Biden’s early Wednesday crusade pushed back the Republican conference’s positive view of the COVID-19 pandemic, which killed more than 1,100 people in the United States on Tuesday.
In a three-minute pre-recorded revisionist history lesson, White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow continually referred to the coronavirus pandemic in the past, suggesting that this was a unique crisis in a century that the country had already overcome.
“It’s horrible,” Kudlow said of the COVID-19 crisis that killed more than 178,000 people in the United States and continues to kill more than 1,000 people a day, as it did for five consecutive days last week. “The aptitude and economic effects have been tragic. The difficulties and pain were everywhere,” he says.
“But presidential leadership came here temporarily and well with a rescue of protection and ordinary fitness to combat the COVID virus well.”
Kudlow is no stranger to the kind of forgetfulness of his head in the sand he spat on Tuesday. He had also claimed last February that the coronavirus pandemic had been contained “pretty close to waterproofness,” and months later he had defended the claims of CNN host Jake Tapper in May, suggesting: as the coronavirus spread across the United States. – that your winter comments were real at the time.
Biden’s crusade communications director Kate Bedingfield rejected what she called an RNC “illusion” amid a month of “total mismanagement” of the pandemic through Trump in a statement released Wednesday.
“President Trump’s RNC is a reality of choice,” Bedingfield said. “In this illusion, thousands of Americans died last week from COVID-19, and millions of Americans were inflamed or unemployed.”
The biden crusade official rebuked Republicans for presenting a transparent plan to roll back the pandemic on the first two nights of the convention.
“Donald Trump’s continued refusal to take this virus seriously has given America the world’s worst epidemic,” Bedingfield said in the statement.
“His refusal to face the truth or recognize the magnitude of the loss is a stark reminder to Americans of their overall failure to lead,” he added.