His public statements regarding hydroxychloroquine have diminished significantly over the past week for reasons that remain unclear. His most recent mention of the drug at the White House’s daily coronavirus news conferences came last Tuesday, when the president announced his administration had deployed roughly 28 million doses of hydroxychloroquine from the federal government’s Strategic National Stockpile.
President Trump strode to the lectern in the White House briefing room Thursday and, for just over an hour, attacked his rivals, dismissing Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden as a “sleepy guy in a basement of a house” and lambasting the media as “fake news” and “lamestream.”
He showered praise on himself and his team, repeatedly touting the “great job” they were doing as he spoke of the “tremendous progress” being made toward a vaccine and how “phenomenally” the nation was faring in terms of mortality.
Home Alone at the White House: A Sour President, With TV His Constant Companion
WASHINGTON — President Trump arrives in the Oval Office these days as late as noon, when he is usually in a sour mood after his morning marathon of television. He has been up in the White House master bedroom as early as 5 a.m. watching Fox News, then CNN, with a dollop of MSNBC thrown in for rage viewing. He makes calls with the TV on in the background, his routine since he first arrived at the White House. But now there are differences. TheHe has been up in the White House master bedroom as early as 5 a.m. watching Fox News, then CNN, with a dollop of MSNBC thrown in for rage viewing. He makes calls with the TV on in the background, his routine since he first arrived at the White House.
What he did not do was offer any sympathy for the 2,081 Americans who were reported dead from the coronavirus on that day alone — among the now more than 54,000 Americans who have perished since the pandemic began.
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What began as daily briefings meant to convey public health information have become de facto political rallies conducted from the West Wing of the White House — events that are now in doubt after an uproar last week over Trump’s suggestion of another bogus coronavirus cure. The president has offered little in the way of accurate medical information or empathy for coronavirus victims, instead focusing on attacking his enemies and lauding himself and his allies.
Trump coronavirus briefings put health officials in bind
Health experts on the White House coronavirus task force increasingly are being put in a tough spot by the president's daily press briefings. President Trump frequently uses the briefings to settle scores with the media, and his efforts to put a positive spin on the news and his administration's actions has led him to embrace ideas that lack scientific backing.He then sometimes asks the scientists and doctors around him to weigh in or offer support, putting them in an impossible spot.It's been an issue throughout the timeline of the briefings, but it has particularly been under a spotlight this week.
Trump has spoken for more than 28 hours in the 35 briefings held since March 16, eating up 60 percent of the time that officials spoke, according to a Washington Post analysis of annotated transcripts from Factba.se, a data analytics company.
Over the past three weeks, the tally comes to more than 13 hours of Trump — including two hours spent on attacks and 45 minutes praising himself and his administration, but just 4½ minutes expressing condolences for coronavirus victims. He spent twice as much time promoting an unproven antimalarial drug that was the object of a Food and Drug Administration warning Friday. Trump also said something false or misleading in nearly a quarter of his prepared comments or answers to questions, the analysis shows.
Trump speaks alongside Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, at a task force briefing April 22. The president frequently answers questions addressed to other officials at the briefings.
Trump stands in front of a video presentation during the April 20 daily coronavirus press briefing.
Trump’s freewheeling approach ended in a political crisis this past week, after the president’s dangerous suggestion at a briefing Thursday that injecting bleach or other disinfectants might cure the coronavirus — “almost as a cleaning.” The remarks set off a government-wide scramble and led to Trump telling aides Friday he would skip briefings this weekend. White House officials say privately they are considering scaling back the events entirely.
Nervous Republicans See Trump Sinking, and Taking Senate With Him
The election is still six months away, but a rash of ominous new polls and the president’s erratic briefings have the G.O.P. worried about a Democratic takeover.The scale of the G.O.P.’s challenge has crystallized in the last week. With 26 million Americans now having filed for unemployment benefits, Mr. Trump’s standing in states that he carried in 2016 looks increasingly wobbly: New surveys show him trailing significantly in battleground states like Michigan and Pennsylvania, and he is even narrowly behind in must-win Florida.
“What is the purpose of having White House News Conferences when the Lamestream Media asks nothing but hostile questions, & then refuses to report the truth or facts accurately,” Trump complained in a tweet Saturday. “They get record ratings, & the American people get nothing but Fake News. Not worth the time & effort!”
The briefings have come to replace Trump’s campaign rallies — now on pause during the global contagion — and fulfill the president’s needs and impulses in the way his arena-shaking campaign events once did: a chance for him to riff, free-associate, spar with the media and occupy center stage.
The Post analysis of Trump’s daily coronavirus briefings over the past three weeks — from Monday, April 6, to Friday, April 24 — reveals a president using the White House lectern to vent and rage; to dispense dubious and even dangerous medical advice; and to lavish praise upon himself and his government.
