Will Trump fire Dr. Fauci this week. More importantly will Trump even acknowledge the death toll other than saying “it’s a bad week” and babble some happy talk. He will promote the debut of a economic reopening council only to divert attention to the now 22,000 deaths.

President Trump’s trade advisor, Peter Navarro, calls the suggestion that there were warnings of catastrophic consequences from a pandemic “fake news.” But after our interview, a late January memo he wrote surfaced warning almost exactly that. https://t.co/qRXfk86rzx pic.twitter.com/YXCrEOV1af — 60 Minutes (@60Minutes) April 12, 2020

Navarro gets slam dunked during 60 Minutes Overtime.



He challenged 60 Minutes’ record – “Show me episodes during the Obama and Bush administrations that said the global pandemic was coming, and then you will have some credence in attacking the Trump Administration.”



Watch: pic.twitter.com/ewSoHTF0aF — Christopher C. Alberto (@ChrisAlbertoLaw) April 13, 2020

Feb 12: 14 cases

March 12: 1,645 cases

April 12: 556,044 cases

And more than 22k dead.

The bottom line: Anthony Fauci said on CNN’s “State of the Union” Sunday that “no one is going to deny” that more lives could have been saved if the Trump administration had implemented social distancing guidelines earlier on.

DR. FAUCI on CNN: "You could logically say that if you had a process that was ongoing and you started mitigation earlier, you could have saved lives. Obviously no one is going to deny that … But there was a lot of pushback about shutting things down back [in February]." pic.twitter.com/KpUDCrkS64 — Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) April 12, 2020

10 times Trump and his administration were warned about the coronavirus threat in January and February https://t.co/qRn4x0QdAH — Axios (@axios) April 12, 2020

The state of play: The first case of COVID-19 reached the U.S. on Jan. 15. The World Health Organization declared it a pandemic on March 11. Trump declared the U.S. outbreak a national emergency on March 13.

On Jan. 18, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar first briefed Trump on the threat of the virus in a phone call, the New York Times reports. Trump made his first public comments about the virus on Jan. 22, saying he was not concerned about a pandemic and that “we have it totally under control.” On Jan. 27, White House aides met with then-acting Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney to try to get senior officials to take the virus threat more seriously, the Washington Post reports. Joe Grogan, the head of the White House Domestic Policy Council, warned it could cost Trump his re-election. On Jan. 29, economic adviser Peter Navarro warned the White House in a memo addressed to the National Security Council that COVID-19 could take more than half a million American lives and cause nearly $6 trillion in economic damage. On Jan. 30, Azar warned Trump in a subsequent call that the virus could become a pandemic and that China should be criticized for its lack of transparency, per the Times. Trump dismissed Azar as alarmist and rejected the idea of criticizing China. Also on Jan. 30, the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus a global health emergency. WHO has only done so five times since gaining that power in 2005. On Feb. 5, senators urged the administration in a briefing to take the virus more seriously and asked if additional funds were necessary. The administration made no requests at the time for emergency funding. On Feb. 14, a memo was drafted by health officials in coordination with the National Security Council that recommended the targeted use of “quarantine and isolation measures,” per the Times. Officials planned to present Trump with the memo when he returned from India on Feb. 25, but the meeting was canceled. On Feb. 21, the White House coronavirus task force conducted a mock exercise of the pandemic. The group concluded that the U.S. would need to implement aggressive social distancing, even if it caused mass disruption to the economy and American lives, per the Times. On Feb. 23, Navarro doubled down on his warnings in another memo, this time addressed to the president, stating that up to 2 million Americans could die of the virus. On Feb. 25, director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases Nancy Messonnier publicly warned of the virus threat and said “we need to be preparing for significant disruption in our lives.” Trump reportedly called Azar fuming that Messonnier had scared people unnecessarily and caused the stock market to plummet, per the Times.

www.axios.com/…

February was a tipping point for some experts.

The concern these medical experts had been raising in late January and early February turned to alarm by the third week in February. That was when they effectively concluded that the United States had already lost the fight to contain the virus, and that it needed to switch to mitigation. One critical element in that shift was the realization that many people in the country were likely already infected and capable of spreading the virus, but not showing any symptoms.

www.nytimes.com/…

Never mind the deaths, the sickness, the loss of jobs and businesses, the imminent risk of global economic depression. The president wants to focus on his grievances about his press clippings. pic.twitter.com/0ewgRKXxT8 — David Frum (@davidfrum) April 13, 2020

Do you trust President Trump personally to be honest about the threat of coronavirus?

Yes 33%

No 53%

.

Do you think the Trump administration was adequately prepared to deal with coronavirus?

Yes 22%

No 63%@YouGovUS/@YahooNews 4/6-7https://t.co/lrZkMBeMCx — Political Polls (@Politics_Polls) April 12, 2020

Dr. Fauci is right and we cannot allow Trump to retaliate against him. We must protect Dr. Fauci so that he can continue to deliver the facts to the American people freely and without fear of being fired. https://t.co/qxNnqnaa6m — Ed Markey (@EdMarkey) April 12, 2020

Show this to the next person that tells you that #COVID19 is being overblown or the flu kills more so no big deal. Data for flu seasons is from the CDC’s FluView app, COVID data from JHU. h/t @RonanKelly13 https://t.co/nSunB8OkQQ… #coronavirus #StayHome #COVIDー19 #nottheflu pic.twitter.com/6NCI6pdgG3 — Ross Armer (@RossArmer) April 12, 2020