New Information on How Donald Trump Killed 400,000 (or More) Americans By David Corn November 16, 2021 ![]() President Donald Trump at a coronavirus task force briefing at the White House, on March 22, 2020, with Dr. Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Vice President Mike Pence, and FEMA head Peter Gaynor. Patrick Semansky/AP The congressional January 6 investigation has been drawing great attention lately, particularly as it has triggered the federal indictment of Steve Bannon for defying its subpoena, fired off other subpoenas at Mark Meadows and assorted Trumpers, and sought to obtain Trump White House records related to the insurrectionist attack on the Capitol. At the same time, a different congressional investigation, with much less notice, has been pursuing another profound betrayal committed by Donald Trump and his crew: the lethal mismanagement of the COVID-19 crisis. That inquiry broke into the headlines a few days ago with the news of more evidence that the Trump White House impeded the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s efforts to warn Americans about the pandemic.
On Friday, the Select Committee on the Coronavirus Crisis, which is chaired by Rep. James Clyburn (D-S.C.), released interviews and documents revealing how senior Trump officials tried to block government health officials from informing the public about the seriousness of COVID-19. On February 25, 2020, Nancy Messonnier, a senior CDC health expert, warned in a news briefing that the virus’s spread in the United States was inevitable. That enraged Trump, who was trying to downplay the coronavirus threat. The new material shows that the Trump administration tried to shut her up. And Anne Schuchat, a top CDC official, told the committee that Trump officials scrambled to hold a briefing hours after Messonnier’s warning, though “there was nothing new to report.”
The story gets worse: Between March 9 and May 29 of last year, the CDC held no press briefings. In testimony to the committee, Kate Galatas, a CDC communications official, said the White House repeatedly thwarted the agency’s attempts to schedule such briefings, including one in April that would have emphasized the need to wear masks to contain the virus’s spread.
And worse: Dr. Deborah Birx, who was the White House COVID-19 task force coordinator, told the committee that Dr. Scott Atlas, a radiologist (not an infectious disease specialist) who was advising Trump on COVID, leaned on the CDC to alter its guidelines on testing to recommend that only symptomatic people be tested. (This would have yielded lower numbers of confirmed cases.) Government scientists, worried about asymptomatic people spreading the disease, thought it was important for symptomatic and asymptomatic people to get tested. Atlas’ pressure, though, led to CDC guidance in August 2020 on testing that was less vigorous. This revised recommendation, Birx told the committee, “resulted in less testing and…less aggressive testing of those without symptoms that I believed were the primary reason for the early community spread.” A month later, the CDC reinstituted the more expansive testing directive. It was released over “objections from senior White House personnel,” according to Birx.
As researchers from UCLA noted in March 2021, the United States could have avoided 400,000 COVID deaths if the Trump administration had implemented a more effective health strategy that included mask mandates, social distancing, and robust testing guidelines. Birx made a similar statement at that time.
We’ve long known that Trump did the opposite of what public health experts advised. More concerned with his own standing in the polls than with the health and safety of the citizenry, Trump dismissed or minimized the threat and sent a mixed message on masks, social distancing, and testing. The new revelations from the committee underscore his immense negligence and dereliction of duty that led to the preventable deaths of hundreds of thousands.
In a world of endless Trump outrages, this particular atrocity deserves more…well, outrage. The right went nuts over Benghazi, in which four Americans tragically died, yet it evinces no concern over the needless deaths of 400,000. Is this number just too large to absorb? In a 1932 essay, German journalist and satirist Kurt Tucholsky quoted a fictional diplomat referring to the horrors of war: “The war? I cannot find it to be so bad! The death of one man: this is a catastrophe. Hundreds of thousands of deaths: that is a statistic!" (No, apparently, Stalin did not say this.)
Moreover, it’s dumbfounding that killing 400,000 through ineptitude is not a disqualification for political leadership. Trump remains the GOP’s 2024 frontrunner, and party leaders continue to genuflect before him. Meanwhile, decrying Mr. Potato Head and Big Bird and fulminating over Dr. Seuss books have been far more important priorities for Republicans.
It’s also puzzling that the nation is not more focused on learning what went wrong during this horrific crisis. The work of the coronavirus subcommittee is not breathlessly monitored by the media. The material it just released did not make the front pages, as far as I can tell. And a search indicates the New York Times did not cover it. There is still much to learn about how Trump and his accomplices screwed up the government’s response to this once-in-a-lifetime (we hope) catastrophe. (Paging Jared Kushner.) It just doesn’t seem too high on the national to-do list.
Still, Clyburn pushes on. He has been trying to obtain testimony from Dr. Robert Redfield, the former CDC director. Redfield’s appearance before the committee was blocked last year by the Trump administration. On Friday, Clyburn sent him a letter to “renew” the committee’s request that he submit to an interview and hand over documents. In the letter, Clyburn noted, “The Trump Administration’s use of the pandemic to advance political goals manifested itself most acutely in its efforts to manipulate and undermine CDC’s scientific work.”
It's tough to think of a topic more deserving of congressional oversight than the government’s mishandling of a pandemic that has killed hundreds of thousands and caused economic hardship for tens of millions of Americans. (A seditious violent assault on Congress, as part of an effort to overturn an election, comes to mind, too.) For obvious reasons, Trump and the GOP do not want scrutiny of this policy debacle that was driven by Trump’s narcissism and incompetence. For the health of the republic, Clyburn should press ahead.
Got any comments on this story or anything else to say? Email me at thisland@motherjones.com. Ivanka and Donald Jr. on the Witness Stand in a Trump Corruption Trial? Over the past few months, I’ve been one of the few reporters paying close attention to an early act of alleged corruption in the Trump era. In January 2020, the attorney general of Washington, DC, filed a lawsuit against Trump’s inaugural committee and the Trump Organization that claimed the Trump Hotel in Washington had overcharged the nonprofit committee by $1 million or so for event space during the Trump inauguration. That meant that payments from Trump’s inaugural committee allegedly enriched Donald Trump, Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka Trump, and Eric Trump, who each own a piece of the hotel (which is about to be sold). That would be some serious grafting. As I've reported, during separate depositions in this case, both Donald Jr. and Ivanka made apparently false statements. And last week, a judge in Washington, DC, issued a ruling that moved the lawsuit toward a trial. Though this civil case has received less ink than Donald Trump’s legal troubles in New York, this lawsuit could lead to Ivanka and her eldest brother taking the witness stand and being questioned about an alleged Trump rip-off. Stay tuned. The Watch, Read, and Listen List American Rust. I have long had a fan-crush on Jeff Daniels. Did you watch Godless, the wonderful 2016 Western miniseries on Netflix? Daniels defined villainy in his depiction of the show’s bad guy. In Showtime’s American Rust, a nine-episode miniseries based on Philipp Meyer’s much-lauded novel of the same name, Daniels is Del Harris, the beleaguered police chief of Buell, a small Rust Belt town in Pennsylvania. He’s weening himself off pain pills and hiding from a backstory involving his past as a Pittsburgh cop. And he’s keen on Grace Poe (Maura Tierney), a seamstress who’s trying to start a union at the low-wage wedding-gown factory where she works. An ex-cop-drug-addict turns up dead at a shut-down steel factory, and Grace’s teenage son, Billy, is apparently involved. American Rust is something of a cross between HBO’s Mare of Easttown and Showtime’s Your Honor (one of last year’s best series). Harris desperately wants to protect Billy—and that means hunting down a drug dealer who’s spreading misery through this down-and-out, gritty stretch of Trump Country. You know the drill—Harris cuts corners, he raises the suspicions of his colleagues. At the same time, Grace pursues a do-whatever-it-takes path to save her son. The plot twists are not as gripping as they could be, but Daniels’ depiction of quiet aching is mesmerizing. Ultimately, the series is not about a big, shocking finale. Its triumph is chronicling how Del and Grace, and others in Buell, cope with a life they didn’t see coming. Unfortunately, the wrap-up episode disappoints, for the resolution of the main plot arrives abruptly, and many threads are left sort of dangling, as if the producers couldn’t decide whether they wanted to continue the story into a second season. Still, nine hours of watching Daniels playing a fellow trying his damnedest to find steady ground is a treat.
John Mellencamp and Bruce Springsteen, “Wasted Days.” This is not meant as a dig at John Mellencamp (the artist formerly known as John Cougar), but in the earlier part of his career he came across as a poor man’s Springsteen. But through the years, he matured and evolved into a mainstay of heartland rock sharing a progressive worldview. This Indiana native deserves much credit for helping to launch Farm Aid, which for decades has helped family farmers. I don’t know how I missed this, but at the end of September, Mellencamp and Springsteen released the first song they ever recorded together. “Wasted Days,” written by Mellencamp, is hardly subtle. It’s two fellows on the wrong side of middle age contemplating the end of their days. Quite literally. They ask, “How many minutes do we have here?” There was similar running-out-of-time rumination on the album Springsteen and the E Street Band released last year, Letter to You. Over a half-century ago, Roger Daltrey of The Who sang, “Hope I die before I get old.” Many rockers did, but most did not. And as those who remain—and who are still producing— approach the final bars of their songs, we fans (who are on that same path) can expect to experience and perhaps even enjoy this expanding genre of almost-gone rock. Got any films, television shows, books, or music to recommend? Email me at thisland@motherjones.com. Read Recent Issues of This Land November 13, 2021: Does blue-state America care more about red-state America than vice versa?; Dumbass Comment of the Week; how to get back issues of This Land; the Mailbag, MoxieCam™; and more.
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