As the World Health Organisation (WHO) warns the US could be the next coronavirus epicentre following a surge in cases and deaths to 43,925 cases and 547 respectively, Donald Trump is under fire for hinting at a return to business as usual within weeks, prioritising the health of the economy over that of Americans.
“We are watching a train wreck in slow motion,” commented former White House ethics chief Walter Shaub. “If Trump carries through on this threat to ‘open’ things up real soon, the death toll will be catastrophic.”
On Capitol Hill, Republican and Democratic senators have assured the public they are “very close” to agreeing terms on a $2trn (£1.7trn) stimulus bill and expect to finalise a deal on Tuesday.
The president appeared to declare victory over the virus — "we win" — as he looks to restart the US economy by Easter, despite no evidence that Americans can safely return to work without spreading the virus within three weeks.
During his White House briefing on Tuesday, the president said: "What timeline this would be."
But pressed on whether anyone in his administration has supported a rushed return to business as usual, the president said he thought it was a "beautiful time" and "based on a certain level of weeks" — but didn't say it was at the recommendation of health officials.
The administration also warned New Yorkers and anyone who recently travelled to the state to self-quarantine for up to two weeks as the city has become an "epicentre" of transmission in the US.
Asked whether the president has consulted with Governor Andrew Cuomo about those guidelines, which would impact millions of people in New York City while non-essential businesses are closed across the state, Mr Trump said the two are "talking".
The governor said he has "exhausted every option available to us" as the state has experienced a surge in confirmed cases, including nearly 15,000 in New York City alone.
"We are not slowing it, and it is accelerating on its own", he said on Tuesday as he dismissed the president's idea for Americans to return to work soon for the sake of the economy, potentially endangering more-vulnerable people and spreading the virus even further.
He said: "That's not the American way. That's not the New York way."
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The number of Americans killed by the coronavirus outbreak is up to 541 this morning from 43,500 cases, reports CNN.
With Hawaii recording its first death from the disease yesterday, 16 states have now issued stay-at-home orders, which, once in effect, will impact 142m people or 43 per cent of the US population
"This is going to get much worse before it gets better," New York governor Andrew Cuomo warned on Monday, his state remaining one of the hardest hit in the union, with BIg Apple hospitals under severe strain as a result of the crisis and facing a shortage of medical supplies.
You can follow a live international overview of the crisis with my colleague Jon Sharman via the link below, with the world now on 381,000 cases of the disease.
The US president is under fire this morning for hinting at a return to business as usual within weeks, prioritising the health of the economy over that of American citizens.
"We have to open our country because that causes problems that, in my opinion, could be far bigger problems."
Trump acknowledged there were trade-offs, but claimed, without apparent evidence, that if closures stretched on for months there would be "probably more death from that than anything that we're talking about with respect to the virus".
Former Food and Drug Administration commissioner Scott Gottlieb and ex-Homeland Security adviser Tom Bossert both posted lengthy Twitter rants about the possible move, while Steve Bannon also warned against it in an interview on Maria Bartiromo's Fox Business show.
All three men once had the ear of Trump.
The president's remarks were further evidence that Trump has grown impatient with the pandemic, even before it has reached its expected peak.
In recent days, tensions have been rising between those who argue the country needs to get back up and running to prevent a deep economic depression and medical experts who warn that, unless more extreme action is taken, the human cost will be catastrophic.
Health experts have made clear that unless Americans continue to dramatically limit social interaction - staying home from work and isolating themselves - the number of infections will overwhelm the health care system, as it has in parts of Italy, leading to many more deaths.
While the worst outbreaks are concentrated in certain parts of the country, such as New York, experts warn the highly infectious disease is certain to spread.
But with the economic impact now snapping into focus with millions out of work, businesses shut and stock markets in freefall - all undermining Trump's re-election message - the chorus of backlash is growing louder.
"We can't shut in the economy. The economic cost to individuals is just too great," Larry Kudlow, Trump's top economic adviser, said in an interview on Monday on Fox News.
"The president is right. The cure can'tbe worse than the disease, and we're going to have to make some difficult trade-offs."
That opinion has been echoed by others in the White House, some Republicans in Congress and on Fox, where host Steve Hilton delivered a monologue on Sunday night that appeared to have, at least partially, inspired Trump's tweet.
"You know that famous phrase, the cure is worse than the disease? That is exactly the territory we're hurtling towards," Hilton told his viewers, describing the economic, social and human impact of the shutdown as an "even bigger crisis" than the virus.
"You think it's just the coronavirus that kills people? This total economic shutdown will kill people," he said, pointing to growing poverty and despair.
The White House, which for the last two weeks has largely allowed doctors to lead the administration's response, already seemed to be shifting in that direction.
"I'm not looking at months, I can tell you right now," Trump said on Monday, adding America would soon be back open for business.
He added, however, that states could continue to enforce stricter measures.
Trump tweeted that he would be waiting until the end of the current 15-day period of recommended closures and self-isolation to make any decisions.
At the same time, the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) was exploring new guidance making it possible for people working in "critical infrastructure" jobs who have been exposed to the virus to return to work faster "by wearing a mask for a certain period of time," vice president Mike Pence said.
