Late last week, Vice President Mike Pence held a conference call with senators, and by all accounts, it didn’t go especially well. The discussion, not surprisingly, turned to the need for ramped up coronavirus testing, and senators were not altogether pleased to hear the White House didn’t have a national plan.
According to an Associated Press account, Sen. Angus King (I-Maine) told Pence the administration’s failure to develop an adequate national testing regime is a “dereliction of duty.” King reportedly added, “I have never been so mad about a phone call in my life.”
A day later, at the White House press briefing, Donald Trump said King — an independent who caucuses with Democrats — doesn’t matter because the senator is “worse than any Democrat.” The president added that the Maine lawmaker’s frustrations were “totally staged” as part of a political scheme.
It was a peek into a curious perspective: Trump believes criticisms of him can’t be sincere, so they must be part of a plot. He peddled a related line at yesterday’s press briefing:
“Remember it was all ventilators and the reason it was all ventilators, ‘They said there’s no way he’ll ever be able to catch this one.’ And not only did we catch it, we are now the king of ventilators all over the world. We can send them anywhere; we have thousands being made a week and they are very high quality. And that wasn’t playing well, so then they said, ‘Testing, testing, oh we’ll get him on testing.’”
When a reporter asked why he sees the focus on testing as a personal attack, Trump added, “It’s not bipartisan; it’s mostly partisan.”
The president whose political persona has been shaped by bizarre conspiracy theories continues to see plots against him in every corner. As Trump argued yesterday, governors pushed for increased ventilator production, not because it’s a life-saving medical device, but because “they” were creating a political test.
Similarly, the president believes that the focus on ventilators “wasn’t playing well” — which is to say, it wasn’t paying political dividends for his rascally critics — so “they” decided to challenge the White House on testing. His perceived foes, Trump said, are saying this because they want to “get him.”









