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Trump Didn’t Hesitate to Act Like a Ventilator ‘Shipping Clerk’ When It Benefited a Republican Senator

 

President Donald Trump on Wednesday tweeted that he was “immediately sending 100 [v]entilators to Colorado at the request of Senator [Cory] Gardner” to treat patients infected with COVID-19, the novel coronavirus which has caused a global pandemic. The tweet led to denouncements that Trump was playing politics with COVID-19 supplies. Our analysis begins, however, with federal law.

Trump announced the move after previously saying it was not his administration’s job to function as an “ordering clerk” or as a “shipping clerk” for emergency medical gear. Despite federal law saying otherwise, Trump and his son-in-law advisor, Jared Kushner, have said states and local governments should be the primary point stockhouses for medical supplies in such a medical emergency.

Law&Crime has reported — many times over again — that federal law requires the Trump Administration to be both an “ordering clerk” and a “shipping clerk.” (The precise term in the law is “effective and timely supply-chain management.”)  The relevant section of the United States Code, passed mostly after the 9/11 attacks but updated because of the Coronavirus, more broadly requires the federal government to keep a “national stockpile” of medical supplies to “optimize the emergency health security of the United States” in the event of a “public health emergency.”

Given this legal backdrop, it is no surprise that Trump’s critics used the tweet to resurrect complaints that Trump is favoring so-called Republican states and/or Republican politicians. Many accused Trump and his administration of ignoring official requests from Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, a Democrat, for medical supplies. Polis has for some time called the situation in Colorado “dire” and “far worse than we imagined.” He said his state’s “comparatively smaller population” resulted in “staggering increases in cases and deaths … not fully registering in national models” which attempt to track the virus’s spread. Polis issued his requests for supplies on March 28th to Vice President Mike Pence through a letter carbon copied to Sens. Michael Bennet and Cory Gardner.  Sen. Bennet, another Democrat, was later among those who also officially petitioned the Trump Administration for supplies in a separate letter dated April 7th.  Sen. Gardner is the Republican to whom Trump gave a shout out in his tweet.

Read the letters from Polis and Bennet to Trump at the bottom of this page.

Though Trump said he was responding to a request by Gardner for ventilators, a search of Gardner’s website reveals neither a press release nor a letter requesting ventilators from the Trump Administration.  Law&Crime reached out to the office of Sen. Gardner to clarify whether he did, indeed, request ventilators.  We have not yet received a response.

Trump said during a daily coronavirus press conference early Wednesday evening that Gardner phoned in the request.  Trump made that comment after saying he wasn’t getting calls seeking ventilators.

“The ventilators, we’re all set; we have a lot to go if we want; but — I’m not getting calls where they need ventilators anymore, so we were right on those ventilators,” Trump said, despite a review of national stockpile supplies by the House Oversight Committee which suggested there were not enough ventilators.

“I just sent 100 ventilators to Colorado, and that was great.  A senator there, who’s a terrific senator, Cory, Cory Gardner, called me last night and said, ‘could you get 100 ventilators for Colorado,’ and we just sent them out, and they’ll be there very shortly,” Trump continued.  “It looks like we’re in great shape from the ventilator standpoint,” Trump later added.

“The numbers, they’re coming way down,” Trump said of COVID-19 illnesses, despite a CDC chart which explicitly warns the full tally of new infections after March 28th “may not yet be reported.”

The focus of Sen. Gardner’s COVID-19 efforts appears to be on economic matters involving farmers, the National Guard, FEMA grants, and similar concerns. Gardner also requested an investigation into why some ventilators in the national stockpile have apparently not worked properly.  Gardner lodged his demand for a review of those ventilators with the Principal Deputy Inspector General at the Department of Health and Human Services, Christi Grimm. She is the same official Trump trashed on Monday for spearheading official documentation of medical supply shortages.

Gardner has also argued that rural hospitals should receive coronavirus-related support because they could take patients from stressed and crowded urban hospitals. Gardner, furthermore, has admitted that the national stockpile did not have enough material to combat COVID-19.

Some assessments indicate Gardner is at risk of losing his senate seat to Democratic challenger John Hickenlooper, Colorado’s former governor.  Others have ranked the Colorado senate seat occupied by Gardner as among those to watch this fall for a possible change in power.  Another poll says the majority of Americans — 55% — believe the federal government has done an increasingly “poor job” of dealing with the coronavirus.

With this as a backdrop, Gardner promptly thanked Trump for sending the ventilators.

The criticism of the president was typically fast and furious.

Gardner voted against impeaching Trump in February. In a statement at the time, he decried “partisan accusations, investigations, and endless acrimony.”

 

Colorado Governor Polis Let… by Law&Crime on Scribd

 

Bennet, Democratic Senators… by Law&Crime on Scribd

 

[Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images.]

[Editor’s Note:  This piece has been updated to reflect Trump’s comments during his Wednesday coronavirus briefing.  It has also corrected an erroneous reference to Trump’s tweet as occurring on Tuesday, April 8th.  The tweet was Wednesday, April 8th.]

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Aaron Keller holds a juris doctor degree from the University of New Hampshire School of Law and a broadcast journalism degree from Syracuse University. He is a former anchor and executive producer for the Law&Crime Network and is now deputy editor-in-chief for the Law&Crime website. DISCLAIMER:  This website is for general informational purposes only. You should not rely on it for legal advice. Reading this site or interacting with the author via this site does not create an attorney-client relationship. This website is not a substitute for the advice of an attorney. Speak to a competent lawyer in your jurisdiction for legal advice and representation relevant to your situation.