No quarantine for U.S. Vice President Pence, whose COVID-19 test was
negative; next in line to Trump
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[October 03, 2020]
By Susan Cornwell and Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Vice President
Mike Pence, next in line for the Oval Office, tested negative for
COVID-19, hours after President Donald Trump announced that he was
infected and went into quarantine, Pence's spokesman said on Friday.
Trump's test result cast a spotlight on Pence, a Christian conservative
former lawmaker who has been one of the few constants in the Republican
president's tumultuous administration, a little more than a month before
the pair seek re-election to a second term.
Pence, 61, is scheduled to debate his Democratic rival, Joe Biden's
running mate Senator Kamala Harris on Wednesday in Utah. A source at the
Commission on Presidential Debates, which oversees the events, said
there were no plans to scrap the debate after Trump's positive test.
"This morning, Vice President Pence and the Second Lady tested negative
for COVID-19. Vice President Pence remains in good health and wishes the
Trumps well in their recovery," spokesman Devin O'Malley said on
Twitter.
Pence does not need to quarantine, because he is not considered a close
contact with any individuals who have tested positive, including Trump,
Pence's doctor Jesse Schonau said in a statement. "Vice President Pence
remains in good health and is free to go about his normal activities,"
he said.
Pence, who was last seen publicly with Trump on Monday at a Rose Garden
news conference on coronavirus testing, would take over as acting
president should Trump become incapacitated while undergoing medical
treatment. That has happened three times in U.S. history.
Then-President George W. Bush temporarily transferred power to Vice
President Dick Cheney twice, for a few hours each in 2002 and 2007,
while undergoing colonoscopies. Vice President George H.W. Bush was
acting president for nearly eight hours in 1985 while President Ronald
Reagan had a pre-cancerous lesion removed.
The White House said Trump is "not incapacitated" and is working in
isolation while experiencing mild symptoms.
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Vice President Mike Pence wears a protective face mask because of
the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic as he attends ceremonies
marking the 19th anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks on
the World Trade Center at the 911 Memorial & Museum in New York
City, New York, U.S., September 11, 2020. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
Pence filled in for Trump Friday on a conference call with governors
about the coronavirus pandemic, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo told
1010 WINS radio. Pence also stood in for Trump on a call with state
leaders to discuss support for vulnerable seniors.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi is next in line of succession after Pence. She
was tested Friday for COVID-19 and the results were negative, her
spokesman said.
Harris tested negative on Thursday as part of her campaign's routine
screening for the virus.
Pence, a former governor of Indiana, has played a largely
behind-the-scenes role in Trump's White House, although he is known
to have presidential ambitions of his own.
His deference has endeared him to Trump, helping Pence survive in a
White House with near-constant turnover among top officials. But he
has sometimes been ridiculed for his public obsequiousness to his
boss.
Earlier this year Trump put Pence in charge of the U.S. response to
the coronavirus pandemic, a brief that has not gone well. The
nation's death toll from the virus is over 207,000. New cases of
COVID-19 rose in 27 out of 50 U.S. states in September compared with
August, a Reuters analysis showed.
Pence has also been central to some of the administration’s
legislative efforts, including the tax cuts passed in 2017. Pence
staunchly opposes abortion rights and passionately supports
de-regulation of business and shrinking the size of government.
(Reporting by Steve Holland and Susan Cornwell; Writing by Andy
Sullivan and Doina Chiacu; Editing by Scott Malone and Alistair
Bell)
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