AS VIRUS SPREADS TO LEAD RESPONSE TRUMP TAPS PENCE · 2020. 2. 27. · Iman s father, Ahmad Yassin...

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U(D54G1D)y+z!;![!$!" WASHINGTON — President Trump named Vice President Mike Pence on Wednesday to co- ordinate the government’s re- sponse to the coronavirus, even as he repeatedly played down the danger to the United States of a widespread domestic outbreak. The president’s announcement, at a White House news confer- ence, followed mounting biparti- san criticism that the administra- tion’s response had been sluggish and came after two days of contra- dictory messages about the virus, which has infected more than 81,000 people globally, killing nearly 3,000. The announcement also came on a day when the Centers for Dis- ease Control and Prevention re- ported that a person with no known risk factors had been in- fected in Northern California. “The risk to the American peo- ple remains very low,” said Mr. Trump, flanked by top health offi- cials from several government agencies. “We have the greatest experts, really in the world, right here.” The president said he would ac- cept whatever amount of money congressional Democrats wanted to give for the virus response, add- ing, “We’re ready to adapt and we’re ready to do whatever we have to as the disease spreads, if it spreads.” “We’ll spend whatever is appro- priate,” he said. Several top health care experts TRUMP TAPS PENCE TO LEAD RESPONSE AS VIRUS SPREADS Plays Down Risk to U.S. a Day After a C.D.C. Warning This article is by Michael D. Shear, Noah Weiland and Katie Rogers. Vice President Mike Pence will coordinate federal efforts. GABRIELLA DEMCZUK FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A10 WASHINGTON — When Hur- ricane Dorian crashed into the Atlantic Coast in September, President Trump assumed a take-charge role in response. But he undermined his own effective- ness after it became apparent that before displaying a map in front of the television cameras in the Oval Office, he had altered it with a Sharpie pen to match his inaccurate forecast of where the storm was headed. For years, experts have warned that Mr. Trump has been squandering the credibility he could need in a moment of na- tional emergency, like a terrorist attack or a public health crisis. Now, as the coronavirus races across the globe and has begun to threaten the United States, Mr. Trump could face a moment of reckoning. Maintaining a calm and orderly response during an epidemic, in which countless lives could be at stake, requires that the president be a reliable public messenger. “I think the president has a unique opportunity to dispel fears and calm the situation — if people believe he is telling the truth,” said Kathleen Sebelius, who served as secretary of health and human services in the Obama administration. “And I think that’s really where a great disconnect occurs.” On Wednesday evening, Mr. Trump delivered an almost casu- al account of the administration’s response to the coronavirus, leaving it to the experts appear- ing with him to relay the real information and assure a jittery public. Still, he kept trying to suggest the risk was low. “We will see what happens,” the president said as he ad- dressed the nation. “But we are very, very ready for this, for anything.” Mr. Trump said that Johns Hopkins University rated the United States “No. 1 for being prepared,” holding up a chart printed on an 8 ½ by 11 sheet of paper. “This will end,” he said, com- paring the coronavirus to the everyday flu. “We really have NEWS ANALYSIS Facing Potential Test in Public Trust This article is by Annie Karni, Mi- chael Crowley and Maggie Haberman. Continued on Page A9 Exhausted medical workers with faces lined from hours of wearing goggles and surgical masks. Women with shaved heads, a gesture of devotion. Retirees who do- nate their life savings anony- mously in govern- ment offices. Beijing is tap- ping its old propaganda playbook as it battles the relentless coro- navirus outbreak, the biggest challenge to its legitimacy in decades. State media is filling smartphones and airwaves with images and tales of unity and sacrifice aimed at uniting the people behind Beijing’s rule. It even briefly offered up cartoon mascots named Jiangshan Jiao and Hongqi Man, characters meant to stir patriotic feelings among the young during the crisis. The problem for China’s lead- ers: This time, it isn’t working so well. Online, people are openly criticizing state media. They have harshly condemned stories of individual sacrifice when front-line medical personnel still lack basic supplies like masks. They shouted down Jiangshan Jiao and Hongqi Man. They have heaped scorn on images of the women with shaved heads, ask- ing whether the women were pressured to do it and wondering why similar images of men were- n’t appearing. One critical blog post was titled “News Coverage Should Stop Turning a Funeral Into a Wedding.” Daisy Zhao, 23, a Beijing resi- China’s Propaganda Machine Loses Credibility in Outbreak Continued on Page A13 LI YUAN THE NEW NEW WORLD NEW DELHI — To many in the eastern Delhi neighborhood where a convulsion of religious vi- olence erupted this week, it all be- gan with one man. Kapil Mishra, a local politician with India’s leading Hindu nation- alist party, had just lost an elec- tion. Acquaintances in the area, which now feels like a war zone, said he had been looking for a way to bounce back. Mr. Mishra, 39, is known for his outspoken views and flexible poli- tics. As an upper-caste Hindu from a political family, he had worked for Amnesty Interna- tional and Greenpeace, and risen in the ranks of one of India’s most progressive political organiza- tions. But several years ago he shifted allegiance across the polit- ical spectrum to the Bharatiya Ja- nata Party, India’s current govern- ing party, which has deep roots in Hindu supremacist ideology. On Sunday, he appeared at a rally against a group of protesters (most of them women) who were objecting to a new citizenship law widely seen as discriminatory to- ward Muslims. There he vented his anger in a fiery speech in Deadly Delhi Riots Began With a Fiery Demand This article is by Jeffrey Gettleman, Suhasini Raj and Sameer Yasir. Politician Told Police to Evict Protesters The worst Hindu-vs.