October 4 Trump Covid-19 news | CNN Politics

October 4 Trump Covid-19 news

Trump photo op Reiner
'Amazingly irresponsible': Doctor reacts to Trump's photo-op
01:28 - Source: CNN

What we know now

  • President Trump is at Walter Reed medical center and could be discharged as early as Monday, according to his physicians.
  • Over the course of Trump’s illness, he experienced “two episodes of transient drops in his oxygen saturation” and was given a steroid.
  • Trump rode past supporters in his motorcade outside of Walter Reed late Sunday afternoon, and tweeted a video saying he is getting “great reports” from his doctors. 
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Our live coverage of President Donald Trump’s coronavirus diagnosis has moved here.

Pelosi says she's not being briefed on Trump's health

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi speaks during her weekly news conference on October 1 in Washington, DC.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Sunday said she has not been briefed on President Donald Trump’s health since his Covid-19 diagnosis despite her position as second in the presidential line of succession behind Vice President Mike Pence.

“But in terms of the succession, that’s an ongoing process. Sadly at this time, it comes to the forefront.”

Pelosi, who tested negative for Covid-19 on Friday, added that she’s praying for “good health” and a “speedy recovery” for Trump while hoping that the episode will serve as “a signal that we really have to do better in preventing the spread of this virus.”

Read more:

FILE nancy pelosi 0724

Related article Pelosi says she's not being briefed on Trump's health

President Trump is receiving several different treatments for Covid-19

President Donald Trump leaves the White House for Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on October 2.

President Donald Trump’s physicians are giving him several different treatments — including investigational drugs — in the hope of relieving his Covid-19 symptoms and possibly shortening his course of illness.

While many questions remain about the President’s condition and when he was first diagnosed with the coronavirus that causes Covid-19, here is what has been revealed so far about what he was been treated with — and when.

Regeneron’s monoclonal antibody therapy: On Friday afternoon, the White House said in a letter that Trump was treated with an 8-gram dose of the experimental antibody therapy cocktail made by the biotechnology company Regeneron. The investigational cocktail, known by its investigational name REGN-COV2, has been in clinical trials since June. 

Remdesivir: President Trump is being given a five-day course of the antiviral drug remdesivir, one of the doctors treating him said during a briefing on Saturday. The treatment is intended to shorten recovery time for Covid-19 patients. In a Phase 3 clinical trial, remdesivir was found to speed recovery in moderately ill patients with pneumonia from Covid-19, according to results published in the medical journal JAMA in August.

Dexamethasone: Trump was given the corticosteroid drug dexamethasone on Saturday after his oxygen level transiently dipped, White House physician Dr. Sean Conley said during a briefing on Sunday. The drug is typically given to patients on supplemental oxygen or needing ventilation.

Supplemental oxygen: After previously telling reporters on Saturday that Trump “is not on oxygen right now,” White House physician Conley said during a briefing on Sunday that the President had been given supplemental oxygen and had two episodes of transient drops in his oxygen level. Oxygen therapy, or supplemental oxygen, is a treatment that delivers oxygen gas for patients to breathe who may have difficulty breathing.

Read more about Trump’s coronavirus treatments:

US President Donald Trump walks to Marine One prior to departure from the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, October 2, 2020,  (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article To treat Covid-19, President Trump is taking remdesivir, dexamethasone and more

Venezuela’s Maduro wishes Trump a "prompt and effective recovery" from Covid-19

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro attends a meeting at the Miraflores Palace in Caracas, Venezuela on February 7.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Sunday wished US President Donald Trump a “prompt and effective recovery” from coronavirus, despite calling him a “bloody enemy of Venezuela.”

In a televised address to the nation, Maduro said that Trump “sadly underestimated all precautionary measures” regarding the virus. He added that Venezuela expresses its “human solidarity” with Trump since “no human being should get infected.”

Photos: Inside Amy Coney Barrett's White House reception

First lady Melania Trump applauds Judge Amy Coney Barrett in the Oval Office prior to the official announcement on Saturday, September 26.

Since President Donald Trump announced his positive Covid-19 test, public attention has centered on the Rose Garden ceremony for Amy Coney Barrett’s Supreme Court announcement and how a number of its attendees have since tested positive.

But there was also a smaller, private reception inside the White House — one that did not include wearing masks and did not include social distancing.

After the public event, dozens of attendees gathered inside the White House’s Diplomatic Reception Room and the adjoining hallway. The reception lasted between 30 and 45 minutes, one source with knowledge of the event told CNN.

