Noah Feldman, Columnist

Trump’s Fear of Experts Hurt the Coronavirus Response

In emergencies, it’s supposed to be the experts — not the president — who are in charge.

Time to hand the briefings over to the CDC.

Photographer: Bloomberg

With every passing day, it becomes more and more apparent that the U.S. federal government’s response to Covid-19 has been appallingly slow and inadequate. A major reason is that the person at the apex of that institution, President Donald Trump, dislikes and distrusts the expert bureaucrats who make the government actually function.

The laws that govern emergencies like the coronavirus pandemic give enormous power to the executive branch to direct and coordinate disaster response. These laws are not designed to empower the president personally. To the contrary, the whole point of the emergency laws is to empower government experts who know what must be done in a crisis — that is, career technocrats who work at agencies like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the federal emergency management agency (FEMA). Congress doesn’t trust the president in an emergency. It trusts the experts.