This time, Donald Trump is facing a crisis not of his own making.
The coronavirus's spread has foisted a fresh challenge upon the U.S. president eight months out from the elections.
Trump — back yesterday from an at-times rock-star-like tour of India — is seeking to close ranks within his administration about his government's plans to stop the virus's spread.
The focus follows mixed messages from Trump and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about the threat posed to public health that rattled Wall Street and sparked an uproar in Washington. One Republican senator publicly demanded "some straight answers" from Trump's team. Investors anxious about the virus's spread from China have driven five consecutive days of losses in U.S. markets.
Flanked by public health officials, Trump addressed the nation last night from the White House briefing room for only the second time in his presidency. The message was that while a broader outbreak in the U.S. is possible, the risk to average Americans is low.
"There's a chance it could get worse. There's a chance it could get fairly, substantially worse," Trump said. "But nothing's inevitable."
While he put Vice President Mike Pence in charge of the government's response, that might not be enough to shield Trump from the political risks.
He faces an unpredictable crisis that could threaten the stability of the world's largest economy and his own political future at November's elections, where the competence of his response may become a key issue.
— Kathleen Hunter
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