In late April, as federal policymakers negotiated the latest economic aid package, one of the sticking points was a specific Democratic demand: Dems insisted that the Trump administration had to prepare a national testing strategy. It was not open ended: the White House was required to submit the plan to lawmakers by Sunday, May 24.
Eventually, Republican negotiators accepted the provision, the bill passed, and Donald Trump signed the package into law.
The good news is, the White House met the agreed upon deadline. The bad news is, the new national testing strategy isn’t much of a testing strategy. The New York Times reported over the holiday weekend:
The Trump administration’s new testing strategy, released Sunday to Congress, holds individual states responsible for planning and carrying out all coronavirus testing, while planning to provide some supplies needed for the tests. The proposal also says existing testing capacity, if properly targeted, is sufficient to contain the outbreak. But epidemiologists say that amount of testing is orders of magnitude lower than many of them believe the country needs.
The previous plan from Team Trump was to put states at the forefront of the effort, leaving governors in charge of crafting their own testing strategies, while the federal government makes vague commitments about providing necessary resources. The new plan looks an awful lot like the old plan.
The Washington Post obtained the 81-page document, which is called the “Covid-19 Strategic Testing Plan.” Even the name proved to be a point of contention: I spoke to a Capitol Hill staffer over the weekend who noted that the law required the administration to develop a “national” testing strategy, and the White House report omitted the word “national” from the title.
Democratic leaders from both chambers issued a joint statement on Sunday, panning the “disappointing” report as inadequate.








