Politics

Coronavirus government response updates: Trump calls US death totals ‘very, very strong’

Coronavirus government response updates: Trump calls US death totals ‘very, very strong’Official White House Photo by Andrea HanksBy LIBBY CATHEY, ABC News

(WASHINGTON) — Though the White House has not held an official coronavirus task force briefing all week, President Donald Trump has taken the opportunity at other scheduled appearances to take questions and applaud his administration’s response to the coronavirus pandemic as a “spectacular job.”

At the tail-end of a response to a question Thursday about the president’s senior adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner declaring the government’s response to COVID-19 a “success story,” Trump touted the U.S. death total, which has climbed past 60,000, as “very strong.”

“Our death totals, our numbers per million people, are really very, very strong. We are very proud of the job we have done,” he said in the East Room event on “protecting America’s seniors.”

Trump’s push to reopen comes as the country’s economy sees its largest decline since the Great Recession, unemployment claims break records and as a November presidential election approaches.

Trump tweets support for Michigan protesters, suggests Whitmer ‘make a deal’

Trump is tweeting support once again for protesters in Michigan after Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer extended the state’s stay-at-home order and protesters, some who were armed, spilled into the state Capitol Thursday. The president suggested the governor “give a little” and “make a deal.”

He had previously tweeted to “LIBERATE” protesters in Michigan, Minnesota and Virginia — 2020 election battleground states with Democratic governors — appearing to try to take advantage of public restlessness amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Trump set to travel to Camp David

With the White House social distancing guidelines officially expired, Trump is traveling to his vacation home of Camp David for the weekend following his Friday afternoon remarks on “Presidential Recognition Ceremony: Hard Work, Heroism, and Hope.”

It’ll be the first time Trump has left the White House since March 28, when he went on a day trip to Norfolk, Virginia, to send off the USNS Comfort.

He briefly visited the Federal Emergency Management Agency headquarters in Washington, D.C., on March 19.

Before that, he was in Florida the first weekend of March, and prior to that Florida trip, he maintained a regular travel schedule of rallies and other events, such as a rally in Charleston, South Carolina, on Feb. 28.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Related posts

In a new book, Kristi Noem writes about shooting her dog

ABC News

Maine Democrats threaten to switch to winner-take-all delegate system

ABC News

In Howard Stern interview, Biden says he’s ‘happy’ to debate Trump

ABC News