About a month ago, as coronavirus infection rates started to soar, Donald Trump decided the number of cases was less important than the number of fatalities.
“Coronavirus deaths are way down,” the president boasted on Twitter in late June. He added during a Fox News event, “[W]hat they don’t say is there are fewer deaths than there have been — way, way down.” Others at the White House pushed the same line.
Even at the time, there were political risks tied to the talking points. While the claims about the death rate were accurate in late June, it seemed obvious given infection rates that fatalities would soon climb. Politico spoke to William Hanage, an epidemiologist at Harvard’s school of public health, who said, “If you’re going to do that with the death rate, you should be prepared to look at the death rate in a month or so. You might not find it so attractive.”
You can probably guess where this is going.
The United States on Tuesday recorded more than 1,000 daily deaths from the coronavirus for the first time since May, another grim sign the country is struggling to contain the pandemic six months after it emerged in the U.S. The daily death toll from Covid-19 had been falling steadily for months after peaking at over 2,000 in mid-April, but deaths began trending upward again earlier this month as the virus stormed across the South and Southwest.
In this case, the point isn’t to focus on misplaced White House boasts from June. Rather, the larger concern is a misplaced White House boast from yesterday afternoon.








