Arrogant Trump unlocks America

Arrogant Trump unlocks America
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Highlights

Washington: US President Donald Trump defended his response to the coronavirus outbreak on Monday and said he did not intend to fire Anthony Fauci...

Washington: US President Donald Trump defended his response to the coronavirus outbreak on Monday and said he did not intend to fire Anthony Fauci after the leading US health expert said earlier mitigation efforts could have saved more lives.

At a contentious briefing with reporters, Trump lashed out at media coverage that has focused on gaps in the US government's response after initial warnings about the pandemic disease which has now spread throughout the United States.

The president asserted he had the ultimate authority to re-open the largely shuttered economy despite an earlier deference to US State governors and constitutional questions about whether that decision-making fell within his purview.

"The president of the United States calls the shots. If we weren't here for the States, you'd have had a problem in this country like you've never seen before," Trump said. "When somebody is the president of the United States, the authority is total, and that's the way it's got to be. ... It's total. The governors know that."

Trump, who said a plan to open businesses again would be completed shortly, interrupted his daily briefing to play a campaign-style video that highlighted his actions to tackle the virus and included clips of Democratic and Republican governors praising his efforts.

The president also invited Fauci to the stage in the opening minutes of the briefing to make clear that Trump had followed his recommendations on putting mitigation efforts into place across the country.

Trump, who played down the seriousness of the virus in its initial stages, has chafed at media coverage suggesting he did not do enough to prevent its spread.

On Sunday, he retweeted a call to fire Fauci after the top US expert on infectious diseases said lives could have been saved if the country had shut down sooner during the novel coronavirus outbreak.

At the briefing on Monday, Fauci said he was answering a hypothetical question in the television interview and made clear that Trump had listened to him when he recommended mitigation efforts.

Trump said he and Fauci had been on the same page "from the beginning" and declared he liked the respected doctor. "I think he's a wonderful guy," Trump said, while adding that not everyone was happy with the health expert.

"VERY COMPLICATED"

Fauci has assumed national prominence - and a degree of popular affection - as a leader in the fight against the coronavirus, which has killed 23,543 people in the United States and infected 583,990, according to a Reuters tally.

He has contradicted or corrected Trump on scientific matters during the public health crisis, including whether the anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine is effective against the virus.

On Monday, Fauci made a point of saying the president had followed his advice on putting social distancing recommendations in place for the country.

"The president listened to the recommendation," Fauci said. "The first and only time that I went in and said: 'We should do mitigation strongly,' the response was, 'Yes, we'll do it.'"

The Republican president in the past has repeated critical tweets of officials or enemies rather than make the criticism himself. The retweet fueled speculation Trump was running out of patience with Fauci and could fire him, prompting a White House denial before Trump's briefing.

White House spokesman Hogan Gidley said Trump's retweet addressed what he considered a false report on his travel restriction involving China, where the novel coronavirus originated.

Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, was asked on CNN about a New York Times report documenting early warnings issued to the White House about the novel coronavirus. The scientist acknowledged shutting the country down sooner could have saved lives, but cautioned that a number of factors were involved.

France extends

lockdown till May 11

Paris (IANS): French President Emmanuel Macron said that the country's coronavirus lockdown will be extended till May 11. "The confinement... the strictest... will pursue till Monday May the 11th," Macron said on Monday in his televised address to the nation, as four weeks of lockdown in the country has produced some positive effects in containing the spread of coronavirus, reported Xinhua news agency. He said May 11 will mark the start of a new phase in France. From then on, nurseries and schools will reopen progressively; restaurants, cafes, hotels will remain closed; all people showing COVID-19 symptoms will be tested. "The hope is reborn but nothing is won," Macron noted, adding "In the Grand Est (region in northeast France) as in the Paris region, the (health) system is under pressure. The epidemic is still not controlled,"

"We should therefore pursue with our efforts and continue to apply the rules," he said.

New York deaths surpass 10,000

New York(IANS): Governor of the US state of New York Andrew Cuomo said statewide deaths from COVID-19 rose to 10,056, adding "the worst is over if we continue to be smart" in coping with the novel coronavirus. Cuomo on Monday said at his daily briefing that a total of 671 people passed away on Sunday due to the disease, a number much lower than in the past few days, Xinhua news agency reported. Meanwhile, indicators including the rates of ICU admissions and intubations have gone down and the three-day-average rate of hospitalisation basically reached a plateau, according to the governor.

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