Trump Travel Ban, Announced Without Notice, Throws Europe Into Panic
Trump's new travel ban on Europe exempts the UK, Scotland and Ireland where Trump just happens to own resorts. |
European leaders condemned the move, calling the approach
from the president one that would not help the world address the
pandemic.
"The coronavirus
is a global crisis, not limited to any continent, and it requires cooperation
rather than unilateral action," European Union Council President Charles
Michel and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a joint
statement Thursday.
The United Kingdom,
Ireland, Bulgaria, Croatia, and Romania are all reportedly exempt from the order as it only applies to
the "Schengen Zone," where Europeans can move freely between member
states.
As Mother
Jones reported, Michel and von der Leyen's response
was a strong and unambiguous statement on the crisis:
The scathing condemnation made clear that Trump's move—which limits travel from 26 European countries but does not include the United Kingdom, Ireland, or other countries that are not part of the continent's visa-free travel zone—had largely blindsided European countries, sending stock markets across the region into yet another free-fall.
Meanwhile, in the United States, lawmakers, experts, and local communities are scrambling for answers on crucial issues Trump failed to address in his televised remarks on Wednesday: the continued lack of rapid testing and a coherent messaging on what social distancing policies to follow.
Trump's
decision had Americans abroad scrambling to get home before the lockdown
and sent markets around the world tumbling.
New York Times reporter Mike McIntire, in a Twitter
thread, described how panic over flights back to the U.S.—exacerbated by
unclear rules on whether or not Americans could return after the lockdown—led
to overpaying for flights and a logjam at France's Paris-Charles De Gaulle
airport.
Stocks plummeted
Thursday, with the U.S. market shutting down temporarily from the so-called
"circuit breaker" which suspends trading if the market falls far
enough.
In Europe, markets cratered on the president's announcement of the travel ban, which he initially said would also apply to trade and cargo as well before the White House walked that portion of the statement back.
In Europe, markets cratered on the president's announcement of the travel ban, which he initially said would also apply to trade and cargo as well before the White House walked that portion of the statement back.
Gérard Araud, former
French ambassador to Washington, tweeted that Trump's comments made sense
for the U.S. president—even if they were destructive for the rest of the world.
"Trump needed a
narrative to exonerate his administration from any responsibility in the
crisis," said Araud. "The foreigner is always a good scapegoat."