Donald Trump looks increasingly intent on playing a game of chicken of sorts with his government's Covid-19 response.
As the U.S. death toll topped 1,000 yesterday, the president's vision of putting Americans back to work by Easter has set him on a collision course with some other global leaders and the heads of U.S. cities and states who are imposing lockdowns to stem the contagion.
Trump's play-it-down approach, also embraced by like-minded Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, contrasts with the nations warning their health-care systems risk being overrun. The schism will be on full display today as Group of 20 leaders hold a virtual summit to "advance a coordinated global response."
Others who adopted lenient stances have since bowed to the reality of the virus. U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson abandoned a "herd immunity" approach and announced a three-week lockdown. In Russia, Vladimir Putin postponed a constitutional vote that would let him rule to 2036, and Japan, where workers were thronging the Tokyo metro as recently as yesterday, is considering declaring a state of emergency.
The World Health Organization wants governments to stop wasting time.
"We squandered the first window of opportunity," Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said yesterday in a rare public admonishment of the response so far. "The time to act was actually more than a month ago or two months ago."
— Michael Winfrey
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