The Morning Dispatch: Trump vs. the Virus

A comprehensive breakdown of the president’s weekend at Walter Reed.

Happy Monday! If you have the coronavirus or were exposed to the coronavirus, please don’t plow ahead with your Ozaukee County Oktoberfest fundraiser, or head back to the office to tell your staff in person, or order your assigned Secret Service agents to accompany you on a little joy ride. Just go and stay home.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • The United States confirmed 41,284 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 4.4 percent of the 934,726 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 475 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 209,810.

  • President Trump was hospitalized at Walter Reed Medical Center on Friday, hours after he announced he had tested positive for COVID-19. His doctors said on Sunday he may be discharged as early as today, but noted he is being treated with several experimental drugs and therapeutics.
  • A host of other prominent White House and Republican officials have tested positive for COVID-19 since President Trump announced he had contracted the virus: RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel, Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien, former White House adviser Kellyanne Conway, Trump body man Nicholas Luna, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Sen. Ron Johnson, Sen. Thom Tillis, and Sen. Mike Lee.
  • Employers added 661,000 jobs in September, according to a Friday Bureau of Labor Statistics report. The unemployment rate fell 0.5 percentage points to 7.9 percent, but the rate of the economic recovery is slowing. There are currently 10.7 million fewer jobs in the United States than there were in February.
  • Despite several senators quarantining because of exposure to the coronavirus, the Senate will proceed with Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation hearings as scheduled, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Saturday. McConnell did, however, delay the Senate’s return from recess until October 19, meaning portions of Barrett’s confirmation hearings will likely be virtual.
  • Senior aides of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a whistleblower complaint on Thursday accusing the state’s top lawyer of bribery, abuse of office, improper influence, and other potential federal crimes.
  • Cal Cunningham, the Democratic Senate candidate in North Carolina, admitted on Friday to sending flirtatious text messages to a woman who is not his wife. “I have hurt my family, disappointed my friends, and am deeply sorry,” Cunningham said, making clear he was not leaving the race.
  • St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame pitcher Bob Gibson died on Friday at age 84 of pancreatic cancer.

The President vs. the Pandemic

When our last newsletter hit your inboxes, Washington had just been upended by President Trump’s overnight diagnosis with COVID-19. Since then, reams of additional reporting and information have come out. But as with so many stories with this White House, much of what we have been told is a garbled, contradictory mess—the truth feels little clearer than it did in those first frantic moments after Trump’s announcement.

Let’s start with what’s plain and clear. After experiencing symptoms of the coronavirus, including a cough, fever, and concerning oxygen levels, President Trump traveled to Walter Reed, the Bethesda, Maryland, military hospital where presidents are traditionally treated, on Friday afternoon. He has since received several forms of therapeutic treatment, including an antibody cocktail of Regeneron, the antiviral Remdesivir, the anti-inflammatory dexamethasone, and sporadic supplemental oxygen. He has also released several upbeat videos thanking Americans for keeping him in their prayers, and taken one impromptu motorcade ride to wave at supporters outside the hospital.

What’s the Takeaway?

This weekend found the Trump administration repeatedly deceiving and obfuscating about the president’s condition during a time when the nation was counting on them for information about their commander-in-chief—but that in itself is, unfortunately, not particularly surprising. It does, however, make it a bit more difficult to answer the key question before us: How much danger is President Trump still in?

It’s encouraging to see that President Trump is feeling well enough to be up and about. But that doesn’t tell us the whole story. One notable characteristic of this vile disease has long been that the pneumonia it causes often doesn’t feel as oppressive as many other pneumonias. The dramatic spike in home deaths in the early days of the pandemic was due in large part to the phenomenon of patients convalescing at home who felt fine as their oxygen levels crept stealthily down before cratering all at once. Here’s how one doctor described it to us all the way back in April:

Unlike a lot of other illnesses that affect the lungs, patients seem to be relatively comfortable at home, but at the same time if you check the oxygenation of their blood, it’s rather low compared with most other pneumonias. But they seem to compensate well for it until they get down to like 93 or 91 percent, and then they just plummet. And at that point, if they’re not in the hospital and they don’t have access to oxygen and other therapeutics, they basically die within a matter of hours. … A lot of elderly people are living alone, and they’re getting by, and they’re on the phone with their family saying, ‘I’m sick, but I’m okay, don’t worry about me.’ And then they’re dead.”

Worth Your Time

  • With Uber finding itself embroiled in a possibly existential battle in California, The Wall Street Journal’s Allysia Finley sat down with the ride-sharing company’s CEO, Dara Khosrowshahi. Assembly Bill 5 would force Uber and other rideshare apps to classify drivers as employees rather than contractors, entitling them to “fixed schedules, including meal breaks, and state-mandated benefits regardless of how many hours they work.” Khosrowshahi contends that, “If you’re of the opinion that Uber is an employee with this new model, then you’d be of the opinion that Airbnb is employing their hosts as well and eBay is employing their sellers.” Check out the piece to get insight into the company’s strategy for self-driving cars and changing American attitudes towards car ownership.
  • We hear the term all the time, but what exactly is a “superspreader event?” Katherine Harmon Courage tries to answer that question in her latest piece for Vox. The coronavirus’ airborne nature and aerosolization render it tragically suited for mass transmission events. “An infected person could seed a poorly ventilated indoor space with virus without even getting physically close to all the people they end up infecting,” Courage notes. But very few of these superspreader events occur outdoors. “A team of researchers at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine has been collecting data on these superspreading events in a public database,” she writes. “Only one of the 22 cluster location types the team analyzed in a preliminary study was an outdoor setting.”

Presented Without Comment

Also Presented Without Comment

Amy S. Rosenberg @amysrosenberg

Jaime Harrison brought his own plexiglas divider to his Senate debate with Lindsay Graham. #SCSen

Toeing the Company Line

  • “For Christians, there should be no such thing as schadenfreude and no thought of karma,” David writes in his Sunday French Press. In discussing how and why Christians of all political stripes should be hoping for President Trump’s recovery from COVID-19, David argues “we shouldn’t simply pray that a president’s trials cease. We can and should also pray that his trials bear fruit—the fruit of humility and repentance.”
  • In Friday’s late Late-Week Mop-Up, Sarah was joined by election lawyer Chris Gober for a conversation about how Trump’s coronavirus diagnosis affects the election and how campaigns handle Election Day legal challenges. “My expectation is that, assuming the presidential race is very close, and especially the down-ballot races, we’re not going to know the results of the election on election night,” Gober said. “My expectation is that we are going to have so many mail-in ballots that still need to be counted, that that is just going to take time to finish that process … the outcome of these elections really could be hanging in the balance while we continue to do that counting.”
  • Jonah’s Friday G-File went after our “troll addiction epidemic,” the compulsive need of partisans to define their political opposition by its worst members. It’s a feedback loop that incentivizes destructive behavior. “Just as there are a lot of liberals and Trump critics who want to be vile jackasses about Trump’s [COVID-19] predicament,”  he writes, “there are lots of conservatives and Trump supporters who want them to behave that way. Each side has an incentive structure to pick the worst examples of the other side and say, ‘See, this is what they’re all like!’”
  • On the latest episode of the Dispatch Podcast, Sarah and Steve spoke with Dr. Jonathan Reiner—Dick Cheney’s former physician and a consultant to the White House Medical Unit during the Bush, Obama, and Trump years—about the White House’s negligence leading up to Trump’s COVID-19 diagnosis, and what the president’s doctors should be doing now. Audrey wrote a piece for the site featuring analysis from the interview.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), James P. Sutton (@jamespsuttonsf), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).

Photograph by Alex Edelman / Getty Images.