CNN is told the attendees did not wear masks, and pictures of the event show no social distancing.

Pictures of the reception taken by the New York Times’ photographer Doug Mills and White House photographer Andrea Hanks capture a group of people talking very close together, with one image showing first lady Melania Trump, Barrett and her family posing shoulder to shoulder and directly behind Trump in the Oval Office.

Barrett talks with Maureen Scalia, wife of late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.
US Sen. Mike Lee and his wife, Sharon, chat with Barrett. Lee has tested positive since the reception.
President Donald Trump smiles while chatting with Barrett's children.

See more photos from the reception:

President Donald J. Trump and First Lady Melania Trump, joined by White House senior advisors, pose for a photo with Judge Amy Coney Barrett, the President's nominee for Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, her husband Jesse and their children Saturday, Sept. 26, 2020, in the Oval Office of the White House. (Official White House Photo by Andrea Hanks)

Related gallery Photos: Inside Amy Coney Barrett's White House reception

White House sends first email about coronavirus since Trump tested positive

The White House is seen on Sunday evening, October 4 in Washington, DC.

The White House Management Office just sent its first staff-wide email since President Trump tested positive for coronavirus early Friday morning.

Until now, staffers had gotten no word about whether to come into work or to remain home given several of their colleagues tested positive for coronavirus. Stunningly, the email states they should not contact the White House testing office if they have symptoms.  

“Affected staff should inform their supervisors and seek care from their primary care provider.”

The email instructed staff to go home if they develop symptoms and contact their primary care provider about getting tested. 

“Staff should not go to the White House Medical Unit clinic for any Covid-19 testing inquiries,” the email read. 

Officials with possible exposure to someone who has Covid-19 were told to notify the management office and “ONLY return to work when you have been cleared by the White House Medical Unit.”

No events on White House schedule for Monday

President Trump has no events on his schedule for Monday as he continues to be hospitalized at Walter Reed medical center.

Earlier today, Dr. Brian Garibaldi, who is part of President Trump’s medical team, said the President could be discharged from Walter Reed as early as Monday.

Trump completed a second dose of remdesivir on Saturday and “today he feels well,” Garibaldi said.

Trump left the hospital with his security detail late Sunday afternoon so he could ride in a SUV past supporters cheering him on outside of Walter Reed. Trump waved to his supporters through the window while wearing a mask in the back of his SUV.

At least 7 people who attended Supreme Court announcement have tested positive for Covid-19 

President Donald Trump announces Judge Amy Coney Barrett as his nominee to the Supreme Court at the White House on September 26 in Washington, DC.

Many of President Trump’s aides or contacts who have recently tested positive for Covid-19 attended the White House festivities honoring Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett on September 26, in the Rose Garden.

At least seven people attending the event, including the President and first lady, have tested positive. University of Notre Dame President the Rev. John Jenkins, former counselor to the President Kellyanne Conway and Republican Sens. Mike Lee of Utah and Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who were seated relatively close to each other, tested positive.

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie also tested positive and checked himself into the hospital Saturday as a precautionary measure, because he has asthma.

Conway, Christie, Trump’s senior adviser Hope Hicks and his campaign manager Bill Stepien — who have all tested positive — were also all involved in debate prep ahead of Trump’s Tuesday clash with Democratic nominee Joe Biden.

Trump did not address anyone else’s diagnosis during a video message from Walter Reed Saturday.

As he praised the medical care he had received at Walter Reed, he sought to spin his hospitalization to his advantage by making it sound like his diagnosis had been inevitable, even though he took few precautions to prevent it.

Read more here.

Walter Reed attending physician slams Trump motorcade photo op: "The irresponsibility is astounding"

A non-military attending physician at Walter Reed National Medical Center harshly criticized President Trump’s motorcade photo op as something which could endanger lives of Secret Service agents who accompanied him in his SUV.

Phillips has been an attending physician for almost three years at Walter Reed medical center and is also a board certified emergency medicine physician and assistant professor at George Washington University Hospital in Washington, D.C.

“That Presidential SUV is not only bulletproof, but hermetically sealed against chemical attack. The risk of COVID19 transmission inside is as high as it gets outside of medical procedures. The irresponsibility is astounding. My thoughts are with the Secret Service forced to play,” Phillips tweeted. 

The White House released a statement this evening saying that “appropriate precautions” were taken for Trump’s motorcade and that the movement “was cleared by the medical team as safe to do.”

Speaking with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer this evening, Phillips, who has not participated in the care of the President, went on to say it was unlikely the President’s motorcade had been approved by medical professionals without outside political influence.

