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Trump said, 'yeah, okay' and hung up the phone when his health secretary warned him about the coronavirus in January 2020, a new book says

Jul 1, 2021, 01:38 IST
Business Insider
Then-President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office in 2017. Drew Angerer/Getty Images
  • Trump dismissed warnings about the coronavirus in January 2020, according to a new book.
  • Then-HHS Secretary Alex Azar tried to tell Trump about the threat of COVID-19 in a phone call.
  • "Yeah, okay," Trump responded, then hung up.
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Then-President Donald Trump cut the conversation short when his health secretary, Alex Azar, warned him of the coronavirus in January 2020, according to a new book, "Nightmare Scenario: Inside the Trump Administration's Response to the Pandemic That Changed History," by The Washington Post's Damian Paletta and Yasmeen Abutaleb.

The president was at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida at the time, a trip that took place roughly a month after the House impeached him over his efforts to solicit Ukraine's interference in the 2020 election. The Senate was readying his trial. Trump aides thought the president needed cheering up and sent him off to West Palm Beach, the book says.

Meanwhile, health staffers in his administration were growing increasingly concerned over COVID-19, according to the book.

"Mr. President, I've got to tell you something," Azar told Trump during a mid-January 2020 phone call, before COVID-19 broke out across the country and forced officials to impose lockdowns. "There's this new virus out of China that could be extremely dangerous. It could be the kind of thing we have been preparing for and worried about."

Azar then relayed to Trump that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had started to screen travelers from China to the US but that additional safety measures probably needed to be taken to mitigate potential spread of the virus, per the book.

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"Yeah, okay," Trump replied, seemingly unconvinced of the threat. Then he hung up the phone.

Azar, then the head of the Health and Human Services Department, failed to get through to the president. He had been on shaky ground with Trump, who was still upset over a recent health policy that banned most flavored electronic cigarettes. The move had angered Trump's base, and the president thought it would cost him his reelection, according to the book.

The Post journalists reported that Azar "could barely get a word in before Trump started shouting" at him over e-cigarettes during that January phone call.

That same month, Trump dismissed Azar's advice on another occasion, according to the book. Trump wanted to send a tweet praising Chinese President Xi Jinping on the pandemic, though Azar begged him not to.

"For the love of God, don't do that," he told the president, per the book. But Trump went ahead and tweeted.

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In the following months, as COVID-19 infections and deaths surged across the US, Trump continued to dismiss advice from his own administration. Trump and his close allies would also often downplay the severity of the outbreak and flout guidelines like mask wearing and social distancing. More than 400,000 Americans died of COVID-19 during his administration.

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