-Muslim violence in years left parts of the Indian capital in ruins this week. SAJJAD HUSSAIN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES Continued on Page A8 LOS ANGELES — On the day before in-person early voting was to begin across California’s most populous county, there was no sign of life at Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s campaign office in East Los Ange- les last Friday. A metal gate out front was padlocked shut, with a missed-delivery notice from the Postal Service wedged into it. In a strip mall a mile away, a campaign office for Senator Bernie Sanders was humming with activity. Field organizers were busy calling supporters, and every so often the ding of a bell signaled that another volunteer was on board. Mr. Biden is counting on a win in the South Carolina primary on Saturday to help position him as the leading moderate challenger to Mr. Sanders, after three straight losses shredded Mr. Bi- den’s status as the onetime front- runner. But even if he succeeds in South Carolina, his lack of re- sources and thin campaign orga- nization in California and other states that vote next week on Su- per Tuesday present a daunting challenge to a candidacy already on precarious footing. Interviews with party leaders in half a dozen Super Tuesday states suggest that the same vul- nerabilities that plagued Mr. Bi- den beginning in Iowa — subpar organization, limited outreach to local Democrats and a late start to campaigning — are holding him back in the states that next week Biden’s Tuesday Could Turn Out Far From Super By THOMAS KAPLAN and KATIE GLUECK Continued on Page A18 REYHANLI, Turkey — The baby wasn’t moving. Her body had gone hot, then cold. Her father rushed her to a hospital, going on foot when he could not find a car, but it was too late. At 18 months, Iman Leila had frozen to death. In the half-finished concrete shell that had been home since they ran for their lives across northwest Syria, the Leila family had spent three weeks enduring nighttime temperatures that barely rose above 20. “I dream about being warm,” Iman’s father, Ahmad Yassin Leila, said a few days later by phone. “I just want my children to feel warm. I don’t want to lose them to the cold. I don’t want any- thing except a house with win- dows that keeps out the cold and the wind.” Syria’s uprising began in a flare of hope almost exactly nine years ago. Now, amid one of the worst humanitarian emergencies of the war, some of those who chanted for freedom and dignity in 2011 want only to ward off the winter cold. Already the effective winner of Syria’s civil war, President Bashar al-Assad is closer than ever to re- taking Syria’s last rebel-held terri- tory, Idlib Province in northwest Syria, a milestone that will clinch his victory even as it deepens his people’s suffering. Over the past three months, his forces, backed by Russian airstrikes, have inten- sified their assault on the prov- ince, driving nearly a million resi- dents toward the border with Tur- key. Many are living in tents or sleeping out in the open in the Children Freeze to Death. Bombs Rain Down. And ‘Nobody Cares.’ By VIVIAN YEE and HWAIDA SAAD Attacks have driven nearly a million Syrians toward the Turkish border over the past three months. Many live in tents or in the open. MUHAMMED SAID/ANADOLU AGENCY, VIA GETTY IMAGES Fearful Families on Run in Largest Exodus of 9-Year Syrian War Continued on Page A6 Maria Sharapova, a five-time Grand Slam singles winner, said she would retire from tennis at age 32. PAGE B7 SPORTSTHURSDAY B7-12 A Champion Calls It a Career Carrie Lindsey’s “nonsurgical face-lift” massage involves extensive smooshing and stretching. Her Brooklyn clients are willing to pay $285 for it. PAGE D1 THURSDAY STYLES D1-6 Faces Radiantly Rearranged Despite a loss to LeBron James and the Lakers, the Pelicans rookie has his team in the playoff chase. PAGE B7 Zion Williamson’s Time Is Now Nicholas Kristof PAGE A29 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A28-29 The Trump administration can block grants to states and cities like New York that defy immigration authorities, an appeals court ruled. PAGE A21 NEW YORK A21-25 A Loss for ‘Sanctuary’ States Monday’s election will be Israel’s third in less than a year, and many expect that a fourth will follow. PAGE A4 Israelis Stagger to Another Vote Activists are calling for a 24-hour strike by women next month to demand great- er support for their rights. PAGE A4 INTERNATIONAL A4-13 Day of No Women in Mexico? Bob Chapek, Disney’s new chief, quietly worked for 27 years in the company, mostly in unflashy parts like consumer products and distribution. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-6 C.E.O. From a Smaller World Deontay Wilder’s 40-pound outfit for his boxing rematch against Tyson Fury took “grand entrance” to a new level. It may have cost him the bout. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-8 Height of Heavyweight Camp Six workers, including the suspected gunman, were killed on the Molson Coors campus in Milwaukee. PAGE A15 NATIONAL A14-20 Shooting Deaths at Brewery Work in Arizona is endangering sacred indigenous sites, including an oasis that has been used for 16,000 years. PAGE A14 Tribes Condemn Border Wall MARKET SWINGS President Trump has taken credit for stocks rising, but he blamed others when they fell on fears about the virus. PAGE A9 VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,616 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 Late Edition Today, clouds breaking for sunshine, very windy, turning colder, high 46. Tonight, partly cloudy, windy, cold, low 29. Tomorrow, brisk, cold, high 39. Weather map is on Page B10. $3.00

