
First lady Melania Trump stands with President Donald Trump as he looks at Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden and his wife Jill Biden during the first presidential debate Tuesday, Sept. 29, 2020, at Case Western University and Cleveland Clinic, in Cleveland, Ohio. (AP Photo/Morry Gash, Pool)
By STEVE PEOPLES and BILL BARROW, Associated Press
An election year already defined by a cascade of national crises descended further into chaos Friday, with President Donald Trump declaring that heโs tested positive for the coronavirus after consistently playing down the threat.
With Trump in quarantine, Democratic challenger Joe Biden pressed a bipartisan message in battleground Michigan after he and his wife tested negative.
โThis cannot be a partisan moment. It must be an American moment. We have to come together as a nation,โ Biden declared at a speech in Grand Rapids, warning that the virus โis not going away automatically.โ
While Biden vowed to continue his cautious approach to campaigning during the pandemic, the presidentโs diagnosis injected even greater uncertainty into an election already plagued by crises that have exploded under Trumpโs watch: the pandemic, devastating economic fallout and sweeping civil unrest. With millions of Americans already voting, the country on Friday entered uncharted territory that threatened to rattle global markets and political debates around the world.
Much depends on the extent of Trumpโs symptoms, but, at the least, the development focuses the campaign right where Biden has put his emphasis for months โ and where Republicans donโt want it: on Trumpโs uneven response to a pandemic that has killed more than 205,000 people in the U.S. And for the short term, itโs grounded Trump in a quarantine, denying him the large public rallies that fuel his campaign just a month before the election.
Biden and other Democratic officeholders wished Trump well in the wake of the stunning development, although some could not help but admonish the Republican president, who openly ignored his own administrationโs social safety recommendations for much of the year.
โGoing into crowds unmasked and all the rest was sort of a brazen invitation for this to happen,โ House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on MSNBC.
The White House reported that Trump was โfatiguedโ and had been injected with an experimental antibody drug combination still in clinical trials. His campaign announced Friday afternoon that all of Trumpโs scheduled campaign events were being moved online or temporarily postponed. Trumpโs family, a steady presence on the campaign trail, was also grounded.
Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel has tested positive for the virus as well. But Vice President Mike Pence, who has tested negative, will attend his campaign events as planned.
Other world leaders, including Britainโs Prime Minister Boris Johnson, have contracted the virus and made full recoveries. But strategists in both parties acknowledged the timing is bad.
Millions of Americans have already begun voting in several key states, and tens of millions more will receive absentee mail-in ballots or begin in-person early voting in the coming weeks.
โTrumpโs main advantages, including incumbency, have been removed. Rallies, his main vehicle for mobilizing his base, will no longer be possible. Fly-bys with Air Force One as a backdrop are gone,โ said Republican strategist Rick Tyler, a frequent Trump critic.
He said that Trumpโs infection also โfundamentally undercuts his entire campaign strategy, which was to ignore the pandemic and make unsubstantiated claims that weโve turned the corner and are making an economic comeback.โ
Biden, meanwhile, is not expected to alter his plans significantly.
The Democratic nominee has been much more cautious in his approach to campaign events and contact with voters than Trump. Having spent much of the spring and summer avoiding crowds, Biden has held far fewer public events since returning to the campaign trail last month โ all of them with small crowds, if any, following social distancing guidelines. Only on Thursday did Bidenโs campaign announce that it would resume door-to-door canvassing in addition to its phone and digital outreach to voters.
Biden traveled from Delaware to Michigan on Friday afternoon for a campaign event, while Jill Biden was attending a separate event in New Hampshire. Bidenโs running mate, Kamala Harris, made her previously scheduled trip to Las Vegas as well.
The campaign confirmed Biden, his wife and Harris all tested negative for the virus.
โThis is not a matter of politics. Itโs a bracing reminder to all of us,โ Biden said in Grand Rapids, calling for a nationwide mask mandate as he spoke wearing a surgical mask. โWe have to take this virus seriously.
Trump now faces tremendous pressure to adjust his rhetoric and campaign tactics after spending much of the year downplaying the severity of the virus and repeatedly declaring COVID-19 would โdisappear.โ
As recently as Tuesday, Trump ridiculed Biden on national television for his cautious approach.
โI put a mask on when I think I need it,โ Trump said during the debate. โI donโt wear masks like him. Every time you see him heโs got a mask. He could be speaking 200 feet away, and he shows up with the biggest mask Iโve ever seen.โ
Two additional debates are scheduled for Oct. 15 and Oct. 22. The Commission on Presidential Debates has not yet commented on any changes in the debate schedule or health protocols, but has confirmed that next weekโs vice presidential debate is on as scheduled.
Both presidential candidates are in high-risk categories for COVID-19 complications. Trump is 74 years old and clinically obese. Biden is 77 years old.
Should Trump emerge with no visible effects, he could declare a speedy recovery as proof that heโs been right about COVID-19 being overblown. But that still would be at odds both with established science and with what Trump himself has said privately. Recordings by journalist Bob Woodward captured Trump in early February detailing the โdeadlyโ consequences of coronavirus, contrary to his public dismissiveness.
โFrom now until we get to the election, attention is going to be back where it should be: on COVID, the presidentโs response and the impact โ and on health care,โ said Democratic strategist Antjuan Seawright, a Biden supporter. โThis proves our candidate was right all along.โ

