Skip to main content

U.S. conservative leader had contact with coronavirus case at conference

WASHINGTON/WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (ITNTV) - The organizer of a large gathering of prominent U.S. conservative politicians and activists said on Sunday he had some “incidental” contact with an attendee who has since tested positive for coronavirus, but that he felt “healthy as a horse” and had not heard of anyone else falling ill.
FILE PHOTO: Matt Schlapp, chairman of the American Conservative Union, speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) annual meeting at National Harbor in Oxon Hill, Maryland, U.S., February 27, 2020. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File Photo
“I had incidental contact with him very briefly,” American Conservative Union Chairman Matt Schlapp told Fox News Channel’s “Fox & Friends Weekend.”
President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence also attended the gathering in late February, but Schlapp confirmed that neither had contact with the person infected by the virus.
Conservative students, right-wing media personalities and pro-Trump activists and fans gathered just outside Washington last month for the annual Conservative Political Action Conference, which met this year under the theme “America vs. Socialism.”
A top U.S. health official, Anthony Fauci, said on Sunday that Americans, especially those who are vulnerable, may need to stop attending big gatherings as the coronavirus spreads.
In addition to Trump and Pence, participants included incoming White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, U.S. Senator Ted Cruz, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, and Representative Jim Jordan, one of Trump’s biggest congressional allies.
Schlapp shook hands with Trump before the president spoke on the conference’s last day. However, the infected attendee was not attending that day, Schlapp wrote on Twitter.
The incubation period for the coronavirus is anywhere between two to 14 days and the conference ended on Feb. 29.
In an interview with Reuters, Schlapp said the patient, who is quarantined, “seemed to have a big step forward to health last night and feels even better today.”
He said that his team has held many conversations with people associated with the event and heard of no alarming health developments.”We’re doing our best to ascertain who might have had any contact with the patient,” Schlapp said, adding that people who had concerns should reach out to their medical professionals.
Ian Walters, a spokesman for CPAC, said only a “handful” of people at the conference had direct contact with the sick attendee, who Schlapp said on Fox had stayed “in a small area.”
In the Fox interview, Schlapp said CPAC had spoken with health officials in Maryland where the conference was held and that “they are not alarmed.”

A White House official said Trump, a self-described germophobe, uses antibacterial gel “all the time as it is.”
In the United States, 19 people have died out of about 450 reported cases of coronavirus, which originated in China last year and causes the sometimes deadly respiratory illness COVID-19. The outbreak has killed more than 3,600 globally.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

European Union will close its borders to all non-essential travel to fight coronavirus

Madrid (ITNTV) The European Union will close its borders to all non-essential travel as it attempts to contain the  ongoing spread of the coronavirus  on the continent. "The less travel, the more we can contain the virus," European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Monday following a video conference between G7 leaders. She appeared confident that the European Council would sign off on the restriction in a Tuesday vote. The bloc's member states imposed aggressive measures on Monday,  days after the  World Health Organization (WHO) said Europe was at the epicenter of the pandemic. French President Emmanuel Macron declared "war" on the virus during a national address on Monday, banning all social events across the country -- including family gatherings. Macron said those who have gathered in public places in recent days have not been respecting previous measures to limit the outbreak's spread in France, which as of Monday had 5,380 con...

US uses encrypted app to connect with Iranians as coronavirus sweeps their country

Washington (ITNTV) The State Department is using social media to encourage Iranians to share information with the Trump administration -- both on an encrypted tip line and through an online survey -- about the  coronavirus pandemic  that is devastating the country. "This is Iran's Chernobyl," said one administration official of the outbreak, who described social media portals as a tool to bypass the Iranian regime and connect to the country's people. The US began encouraging Iranians to use the encrypted messaging app last year, when Iranian demonstrators took to the streets and US officials wanted to learn more about the regime's bloody crackdown. Now, with Covid-19 devastating Iran, the tip line has been reinvigorated, administration officials told CNN. This time, the goal is to collect information from Iranians, find ways to share that information when it is determined to be accurate and leverage the coronavirus in an effort to fortify a relationship ...

Virus creates world's longest passenger flight

(ITNTV) —  The aviation industry has been hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic, with travelers across the world dealing with canceled flights and travel bans as they scramble to get home. But one unlikely aviation side effect is the creation of a new world aviation record. On March 14, French airline Air Tahiti Nui flew the longest ever scheduled passenger flight by distance -- transiting 9,765 miles across the world from Papeete, in Tahiti, French Polynesia, to Paris' Charles de Gaulle airport. This one off milestone was a direct consequence of the coronavirus-induced US travel restrictions. This route usually involves a scheduled stopover at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX). But when an airplane stops over in the US, all passengers must alight the aircraft and proceed through US Customs and Border Protection before they're allowed to advance on with the next leg of their journey. Current restrictions rendered this part of the journey untenable, so instead, f...