The White House’s coronavirus task force is shifting its focus away from emergency response and toward economic recovery from the COVID-19 crisis, even as the president openly acknowledges that the cost for easing restrictions affecting the US economy at this time may be paid in human lives.
Vice President Mike Pence told media on Tuesday that the task force managing the federal response to the novel coronavirus could be disbanded in the next month following “the tremendous progress we’ve made as a country.” Today, however, President Donald Trump walked Pence’s statement back—sort of.
Trump this morning claimed victory for the task force in a four-tweet thread. “Because of this success,” he concluded, “the Task Force will continue on indefinitely with its focus on SAFETY & OPENING UP OUR COUNTRY AGAIN.” The composition of the task force may now change “as appropriate,” he added, with new members coming on board and old ones leaving, and will “also be very focused on Vaccines & Therapeutics.”
One key member of the task force who seems at risk for ouster is Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert. Fauci’s strongly science-based approach has conflicted with the president in the past. More recently, Fauci has publicly cautioned states against reopening too soon, warning that resurgences of the disease are likely to follow.
The announced shift came as a surprise to some of the members of the task force, The Wall Street Journal and CNN both reported, citing sources who said members learned about the change for the first time from Trump’s tweets and were unsure what the task force would be doing going forward.
It’s not difficult to make the argument that the crisis is far from over. Across the US, COVID-19 has led to more than 70,000 deaths so far. A leaked internal administration report published yesterday projected 3,000 coronavirus-related deaths per day in the US by the end of this month, about double the current average of 1,750 per day.



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