Former New Jersey Governor Christie says he was wrong not to wear mask
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[October 17, 2020]
By Maria Caspani
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Former New Jersey
Governor Chris Christie, having had the coronavirus, said he had been
wrong not to wear a mask at a White House event or while preparing
Republican President Donald Trump to debate Democratic rival Joe Biden.
Christie, hospitalized for a week after testing positive for COVID-19,
told ABC television on Friday the virus hit him "like a freight train"
after he experienced mild symptoms, and he had been "racked with pain
and exhaustion."
An asthma sufferer, Christie said he was wrong to let his guard down as
part of Trump's inner circle of advisers and urged Americans to wear
masks and take the virus threat seriously.
"It was a mistake," Christie said on ABC's Good Morning America. "I was
led to believe that all the people I was interacting with at the White
House had been tested and it gave you a false sense of security."
Trump spent three nights at a military hospital after he and first lady
Melania Trump tested positive.
Christie said the White House did no contact tracing around his case but
his local health authorities did contact him to do the tracing after he
checked into Morristown Medical Center in New Jersey.
A failed Republican presidential candidate in 2016, Christie is one of
several Trump allies to test positive for the virus in recent weeks.
Christie made similar remarks about masks on Thursday, and Trump, who
has mostly shunned masks, reacted.
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President-elect Donald Trump stands with New Jersey Governor Chris
Christie before their meeting at Trump National Golf Club in
Bedminster, New Jersey, U.S., November 20, 2016. REUTERS/Mike
Segar/File Photo/File Photo
"Well, I mean he has to say that," Trump told an NBC town hall
broadcast on Thursday night. "I think it's great, he's a friend of
mine, he's a good guy, and wrong or not wrong, you have to
understand, as president, I can't be locked in a room someplace for
the next year and just stay and do nothing."
Christie said he was feeling "a lot better" after receiving
treatment that included Eli Lilly's experimental antibody treatment
and the drug remdesivir. He urged Trump and leaders across the
political spectrum to be more "affirmative" about masks.
"We need to be telling people there is no downside to you wearing
masks and in fact there can be a great deal of upside," Christie
said.
(Reporting by Maria Caspani in New York; Additional reporting by
Doina Chiacu in Washington; Editing by Howard Goller)
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