Transcript of AS VIRUS SPREADS TO LEAD RESPONSE TRUMP TAPS PENCE · 2020. 2. 27. · Iman s father, Ahmad Yassin...

  • C M Y K Nxxx,2020-02-27,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

    U(D54G1D)y+z!;![!$!"

    WASHINGTON — PresidentTrump named Vice PresidentMike Pence on Wednesday to co-ordinate the government’s re-sponse to the coronavirus, even ashe repeatedly played down thedanger to the United States of awidespread domestic outbreak.

    The president’s announcement,at a White House news confer-ence, followed mounting biparti-san criticism that the administra-tion’s response had been sluggishand came after two days of contra-dictory messages about the virus,which has infected more than81,000 people globally, killingnearly 3,000.

    The announcement also cameon a day when the Centers for Dis-ease Control and Prevention re-ported that a person with noknown risk factors had been in-

    fected in Northern California.“The risk to the American peo-

    ple remains very low,” said Mr.Trump, flanked by top health offi-cials from several governmentagencies. “We have the greatestexperts, really in the world, righthere.”

    The president said he would ac-cept whatever amount of moneycongressional Democrats wantedto give for the virus response, add-ing, “We’re ready to adapt andwe’re ready to do whatever wehave to as the disease spreads, if itspreads.”

    “We’ll spend whatever is appro-priate,” he said.

    Several top health care experts

    TRUMP TAPS PENCETO LEAD RESPONSE

    AS VIRUS SPREADSPlays Down Risk to

    U.S. a Day After aC.D.C. Warning

    This article is by Michael D. Shear,Noah Weiland and Katie Rogers.

    Vice President Mike Pence willcoordinate federal efforts.

    GABRIELLA DEMCZUK FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

    Continued on Page A10

    WASHINGTON — When Hur-ricane Dorian crashed into theAtlantic Coast in September,President Trump assumed atake-charge role in response. Buthe undermined his own effective-ness after it became apparentthat before displaying a map infront of the television cameras inthe Oval Office, he had altered itwith a Sharpie pen to match hisinaccurate forecast of where thestorm was headed.

    For years, experts havewarned that Mr. Trump has beensquandering the credibility hecould need in a moment of na-tional emergency, like a terroristattack or a public health crisis.

    Now, as the coronavirus racesacross the globe and has begunto threaten the United States, Mr.Trump could face a moment ofreckoning. Maintaining a calmand orderly response during anepidemic, in which countlesslives could be at stake, requiresthat the president be a reliablepublic messenger.

    “I think the president has aunique opportunity to dispelfears and calm the situation — ifpeople believe he is telling thetruth,” said Kathleen Sebelius,who served as secretary ofhealth and human services in theObama administration. “And Ithink that’s really where a greatdisconnect occurs.”

