About a month ago, for reasons that were far from clear, Donald Trump promoted a curious report about the coronavirus. Pointing to an article on a right-wing website, the president signaled to the public that Johnson & Johnson was in the process of creating a coronavirus vaccine.
And while that certainly sounded encouraging, it wasn’t quite right. While Johnson & Johnson is one of several companies that are working on a possible vaccine, human trials are nowhere close.
This morning, Trump told reporters in India, “[W]e are very close to a vaccine,” only to have White House officials clarify soon after that he wasn’t talking about the coronavirus. At the same press conference, Trump insisted that the United States is “probably” down to 10 confirmed cases of the coronavirus, which was also wrong. (Just last week, the Trump administration brought 14 coronavirus-infected Americans to U.S. soil, despite objections from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.)
It’s against this backdrop that Vox’s Matt Yglesias noted that this seems like a good time to question Team Trump’s competence when it comes to dealing with the virus outbreak.
The Covid-19 outbreak … is a reminder that it remains a scary world and that the American government deals with a lot of important, complicated challenges that aren’t particularly ideological in nature. And we have no reason to believe the current president is up to the job. Trump not only hasn’t personally involved himself in the details of coronavirus response (apparently too busy pardoning former Celebrity Apprentice guests), he also hasn’t designated anyone to be in charge.
This is hardly an outlandish assessment. On the show last night, Rachel highlighted this Foreign Policy piece from a month ago, which said the United States “has never been less prepared for a pandemic.” The article added:









