Trump: ‘Testing is a local thing’

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APRIL 19, 2020

President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a coronavirus task force briefing at the White House, Saturday, April 18, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Amid rising tensions with governors, President Donald Trump continued to tout the number of coronavirus tests in the United States, insisting that the issue is being politicized and that the federal government is helping states get the supplies they need.

“Our testing is expanding very rapidly by millions and millions of people,” Trump said Sunday night during the coronavirus task force briefing.

In the midst of a dispute between Trump and the governors, who want the federal government to take the lead on expanding testing capacity, Trump dug in: “Testing is a local thing. It’s very important. It’s great, but it’s a local thing.”

He also addressed the concerns of governors about the lack of supplies needed for the tests by holding up one of the cotton swabs that is used in the test and comparing it to a Q-tip, while acknowledging that it is more complicated.

He noted that the administration has sent out more than 5 million nasal swabs, but said some states “don’t know where they are.”

“The swabs — that’s easy,” Trump continued. “We have them coming in by the tens of millions.” He said the nation will end up with so many swabs “you won’t know what to do with them.”

Last week, Trump tweeted “The States have to step up their testing!” and in Friday night’s briefing, he said that coronavirus testing is the responsibility of the states — just a few in a series of statements seeking to shift blame for the lag time to governors.

On Saturday, he lashed out at governors for “complaining,” asserting that they were politicizing the testing issue in the same fashion as when they were calling for ventilators in recent weeks.

But even some Republican governors are disputing that notion, stating that it will be impossible to reopen private businesses without expansive testing to know who is healthy and who is not.

Many are now arguing that the federal government must help to sort out the issues in the supply chain that have prevented states from being able to get the critical ingredients they need to conduct the tests, including swabs, the viral transport medium need to carry the specimens and chemical reagent, which is used to help determine the diagnosis.

On CNN’s State of the Union, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, said the lack of testing is the number one problem in America and “has been since the beginning of the crisis.”

“The administration, I think, is trying to ramp up testing. They are doing some things with respect to private labs,” Hogan told CNN’s Jake Tapper. “But to try and push this off to say that the governors have plenty of testing and they should just get to work on testing — somehow we aren’t doing our job — is just absolutely false.”

On NBC’s “Meet the Press” Sunday, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, also a Republican, said he could probably double or even triple testing virtually overnight “if the FDA would prioritize companies that are putting a slightly different formula together for the extraction reagent kit.”

“We have a shortage, worldwide shortage, of some of the materials that go into this,” DeWine told NBC’s Chuck Todd. “So, we really need help — if anybody in the FDA is watching, this would really take our, take our capacity up, literally Chuck, overnight.”

New York Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo warned on Sunday that if his state were to open businesses too quickly, the cases would accelerate again instead of that number going down.

“We apex, we plateaued, it’s coming down the other side. That is good news,” Cuomo said Sunday. “So we exhale, we can control the beast — yes — but the beast is still alive. We did not kill the beast. And the beast can rise up again.”

Even when some businesses are allowed to reopen at an undetermined date in the future, he said state officials will be closely monitoring the infection and hospitalization rates.

If the infection begins to spread again, “you can go right back to where you were in one week’s time,” Cuomo said. “And if we went through all of this and lost all of these people and forced essential workers and hospital workers to do unbelievable tasks to get us through this crisis — and we recreate the crisis, then shame on us.”


Courtesy/Source: CNN