Martha Boneta | Posted: Sep 24, 2020 12:01 AM
The opinions expressed by columnists are their
own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Talk in
Washington has turned to the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and what
President Trump will do to replace her—and Democrats aren’t happy about it.
First, they
know Republicans probably have the votes to approve a qualified nominee if
the president appoints one. Second, they don’t like that it takes the focus off
what they see as a winning campaign issue—President Trump’s response to
Covid-19.
But their
relentless criticism of his response was about to get called into question
anyway as the presidential debates near and the president gets a chance to
explain what he did and how.
Because when
you look at it, the president’s response has been nothing short of spectacular.
Official
death tolls now put the damage at nearly 200,000 Americans. Considering more than 2 million were predicted at the outset to
die in the first year, we’re still at less than 10 percent of the prediction.
About half the victims were 85-older; about two-thirds are 75-older.
New York,
where the Democrat governor ignored the Navy hospital ship in New York Harbor and
the other hospitals the federal government built for the state and forced Covid patients into nursing homes,
accounts for about a sixth of the deaths in the nation and more than Texas and California combined.
And this for
a virus no one outside Wuhan, China, had heard of until New Year’s Eve.
Early on, we
read that President Trump basically ignored the virus for 70 days, by which time
it had sunk its tentacles into the American mainstream and shut down our
economy. The problem with this scenario is that no one can show which 70 days
Trump abandoned ship.
Three days after China reported the
discovery of the virus to the World Health Organization, Trump had directed the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to try to get scientists into China
to investigate.
By Jan. 6,
the administration had issued its first travel warning to Wuhan.
By the 11th—the day the administration got its first look at the mapped genome
of the virus—it had upgraded the travel notice to Level 1 and
begun to search for a vaccine. By Jan. 23, the first coronavirus test had been approved
conditionally by the Food and Drug Administration.
By the end
of January, the White House Coronavirus Task Force had
been appointed, vetted, agendized and announced, and the White House had cut
travel to China and declared the coronavirus a public health emergency.
On Feb. 4,
President Trump talked about Covid during his State of the Union address, saying
the U.S. would do everything in its power to stop the disease and save
Americans. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi famously tore up that speech, and 20 days
later, when Covid caution had begun to threaten the bottom line of merchants in
San Francisco, she went on TV to say “Come to Chinatown. Here we are.
Come join us.”
By the end
of February, the administration had gotten experts into China, announced
a series of partnerships to develop vaccines, allowed more labs to produce
tests, and barred travel to Iran and restricted it to other countries.
In March,
President Trump signed the first Coronavirus relief bill,
got top health insurance companies to waive the co-pay for Covid testing,
announced public-private partnerships to open drive-through testing sites,
approved numerous fast diagnostic tests, and began to purchase millions of
masks and other personal protection devices.
He approved tele-health visits, let doctors
practice across state lines, and got American businesses to ramp up ventilator
manufacturing to the point we were producing in 100 days three times what we
produce annually.
On the
economic side, he waived interest on student loan
payments, moved tax day from April to July, created
a program to issue low-interest and no-interest loans to small businesses,
deferred other tax payments, and rewrote USDA regulations to help feed children
who lost their access to meals when schools shut down in the middle of the
month.
In the Coronavirus
relief packages, he ensured direct payments went to Americans
as well as tax breaks, a moratorium on foreclosures and evictions, and
other measures to help them endure the hardest parts of the lockdown.
And what is
the result? The curve is flattened. Vaccines are expected within the month. Deaths are down
to less than 300 per day in a country of 340 million people,
and no one in the U.S. died for lack of a ventilator, meds, beds, or protective
equipment. Unemployment, which reached a record 14.7 percent at the height of
the shutdown in April, is
now 8.4 percent nationally and as low as 6 percent in states
where governors have been aggressive about reopening.
And all done
by working with private industry in the greatest public-private mobilization
since World War II, by working with governors across party lines, and by
remaking health care and approval processes on the fly to better respond.
America will
be stronger as a result of this. Our health system will be better prepared for
the next pandemic—and the next flu season. Our economy will be more resilient.
And a lot of the thanks for that must go to President Trump. So yes, let’s talk
about his Coronavirus response. Let’s tell the whole story.
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