Biden shames Trump for playing ‘yet another round of golf’ as president starts holiday at golf club

Joe Biden shames Donald Trump for playing ‘yet another round of golf’ while the coronavirus crisis looms as president begins the July Fourth weekend at his Virginia golf club

  • Joe Biden shamed President Trump for playing ‘yet another round of golf’ while the coronavirus crisis loomed 
  • President Trump spent several hours on Friday at his Sterling, Virginia golf club before he heads to South Dakota for an event at Mount Rushmore tonight 
  • Biden tweeted Trump should be handling a shortage of personal protective equipment for medical workers, repeating lines from a speech he gave Tuesday

Joe Biden shamed President Trump for playing ‘yet another round of golf’ while the coronavirus crisis looms as the president spent the start of the Fourth of July weekend at his Virginia golf property.

‘We are five months into this crisis, and our health care workers still don’t have the masks and protective equipment they need. It’s a national disgrace,’ the presumptive Democratic nominee tweeted Friday, while Trump was on the course. ‘Mr. President, use your authority and fix the shortage of PPE before you tee off for yet another round of golf.’ 

Biden was repeating lines from the speech he delivered in Wilmington, Delaware Tuesday, when he argued that Trump had ‘surrendered’ to the virus.  

Joe Biden sent out a tweet shaming President Trump for being at his Virginia golf club playing golf as coronavirus cases continue to climb around the U.S. 

Biden used lines from a speech he delivered Tuesday in Wilmington, Delaware, where he went after the president's response to the crisis, saying Trump had 'surrendered'

Biden used lines from a speech he delivered Tuesday in Wilmington, Delaware, where he went after the president’s response to the crisis, saying Trump had ‘surrendered’ 

President Trump's motorcade is seen entering the Trump National Golf Course in Sterling, Virginia Friday morning. Later Friday, Trump will travel to Mount Rushmore for a Fourth of July event

President Trump’s motorcade is seen entering the Trump National Golf Course in Sterling, Virginia Friday morning. Later Friday, Trump will travel to Mount Rushmore for a Fourth of July event 

The president has downplayed continued problems the U.S. is having dealing with the virus as the cases per day in the country have topped 50,000.  

On Thursday, during an appearance in the White House briefing room, Trump touted the 4.8 million jobs added to the economy, while never mentioning the 50K figure. 

He said the new COVID-19 cases were ‘being handled’ and that the administration was ‘putting out the fires.’ 

‘It’s got a life. And we are putting out that life because it’s a bad life that we’re talking about,’ he said of the virus. 

He also continued to push for a swift reopening of the economy, mentioning he’d like to see people go back to church, despite Republican-led states like Texas imposing mask-wearing mandates and closing down bars to deal with the recent spike. 

‘And now we’re opening up and it’s opening up far faster than anybody thought even possible and more successful,’ the president said Thursday. 

In the briefing room, Trump also said that on a call with governors and Vice President Mike Pence none of them asked for any additional medical equipment.

What Trump didn’t note is that Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey had asked Pence for 500 medical personnel to handle the growing crisis in his state.   

Critics are also angry that the president could be promoting further spread of the coronavirus by headlining two back-to-back Fourth of July events. 

After golfing Friday, he’ll travel to South Dakota to deliver a speech and take in a fireworks display at Mount Rushmore. 

Then on Saturday, he will host his ‘Salute to America’ celebration from the White House, complete with military flyovers, prior to the annual fireworks display. 

Medical experts, including Dr. Anthony Fauci who sits on the White House’s coronavirus taskforce, have said Americans need to avoid large crowds. 

The Mount Rushmore event will be capped at 7,500 people, but South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem said there weren’t plans for social distancing, though officials would be handing out masks. 

The Department of the Interior has 30,000 masks ready for the crowd that is expected to show up on the National Mall for the Fourth of July holiday. 

Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said Wednesday that she had warned the Interior Department that the gathering went against Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines, but she has no authority over the festivities because they’re being held on federal lands.  

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk