News

Trump Deflects Blame For Coronavirus Testing Shortage, Criticizes Obama: ‘I Don’t Take Responsibility At All!’

President Donald Trump avoided taking responsibility over the lack of available coronavirus testing, and instead accused former President Barack Obama of mishandling the swine flu outbreak which started in 2009.

“I don’t take responsibility at all,” Trump said Friday, blaming a “set of circumstances” and “rules, regulations and specifications from a different time.”

Independent researchers estimate that the U.S. has completed about 20,000 coronavirus tests as of Friday. South Korea, which has been largely successful in containing the outbreak, has tested an estimated 250,000 people. Plus, South Korea has a population nearly six times smaller than the U.S. (51 million compared to 327 million).

CHECK CURRENT DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY DELEGATE TOTALS HERE!

Subscribe to our free weekly newsletter!

A week of political news in your in-box.
We find the news you need to know, so you don't have to.

“Our response is much, much worse than almost any other country that’s been affected,” the director of Harvard’s Global Health Institute, Ashish Jha told NPR last week. “Without testing, you have no idea how extensive the infection is. You can’t isolate people. You can’t do anything.”

Trump claimed that the health system was not equipped to respond to a pandemic of this skill and argued that his administration is reshaping and improving the system, “leaving a very indelible print in the future in case something like this happens again.”

“That’s not the fault of anybody — and frankly the old system worked very well for smaller numbers, much smaller numbers but not for these kind of numbers,” he added.

He then said Obama “didn’t do testing like this” during the swine flue, or H1N1, pandemic that affected over 60 million people between April 2009 and 2010. He said the Obama administration “didn’t do testing” and that when “they started thinking about testing,” it was “far too late.”

However, the novel coronavirus has proven significantly more fatal than H1N1 with a mortality rate hovering around 3%, compared to H1N1’s .02%.

The president also deflected blame for dissolving the Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense, which had been part of the National Security Council.

“I didn’t do it,” Trump said, adding “I don’t know anything about it. You say we did that. I don’t know anything about it.”

Katherine Huggins

Share
Published by
Katherine Huggins

Recent Posts

Biden Adviser Neera Tanden Testifies She Didn’t See Any Evidence Of ‘Mental Decline’ By Former President At House Hearing

This week, the former director of Biden’s Domestic Policy Council, Neera Tanden, was interviewed as…

17 hours ago

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Wants Every American Wear A Health-Tracking Device, Critics Call It ‘Government Tracking Device’

Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has revealed plans to distribute…

17 hours ago

Texas Man Charged With Murder For Secretly Giving Girlfriend Abortion Pill

A Texas man was charged with murder after putting abortion-inducing drugs in his girlfriend’s food…

18 hours ago

Attorney General Pam Bondi Claims Justice Dept. Has ‘Tens Of Thousands Of Videos’ Belonging To Jeffrey Epstein, Critics Are Skeptical

Weeks after Attorney General Pam Bondi stated that the Justice Department was reviewing “tens of…

19 hours ago

NYC Mayor Eric Adams Cuts Ties With Campaign Consultant Accused Of Assaulting Girlfriend

Mayor Eric Adams recently terminated campaign consultant Trent Pool, after being made aware of the…

19 hours ago

Pride In America Drops 9% From Last Year Due To Large Decline With Democrats & Independents, New Poll Finds

Gallup released findings from a poll conducted between June 2 and 19 on American Pride.…

1 day ago