WASHINGTON
(AP) — It was early on a Friday when Jared Kushner said he received a
call from his father-in-law, President Donald Trump. Trump was hearing
from friends in New York that the city’s public hospital system was
running low on critical supplies to fight the new coronavirus —
something city officials, nurses and doctors had been saying for weeks.
Kushner,
who has taken a lead role in the federal government’s response, called
Dr. Mitchell Katz, who runs the city’s hospital system, to ask what was
most needed.
And
not long after, Trump was on the phone with New York Mayor Bill de
Blasio announcing that the Federal Emergency Management Agency would be
sending a month’s worth of N-95 masks to the city’s front-line workers.
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“The
president’s been very, very hands-on in this,” Kushner told reporters.
“He’s really instructed us to leave no stone unturned.”
It was a happy ending to one chapter of a dreadful story: Critical supplies went to a place with critical needs.
But
the president’s intervention underscored what watchdogs say is a
troubling pattern when it comes to how the Trump administration is
doling out lifesaving resources. Despite building a data-driven triage
system in which FEMA allots supplies based on local needs, those who are
politically connected and have the president’s ear have, at times, been
able to bypass that process and move to the front of the line.
White
House officials reject the notion that the process is being
circumvented, stressing that everyone has been working to quickly get
supplies to the places that need them most. That includes navigating
complicated global supply chain issues and coordinating complementary
efforts by private companies like Apple and billionaires including New
England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, casino magnate Sheldon Adelson and
Chinese business giant Jack Ma. If state and local leaders need
assistance, they said, all they need to do is call.
“It’s
outrageous that some would even speculate that the resources being
delivered by the federal government to the states is somehow based on
politics,” said White House spokesman Judd Deere. “This is about saving
lives.”
But sometimes it helps to know those in charge.
It
was just after 8 p.m. last Saturday when Republican Rep. Lee Zeldin of
New York took to Twitter to sound the alarm about critical needs on Long
Island, a coronavirus hotspot with about 25,000 people infected.
Suffolk Count’s stockpile had run out of personal protective equipment —
PPE — needed by local hospitals, nursing homes and first responders,
including masks and gowns.
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“We need fellow Americans who can help to PLEASE send us PPE ASAP!” Zeldin wrote.
Minutes later, his call was answered.
“I
posted a tweet and I received a call within minutes — literally within
minutes — from Jared Kushner wanting to help,” said Zeldin. A day later,
the congressman said, 150,000 surgical masks were delivered by a
company he’d been connected with by someone close to the White House who
had also seen his message. And 250,000 N-95 masks were delivered by the
federal government days later.
“Honestly I couldn’t be happier with how quick the turnaround has been,” Zeldin said earlier this week.
While
Zeldin isn’t considered a top Democratic target, Trump has also helped
vulnerable Republicans secure supplies, raising concerns from critics
that he may be using the shipments to bolster political allies.
The
president tweeted Wednesday that he would be “immediately sending 100
Ventilators to Colorado” at the request of Sen. Cory Gardner, a
Republican who is considered among the party’s most vulnerable senators.
To Colorado Rep. Diana DeGette, a Democrat, that looked like “playing
politics w/ public health.”
On
Friday, another vulnerable GOP senator, Martha McSally, took to Twitter
to relay the “huge news” that Arizona would be getting 100 ventilators
and to thank “President Trump and @VP for hearing our call.”
Allies
of the president have intervened in other ways. Republican fundraiser
Ray Washburne helped arrange a call between Trump and high-end
restaurateurs including Wolfgang Puck and Jean-Georges Vongerichten, a
tenant of Trump International in New York. Trump quickly embraced a
proposal to restore the tax break allowing corporations to fully deduct
the costs of restaurant meals and entertainment.
“I’ll just get the president on the phone,” Washburne recalls telling the group. “He was fantastic.”
Members
of Trump’s private Mar-a-Lago club also have contacted the White House,
asking for advice about where to send supplies they had privately
procured.
Noah
Bookbinder, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics
in Washington, a government watchdog group, said it’s always
problematic when presidents make decisions based on what they’re hearing
from friends, business associates and customers.
“But
when we’re talking about life and death decisions that will affect the
future of not just individuals but whole communities, it’s particularly
appalling that these decisions are made based on the whim of the
president and the input of the people who happen to have his phone
number,” Bookbinder said.
Billionaire
philanthropist Ken Langone, namesake of New York’s NYU Langone Medical
Center, panned the idea that anyone was receiving special treatment and
applauded the administration’s efforts to make sure everyone gets what
they need.
“I’m
very impressed with the team effort that’s going on,” he said, adding,
“I wish my having known Trump had got me special treatment.”
“There is none of that ... otherwise we wouldn’t have shortages.”
As
for Zeldin, the congressman said he had been relying on the process set
up by the White House, in which states go through FEMA to get supplies.
But “when the stockpile gets down to zero,” he said, “then you have to
find another way.”
In any case, he said, now isn’t the time to point fingers.
“There
will be an after-action report that is done here and part of what will
be done here is analyzing the process of how the federal government
communicates and works with the states and how the states communicate
and work with the counties,” he said. But for now, “Everyone’s in the
same foxhole with their rifles pointed in the same direction and that’s
the only way to get through this.”
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