/BANGOR, Penn. (Reuters) - As
Americans digested the news on Friday that President Donald Trump had
tested positive for the novel coronavirus, some of his backers expressed
surprise that he hadn't been safe from infection and said their support
for him was not diminished.
"It was shocking," said Maranda Joseph, 43, of Warren, Ohio, who has 12
Trump flags in her front yard festooned with skeletons and other
Halloween decorations. "To see he has it wakes you up a bit. Anyone can
get it, even the president."
Trump tweeted early Friday morning that he and his wife, Melania, had
tested positive after a whirlwind campaign week in which he
visited seven states and debated with his Democratic rival in the
Nov. 3 election, Joe Biden.
The Republican has played down the risks of the virus and COVID-19
disease that has killed more than 207,000 Americans, drawing criticism
for his erratic messaging and recent resumption of campaign rallies
where his supporters often are crowded together and don't wear masks.
Officials in Minnesota and New Jersey - two of Trump's stops this week -
urged anyone who had attended his events to be tested.
Joseph, a homemaker, said she thinks more people should wear masks at
future Trump rallies, though she added that she would attend one herself
once the president recovers.
"People with compromised immune systems should stay home," she said.
Some in Warren expressed skepticism that Trump even has the virus,
citing Ohio Governor Mike DeWine’s positive test earlier this year
before he tested negative later the same day.
"There’s so many false positives out there. Has Trump had a second test
yet?" asked Sharon Tice, 70, who sells Trump T-shirts and other
memorabilia. "But if he does have it, it could influence the way he sees
things."
In Palm Springs, California, 36-year-old Katie Jones, from San Diego,
was confident Trump would beat the virus.
"It's, like, heartbreaking inside, but he's a strong man. He'll get
through it," she told Reuters.
The White House said Trump was being moved into a special suite at
Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland, for
the next few days as a precautionary measure.
A source familiar with the situation said Trump has a mild fever and a
White House official said doctors urged the move so Trump could get
immediate care if needed.
Dan Madden, an independent voter from Orange County speaking in Palm
Springs, said concerns could rise if Trump's condition worsened.
"If he's down in bed and sick and needs a respirator, that would
probably change a lot of people's opinion. But he may just feel some flu
symptoms. He may just have to stay in bed a few days. You don't know. It
affects everyone so differently."
Trump's gender, age and weight are all factors that make him more
vulnerable to developing severe COVID-19 and give him a notional risk of
around 4% of dying from it, health experts said on Friday.
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Cathy Lukasko, auxiliary chair of the Trumbull County
Republican Party, speaks with U.S. President Donald Trump
supporter Edward Cola, 67, at the Trumbull County Republican
Party headquarters in Warren, Ohio, U.S., October 2, 2020.
REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
Some Republicans said the diagnosis could actually help the
President.
"Trump will prove to the American people that you can survive COVID,"
said Cathy Lukasko, auxiliary chair of the Trumbull County, Ohio,
Republican Party.
More than 7.2 million infections have been reported in the United
States since the pandemic began seven months ago.
Lukasko was running the party’s offices on Friday without a mask,
handing out signs for Trump and local Republican candidates.
"This might be a nice little break for him," she said.
The reactions reflected a longstanding pattern - Americans are
largely settled in their views on Trump. A Reuters/Ipsos poll
published on Thursday showed Biden holds a 9-point lead over Trump,
the same margin in six of the last seven national polls, a period of
time that has seen the death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader
Ginsburg and Tuesday night's chaotic debate.
Some Republicans like Kai Weisser, a 60-year-old retired lifeguard
in Huntington Beach, California, were critical of Trump for his
attitude to the virus.
"Ha ha ha, you're a knucklehead. You should've wore one (a mask),"
he said of Trump.
"Yeah, he undersold it...I think he got it wrong ... I've always
been a Republican. I voted for Donald Trump, but I can't see myself
voting for him a second time."
In Bangor, Pennsylvania, Trump supporter Jack Cooper, a 70-year-old
retired electrician, also said the president was paying the price
for underestimating the virus's dangers.
"He's getting a taste of his own medicine," said Cooper, who lives
in a crucial swing district. "He was fooling around without a mask
in big crowds. It's like bringing a pit bull into a big crowd —
something is gonna happen."
Even so, Cooper said it would not stop him for voting for Trump
again.
(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder in Warren and Nick Brown in Bangor;
Additional reporting by Norma Galeana in Palm Springs and Omar
Younis in Huntington Beach; writing by Scott Malone and David
Brunnstrom; Editing by Grant McCool and Daniel Wallis)
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