Trump infection is only a matter of time



[ad_1]

The American president celebrated so-called normality in the course of the crown pandemic and is now paying for it. The consequences of your infection cannot yet be foreseen.

President Donald Trump exits Air Force One for an election rally in Georgia on September 25.

President Donald Trump exits Air Force One for an election rally in Georgia on September 25.

Tom Brenner / Reuters

In the last month of the election campaign, US President Donald Trump alarmed the world with the news that he and his wife Melania were infected with the new corona virus. While Trump’s personal physician initially stated in an official statement that the two were temporarily healthy, the US media reported, citing eyewitnesses, that Trump appeared lethargic on Thursday and was showing mild cold symptoms. Vice President Mike Pence, who would have to take office if Trump were seriously ill, and his wife Karen received negative test results.

Dies «October Surprise» am 1. Etiquette

“October Surprise” is a permanent term on the US election campaign calendar for events that could shake the cards shortly before the election date in early November. In this sense, the “bomb” of the Trump infection was immediate: it exploded on the first day of the month. The capital, Washington, America’s center of power, rubbed its eyes a little harder than usual when it woke up Friday morning. The speculations were wildly popular. Trump’s personal physician could not change that, who had underlined in his message that the president would also fulfill his duties in full in quarantine.

As wishes for good health rolled in from across the country and around the world, the United States became more aware than ever that not just the presidency, but an essential part of governance, is in the hands of older men and women. , who by doing so have a higher average At risk of the Covid-19 epidemic. Trump is 74 years old, his Democratic rival Joe Biden 77. The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, who should guarantee the orderly succession of the presidential office after the vice president, is 80 years old. The next in the chain of successors in office would be the interim president of the Senate, Chuck Grassley, who is 87 years old.

The consequences of Trump’s infection cannot yet be foreseen. It is clear that for the moment, and at least, he will have to do without his trademark, the loud and wild election events with thousands of enthusiastic supporters. Whether more television duels will take place with challenger Biden is in the stars anyway: After the unworthy exchange of blows on Tuesday, the committee responsible for presidential debates announced changes to the rules. Trump has already threatened not to accept it.

The fact that Trump was eventually infected with the virus was not a surprise, but rather a matter of time. He had demonstratively renounced the basic precautionary measures that the specialized agencies of his own government had been recommending for months. He had mocked his challenger Biden in Tuesday’s television match because he always wears a mask. He had organized events where he and his staff, demonstratively, neither kept their distance nor protected their faces. Like Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Trump had often given the impression, in word and deed, that he thought the epidemic was an exaggerated cause, even though he was clearly aware. of the danger of the pathogen Covid 19. The virus did not last long and infected all three.

What that means politically is uncertain. Bolsonaro’s popularity has apparently risen, despite Brazil having the highest number of Covid-19 deaths after the United States. Johnson, on the other hand, has been blowing the wind violently in the face since a second wave of infections swept across the island kingdom. Staunch Trump supporters will hardly be impressed if the president survives the infection. But whether this also applies to a wider population, which may have been lulled by Trump’s siren songs of an imminent end to the pandemic, is another question. An indisputable fact is that there are no kinks in the curve of neither new infections nor deaths in the US.

Twitter Ads

Trump himself had prepared his supporters for the bad news Thursday night when he confirmed an explosive report from the Bloomberg agency in a telephone interview with Fox News Thursday night. He had reported that Hope Hicks, the president’s close colleague and special counsel and son-in-law Jared Kushner, had received a positive Sars-CoV-2 test result. She took the test after complaining of symptoms at a campaign rally in Minnesota.

Shortly after the interview, Trump announced in a Twitter message that he and the first lady had begun a quarantine while awaiting the results of their own tests. About two hours later, he confirmed that both he and the first lady were infected.

Problem of one of the closest confidants

win. Hope Hicks, 31, was a mannequin and employee of Trump’s favorite daughter, Ivanka, for her fashion company. Trump first named her a spokesperson for his campaign team and later also the director of strategic communications at the White House. Over the years, she has been in the circle closest to the president.

However, he had already caused Trump problems when he defended a White House employee whom two ex-wives had accused of domestic violence. This resulted in the government at first making it appear that it was trying to defend the man. It later emerged that Hicks was in a relationship with the person in question.

Hicks Name also emerged in connection with an investigation into the meeting of leaders of Trump’s campaign team with Russian suppliers of incriminating material about Hillary Clinton. At the time, Trump attempted to deny the purpose of the meeting in a press release. A former member of the president’s team of legal advisers accused Hicks of hinting in Trump’s presence that incriminating emails between members of the campaign team would disappear. She denied it, but admitted in a hearing with a Congressional committee that Trump sometimes forced her to spread “white lies.” On the other hand, she never lied about important things.

Hicks left the White House immediately afterward and took up a lucrative management position at Fox Corporation, the parent company of Fox News. In February, she returned to the White House as an adviser to Trump.

Advisor Hope Hicks, without a mask, on her way to President Trump's election rally in Minnesota, where she felt symptoms of Covid-19 on Thursday night.

Advisor Hope Hicks, without a mask, on her way to President Trump’s election rally in Minnesota, where she felt the symptoms of Covid-19 on Thursday night.

Leah Millis / Reuters



[ad_2]