Post by Admin on Sept 17, 2020 6:31:12 GMT
In a rare excursion outside the friendly media bubble of Fox News on Tuesday night, Donald Trump took questions directly from uncommitted American voters at a televised “town hall” type event, in an experiment his campaign might not be in a hurry to repeat.
Under sometimes aggressive questioning from ordinary members of the voting public about healthcare, immigration and the coronavirus, Trump at times twisted in the spotlight, narrowing his eyes at a question about the “race problem in America” and trying to interrupt another voter’s question about health insurance.
But the voter shut the president down. “Please stop and let me finish my question, sir,” said the questioner, Ellesia Blaque, a professor from Philadelphia who explained that as a Black woman with a pre-existing health condition, “I’m minimized and not taken seriously.”
Trump looked away sourly, but did not try to interrupt again.
Political analysts could not look away in the aftermath of what some regarded as a train-wreck performance for Trump, while Trump himself claimed the next day on Twitter that he had won “great reviews”.
“Would love to know who in the White House thought that Trump doing this town hall was a good idea,” tweeted the columnist Karen Tumulty.
The Washington Post factchecker awarded Trump’s performance “four Pinocchios, over and over again”.
Perhaps worse for Trump than the factcheckers, however, were his multiple visible descents into confusion on stage, such as when he described how “herd mentality” could defeat the coronavirus – when he seemed to mean “herd immunity”.
“It would go away without the vaccine, George,” Trump told host George Stephanopoulos of ABC News, about Covid-19. “Sure, over a period of time. You’ll develop like a herd mentality, it’s gonna be … it’s gonna be herd-developed, and that’s gonna happen. It will all happen.”
The moment was made into an instant attack ad by the Lincoln Project, a consortium of anti-Trump Republicans, who commented: “This is not a man you want to trust with the management of a national vaccine distribution.”
The coronavirus tangle was not Trump’s only moment of seeming disorientation on stage at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, where voters wearing masks were seated far apart.
Challenged on a recently released audio tape in which he can be heard to tell the Watergate journalist Bob Woodward of the coronavirus “I wanted to always play it down, I still like playing it down”, Trump – who has been telling Americans for six months that the virus is about to disappear – said that he had in fact “up-played” the virus.
“Actually, in many ways, I up-played it, in terms of action,” Trump said.
The remarks came in response to an uncommitted voter at the event, who asked Trump why he would “downplay a pandemic that is known to disproportionately harm low-income families and minority communities”. The president said he did not minimize the threat of the virus: “My action was very strong. I’m not looking to be dishonest. I don’t want people to panic.”
He went on to state flatly that he had no regrets about his management of the pandemic, despite a confirmed US death toll that is nearing 200,000 with no sign of containment of the virus soon.
Under sometimes aggressive questioning from ordinary members of the voting public about healthcare, immigration and the coronavirus, Trump at times twisted in the spotlight, narrowing his eyes at a question about the “race problem in America” and trying to interrupt another voter’s question about health insurance.
But the voter shut the president down. “Please stop and let me finish my question, sir,” said the questioner, Ellesia Blaque, a professor from Philadelphia who explained that as a Black woman with a pre-existing health condition, “I’m minimized and not taken seriously.”
Trump looked away sourly, but did not try to interrupt again.
Political analysts could not look away in the aftermath of what some regarded as a train-wreck performance for Trump, while Trump himself claimed the next day on Twitter that he had won “great reviews”.
“Would love to know who in the White House thought that Trump doing this town hall was a good idea,” tweeted the columnist Karen Tumulty.
The Washington Post factchecker awarded Trump’s performance “four Pinocchios, over and over again”.
Perhaps worse for Trump than the factcheckers, however, were his multiple visible descents into confusion on stage, such as when he described how “herd mentality” could defeat the coronavirus – when he seemed to mean “herd immunity”.
“It would go away without the vaccine, George,” Trump told host George Stephanopoulos of ABC News, about Covid-19. “Sure, over a period of time. You’ll develop like a herd mentality, it’s gonna be … it’s gonna be herd-developed, and that’s gonna happen. It will all happen.”
The moment was made into an instant attack ad by the Lincoln Project, a consortium of anti-Trump Republicans, who commented: “This is not a man you want to trust with the management of a national vaccine distribution.”
The coronavirus tangle was not Trump’s only moment of seeming disorientation on stage at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, where voters wearing masks were seated far apart.
Challenged on a recently released audio tape in which he can be heard to tell the Watergate journalist Bob Woodward of the coronavirus “I wanted to always play it down, I still like playing it down”, Trump – who has been telling Americans for six months that the virus is about to disappear – said that he had in fact “up-played” the virus.
“Actually, in many ways, I up-played it, in terms of action,” Trump said.
The remarks came in response to an uncommitted voter at the event, who asked Trump why he would “downplay a pandemic that is known to disproportionately harm low-income families and minority communities”. The president said he did not minimize the threat of the virus: “My action was very strong. I’m not looking to be dishonest. I don’t want people to panic.”
He went on to state flatly that he had no regrets about his management of the pandemic, despite a confirmed US death toll that is nearing 200,000 with no sign of containment of the virus soon.