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With a resurgence of coronavirus cases in the U.S. and states pausing their reopening plans, the Trump administration is pointing a finger at Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases for three decades and one of the leading experts on pandemics in the U.S. for four decades.
Fauci told the Financial Times that he has not briefed the president since June 2.
On Sunday, Adm. Brett Giroir, the testing coordinator at the Department of Health and Human Services, told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that Fauci was not correct in his advice to states to slow down the opening of businesses: “I respect Dr. Fauci a lot, but Dr. Fauci is not 100% right, and he also doesn’t necessarily, he admits that, have the whole national interest in mind. He looks at it from a very narrow public health point of view,” Giroir said.
On Sunday, President Trump retweeted this tweet from April that was critical of Fauci: “So based on Dr. Fauci and the Democrats, I will need an ID card to go shopping but not to vote?”
He also retweeted this tweet: “The most outrageous lies are the ones about Covid 19. Everyone is lying. The CDC, Media, Democrats, our Doctors, not all but most that we are told to trust. I think it’s all about the election and keeping the economy from coming back, which is about the election. I’m sick of it.”
“ ‘I respect Dr. Fauci a lot, but Dr. Fauci is not 100% right … He looks at it from a very narrow public health point of view.’ ”
Last week, Trump also doubled down on his criticism of Fauci’s response to the pandemic. “Dr. Fauci’s a nice man, but he’s made a lot of mistakes,” he said on Sean Hannity’s Fox News show. “Like you don’t have to ban them coming in from very infected China. I did it anyway and we saved hundreds of thousands of lives. I banned Europe from coming in when Italy and France and Spain were having all the problems.”
“They’ve been wrong about a lot things, including face masks,” Trump added. “Maybe they’re wrong, maybe not, but a lot of them said don’t wear a mask, don’t wear a mask. Now they are saying wear a mask. So a lot of mistakes were made — a lot of mistakes.”
The president has rarely worn a mask in public and has not said Americans should wear masks. In a break with his tradition of eschewing any face covering, he wore one this past weekend while visiting Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.
On April 13, when reporters questioned Fauci about possible tension between him and the administration, Fauci said he made recommendations to Trump to restrict travel. “The travel was another recommendation, when we went in and said, ‘We probably should be doing that,’” Fauci said. “And the answer was yes. And then another time was, ‘We should do it with Europe,’ and the answer was yes. And the next time, ‘We should do it with the U.K.,’ and the answer was yes.”
Trump himself has previously been circumspect on masks. On April 3, the administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reversed their policies on masks, and said everyone — not just medical workers, as they previously said — should wear face coverings. Trump cited “recent studies” of asymptomatic transmission for the U-turn, while the CDC cited “new evidence.”
That same day, Trump said his administration recommended wearing cloth face coverings. However, he said he wouldn’t wear a mask himself. “From recent studies, we know that the transmission from individuals without symptoms is playing a more significant role in the spread of the virus than previously understood,” he said. “You don’t have to do it. I’m choosing not to do it.”
“ ‘We know that the transmission from individuals without symptoms is playing a more significant role in the spread.’ ”
On April 15, New York Gov. Cuomo issued an executive order requiring New Yorkers to wear masks in public. “Put the mask on when you are not in socially distant places,” he said. “It is your right to go out for a walk in the park, go out for a walk because you need to get out of the house. Fine, don’t infect me. You don’t have a right to infect me.”
Fauci recently said that the U.S. government had not been doing well with contact tracing, the process of tracing people who have been in contact with someone identified to have the virus, instructing them to stay home, and connecting them with the resources they need to do so. “I don’t think we’re doing very well, for a number of reasons, and not all of which is the fault of the system,” he said in an interview last month with CNN’s T, -0.70% Elizabeth Cohen.
COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus SARS-CoV-2, has already proved extremely infectious. It had infected nearly 13 million people globally and over 3.3 million in the U.S. as of Monday, according to official figures collated by Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering. The disease had claimed at least 570,259 lives worldwide and 135,295 in the U.S.
The White House’s sharp words for Fauci came as confirmed coronavirus cases were rising in nearly 40 U.S. states. Meanwhile, New York, which was once the epicenter of the pandemic in the U.S. and still has the most cases of anywhere in the U.S. (at least 406,400 confirmed cases and 32,350 fatalities from the disease), reported zero deaths Monday for the first time since the pandemic began.
