ADVERTISEMENT

First Campaign Trip Since Diagnosis Set for Monday: Trump Update

President Donald Trump will be “clear to go” on Saturday, when he wants to speak to the American people.

First Campaign Trip Since Diagnosis Set for Monday: Trump Update
U.S. President Donald Trump pauses while speaking to members of the media before boarding Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S. (Photographer: Yuri Gripas/Abaca/Bloomberg)

President Donald Trump will hold his first rally on the campaign trail since his Covid-19 diagnosis, heading to Florida on Monday. He will address to a group on the White House South Lawn Saturday. The government’s top infectious disease doctor termed the Rose Garden ceremony that preceded a series of coronavirus infections among officials and staff a “super-spreader” event.

Trump first unveiled his positive test for the coronavirus early Oct. 2, and credits an antibody treatment from Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. for a quick recovery. He returned to the Oval Office Wednesday after working from the White House residence following his departure from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

Key Developments:

Trump to Head to Florida Monday for Rally (5:04 p.m.)

Trump plans to travel to Florida on Monday for his first campaign-trail rally since his hospitalization for Covid-19, his campaign said in an email.

Florida is viewed as a must-win for the president, and Trump has consistently polled behind challenger Joe Biden in the state. Florida is tied for third in the electoral-college vote count, with New York and behind California and Texas.

Trump Plans Saturday Address on Law, Order (4:03 p.m.)

Trump plans on Saturday to host his first in-person event at the White House since being hospitalized with Covid-19, two White House officials said, amid questions about the stage of his recovery.

The South Lawn event is expected to include a couple hundred guests, said a person familiar with the matter. The president will address the crowd from a distance, on the Blue Room balcony. The Saturday event will be focused on law and order, according to the White House official. It wasn’t immediately clear what precautions would be taken to protect White House guests from the virus. -- Jennifer Jacobs

Fauci Calls White House Ceremony ‘Super-Spreader’ Event (2:35 p.m.)

Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said the White House had experienced a “super spreader” coronavirus incident.

“The data speak for themselves. We had a super-spreader event in the White House,” Fauci said in an interview with CBS Radio. “And it was in a situation where people were crowded together, were not wearing masks. So the data speaks for themselves.”

The administration on Sept. 26 held a ceremony in the Rose Garden for Trump’s nomination of Amy Coney Barrett as Supreme Court justice, as well as gatherings inside the building. Washington, DC, health authorities have called for attendees, along with people who’ve been in contact with them and workers at the White House, to get tested for Covid-19.

The Sept. 26 event has been linked to at least 12 coronavirus infections, when including Trump’s, according to data compiled by Bloomberg News.

Trump Won’t Travel Over Weekend (1:31 p.m.)

Trump will remain at the White House this weekend, people familiar with the matter said, after he said he wanted to hold rallies in Florida and Pennsylvania despite questions over the stage of his recovery from Covid-19.

Trump, who told Fox’s Sean Hannity late Thursday that he wanted to hold rallies Saturday and Sunday, won’t travel until Monday at the earliest, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

White House Residential Staff Members Test Positive (11:11 a.m.)

Four staff members at the White House residence have tested positive for the coronavirus, linked to an outbreak at the building nearly three weeks ago, according to two people familiar with the matter.

Those infected include three members of the housekeeping staff and an assistant to the chief usher, Timothy Harleth, according to the people. None of the infected staff came in direct contact with the president or his relatives, and wore masks in the residence, one of the people said.

Trump regularly asked some staffers who came near him to remove their masks, according to one of the people. He seemed impatient with people wearing masks around him, because he’d been tested, the person said. -- Jennifer Jacobs

Democrats Introduce Presidential Medical Removal Bill (10:28 a.m.)

House Democrats unveiled a bill to create a medical commission under the 25th Amendment to the U.S. constitution to adjudicate the possible removal of future presidents due to medical incapacity. They said the bill would not apply to Trump in his current term, even as conservatives are accusing Democrats of trying to undermine the election.

“We do need to do this, certainly in the next Congress,” Representative Jamie Raskin of Maryland said at a press briefing with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Covid-19 raises the issue because the president could be on ventilator or incapacitated, he said.

The bill would provide for a congressionally appointed panel that could move to shift power to the vice president. “The commission is entirely bipartisan,” Raskin said, with eight medical members chosen by Republicans and Democrats and another eight former high-level executive branch members also chosen by the two parties, along with a chair.

Under the 25th Amendment, two-thirds majorities would be needed to approve removal of power from the president under a petition from the vice president, if the president insists on maintaining power.

With regard to whether Trump’s judgment is now being impaired by drugs, Pelosi said, “I don’t know.” She also said the legislative proposal “is not about the election at all.” -- Erik Wasson

White House Says Trump ‘Clear to Go’ on Saturday (8:45 a.m.)

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany said Trump “will be clear to go” on Saturday, when “he wants to talk to the American people.” There are medical tests underway to ensure he doesn’t transmit the virus when he returns to the campaign trail, she said on Fox News, noting she’d conferred with White House doctor Sean Conley.

It will be “tough” to make a rally happen Saturday, she also said. “He won’t be out there if he can transmit the virus,” she said. “There will be a test in place and rest assured that test will show that it’s not transmissible.”

McDaniel Claims Trump ‘Won’t Be Shedding’ Virus by Next Friday (8:09 a.m.)

Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel criticized the Commission on Public Debates for unilaterally deciding that the second scheduled presidential debate would need to be held virtually, on the original Oct. 15 date. The Republican side had offered alternative dates, she said. McDaniel, who has also tested positive for Covid-19, said she herself is doing “well.”

“What’s so odd about this is even based on the CDC, the president won’t be shedding live virus by next Friday,” McDaniel said in an interview on Fox Business, referring to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Why are they canceling a live, in-person debate? This is so bad for our country.”

Most Covid-19 patients can stop isolating 10 days after they first showed symptoms, according for the CDC. But not all patients are the same and there is no test that shows when a person who was infectious stop shedding the virus. Trump first tested positive for Covid-19 on Oct. 1.

Trump’s physicians have not said whether the president has tested negative since his diagnosis nor have they revealed the date of his last negative test, which could indicate when he was first exposed. -- Jordan Fabian

Trump Will Get TV Doctor’s Evaluation on Fox Friday (7:19 a.m.)

Rather than reveal his medical records to reporters the traditional way in 2016, Trump dictated a letter to his doctor and shared it during a TV appearance with Dr. Oz.

He will now reprise the move on Fox News on Friday.

The president will undergo a medical evaluation on Tucker Carlson’s program from Dr. Marc Siegel.

Siegel is a medical contributor on Fox. In the past, he has speculated without evidence that Biden is using speed and Adderall before debates, said it’s “almost impossible” for people under 70 to die from Covid-19, and argued that Speaker Nancy Pelosi should “stop pontificating” about Trump’s health.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.