Donald Trump held a rather unsettling press conference at the White House yesterday, which included a presidential boast he probably should have avoided.
“We have met the moment, and we have prevailed,” Trump told reporters during a White House briefing. The president later added that he was referring to testing, not the virus itself.
Even if we accept the clarification at face value, and assume he was referring specifically to coronavirus testing and not the broader crisis, the boast is impossible to take seriously.
Indeed, Trump’s rhetoric about testing is so detached from reality, it suggests the president is struggling to keep up with current events. He stood in front of a banner that declared, in all capital letters, that the United States currently “leads the world in testing,” which isn’t true. Trump said any American who wants a test can now get one, which is ridiculous.
The president keeps trying to compare U.S. testing to South Korea’s testing in ways that make clear Trump is deeply confused about basic details. He added yesterday that all Americans returning to the workplace will be able to get daily tests “very soon,” which is a bizarre fantasy. At one point, the president’s rhetoric on testing was contradicted by his own testing coordinator, Adm. Brett Giroir.
But let’s not brush past the “we have prevailed” chest-thumping too quickly.
George W. Bush never actually said, “Mission Accomplished,” despite his association with the ignominious phrase. It was the text on a banner above Bush’s head in 2003 when the then-president declared the end of “major combat operations” in Iraq, and his presidency was haunted by the phrase as conditions in the Middle East deteriorated.
The significance lingered: the Republican’s two-word banner came to represent premature celebration amidst disastrous circumstances. As regular readers know, it quickly became a warning to future presidents who might be tempted by hubris.









