Trump visits masks factory — but will he wear one?
US President Donald Trump leaves to visit a mask-making factory in Arizona, but will he wear one? (JIM WATSON)
Washington (AFP) – Will he finally wear one? President Donald Trump’s refusal to use a mask during the coronavirus crisis comes under the spotlight Tuesday when he visits a mask-making factory for his first big trip outside the White House in two months.
As he left Washington for the Honeywell plant in Phoenix, Arizona, Trump suggested he might don the face covering. But only, he added grudgingly, if it’s a “mask environment.”
The outing is part of Trump’s new push to encourage a reopening of the economy, which has been devastated by the social distancing and quarantine measures against COVID-19.
With only six months until election day, the Republican is scrambling to change the national mood and to sell voters his pitch of a fast economic comeback.
But with the US coronavirus death toll now around 70,000 and no sign of an easy end to the pandemic, critics accuse him of turning his back on the crisis for personal political gain.
Masks, like the N-95 versions produced by Honeywell, have become a symbol of those clashing visions.
Polls show that Democrats support face covering as a sign of shared responsibility, while some Republicans see mask-wearing orders as a big government threat to individual liberty.
White House medical experts and even First Lady Melania Trump promote masks as a crucial tool in fighting the viral spread.
But the president, tuned closely into his right-wing base, has so far used his massive visibility to downplay the need.
“I think wearing a face mask as I greet presidents, prime ministers, dictators, kings, queens, I don’t know,” he said in April, apparently suggesting a mask would be unpresidential. “Somehow, I don’t see it for myself.”
– Alterative facts –
Trump’s Arizona mask moment comes after his vice president, Mike Pence, caused an uproar a week ago when he was photographed mask-less during a visit to the famous Mayo Clinic hospital in Rochester, Minnesota, which requires visitors to cover up.
Pence — unusually for a member of the Trump administration — publicly admitted he’d been wrong.
“I didn’t think it was necessary, but I should have worn a mask,” he said on Sunday.
The White House says that because top officials and their guests are frequently tested for the coronavirus they don’t need to wear masks.
However, the controversy runs deeper, reflecting a dispute over facts that has turned swaths of the United States into camps where the left and right see different basic realities.
Trump-supported groups protesting the coronavirus lockdown — sometimes ostentatiously brandishing firearms and parading in paramilitary garb — liken going mask-free to an act of political independence.
In Stillwater, Oklahoma, and other cities, local leaders abandoned orders to wear masks after threats of violence.
A common slogan at the protests now is that the entire pandemic is a “hoax.”
Trump, who is behind in many polls against his Democratic challenger Joe Biden, is walking a tightrope.
A big resurgence of the virus might doom his chances of a second term. On the other hand, he believes that a quick economic recovery would clinch the deal.
For that, he needs people to stop fearing the pandemic.
“We can’t stay closed as a country, we’re not going to have a country left,” he said Sunday.
Disclaimer: Validity of the above story is for 7 Days from original date of publishing. Source: AFP.