Coronavirus: Trump Feuds with Governors Over Authority
New York
Governor Andrew Cuomo accused President Donald Trump of "spoiling for a
fight", as the US leader lashed out at "Democrat Governors".
Several
states, including New York, have begun cautious talks on reopening, but Mr
Trump has claimed "total" power to lift virus lockdowns.
Mr Cuomo
refuted the claim on Tuesday as the president took to Twitter to criticise the
governor.
The US is
the epicentre of the pandemic with 554,684 cases and 23,608 deaths.
New York has
the most cases, but has seen signs of improvement, leading Mr Cuomo and
regional governors to discuss plans for eventual relaxation of restrictions.
The governor
criticised Mr Trump at his daily press briefing, telling reporters that this
was the governors' prerogative, not the president's. He would "not
engage" in a fight with Mr Trump, he claimed, but added he would have
"no choice" if the president the threatened the welfare of New
Yorkers.
Mr Trump
drew rebuke after claiming on Monday that he had the ultimate authority to lift
lockdown orders, contradicting governors and legal experts.
He took the
row to Twitter on Tuesday, criticising Mr Cuomo and issuing an oblique snipe at
other governors.

"Tell
the Democrat Governors that 'Mutiny On The Bounty" was one of my all time
favourite movies," Mr Trump, a Republican, wrote on Twitter.
"A good
old fashioned mutiny every now and then is an exciting and invigorating thing
to watch, especially when the mutineers need so much from the Captain."
The tale tells of a ship's revolt in which mutineers meet with unhappy ends,
with Mr Trump appearing to compare himself to the captain.
The
president aimed particular fire at Mr Cuomo, who he said was calling
"daily, even hourly, begging for everything," like hospitals, beds,
ventilators for his state. New York remains the US state hardest-hit by the
coronavirus outbreak, reporting 778 deaths in the past 24 hours.
"I put
my hand out in total partnership and cooperation with the president," said
Mr Cuomo on Tuesday, who had earlier called Mr Trump a "king" on CNN.
The comments
follow Mr Trump's assertion on Monday that "the president of the United
States calls the shots," during a combative press conference in which he
feuded with reporters.
But the US
Constitution says the states maintain public order and safety.
The Trump
administration has signalled 1 May as a potential date for easing the
restrictions.
The current
White House recommendations for Americans to avoid restaurants and
non-essential travel and keep in-person gatherings to no more than 10 people
expire on 30 April.
Mr Cuomo
described the president's position as a "shift" for the president,
who had left the shuttering of states to governors.
"On the
first phase, the president took a different tack," Mr Cuomo said.
"It's a shift, but it's ok."
Governors
assert it is their prerogative when the coronavirus-related restrictions get
lifted.
Responding
to a Trump tweet earlier in the day claiming unilateral authority on the
matter, Governor Tom Wolf of Pennsylvania said: "Well, seeing as how we
had the responsibility for closing the state down, I think we probably have the
primary responsibility for opening it up."
State
governors are discussing plans to resume economic activity without apparent
input from the Trump administration.
Officials in
New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts and
Pennsylvania promised an "overwhelmingly prudent" approach, but gave
no timeline.
New York has
almost 190,000 coronavirus cases and has seen more than 10,000 deaths - among
the highest rates in the world.
Globally,
different approaches have been adopted to loosening lockdown restrictions.
The Chinese
province of Wuhan, where coronavirus was first reported last December, has
partially reopened after more than two months of isolation.
Spain has
allowed around 300,000 nonessential workers to return to their jobs.
Italy - the
hardest-hit country in Europe - will allow a narrow range of businesses to
resume operations this week.
In France,
President Emmanuel Macron has announced the country's near-lockdown will extend
until 11 May.
The UK
government has said no one should expect any changes to its lockdown
restrictions this week.
Mr Trump
told Monday's briefing he did not intend to fire the top US expert on
infectious diseases, Anthony Fauci - a day after the president shared a tweet
with the hashtag "#firefauci".
Dr Fauci
incurred the ire of the president's supporters after he told CNN that lives
could have been saved if the US had shut down earlier during the coronavirus
outbreak.
Mr Trump
invited Dr Fauci - a key member of the White House coronavirus task force - to
the stage in the opening minutes of the briefing.
The
president said that he and Dr Fauci had been on the same page "from the
beginning" and declared he liked the respected doctor.
"I
think he's a wonderful guy," Mr Trump said, while adding that not everyone
was happy with the health expert.
Dr Fauci has
contradicted or corrected Mr Trump on scientific matters during the public
health crisis. But on Monday, he conceded he had used "a poor choice of
words" in his CNN interview.
While Mr
Trump initially played down the threat of coronavirus, he was by no means alone
among US public officials in doing so.
Dr Fauci
himself on 17 February said the danger from coronavirus is "just
minuscule" compared with the "real and present danger" of flu.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-canada
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