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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, May 21 2020

Full Issue

Trump's 2020 Message Amid Virus Devastation: I Built The Economy Once, I Can Do It Again

President Donald Trump, who has tied his presidency to the health of the economy, is in a tricky spot. But historians and economists are skeptical he can run on the promise to fix it. Meanwhile, Republicans quietly chat about paring back the convention.

With an economic crisis gripping the nation, President Donald Trump is reprising his 2016 slogan, with a twist: Make America Great Again, Again. Trump is trying to defy history by convincing Americans he can restore a coronavirus-decimated economy and become one of the only U.S. presidents to win reelection during a recession. His argument, which has met with skepticism from economists, is essentially: I鈥檝e already built the economy once, I can build it a second time. (Kumar, 5/20)

President Donald Trump is running against himself. With his cries to 鈥淩eopen our country!鈥 and his rebukes of the federal bureaucracy and health regulations amid the coronavirus pandemic, Trump has tried to tap into the same populist, anti-Washington anger he rode to victory in 2016. The difference: He is now, by definition, the face of government. (Lemire and Miller, 5/21)

The money to pay for the Republican National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., is mostly raised, and contracts with hotels and local vendors are signed. The delegates are set to easily anoint a party nominee who fought tooth and nail for the title four years ago. But instead of preparing to celebrate President Trump, White House and Republican officials are now quietly looking at the likelihood of a pared-down convention, with the coronavirus appearing increasingly likely to still pose a serious threat in late summer. (Haberman and Karni, 5/21)

And in news from across the aisle 鈥

In the thick of primary season, Elizabeth Warren and Joe Biden brawled over Medicare for All: He called her approach 鈥渁ngry,鈥 鈥渆litist,鈥 鈥渃ondescending鈥; she shot back anyone who defends the health care status quo with industry talking points is 鈥渞unning in the wrong presidential primary.鈥 Six months later, with Biden the presumptive nominee and Warren in the running for VP, she is striking a more harmonious chord. (Thompson, 5/21)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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