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babylonsister

(171,102 posts)
Thu Apr 8, 2021, 09:01 PM Apr 2021

David Corn: Will the Public Ever Get a Full Accounting of Trump's Disastrous COVID Response?

https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2021/04/will-the-public-ever-get-a-full-accounting-of-trumps-disastrous-covid-response/

Will the Public Ever Get a Full Accounting of Trump’s Disastrous COVID Response?
We deserve a 9/11 commission-style reckoning—but may have to settle for less.
David Corn
Washington, DC, Bureau ChiefBio | Follow

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The United States could use such a soul-searching reckoning regarding the coronavirus pandemic that has claimed the lives of more than 555,000 Americans. Recently, Dr. Deborah Birx, who was the coronavirus response coordinator in the Trump White House, said that about 400,000 of these deaths “could have been mitigated or decreased substantially.” That is, errors, miscalculations, and policy failures on the part of Donald Trump and his administration resulted in a death toll nearly 140 times greater than 9/11. And yet, no apology. Moreover, the prospect of a full accounting of the Trump administration’s lethal handling of the pandemic also remains uncertain. But the American public—particularly those who have lost loved ones or suffered in other ways due to the pandemic—deserves a comprehensive evaluation that reveals who made what mistakes and what must be done to prevent a future calamity.

snip//

The select subcommittee has done a lot of digging into a wide assortment of pandemic-related subjects. It slammed large corporations that obtained COVID relief funds intended for small businesses. It investigated the disbursement of the PPP loan payments handed out by the Trump administration. It probed PPE contracts and sought to investigate alleged White House suppression of testing. The subcommittee recently released evidence that the Trump administration failed to address PPE supply shortages, even when warned of shortfalls. It examined political interference at the Centers for Disease Control, widespread coronavirus deaths and infections at meatpacking plants, and the ability of states to hold elections during a pandemic. The select subcommittee released documents showing that the Trump administration awarded a $250 million PR contract for an ad campaign shortly before the 2020 election to downplay the impact of the pandemic. It held a briefing with public health experts to examine actions that need to be taken to ensure the equitable distribution of coronavirus vaccinations.

The subcommittee has sent out its own document requests to the Biden administration for information on what the Trump administration did last year. And under the resolution establishing the subcommittee, it is obligated to issue a final report of some sort.

Though both the House and Senate committees are scrutinizing various slices of how the Trump White House managed—or mismanaged—the pandemic, there’s no telling yet whether either will be able to hold an investigation that ends up highlighting the whole dramatic and sorry tale. Will they stage attention-grabbing hearings with the officials who failed the public? Will they produce a report as sweeping and as impactful as the one crafted by the 9/11 commission?

The best investigations tell a story. They forge a narrative that spurs greater understanding of the subject at hand. That’s especially important when a tragedy has occurred. There is a need to fully comprehend the event—to come to terms with it—and to prevent a repeat or something worse. A bipartisan independent commission well-staffed and equipped with subpoena power would certainly offer the best forum for guiding the nation through this act of collective comprehension. But it takes two parties to be bipartisan. If the Republicans care more about protecting Trump, the Democrats on their own cannot conjure up such an endeavor. Their only course is to employ the existing mechanisms of Congress and leverage the power of these committees—conducting hearings, wielding subpoenas, issuing reports—to uncover and present a complete accounting. Probably without any apologies.
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David Corn: Will the Public Ever Get a Full Accounting of Trump's Disastrous COVID Response? (Original Post) babylonsister Apr 2021 OP
That would mean the media would have to admit their own role JI7 Apr 2021 #1
+1 ! n/t Pobeka Apr 2021 #2
Some other great articles there underpants Apr 2021 #3
I doubt it but then we all watched in real time the destruction by his Bev54 Apr 2021 #4

JI7

(89,281 posts)
1. That would mean the media would have to admit their own role
Thu Apr 8, 2021, 09:03 PM
Apr 2021

and they haven't admitted to it when it comes to Iraq and their reporting in the elections and treatment of Democrats in order to be fair and balanced.

Bev54

(10,083 posts)
4. I doubt it but then we all watched in real time the destruction by his
Thu Apr 8, 2021, 09:50 PM
Apr 2021

administration with covid and a few other things. What scares me is what we don't know about and Russia is one of those.

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