Here's John T Bennett's report.
As Trump fails to reassure the public with vaguely-worded tweets like this...
...the World Health Organisation has issued a dire new warning regarding the surge in cases in the United States.
Samuel Osborne has the latest.
This is pretty rich from the president.
After a week of referring to the outbreak as "the Chinese Virus" and denying the term was racist, he's now calling for an end to racially-motivated attacks on Asian Americans, washing his hands of all responsibility once again.
If that about-turn doesn't inspire confidence, check out this extraordinary exchange about the White House press lobby during yesterday's press conference.
Andrew Buncombe has this report on the latest consequences of the president's bigotry.
On Capitol Hill, Republican and Democratic senators have assured the public they are “very close” to agreeing terms on a $2trn (£1.7trn) stimulus bill and expect to finalise a deal on Tuesday.
"The president is giving us direction," he continued. "The president would like to have a deal, and he's hopeful we can conclude this."
The president has been busy retweeting right-wing nut jobs James Woods and Ann Coulter this morning as well as this meme, which he seems to have completely misunderstood in his fever of self-delusion.
It was just weeks ago that Trump made a similar error involving a key scene from the new season of Curb Your Enthusiasm involving an angry biker and a MAGA hat.
Incidentally, here's Richard Hall's profile of the good doctor, whose authority has provided a comfort to many and whose absence from yesterday's briefing struck alarm bells.
Two developments at the White House yesterday that are worth addressing.
Trump signed the following order to rein in the stockpiling of much-needed medical resources.
Admitting anyone in the administration had contracted the disease would be a major step and surely risk sparking panic.
On another weird day for Trump's Twitter feed, the president has said the Defense Production Act "is in full force" and attacked the Democrats for stalling the stimulus package (as he sees it).
Otherwise though, he's been posting Pelosi memes, tweeting to actress Kirstie Alley and promoting books by his army of alt-right sycophants.
Say hello to Republican Dan Patrick, who made that appalling "dulce et decorum est" pronouncement on Tucker Carlson's Fox News show late last night.
His thoughts on the patriotic elderly being willing to die for the good of the economy and their grandchildren's futures enraged Twitter in predictable fashion, with his fellow statesman Beto O'Rourke among those going in hard.
Here's Andrew Naughtie with more.
Speaking of Fox, the MSNBC pundit issued this scathing assault on the rival network's "utterly insane about-face" in covering an outbreak it initially dismissed as a hoax.
Its broadcasting is certainly suffering the ill effects of all of this.
A helpful reminder from the president's spokesman here that he and his coronavirus task force will be taking questions on Fox today about the escalating crisis - 12 noon EST (4pm GMT).
An Arizona man has died and a woman is in critical condition after ingesting a chemical that contained chloroquine, which Trump has promoted as a coronavirus treatment despite warnings from health officials that it has not been proven to treat the virus.
Alex Woodward has this report.
Keen Trump observer Andrew Buncombe offers this analysis of the president's latest strategy for navigating the crisis.
A US Navy sailor has become the first person to test positive for the coronavirus at the US base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
The base said in a statement today that the unidentified sailor is isolated at home at the naval station along the southeastern coast of Cuba. The base says health authorities are attempting to track anyone who had contact with the sailor.
Medical personnel have been screening anyone who arrives at the base and the Navy has imposed social-distancing rules.
The naval station has a population of about 6,000 people. That includes about 2,000 foreign labourers from Jamaica and the Philippines.
There are still 40 prisoners held at the Guantanamo detention centre. Most base personnel have no contact with the men held there
This is troubling stuff from the president...
Here's what went down (or rather, up):
- The S&P 500 rose more than 5 per cent
- The Nasdaq Composite opened up 4.9 cent higher
There have been some positive noises on that score coming out of Washington this morning.
”We’re going to have conference calls with a bunch of Republicans to update them on where we are. And we’re on our way to Mitch McConnell’s office, we’re looking forward to closing a bipartisan bill today. The president wants us to get this done today. We’re down to a small number of issues and we look forward to a successful vote."
Speaker Pelosi meanwhile told CNBC this morning that “there is real optimism that we could get something done in the next few hours.”
“I think we’re getting to a good place, if they stay there,” she said.
Trump mentioned the wartime Defense Production Act earlier, empowering the US government to order manufacturers to regear their plants towards making products for the national good.
He said that there had been no need to enforce it as companies were volunteering their resources but the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s administrator Peter Gaynor told CNN this morning it would be coming into effect today for the mass production of testing kits, so some confusion abounds.
Anyway, here's Samuel Lovett on how the world's car manufacturers are rising to the challenge by converting to the production of ventilators and face masks.
My colleague Jon Sharman points out this is the one month anniversary of this Champions League-level Trump tweet:
The probable Democratic 2020 challenger had some damning words on his rival's response to the outbreak yesterday, calling out the "failure of planning and preparation" from the Trump administration and saying its weak, self-interested response had made matters a great deal worse.
He already appears to be enjoying a bump in the polls as the tide of public opinion turns against the president's recklessness.








