A recent report from the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis didn’t generate a flood of attention — I guess that’s what happens when governmental reports are issued on a Friday afternoon around the holidays — but that’s a shame because the findings were quite extraordinary. NBC News reported:
The Trump administration engaged in “deliberate efforts” to undermine the U.S. response to the coronavirus pandemic for political purposes, a congressional report released Friday concludes. The report, prepared by the House select subcommittee investigating the nation’s Covid response, says the White House repeatedly overruled public health and testing guidance by the nation’s top infectious disease experts and silenced officials in order to promote then-President Donald Trump’s political agenda.
I can appreciate why so many of us have grown inured to Trump-era scandals, and some of the relevant details had already come to public light. Nevertheless, by any fair measure, this excerpt from the NBC News report includes two rather extraordinary sentences.
The United States was confronted with a once-in-a-century public health crisis that would’ve proved challenging for even a competent administration. But we were left with a hapless television personality in the nation’s highest office, who oversaw an administration that, according to an official congressional investigation, deliberately undermined its own country’s pandemic response, prioritizing politics over policy.
In a normal administration, this would be a scandal that defined a generation. Indeed, it’s hardly outlandish to believe such a failure would constitute an impeachable offense. But in Donald Trump’s administration, it’s eclipsed by other era-defining scandals.
William Saletan — who went so far as to argue that the former president “deliberately sabotaged the nation’s response to the pandemic” — had a good piece in Slate, emphasizing the difference between the Biden administration’s Covid response and its predecessor: The current president and his team aren’t imposing political constraints on scientists and public health agencies. From Saletan’s piece:








