Trump Declares Victory Over COVID-19, Entertains Rally Crowd With Racist Jokes

Ron Delancer By Ron Delancer

Speaking in a state that has become the newest hot spot for the coronavirus outbreak in the United States, where new cases are surging enough to repeatedly set new daily infection records, President Donald Trump celebrated his triumph over the deadly virus, telling a crowd of young Arizona supporters that everything was under control.

“Someday it’ll be recognized by history,” he said of his pandemic response while speaking at a campaign-style event at Dream City Church, hosted by the conservative nonprofit Turning Point USA.

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This is “hopefully the end of the pandemic,” Trump told an audience of about 2,900 college students, packed shoulder to shoulder, most of whom did not wear masks.

Trump’s remarks come as Arizona grapples with more than 50,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and nearly 1,400 deaths, and hours after Dr. Anthony Fauci, the infectious diseases expert leading the country’s response to COVID-19, warned that “the next couple of weeks are going to be critical” in addressing surges in the worst-hit states.

Arizona is one of several states that, with Trump’s urging, followed an aggressive reopening schedule. It’s now averaging about 2,500 new cases daily, a 94% increase from last Monday, and infections are rising in more than half of the U.S. states.

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During his speech, Trump didn’t acknowledge the surges during his Arizona rally and repeated his claims that ramped-up testing protocols are making the pandemic look worse than it is in the U.S. He then boasted of the low mortality rate, despite the U.S. currently having the fourth-highest coronavirus death rate in the world, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Trump also returned to the same racist jokes he’s made since the beginning of the pandemic, which has since claimed more than 120,000 lives in the U.S. so far.

“COVID-19, I said that’s an odd name,” Trump said. “Wuhan. Coronavirus. Kung Flu,” he added, repeating his use of a racial slur that White House senior adviser Kellyanne Conway called “highly offensive” in March. “Some people call it the Chinese Flu. The China Flu.”

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This was Trump’s second rally in the last week. On Saturday, his campaign proceeded with one in Tulsa, Oklahoma, despite six of his campaign staffers testing positive for the coronavirus the day before the rally.

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