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'Why is he shaking all their hands?': Trump breaks coronavirus rules as he parades CEOs for 'infomercial' press conference

Trump called the businessmen 'geniuses', too

Clark Mindock
New York
Friday 13 March 2020 18:06 EDT
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Mr Trump disregarded basic health guidelines that urge people to avoid personal contact, including handshakes
Mr Trump disregarded basic health guidelines that urge people to avoid personal contact, including handshakes (AP)

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Shortly after a speech announcing a series of measures undertaken by the US government to combat the coronavirus pandemic, Donald Trump took the unusual step of shaking the hands of several American CEOs as he invited them to talk about how their corporations are pitching in to combat the crisis that has sent markets spiralling and workers into self-isolation.

The president said that he was declaring a national emergency, which includes a lift on regulations and the establishment of drive-through testing centres in the parking lots of big box stores like Walmart and Target.

And then, while praising the work of the private sector to bring a coronavirus test to market weeks after other countries implemented widespread testing, Mr Trump disregarded basic health guidelines that urge people to avoid personal contact, including handshakes.

Why is Trump shaking all the CEOs hands?” wrote Anthony Wright, the director of Health Access California, on Twitter, mirroring a question posed by countless others as they watched Mr Trump glad hand with the CEOs of Target, Walmart, and Roche, the company that recently received Food and Drug Administration approval to bring a coronavirus test to market.

US health officials have urged Americans to avoid large gatherings, and to self-isolate when possible.

Doctors have also said that people should avoid handshakes when possible, and to wash hands frequently and thoroughly.

The president’s announcement, in the White House Rose Garden, also drew outrage from critics who claimed that his inclusion of several business leaders who he praised at length amounted to the use of a presidential platform to advertise American corporations during an address that was sure to be played on televisions across the country.

“Donald Trump has turned the announcement of a national emergency into a corporate infomercial,” wrote Matt McDermott, a pollster in Washington, DC. “This is truly insane.”

The United States has tested just over 11,000 samples for coronavirus since January, according to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, in spite of the growing concern that the outbreak is spreading at the community level across the country. That’s in comparison to other countries that have reported testing nearly that much on a daily basis.

Mr Trump, for his part, encouraged the press to ask the CEOs questions during his Rose Garden speech, but was largely ignored: “If you have any business questions for these geniuses up here, even a business question,” Mr Trump implored.

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