“That’s not standard practice by any means and I have a hard time believing that without undo influence, based on their chain of command, that those physicians would have cleared that,” he said of the President’s motorcade.

“When we take care of patients in the emergency department, or in the thousands of hours I’ve spent in the inpatient wards and surgery and medicine and ICU, we don’t let the patients leave the hospital when they’re sick, unless they sign out against medical advice,” he added. “…The idea that this would be cleared without any medical indication is absurd.”

See his tweets:

Watch Phillips’ interview on CNN:

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01:49 - Source: cnn

White House claims "appropriate precautions" were taken in Trump motorcade

Asked what protocols were used to protect the safety of others in the hospital, the driver, security and additional people involved in tonight’s drive-by with President Trump outside of Walter Reed medical center, as well as whether the President’s doctors cleared the decision, White House spokesman Judd Deere told the pooler: 

Deere did not answer additional questions, including whether the drive-by happened at the President’s request, whether Trump met with anyone in person today, or why the pool wasn’t notified and called back. 

Joe Biden tested negative for Covid-19 today, campaign says

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden departs after speaking at United Food & Commercial Workers Union Local 951 on October 2 in Grand Rapids, Michigan

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden tested negative for Covid-19 today, his campaign said.

No additional details were given. No follow up questions from the pool were answered. 

Some more on this: Biden will be tested more frequently for Covid-19 and intends to move forward with in-person campaigning, following news that President Trump and several individuals in his orbit testing positive, sources told CNN.

The Democratic nominee will receive a test each time he travels, a source familiar with the Democratic nominee’s testing said.

His campaign said Saturday that it would disclose the results of every test Biden takes.

Trump campaign adviser defends President's drive-by photo op: "In a safe way he drove by and said hi"

Trump campaign adviser Jason Miller speaks with CNN on Sunday, October 4.

Trump campaign adviser Jason Miller defended President Trump’s decision to leave Walter Reed medical center and take a short drive to wave to his supporters outside the hospital, saying on CNN Newsroom tonight that he was “feeling very good yesterday” and “he’s feeling even better today.”

Pressed by CNN’s Ana Cabrera on whether it was careless for the President to put his Secret Service detail at risk by forcing them to ride in the car with a Covid-19 positive patient, Miller said Trump “in a safe way he drove by and said hi.”

“He did that in front of the cameras so the media was able to see it,” Miller added.

The campaign adviser claimed the moment was not “a stunt at all.”

Here is part of the on air exchange:

Miller also in defending Trump’s decision, said the Secret Service takes “great care of their agents” and “always take extra precaution.”

“I’m not part of White House operations or the White House medical unit. So the exact logistics I can’t speak to, but I know the Secret Service takes this very seriously. I think it was great that President Trump was able to get out there and show he’s ready to take this virus head on. You can’t stay locked up, whether it be in the attic or in the basement, or whatever. We need to go out and lead,” Miller said.

Trump’s diagnosis also doesn’t seem to have changed his campaign’s understanding of the risks their events have posed to their supporters. Miller told CNN the campaign will continue to take temperatures and give out hand sanitizer and masks as supporters enter rallies, but he did not detail any other changes like requiring attendees to wear those masks.

Watch the exchange:

601a9b2f-b1eb-4ab7-999d-5ca70a23849c.mp4
08:55 - Source: cnn

GOP Sen. Thom Tillis has "significantly improved" after testing positive for Covid-19

Sen. Thom Tillis asks a question during a Judiciary Committee hearing on June 16 in Washington, DC.

Sen. Thom Tillis, a Republican from North Carolina, has “significantly improved” with only lingering symptoms of loss of taste and smell, according to his press secretary Adam Webb.

Tillis tested positive for coronavirus on Friday.

White House press secretary won't give number of West Wing positive cases

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany speaks with reporters outside the White House on October 4 in Washington, DC.

After White House Director of Strategic Communication Alyssa Farah said earlier today that the White House would be releasing numbers of West Wing staffers who have tested positive for coronavirus, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said they would not, citing privacy concerns. 

She also would not answer when repeatedly pressed whether Trump was tested before the presidential debate or on Wednesday, saying she wouldn’t give a “time stamped” readout of his testing schedule.

McEnany only said that he first tested positive on Thursday after he had returned from Bedminster, New Jersey.

McEnany then abruptly ended the briefing and would not answer questions on the President’s motorcade trip outside Walter Reed medical center.

