Donald Trump had a brief Q&A with reporters on the White House South Lawn late yesterday, at which the president fielded a straightforward question: “Why haven’t you said anything about the U.S. hitting 200,000 deaths from COVID?”
Trump paused briefly, before saying, “Uh, anybody else?”
It was, in other words, a question the Republican didn’t see worthy of an answer. A different reporter nevertheless asked a similar question: “Mr. President, could you speak to the grim milestone today of 200,000 deaths to the virus? What do you want to say to the American people?” Trump decided to answer this one:
“Well, I think it’s a shame. I think if we didn’t do it properly and do it right, you’d have two and a half million deaths. If you take a look at alternatives, you could have two and a half million deaths or something thereabouts.”
These were the president’s first — and only — public comments about the United States reaching the tragic milestone.
He soon after left, went to Pittsburgh, and held a campaign rally with supporters who didn’t seem especially interested in social distancing. At the large gathering, the president made no mention of the death toll, though he did mock mask-wearing — a simple step the administration’s public-health officials have said can help prevent the spread of the coronavirus.








