Will Trump鈥檚 COVID-19 diagnosis change anything? Or everything?
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An election year like no other has taken its sharpest turn yet, with President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump testing positive for COVID-19.
On Friday, the president was set to go to Walter Reed Medical Center, out of what the White House said was an abundance of caution.聽Mr. Trump has canceled all travel for the coming days, while his campaign events have moved online for now.
Well wishes from both sides of the aisle and world leaders have poured forth. In a tweet, Democratic nominee Joe Biden and his wife, Jill, offered their support to the Trumps early Friday.聽
Why We Wrote This
As the nation confronts perhaps the most jarring October surprise in history, it could raise new questions about the U.S. electoral system鈥檚 ability to navigate and absorb shocks.
鈥淲e will continue to pray for the health and safety of the president and his family,鈥 . Both Bidens have tested negative.
Perhaps this moment, just 32 days before the Nov. 3 election, presents an opportunity to pause and reflect 鈥 and to rise, if possible, above politics.聽
鈥淸S]chadenfreude is never admirable,鈥 Pete Wehner, a veteran of Republican administrations. 鈥淎ppealing to better angels is.鈥澛
Still, the latest White House COVID-19 crisis is a reminder of the norm-breaking nature of this presidency. Mr. Trump鈥檚 frequent refusal to wear a mask in public聽鈥 and聽聽of Mr. Biden for wearing one 鈥撀爉ay be a metaphor for his presidency writ large, reflecting the president鈥檚 willingness to take risks and dismiss expert advice. Even now, although White House staffers have stepped up their use of masks, some top officials still aren鈥檛 wearing them in public.聽
The campaign itself won鈥檛 stop, even in the coming days. Fundraising, strategizing, and events continue 鈥 with Mr. Biden on Friday traveling to Michigan. Vice President Mike Pence, who has tested negative for the virus, is planning to continue to campaign in person.聽
The vice presidential debate is so far still on for Oct. 7 鈥 and is likely to get more than usual scrutiny, given that it will feature the running mates of the two oldest presidential nominees in U.S. history.聽The future of the remaining two presidential debates, scheduled for Oct. 15 and 22, remains uncertain.
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said Friday he plans to press ahead with the Supreme Court nomination hearings for Judge Amy Coney Barrett, set to start Oct. 12. One member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Republican Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, announced Friday that he has tested positive and plans to isolate for 10 days before returning to Washington for the hearings.
Even more important may be the questions of governance that arise when the president of the United States faces a serious physical challenge.
The American system has built-in backups. The vice president is standing by, empowered to take over the president鈥檚 duties in the event he becomes incapacitated.聽
But the implications of the president鈥檚 diagnosis span wide, from national security to the economy to public safety to the election itself. Mr. Trump鈥檚 team is for foreign adversaries seeking to exploit the situation. An onslaught of false information, some designed to mislead, is already circulating on the internet. Among some Americans, the president鈥檚 diagnosis was immediately dismissed as a lie. Others began speculating that the White House was downplaying the severity of Mr. Trump鈥檚 condition.
鈥淚t鈥檚 as if a nuclear information bomb exploded on social media,鈥 Clint Watts, a former FBI special agent and expert on influence operations, .
My colleague Peter Grier wrote in a series of articles that Mr. Trump has a knack for exploiting the cracks in the American system of governance, aided by long-building cultural and political trends.聽As the nation confronts perhaps the most jarring October surprise in history, it could raise new questions about the U.S. electoral system鈥檚 ability to navigate and absorb shocks.