…And that was OK with him
By Julia Conley, staff writer for Common Dreams
Many attendees were seen without face coverings during a ceremony to announce Judge Amy Coney Barrett as President Donald Trump's nominee to the Supreme Court in the Rose Garden at the White House on Saturday, Sept. 26, 2020 in Washington, D.C. The event is thought to have been a Covid-19 "superspreader event" with at least seven attendees testing positive on Friday. (Photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
Democratic lawmakers
were incredulous after Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar on Friday
testified following President Donald Trump's Covid-19 diagnosis that the Trump
family can't be expected to take the precautions that public health experts
recommend. He also claimed the spread of the coronavirus to more than 7.3
million Americans is a matter of "individual responsibility."
Testifying before the
House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis as Trump reportedly began developing Covid-19
symptoms, Azar told Rep. Nydia Velazquez (D-N.Y.) that the president's family
did not wear masks at the first presidential debate last Tuesday because
"the first family and the protective aspect around the president is a different
situation than the rest of us."
Despite the fact that
at least two members of the Trump family are now ill, Azar suggested the family is in "a
protective bubble."
"He said
this...today?" tweeted MSNBC anchor Rachel
Maddow.
At the Cleveland
Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio on Tuesday, a doctor was reportedly shooed away from the
president's adult children when she approached them to ask them to wear face
coverings during the debate.
Members of the Trump family were also present at the White House event last Saturday where Republicans celebrated the president's nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the U.S. Supreme Court, where many attendees were unmasked.
The gathering is
now thought to have been a "superspreader" event, with at least
seven attendees having tested positive for Covid-19 on Friday,
including Sens. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) and Mike Lee (R-Utah) and former Trump
advisor Kellyanne Conway.
Testifying before masked Democratic lawmakers and GOP members who declined to wear face coverings even as the number of positive Covid-19 tests on Capitol Hill grew, Azar dodged a question from Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) about Trump's recent rallies, where indoor venues have been packed with unmasked attendees in close proximity and where the president has frequently downplayed the severity of the virus.
"Do you think
that the president's rallies that he has gone to where people are not social
distancing...or wearing masks, does that contribute to the increase [in
cases]?" Waters asked.
While assuring the
congresswoman that HHS advises Americans to practice "the three W's"
by wearing a mask, washing your hands, and watching your distance, Azar said
people should also "evaluate [their] individual circumstances."
Azar's comments came
as news spread that the Barrett nomination event may have led to several
positive tests. In addition to the Rose Garden celebration at the White
House, the event included an indoor gathering where attendees were also
unmasked.
New York Times opinion writer Charlie Warzel suggested
on Twitter that Azar's statement that different safety standards apply to those
in the president's circle unfortunately rang true.
"You're staying
at home, not seeing loved ones. Making big sacrifices for the greater
good," Warzel wrote on Saturday. "But that's a *you* thing.
*They* do what they want always."
Rep. James Clyburn
(D-S.C.), chairman of the subcommittee, harshly criticized Azar for enabling
the president to downplay the pandemic and potentially contribute to the spread
of the coronavirus in an effort to appeal to voters.
"Let there be no doubt: the president's response to the coronavirus crisis has been a failure of historic proportions," said Clyburn.
"Covid-19 has claimed more
American lives than the battles of World War I, the Korean War, Vietnam War, Afghanistan
War, and Iraq War combined. As HHS Secretary and the first Chairman of the
White House Coronavirus Task Force, Mr. Secretary, you should have been at the
helm of an ambitious national response. Rather than follow the science,
you tried to hide, alter, or ignore the science whenever it contradicted the
president’s wish to downplay the crisis for perceived political
advantage."