Even as New York and New Jersey posted their worst daily death toll from Covid-19, President Donald Trump was casting blame elsewhere for the response to the pandemic and developing plans to get the economy back in action.
The White House's economic strategy, which is in its early stages, depends on virus testing far more Americans than has yet been possible, in an effort to better identify and contain areas of infection, Mario Parker reports.
The economic restart would likely begin in smaller municipalities that haven't been heavily hit. Hot spots like Detroit, New Orleans and New York City, where there are at least encouraging signs on new infection rates, would remain shuttered.
"We're looking at the concept where we open sections of the country, and we're also looking at the concept where you open up everything," Trump told Fox News.
The president, who's faced criticism for downplaying the virus threat, warned yesterday he's considering putting a "hold" on U.S. funding for the World Health Organization, which he said "blew it" by failing to sound the alarm sooner.
With partisan tensions growing over the makeup of a further round of stimulus, Trump is also drawing fire from Democratic lawmakers for his ouster of the official set to oversee $2 trillion in already-passed aid. While Trump didn't directly explain the decision, he's acted against other inspectors general he considers insufficiently loyal.
Trump only last month suggested Easter Sunday as the time to re-open the country. His target for a return to normalcy may still be running on an unrealistic time frame.
— Kathleen Hunter
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