Donald Trump today declared churches, synagogues and mosques as essential and ordered governors to reopen them immediately, comparing them to liquor stores and abortion clinics that have been considered essential businesses during the coronavirus lockdowns.
The president said if governors don't do it, here would override them so houses of worship could operate over the Memorial Day weekend. Trump's coronavirus taskforce, meanwhile, said people could go outside and hike or visit the beach to enjoy the long weekend so long as social distancing remained in place.
Going into the weekend, Trump finished up his two-week course of hydroxychloroquine as new research linked the anti-malaria drug to an increased risk of death.
And while his feud with Fox News continued after the network revealed polling that showed Joe Biden ahead by eight points in a nationwide match-up, tensions warmed somewhat as both the president and the cable network revealed in the criticism of the former vice president's viral comments that if you don't vote democrat, "you ain't black".
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Donald Trump visited a Ford manufacturing plant in Ypsilanti, Michigan, on Thursday and declined to wear a face mask in the presence of the press, despite the state’s attorney general warning that doing so was both a company policy and a legal requirement in the territory.
Trump toured the Rawsonville plant, which has been recast to produce ventilators and personal protective equipment because of the coronavirus pandemic, and held a roundtable discussion with African-American leaders concerning vulnerable populations hit by the disease.
The hydroxychloroquine-huffing president did not wear a mask during any of his public events at the facility even though Ford reiterated on Tuesday that its policy remained that all visitors must wear them.
Trump has consistently disregarded guidance from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) urging people to wear masks in close company to try to curb the spread of the virus.
Surrounded by Ford executives wearing masks, Trump told reporters he had put one on out of the view of cameras. "I had one on before. I wore one in the back area. I didn't want to give the press the pleasure of seeing it," he said.
When asked if Trump was told it was acceptable not to wear a mask in the plant, Ford executive chairman Bill Ford said, "It's up to him."
The company later said in a statement that the chairman had "encouraged" Trump to wear a mask when he arrived, adding that the president had obliged during a private viewing of three two-seater Ford GT sports cars.
In an interview with CNN, Michigan attorney general Dana Nessel said there would be a "very serious conversation" with Ford for permitting the president to violate state governor Gretchen Whitmer's executive order on masks.
That order specifies that any person who is medically able must wear a mask in enclosed public spaces.
"They knew exactly what the order was and if they permitted anyone, even the president of the United States, to defy that order, I think it has serious health consequences potentially to their workers," Nessel, a Democrat, said.
Trump told Nessel on Twitter she shouldn't be taking her anger out on Ford.
"Not their fault, & I did put on a mask. No wonder many auto companies left Michigan, until I came along!"
This was her stinging response.
Here’s John T Bennett’s report.
Trump also created a stir by praising the “good bloodlines” of the company’s founder Henry Ford, a notorious antisemite admired by Adolf Hitler, during a taxpayer-funded tour he treated like one of his aborted arena campaign rallies with supporters - even hammering out rock tracks by Journey and the Rolling Stones.
"The company founded by a man named Henry Ford - good bloodlines, good bloodlines. If you believe in that stuff?" the president said, addressing Bill Ford, the great-grandson of the automotive industry pioneer: "You got good blood."
The remark had the nasty whiff of eugenics about it, given Henry Ford’s outspoken hatred of “the imperial Jew”, which attracted the admiration of the Third Reich in the 1930s.
Here’s Alex Woodward on the controversy.
Another of Trump's worrying proclamations yesterday was that there would be no second national lockdown in the event that a fresh outbreak of Covid-19 struck later in the year.
This from the man who said on Wednesday he would do "nothing" differently, even with 95,000 Americans dead.
Here's Andrew Naughtie's report.
On a lighter note, the president managed to get in a decent crack about the cost of the company's automobiles ("I went to buy one, then I heard the price and said 'forget it’") and again lied that he was once named Michigan’s Man of the Year.
He has made this same claim on at least seven previous occasions but no such honour exists so this could, quite simply, never have happend.
Also, who stands like this??
One Twitter commentator had it right when they suggested the president's forward-titled posture resembles a centaur that has lost its hind legs.
Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer wrote to Trump yesterday urging him to fly the Stars-and-Stripes at half-mast to mark the country passing the grim milestone of 100,000 Covid-19 deaths.
The move was both a solemn tribute and a sly political manouvre to force the president to take responsibility for the tragedy still unfolding on his watch.
Prior to his petulant spat with Michigan's AG, he announced that precisely such a gesture had been on his mind all along and would take place over the Memorial Day weekend.
Gino Spocchia has more on this.
