Trump
son-in-law Jared Kushner scolds states for requesting supplies from National
Equipment Stockpile
Most observers were shocked at the Trump administration's
latest indication that it intends to provide little assistance to states where
thousands of people have contracted the coronavirus, after Jared Kushner,
senior advisor and son-in-law to President Donald Trump, made his first
appearance as a key member of the White House coronavirus task
force Thursday evening.
Kushner revealed he had little knowledge of how the federal government works.
Kushner revealed he had little knowledge of how the federal government works.
Kushner's perceived disdain during his remarks for state
governments which have spent weeks pleading for sufficient ventilators, N95
respirators, and other personal protective equipment (PPE) for healthcare
providers was denounced by New
York Times columnist Michelle Goldberg as "dilettantism raised to
the level of sociopathy."
When asked about the federal government's response to states that have requested shipments from the Strategic National Stockpile (SNS), Kushner—a former real estate developer with no medical background—suggested states and the residents and healthcare professionals fighting the coronavirus pandemic are not entitled to the use of the government-funded stockpile of medical equipment.
"The notion of the federal stockpile was it's supposed
to be our stockpile," Kushner told the press. "It's not supposed to
be state stockpiles that they then use."
Kushner did not elaborate on what the federal government
might use the stockpile for if not to supply the public with the equipment in
the event of a national health crisis.
According to the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials, the SNS is "designed to supplement and resupply state and local inventories of medicines and supplies during emergencies severe enough to exhaust local supplies."
According to the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials, the SNS is "designed to supplement and resupply state and local inventories of medicines and supplies during emergencies severe enough to exhaust local supplies."
Hospitals across the country have warned for weeks that the rapidly-spreading pandemic has depleted their reserves of ventilators and PPE, putting patients and healthcare providers at risk. "His use of the word 'our' is so wrong," tweeted political scientist Michael McFaul. "These masks in the stockpile are OUR masks, paid for by OUR money."
Kushner's press conference came days after Sen. Elizabeth Warren
(D-Mass.) denounced the
Trump administration for reportedly seizing at least two shipments of supplies
headed to Massachusetts from the stockpile in March, leaving her state with a
fraction of what it ordered.
Hospitals in the commonwealth have warned for
weeks that they were experiencing a PPE shortage that would prove critical if
there was a surge of cases. Kushner on Thursday chided states for requesting
equipment in anticipation of needing it in the near future.
"What you have all over the country is a lot of people are
asking for things that they don't necessarily need at the moment," Kushner
said.
He also accused state and city officials of being "poor
managers" and said they were requesting supplies without knowing they
already had them in state stockpiles.
Late last month, according to a Vanity Fair report,
Kushner encouraged Trump to push back publicly against New York Gov. Andrew
Cuomo's demand for 30,000 ventilators, warning of a dangerous shortage.
"I have all this data about I.C.U. capacity," Kushner
reportedly said at a White House meeting. "I'm doing my own projections,
and I've gotten a lot smarter about this. New York doesn't need all the
ventilators."
Times columnist Jamelle Bouie slammed Kushner's qualifications
to make such claims. New York is reportedly now
six days away from running out of ventilators, with nearly 100,000 people in
the state sickened with the disease.
Atlantic writer Adam Serwer wrote that
Kushner's ascension to one of the top positions in the White House's
coronavirus effort, with his family connection to the president but no
qualifications, is a "hallmark of authoritarian governments."
Such regimes "prize loyalty to the Leader over people who
can do the job right, because protecting the Leader takes priority over
whatever public interest the task involves," Serwer wrote.