In a normal and healthy administration, White House officials would see Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, as a trusted source — especially in the midst of a deadly viral outbreak. Donald Trump’s administration, however, is neither normal nor healthy.
Last week, the president started taking rhetorical shots at his own country’s leading infectious disease expert. That was soon followed by the White House compiling an opposition-research collection on Fauci and distributing it to major news organizations.
Also over the weekend, Dan Scavino, the White House deputy chief of staff for communications and a close confidant of the president’s, promoted a cartoon mocking Fauci. (The New York Times noted that the artist responsible for the cartoon has published work that has been “criticized for its anti-Semitic imagery.”)
Could Team Trump make this worse? Of course it could.
Peter Navarro, President Donald Trump‘s top trade adviser, blasted Dr. Anthony Fauci on Tuesday, claiming that the nation’s top infectious disease expert and the public face of the White House‘s coronavirus response has been consistently wrong while advising on how to contain the disease. In a brief op-ed published in USA Today, Navarro said: “Dr. Anthony Fauci has a good bedside manner with the public, but he has been wrong about everything I have interacted with him on.“
It matters that Navarro, an economist who’s responsible for helping steer the president’s misguided trade agenda, has no credibility upon which to attack Fauci’s epidemiological work. It also matters that Navarro’s op-ed includes glaring errors.









