Spared early on, 'Trump country' now leads in coronavirus cases, deaths
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[October 27, 2020]
By Howard Schneider
(Reuters) - In the early days of what
became a historic public health crisis, the novel coronavirus was, in
the lexicon of U.S. politics, a "blue state" problem - centered in East
and West Coast areas, particularly New York and New Jersey, that voted
against President Donald Trump in 2016.
It remained so for weeks, and that fact defined what became battle lines
between mask wearers and skeptics, and between those convinced
restrictions on commerce were needed to save lives versus those who
wanted less government intervention.
Now, though, it is squarely a "Trump country" issue.
Trump trails in opinion polls ahead of the Nov. 3 election, partly on
the basis of his handling of a pandemic that saw him feuding with state
governors, questioning government scientists, and hesitant to frame a
national response to a crisis that easily spread across state lines. He
refused to change course even after catching the disease himself and
requiring hospitalization.
For a while in the spring it looked like the hands-off approach might
work. The daily growth in new cases declined in the hard-hit Northeast
corridor, while remaining level in the Trump states of the South and
Midwest.
But when summer arrived, and places started lifting restrictions, that
brief moment of control also ended. So did the virus's focus in blue
state America. By midsummer outbreaks spread in the South before moving
this fall into the heart of Trump's base in the industrial Midwest.
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President Donald Trump throws a face mask from the stage during a
campaign rally, his first since being treated for the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19), at Orlando Sanford International Airport in
Sanford, Florida, U.S., October 12, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The gap in case growth narrows somewhat when adjusting for
population by looking at numbers of new infections for each million
people.
Nonetheless, the newest surge in the outbreak remains most intense
in "Trump country."
Some argue that case numbers can be inflated by the accessibility or
use of testing.
Still, the Trump states also have closed the gap when it comes to
deaths.
Blue America has still experienced more COVID-19 fatalities per
million people.
But in early October the Trump states eclipsed the rest of the
country in total deaths, and, with a week to go before Election Day,
the number of fatalities continues to grow faster in those areas.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider in Washington; Editing by Dan Burns
and Lisa Shumaker)
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