New Jersey (15,525 deaths) and Massachusetts (8,325 deaths) are among the top three states with the highest number of fatalities.
Florida’s Department of Health reported 15,299 people tested positive for COVID-19 on Sunday, bumping the total confirmed case tally for the Sunshine State to 269,811 cases, the Associated Press reported. The previous record was 11,694 cases in a single day, set last week by California.
In more bad news, Florida counted a record of 514 fatalities last week, compared with the average of 30 deaths a day the state was recording just three weeks ago. Testing has doubled in the past month to almost 50,000 a day from 25,000, and the percentage of people testing positive has risen to an average of 19% in the last week from less than 5% a month ago, the AP reported.
Studies have concluded that face masks have helped reduce contagion by reducing droplets being sprayed into the air during flu season; another Japanese-based study says this works when paired with vaccination. It may be that they work in a small amount of cases and/or just wearing them helps to promote healthy behaviors.
Scientists writing in The New England Journal of Medicine found that the novel coronavirus was detectable in the air for up to three hours, up to four hours on copper, up to 24 hours on cardboard, and up to two to three days on plastic and stainless steel. Above all else, health professionals recommend washing hands, cleaning surfaces and practicing social distancing in public spaces.
The rift between Fauci and Trump widened against a backdrop of rising cases. Last week, in an interview livestreamed on Twitter TWTR, -0.01% and Facebook FB, +0.44% with the head of the National Institutes of Health, Francis Collins, Fauci said that unlike Europe, U.S. communities “never came down to baseline and now are surging back up” and “we’re still knee-deep in the first wave.”
“ ‘The number of people who are getting sick and going to the hospitals has exponentially increased.’ ”
Arizona reported more than 2,500 new coronavirus cases Sunday and 1,354 deaths on Monday. It now has more than 123,824 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 2,245 deaths in total. Over the past seven days, nearly 27% of tests there were positive, the highest rate in the nation.
“We have for the last three weeks been the worst in the entire country,” Will Humble, the executive director of the Arizona Public Health Association and former director of the Arizona Department of Health Services, told CBS.
What’s more, Mayor Steve Adler of Austin, Texas, previously told CNN T, -0.70% : “If we don’t change the trajectory, we are within two weeks of having our hospitals overrun.” Citing comments by President Donald Trump that COVID-19 would go away, and that 99% of cases were harmless, Adler, a Democrat, said, “It makes me angry. You know, I understand he has a tough job, but it is dangerous not to be sending a clear message to Americans.”
Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, also a Democrat, echoed those sentiments on CBS VIAC, +4.05%. “A month ago one in 10 people were testing positive. Today, it’s one in four. The number of people who are getting sick and going to the hospitals has exponentially increased. The number of people in our ICU beds has exponentially increased.” Turner also said hospitals in his city could be in “serious trouble” if they don’t get a handle on the spread.
Texas reported 8,196 new cases on Sunday, and 10,410 patients hospitalized due to coronavirus, up 25% increase in one week. There have been more than 264,810 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the state and at least 3,216 deaths.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott, a Republican, has warned of another lockdown if people don’t wear masks. “It’s disappointing and again, I can understand the mind set being a kid who grew up in Longview myself, that this may not be the top priority. A murderer, or a rapist or a robber is far more serious to concentrate on,” he told local news station CBS19.
“However, I know this also, and that is if we do not all join together and unite in this one cause for a short period of time, of adopting a mask, what it will lead to the necessity of having to close Texas back down,” he said, adding, “The only way those businesses are going to stay open is to make sure people wear masks to slow the spread of the coronavirus.”
Fauci previously said the virus may be mutating to become more transmissible, and focused on three main failings by both the public and authorities: Many states have reopened too quickly, people are not abiding by rules of social distancing, and the authorities could do a better job at contact tracing to track people who’ve been in contact with those who test positive.
Fauci said earlier this month that America needs to balance the needs of the nation’s economic and public health; he said people need to practice social distancing and wear face masks. “We do need to open up again, no doubt about it, we want to get the economy back,” he said. “But you’ve got to do it in a measured way, and now we’re seeing the consequence of community spread.”
How COVID-19 is transmitted