Trump has 'gone awol' as president amid coronavirus pandemic, says ex-CIA director
Leon
Panetta becomes latest prominent public figure to accuse Trump of
effectively surrendering to the virus and abandoning Americans to their
fate

David Smith in Washington
Published on Thu 2 Jul 2020 13.14 BST
Donald
Trump has “essentially gone awol from the job of leadership that he
should be providing a country in trouble” during the coronavirus
pandemic, a former defence secretary and CIA director said on Wednesday.
Leon Panetta,
who served in various capacities under nine US presidents, became the
latest prominent public figure to accuse Trump of effectively
surrendering to the virus and abandoning Americans to their fate, using
the military jargon awol, meaning absent without leave.
“This is a major crisis,” Panetta told Anderson Cooper 360
on CNN, noting that top infectious diseases expert Anthony Fauci has
warned that America may hit 100,000 new cases a day, twice the current
rate.
“But the president, rather than bringing
together some kind of national strategy to confront this crisis, simply
resorts to tweeting about vandalism and other things to kind of divert
attention from the crisis that’s there.”
He
added: “We have a president that is not willing to stand up and do what
is necessary in order to lead this country during time of major crisis. I
have never experienced a president who has avoided that
responsibility.”
The virus has infected more
than 2.6m Americans and killed 128,000, according to Johns Hopkins
University. Newly reported infections topped 50,000
on Wednesday for the first time, an all-time high in the US outbreak,
and are rising significantly in 40 states, more than a dozen of which
have been forced to pause reopening plans. Hospital beds and testing capacity are under strain.
Trump
is accused of a double failure of leadership, first downplaying the
virus in January and February and then, after a frenetic April in which
he billed himself as a “wartime president”, recklessly pushing states to
reopen, holding a campaign rally and reverting to a head-in-the-sand approach. Now, as then, he has claimed the virus will “just disappear”, adding “I hope” in an interview, even as Covid-19 ravages the nation.
When Trump held a town hall on Fox News
with Sean Hannity last week, only three minutes of the hour were
dedicated to the coronavirus, according to an analysis by CNN. When the
White House coronavirus task force held its first briefing in nearly two
months, it took place at the health department rather than the White
House and was fronted by the vice-president, Mike Pence, whereas the
president had frequently taken the helm before.
Trump’s
Twitter feed is dominated by attention-deflecting attacks on election
rival Joe Biden, fulminations over statues being toppled, bellicose
calls for law and order and bald pronouncements such as “THE LONE WARRIOR!” – but the virus is seldom mentioned.
Asked by the Guardian
whether the president had made a conscious decision to talk less about
the virus, Kayleigh McEnany, the White House press secretary, said on
Wednesday: “The president is not focused on talking; he’s focused on
action. And this administration has taken historic action with regard to
the coronavirus.
“We have an excess amount of
PPE, surge – a huge amount of ventilators in the stockpile. Things that
could never be done, we were told, have been done under this
administration. Testing more than 600,000 a day. This president has done
a historic job with regard to coronavirus.”
Democrats
argue that Trump is ignoring the disaster while passing the buck to
state governors. Speaking in Wilmington, Delaware, on Tuesday, Biden said: “It seems like our wartime president has surrendered and waved the white flag, and left the battlefield.”
Moe Vela,
a Democratic strategist and former senior adviser to Biden at the White
House, said: “I think he really believes that if he doesn’t talk about
it, and that if he distracts us from it, somehow we’re going to forget
that he was responsible for it.
“He thinks that
if he talks about something else or focuses on some other topic or
engages in some other ridiculous behaviour pattern then we’re going to
forget that people are dying. How do you forget that people are dying?
This is not a resurgence; this is a continuation of a very deadly virus
that is spreading like wildfire and he’s running in the opposite
direction.”
Vela, chief transparency officer of
TransparentBusiness, added: “It could easily rank in the top one or two
examples of the epitome of failed leadership in the history of our
nation. You contrast this to an Abraham Lincoln and you can dramatically
see the extreme ends of the spectrum of leadership.”
Neera Tanden,
president of the Center for American Progress, a liberal thinktank in
Washington, is currently recovering from Covid-19. Asked for her view of
Trump’s response to the pandemic, she replied: “I don’t think it’s fit
to print. President Trump’s response to the virus has been, I think, the
worst of any large scale democracy in the world. It’s unprecedented.
There’s no national plan.”
Tanden,
a prominent supporter of Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election, added:
“He’s caught because his performance has been so terrible on the virus
that he thinks he can just change the subject by not talking about it.
The problem is that it’s the chief concern of voters, much more than the
economy.”
A poll by Hart Research
for the pressure group Protect Our Care found that even voters who
approve of Trump’s handling of the economy care more about his botched
response to the virus. Some 57% believe that Trump’s policies are
increasing the chances that many more people will die from the
coronavirus, while only 17% believe they decrease it.
Overall,
the survey found, 60% of voters disapprove of how Trump has handled the
coronavirus and 57% believe the president is to blame for the deaths
associated with it.
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