The former president
said in a note to his staff that while “these are difficult days for our
country, ... we will come out of this better informed and stronger together.”
WASHINGTON — Former
President George W. Bush said that while “these are difficult days for our
country,” he has “absolute confidence in the experts who are in charge” of the
nation’s coronavirus response, according to a note emailed to his staff in
recent days.
Bush pointed in
particular to Debbie Birx and Tony Fauci, two doctors who serve on President
Donald Trump’s coronavirus task force.
“Laura and I know Deb
Birx and Tony Fauci well, as do many of you,” Bush said, referring to his wife,
Laura Bush. “And we know the character of our country. Like other crises we
have overcome, we will come out of this better informed and stronger together.”
The former
president’s praise of Birx and Fauci is especially noteworthy. Birx has served
for years as the U.S.’s global AIDS coordinator, while Fauci is the longtime
director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
Both doctors have become
mainstays in the Trump administration’s response — with Fauci, in particular,
sometimes challenging Trump over policies and positions.
Bush also used the
recent staff note, obtained by The Dallas Morning News,
to share some insight on how he and his wife are taking care during the
outbreak. The couple — who typically split time between Dallas and their ranch
in Crawford — are “handwashing and social distancing to the max,” he said.
The former president
is “reading, painting and riding mountain bikes,” while the former first lady
is “reading, working puzzles and hiking,” he said. “And yes, we’re bingeing –—
mysteries, dramas and documentaries,” he said, referring to watching streaming
video.
Bush offered some
advice to his staff, too.
“Please be safe. Take
care of yourselves and your families. Get exercise. And yes, keep working
hard,” he said. “We appreciate you, we care about you, and we are thinking of
you.”
The former president
has kept a low profile amid the COVID-19 outbreak. Trump has not sought out the
help of his Oval Office predecessors as often happened under past
administrations when there were national emergencies.
Asked on Sunday why
he hasn’t reached out to the former commanders in chief, Trump said he didn’t
“want to disturb them.”
“I don’t think I’m
going to learn much,” the president said. “Now, if I felt that if I called, I’d
learn something and that would save one life — it would save one life, OK? — I
would make the call in two minutes. But I don’t see that happening.”
Trump also criticized
former President Barack Obama’s handling of the H1N1 flu outbreak in 2009 and
Bush’s response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
“If you look at,
let’s say, the H1N1 … that was a disaster,” the president said. “That was a
tough period of time for our country. You look at so many other things that
weren’t handled very well, whether it’s Katrina or something else.”
Trump added that he
already has the “best people in the world.”
“Look, I respect
everybody, but I feel I have an incredible team, and I think we’re doing an
incredible job,” he said.
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