It took eight weeks for Donald Trump to shift his tone on the coronavirus outbreak, but the president who appeared in the White House press briefing room yesterday was clearly reading from a qualitatively different script. As NBC News’ Jonathan Allen explained:
For the first time Monday, President Donald Trump laid out a truly bleak picture of America in the time of coronavirus — pointing to an “invisible enemy” he said could plunge the nation’s economy into recession and possibly even require quarantines of geographic “hot spots,” if not the whole country. The abrupt shift in tone matched a more gradual acceptance by the president that his response to the pandemic so far has failed to inspire confidence in the public, investors and lawmakers.
It’s difficult to say what prompted the shift in tone. Maybe Trump received a sobering briefing that shook him on a personal level. Perhaps he realized happy talk and irrational optimism wasn’t helping with the crisis, and in order for the federal response to be more effective, the president would have to acknowledge some painful truths.
Whatever the motivation, Trump at least sounded different yesterday afternoon, even if that meant contradicting his earlier messages, even if his posture may revert back at any time.
There were, of course, some exceptions. Asked on a scale of 1 to 10, how he’d rate his response to the crisis, the president replied, with a straight face, “I’d rate it a 10.” Given the scope and scale of the White House’s missteps, and the consequences of these misjudgments, that’s not an assessment anyone should take seriously.
But perhaps most importantly, Trump also declared yesterday, “We have a problem that a month ago nobody ever thought about.”