Pompeo says national security briefing today brought Trump “fully up to speed”

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the national security team which briefed President Trump today made sure that the President, who received the briefing from Walter Reed medical center because he is sick with Covid-19, was up to speed on a wide range of national security issues.

“I’ve been working for this President for almost four years,” Pompeo said. “This is a team that is mature and capable. We are fully prepared for all of the possibilities that may take place.”

When Pompeo said the Trump national security team is prepared for all possibilities, it is unclear if he was referencing possibilities related to Trump’s health or possibilities related to national security issues.

Pompeo would also not say which precise national security issue was discussed, but said he got some guidance for his trip to Japan to meet with Australian, Japanese and Indian leaders.

Pompeo described Trump as being in a “great mood” on the phone today.

“He was direct and candid with me as he always is,” Pompeo said.

Some more context: Pompeo’s trip to Asia – which is now only a trip to Japan – was cut short after the news broke that Trump had tested positive for Covid-19, as Pompeo was initially supposed to also visit South Korea and Mongolia. 

Pompeo said he has talked to about half a dozen world leaders over the last few days who have said that they hope Trump will get well and “get well and get healthy.”

CNN reported earlier in the day, however, that the State Department was told that the White House is taking the lead on calls with foreign leaders about Trump’s health, and it is unclear who at the White House is making those calls.

White House Correspondents Association denounces Trump motorcade photo-op without protective pool

The president of the White House Correspondents Association, Zeke Miller, denounced President Trump in a statement for his boarding his motorcade for a photo op around the Walter Reed National Medical Hospital without the protective travel pool which is supposed to accompany the President whenever he is out of the White House.

Read the statement:

Some context: The White House press pool was not notified about Trump’s movement outside of Walter Reed medical center, according to the latest pool report.

There was a travel photo lid issued by the White House earlier today, indicating the President would not be seen in public.

It is highly irregular for the press pool not to accompany the President during a movement. 

Watch CNN coverage here:

e16e4f2c-3b16-4ac6-9844-2c5e9c251e77.mp4
01:09 - Source: cnn

Attorney General Barr has received four negative Covid-19 tests since Friday and will self-quarantine "for now"

Attorney General William Barr attends a meeting at the White House on September 23 in Washington DC.

Attorney General William Barr will self-quarantine “for now” but is expected to return to work this week, according to a Justice Department spokesperson.

The attorney general recently came in close contact with members of President Trump’s inner circle who have tested positive for Covid-19, including former White House adviser Kellyanne Conway.

Barr has received four negative Covid-19 test results since Friday morning, including Sunday, Department of Justice spokesperson Kerri Kupec said Sunday.

He anticipates returning to the Department of Justice midweek, according to Kupec.

The White House press pool was not notified about Trump's movement outside of Walter Reed 

President Donald Trump waves to supporters outside of Walter Reed Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland, on October 4.

The White House press pool was not notified about President Trump’s movement outside of Walter Reed medical center, according to the latest pool report.

There was a travel photo lid issued by the White House earlier today, indicating the President would not be seen in public.

It is highly irregular for the press pool not to accompany the President during a movement. 

Watch CNN coverage:

8a91d1d5-af82-4671-b4a5-977a0c959ec3.mp4
02:15 - Source: cnn

Trump is back at the Walter Reed medical center

President Trump has returned to Walter Reed medical center, according to a statement from White House Deputy Press Secretary Judd Deere, provided to the pool.

“President Trump took a short, last-minute motorcade ride to wave to his supporters outside and has now returned to the Presidential Suite inside Walter Reed,” Deere said.

Trump in Twitter video: "It's been a very interesting journey"

President Trump also announced in a new video that he is getting “great reports” from his doctors and said it’s “been a very interesting journey” since getting Covid-19.

“So it’s been a very interesting journey. I learned a lot about Covid,” Trump said in the video released on his Twitter page. 

Trump said while in the hospital he was also able to meet “some of the soldiers and great responders.” He didn’t explain further on those meetings.

On his surprise visit passing supporters in a motorcade outside Walter Reed medical center, Trump said: “I’m not telling anybody but you but I’m about to make a little surprise visit. So perhaps I’ll get there before you get to see me. But I just, when I look at the enthusiasm- and we have enthusiasm like probably nobody’s ever had.”

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READ MORE

Here’s how a 74-year-old might be treated for Covid-19
Trump’s positive Covid-19 test throws country into fresh upheaval
Pelosi tests negative for Covid after Mnuchin meeting
With the US making no progress on average daily Covid-19 cases last month, officials fear a coming crisis
Biden tests negative for coronavirus following Trump’s positive test