    On Wednesday evening, Mr.Trump delivered an almost casu-al account of the administration’sresponse to the coronavirus,leaving it to the experts appear-ing with him to relay the realinformation and assure a jitterypublic. Still, he kept trying tosuggest the risk was low.

    “We will see what happens,”the president said as he ad-dressed the nation. “But we arevery, very ready for this, foranything.”

    Mr. Trump said that JohnsHopkins University rated theUnited States “No. 1 for beingprepared,” holding up a chartprinted on an 8 ½ by 11 sheet ofpaper.

    “This will end,” he said, com-paring the coronavirus to theeveryday flu. “We really have

    NEWS ANALYSIS

    Facing Potential Testin Public Trust

    This article is by Annie Karni, Mi-chael Crowley and Maggie Haberman.

    Continued on Page A9

    Exhausted medical workerswith faces lined from hours ofwearing goggles and surgicalmasks. Women with shavedheads, a gesture of devotion.

    Retirees who do-nate their lifesavings anony-mously in govern-ment offices.

    Beijing is tap-ping its old propaganda playbookas it battles the relentless coro-navirus outbreak, the biggestchallenge to its legitimacy indecades. State media is fillingsmartphones and airwaves withimages and tales of unity andsacrifice aimed at uniting thepeople behind Beijing’s rule. Iteven briefly offered up cartoonmascots named Jiangshan Jiaoand Hongqi Man, charactersmeant to stir patriotic feelingsamong the young during the

    crisis.The problem for China’s lead-

    ers: This time, it isn’t working sowell.

    Online, people are openlycriticizing state media. Theyhave harshly condemned storiesof individual sacrifice whenfront-line medical personnel stilllack basic supplies like masks.They shouted down JiangshanJiao and Hongqi Man. They haveheaped scorn on images of thewomen with shaved heads, ask-ing whether the women werepressured to do it and wonderingwhy similar images of men were-n’t appearing.

    One critical blog post wastitled “News Coverage ShouldStop Turning a Funeral Into aWedding.”

    Daisy Zhao, 23, a Beijing resi-

    China’s Propaganda MachineLoses Credibility in Outbreak

    Continued on Page A13

    LI YUAN

    THE NEWNEW WORLD

    NEW DELHI — To many in theeastern Delhi neighborhoodwhere a convulsion of religious vi-olence erupted this week, it all be-gan with one man.

    Kapil Mishra, a local politicianwith India’s leading Hindu nation-alist party, had just lost an elec-tion. Acquaintances in the area,which now feels like a war zone,said he had been looking for a way

    to bounce back.Mr. Mishra, 39, is known for his

    outspoken views and flexible poli-tics. As an upper-caste Hindufrom a political family, he hadworked for Amnesty Interna-tional and Greenpeace, and risenin the ranks of one of India’s most

    progressive political organiza-tions. But several years ago heshifted allegiance across the polit-ical spectrum to the Bharatiya Ja-nata Party, India’s current govern-ing party, which has deep roots inHindu supremacist ideology.

    On Sunday, he appeared at arally against a group of protesters(most of them women) who wereobjecting to a new citizenship lawwidely seen as discriminatory to-ward Muslims. There he ventedhis anger in a fiery speech in

    Deadly Delhi Riots Began With a Fiery DemandThis article is by Jeffrey Gettleman,

    Suhasini Raj and Sameer Yasir.Politician Told Police

    to Evict Protesters

    The worst Hindu-vs.-Muslim violence in years left parts of the Indian capital in ruins this week.SAJJAD HUSSAIN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES

    Continued on Page A8

    LOS ANGELES — On the daybefore in-person early voting wasto begin across California’s mostpopulous county, there was nosign of life at Joseph R. Biden Jr.’scampaign office in East Los Ange-les last Friday. A metal gate outfront was padlocked shut, with amissed-delivery notice from thePostal Service wedged into it.

    In a strip mall a mile away, acampaign office for SenatorBernie Sanders was hummingwith activity. Field organizerswere busy calling supporters, andevery so often the ding of a bellsignaled that another volunteerwas on board.

    Mr. Biden is counting on a win inthe South Carolina primary onSaturday to help position him asthe leading moderate challengerto Mr. Sanders, after threestraight losses shredded Mr. Bi-den’s status as the onetime front-runner. But even if he succeeds inSouth Carolina, his lack of re-sources and thin campaign orga-nization in California and otherstates that vote next week on Su-per Tuesday present a dauntingchallenge to a candidacy alreadyon precarious footing.

