Francis Wilkinson, Columnist

Trump Is No Exception: Mass Death Always Affects U.S. Presidents

Regardless of their cause, fatalities on such a scale inevitably transform a nation.

Do you trust him with such delicate, complex decisions?

Photographer: Pool/Getty Images North America
Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

The U.S. has surpassed 28,000 dead from Covid-19, which is almost certainly an undercount, and is bracing for more. President Donald Trump’s partisan and incoherent response — the sum of his positions is that he has both total authority and zero responsibility — has made the crisis more political than it might have been. Multiple governors have shown a better way.

Yet mass death, whether from disease or war, inevitably causes political tremors. And when the landscape resettles, it doesn’t always look the same.