President Donald Trump again lashed out at CBS News reporter Paula Reid for questioning his handling of the COVID-19 crisis. During a May 19 cabinet meeting attended by White House reporters, Reid asked, āMr. President, why havenāt you announced a plan to get 36 million Americans back to work? Youāre overseeing historic economic despair. Whatās the delay, whereās the plan?ā Trump looked exasperated, and shot back, āOh, I think weāve announced our plan. Weāre opening up the country ā just a rude person, you are. Weāre opening up our country. Weāre opening it up very fast. The plan is that each state is opening up, and itās opening up very effectively, and when you see the numbers even you, I think, will be impressed, And it is pretty hard to impress you.ā
Reid pressed on, considering that Trump didnāt actually answer any of the questions she asked. āThatās enough of you,ā the president said sharply, pointing a finger toward Reid before fielding a question from another reporter. You can see the heated exchange take place below. Reidās inquiries were valid; amid the coronavirus pandemic, business closures and lack of customers have resulted in 36 million Americans filing for unemployment over the past two months, making the unemployment rate roughly 15%. To put in perspective, 15 million Americans (about 25%) were counted as unemployed during the Great Depression of 1929 to 1933, considered the most disastrous era of the United Statesā economy.
While there is a White House āOpening Up America Againā plan, itās an overview of the steps and phases states must take to start reopening amid the pandemic ā not a detailed plan for restoring the economy. Whether it was Reidās question, or Reid herself that irked Trump is up in the air. The CBS News White House correspondent has become one of his favorite targets in press briefings, after she asked him during an April briefing why his administration didnāt act sooner when they learned of the COVID-19 threat months earlier. Trump responded by calling her āfakeā and ādisgraceful.ā
https://twitter.com/CBSNews/status/1262840960658092034
The president brought it up again in a May 5 interview with The New York Post, saying that the reporter āwasnāt Donna Reed, I can tell you that,ā referring to the 1950s actress famous for portraying a housewife. āPaula Reid, sheās sitting there and I say, āHow angry. I mean, Whatās the purpose?ā Theyāre not even tough questions, but you see the attitude of these people, itās like incredible.ā She changed her Twitter bio to ānot Donna Reedā after the interview surfaced.
Along with Reid, Trump has clashed with scores of female reporters during his coronavirus briefings. He told her CBS colleague, Weijia Jiang, in a patronizing tone, that she should take it ānice and easyā and ārelaxā after asking him why he was still holding campaign rallies in March. He also told Jiang, who was born in China and emigrated to the US when she was a toddler, to āask Chinaā about coronavirus testing. He recently called Deadline: White House host Nicolle Wallace ā3rd rate lap dogā for defending former Vice President Joe Biden, and warned PBS NewsHourās Yamiche Alcindor to ābe nice, donāt be threateningā when she asked about sending aid to governors.