    Interviews with party leadersin half a dozen Super Tuesdaystates suggest that the same vul-nerabilities that plagued Mr. Bi-den beginning in Iowa — subparorganization, limited outreach tolocal Democrats and a late start tocampaigning — are holding himback in the states that next week

    Biden’s Tuesday Could Turn OutFar From Super

    By THOMAS KAPLANand KATIE GLUECK

    Continued on Page A18

    REYHANLI, Turkey — Thebaby wasn’t moving. Her bodyhad gone hot, then cold. Her fatherrushed her to a hospital, going onfoot when he could not find a car,but it was too late.

    At 18 months, Iman Leila hadfrozen to death.

    In the half-finished concreteshell that had been home sincethey ran for their lives acrossnorthwest Syria, the Leila family

    had spent three weeks enduringnighttime temperatures thatbarely rose above 20.

    “I dream about being warm,”Iman’s father, Ahmad YassinLeila, said a few days later byphone. “I just want my children tofeel warm. I don’t want to losethem to the cold. I don’t want any-thing except a house with win-dows that keeps out the cold andthe wind.”

    Syria’s uprising began in a flareof hope almost exactly nine yearsago. Now, amid one of the worst

    humanitarian emergencies of thewar, some of those who chantedfor freedom and dignity in 2011want only to ward off the wintercold.

    Already the effective winner ofSyria’s civil war, President Bashar

    al-Assad is closer than ever to re-taking Syria’s last rebel-held terri-tory, Idlib Province in northwestSyria, a milestone that will clinchhis victory even as it deepens hispeople’s suffering. Over the pastthree months, his forces, backedby Russian airstrikes, have inten-sified their assault on the prov-ince, driving nearly a million resi-dents toward the border with Tur-key.

    Many are living in tents orsleeping out in the open in the

    Children Freeze to Death. Bombs Rain Down. And ‘Nobody Cares.’By VIVIAN YEE

    and HWAIDA SAAD

    Attacks have driven nearly a million Syrians toward the Turkish border over the past three months. Many live in tents or in the open.MUHAMMED SAID/ANADOLU AGENCY, VIA GETTY IMAGES

    Fearful Families on Run in Largest Exodus of9-Year Syrian War

    Continued on Page A6

    Maria Sharapova, a five-time GrandSlam singles winner, said she wouldretire from tennis at age 32. PAGE B7

    SPORTSTHURSDAY B7-12

    A Champion Calls It a CareerCarrie Lindsey’s “nonsurgical face-lift”massage involves extensive smooshingand stretching. Her Brooklyn clientsare willing to pay $285 for it. PAGE D1

    THURSDAY STYLES D1-6

    Faces Radiantly Rearranged

    Despite a loss to LeBron James and theLakers, the Pelicans rookie has histeam in the playoff chase. PAGE B7

    Zion Williamson’s Time Is Now

    Nicholas Kristof PAGE A29EDITORIAL, OP-ED A28-29

    The Trump administration can blockgrants to states and cities like NewYork that defy immigration authorities,an appeals court ruled. PAGE A21

    NEW YORK A21-25

    A Loss for ‘Sanctuary’ States

    Monday’s election will be Israel’s thirdin less than a year, and many expectthat a fourth will follow. PAGE A4

    Israelis Stagger to Another Vote

    Activists are calling for a 24-hour strikeby women next month to demand great-er support for their rights. PAGE A4

    INTERNATIONAL A4-13

    Day of No Women in Mexico?Bob Chapek, Disney’s new chief, quietlyworked for 27 years in the company,mostly in unflashy parts like consumerproducts and distribution. PAGE B1

    BUSINESS B1-6

    C.E.O. From a Smaller World

    Deontay Wilder’s 40-pound outfit for hisboxing rematch against Tyson Furytook “grand entrance” to a new level. Itmay have cost him the bout. PAGE C1

    ARTS C1-8

    Height of Heavyweight CampSix workers, including the suspectedgunman, were killed on the MolsonCoors campus in Milwaukee. PAGE A15

    NATIONAL A14-20

    Shooting Deaths at Brewery

    Work in Arizona is endangering sacredindigenous sites, including an oasis thathas been used for 16,000 years. PAGE A14

    Tribes Condemn Border Wall

    MARKET SWINGS President Trump has taken credit for stocks rising,but he blamed others when they fell on fears about the virus. PAGE A9

    VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,616 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020

    Late EditionToday, clouds breaking for sunshine,very windy, turning colder, high 46.Tonight, partly cloudy, windy, cold,low 29. Tomorrow, brisk, cold, high39. Weather map is on Page B10.

    $3.00