After Donald Trump acknowledged that he’d tested positive for the coronavirus, a political strategy slowly took shape in Republican circles. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), for example, made the case that the president could emerge from the crisis “humbled,” focused on policy solutions, and emphasizing “the human side” of the pandemic from a personal perspective.
Trump’s re-election team was thinking along the same lines, seeing the president’s health crisis as an opportunity for the Republican to demonstrate the kind of empathy he’s failed to show throughout his term.
Trump clearly has a very different approach in mind. On Twitter yesterday, the president not only announced his premature departure from the hospital, he also told the public not to be “afraid of” the deadly virus that’s claimed the lives of 210,000 Americans. He soon after returned to the White House, where the still-contagious president took off his mask in a performative way and re-entered the building.
The Republican then recorded a video message and released it via social media. After praising the Walter Reed Medical Center and its staff, Trump told Americans:
“I learned so much about coronavirus and one thing is certain, don’t let it dominate you. Don’t be afraid of it. You are going to beat it. We have the best medical equipment, the best medicine, all developed recently. And you are going to beat it…. Don’t let it dominate. Don’t let it take over your lives. Don’t let that happen.”
This is profoundly dangerous advice. Telling people who may very well die from the virus, as 210,000 Americans already have, that they’ll “beat” the coronavirus is, as one doctor put it, “crazy” and “utterly irresponsible.”
Note also how Trump suggested that everyone will have equal access to “the best medical equipment” and “the best medicine,” which is simply not the case.
In the same video, the president went on to suggest he might be “immune” from the virus, which is also completely bonkers, especially given the aggressiveness of the recent medical response to his ailment.
But what struck me as truly extraordinary was Trump’s suggestion that his infection is worthy of praise.