In another brace of tweets, the president lashed out at Fox News last night after it published a poll placing him eight points behind his probable election rival Joe Biden.
"Some real 'garbage' littered all over the network," he frothed, naming - among others - "Niel Cavuto" (sic), who had had the audacity to warn viewers earlier this week that following Trump's example and taking hydroxychloroquine "will kill you".
This poll though..
Here's Justin Vallejo's report.
Despite significant concerns that Texas congressman John Ratcliffe was eminently under-qualified for the post (concerns that were significant enough for his earlier nomination to the role to be scrapped last year), the Republican-held Senate yesterday voted to make him the new US director of national intelligence (DNI), voting 49-44 in favour.
By comparison, the last permanent DNI, Dan Coats, was nominated 85-12 to a position created 17 years ago in the aftermath of 9/11.
Ratcliffe had served only six months on the House Intelligence Committee and was its most junior member when Trump first tapped him for the position and now improbably finds himself replacing acting DNI Richard Grenell anyway.
Trump was, naturally, delighted:
And that’s all we’ll be getting from the Senate for the moment, after its members took a week off for Memorial Day without agreeing any further coronavirus relief package to bailout a nation with 38m and counting unemployed.
Having dismissed the Democrats’ latest $3trn (£2.4rn) proposal, majority leader Mitch McConnell said vaguely yesterday that a new bill was “highly likely” and “not too far off”.
Here’s Griffin Connolly on Ratcliffe.
The session was also notable for this extremely garbled answer to a question on his own health: “I tested very positively in another sense. I tested positively toward negative. I tested perfectly this morning, meaning I tested negative.”
Also during his White House lawn Q&A, the president started to walk back his comments on mail voting being “ripe for fraud” and vulnerable to “illegality” - but still didn’t offer any foundation for what we might generously call his “concern” about election tampering.
Trump said yesterday that mail ballots are acceptable to him if the sender has a good “reason” like, er, being president of the United States.
John T Bennett has this report.
The first lady delivered a pre-recorded message to CNN’s virtual town hall on the coronavirus last night (which is not really the same as taking part in a live question-and-answer session and much more like a publicity ploy).
In it, she advised students to stay chipper and use the shutdown to tackle that copy of Middlemarch they’ve been holding out on.
The Daily Show has this delicious bit of counter-programming: a graduation speech Trump himself gave in 2004 that now features a very unfortunate choice of analogy.
Well, he won't like this poll from ABC/Ipsos any more than he enjoyed the Fox one.
George Conway's merry band of Never Trumper Republicans is at it again, this time going after the mastermind behind Team Trump, whom they accuse of feathering his own nest in their new spot "GOP Cribs".
Griffin Connolly has this report.
The president yesterday ordered the US withdrawal from a three-decade-old arms control treaty that allows countries to conduct unarmed reconnaissance flights over each other’s territory, blaming Russia for failing to stick to the agreement.
But US officials have long complained that Russia has not fully complied with the agreement and Trump has made the decision to withdraw, according to The New York Times. Officials said the same information could be gleaned from satellite imagery at a lower cost.
Here's Richard Hall's report.
For Indy Voices, John T Bennett has his timely warning against Democratic complacency as the speaker and Oval Office challenger descend into PG insults for an R-Rated president.
Oh look.
After being held up for weeks by a debate over restrictions for religious organisations, the CDC advice on safely ending lockdown that was tossed in the trash by the White House has now been added to a 20-page appendix of a previously existing document on the body's website on the quiet.
The CDC's director, Robert Redfield, nevertheless insisted yesterday in an interview with Politico he does not feel "muzzled" by the Trump administration.
Medical journal The Lancet today carries this damning assessment of the antimalaria drug Trump said he was taking earlier this week contrary to medical advice.
The study of 96,000 patients spread over 600 hospitals around the world concludes hydroxychloroquine or cholorquine taken with or without a macrolide is linked to increased rates of mortality and heart arrhythmias among hospital patients with Covid-19.
In a further blow to Colonel Trump's Miracle Elixir, Louise Hall has this report on "Kim", who has been taking the treatment for almost two decades and contracted coronavirus anyway.
The former first lady has offered her remembrances of Wilson Jerman, who died from Covid-19 earlier this week at the age of 91 after leading an extraordinary life of service.
Andrew Naughtie has her thoughts.
As the majority of Americans turn on the president over his failure to contain the pandemic, the following short film by The Atlantic casts a decidedly unflattering light on his leadership by juxtaposing his public statements at the podium with those of Justin Trudeau, Angela Merkel, Jacinda Ardern and Moon Jae-in, among others.