Trump has attacked someone in 113 out of 346 questions he has answered — or a third of his responses. He has offered false or misleading information in nearly 25 percent of his remarks. And he has played videos praising himself and his administration’s efforts three times, including one that was widely derided as campaign propaganda produced by White House aides at taxpayer expense.
Plan is for Trump to shift focus to prospects for economy
WASHINGTON (AP) — After two months of frantic response to the coronavirus, the White House is planning to shift President Donald Trump’s public focus to the burgeoning efforts aimed at easing the economic devastation caused by the pandemic. Days after he publicly mused that scientists should explore the injection of toxic disinfectants as a potential virus cure, Trump has now rejected the utility of his daily task force briefings, where he has time and again clashed with scientific experts. Trump’s aides are aiming to move the president onto more familiar — and safer, they hope — ground: talking up the economy, in tighter controlled settings.
The president repeatedly returns to the same topics, frequently treating questions as cues for familiar talking points.
He has, for instance, mentioned the nation’s testing capacity in 14 percent of his comments, talked about the country’s ventilator supply in 12 percent and waxed on about his imposition of travel bans — particularly from China — in 9 percent.
“These press conferences are 10 minutes of information, if you’re lucky, and an hour and a half of self-congratulations and misinformation,” said Guy Cecil, chairman of Priorities USA, the largest Democratic super PAC, which supports Biden. “It is the distillation of a Trump rally. It is the personification of a Trump rally.”
A woman holds a sign during a demonstration against stay-at-home orders as nurses stand in counter-protest on the State House steps, on April 25, in Providence, Rhode Island.
Joy Redwine calls out for reopening of the state as hers was one of dozens of vehicles, filled with protesters, that circled the Governor's Mansion in Jackson, Mississippi. The protesters honked their horns for over an hour to express their dissatisfaction at the gradual relaxation of the social and business social distancing restrictions established by Republican Gov. Tate Reeves, on April 25.
Protestors gather outside the El Paso County Court House during a rally calling for the reopening of El Paso, on April 25.
Briefings Were ‘Not Worth the Time,’ Trump Said. But He Couldn’t Stay Away.
To the surprise of exactly no one, President Trump resumed his daily coronavirus news briefings on Monday, just two days after tweeting that they were “not worth the time & effort” and just hours after his own White House officially canceled the planned appearance. WASHINGTON — To the surprise of exactly no one, President Trump resumed his daily coronavirus news briefings on Monday, just two days after tweeting that they were “not worth the time & effort” and just hours after his own White House officially canceled the planned appearance.
A demonstrator protests the extension of the emergency Safer at Home order by State Governor Tony Evers to slow the spread of the coronavirus, outside the State Capitol building in Madison, Wisconsin, on April 24.
Protesters against the state's extended stay-at-home order to help slow the spread of the coronavirus demonstrate at the Capitol building in Madison, Wisconsin, on April 24.
A demonstrator protests the extension of the emergency Safer at Home order by State Governor Tony Evers to slow the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), outside the State Capitol building in Madison, Wisconsin, on April 24.
Demonstrators protest the extension of the emergency Safer at Home order by State Governor Tony Evers, outside the State Capitol building in Madison, Wisconsin, on April 24.
Demonstrators protest the extension of the emergency Safer at Home order by State Governor Tony Evers, outside the State Capitol building in Madison, Wisconsin, on April 24.
Amid a Rising Death Toll, Trump Leaves the Grieving to Others
WASHINGTON — One morning this week, President Trump called food sector executives. That afternoon, he met with corporate leaders at the White House. The day before, he paraded small-business owners in the East Room, and the day before that, he showcased executives from retail giants like Walgreens and Walmart in the Rose Garden. As he presides over the coronavirus pandemic and resulting economic collapse, Mr. Trump has hosted or called many people affected by the devastation, including health company executives, sports commissioners, governors, cruise boat company heads, religious leaders, telecommunications executives and foreign heads of state.
Demonstrators protest the extension of the emergency Safer at Home order by State Governor Tony Evers, outside the State Capitol building in Madison, Wisconsin, on April 24.
34 days of pandemic: Inside Trump’s desperate attempts to reopen America
Though Trump remained fixated on reopening the economy, he and his administration fell far short of making that a reality. The factors that health and business leaders say are critical to a speedy and effective reopening — widespread testing, contact tracing and coordinated efforts between Washington and the states — remain lacking. “We wasted two months denying it. We’re now wasting another two months by just dithering around,” said Kathleen Sebelius, a former Kansas governor and health secretary in the Obama administration.
Demonstrators protest the extension of the emergency Safer at Home order by State Governor Tony Evers, outside the State Capitol building in Madison, Wisconsin, on April 24.
A man demonstrates in front of the state capitol building demanding that businesses be allowed to open up, people allowed to work, and lives returned to normal on April 23 in Topeka, Kansas. The protest was part of a growing national movement against stay-at-home orders designed to slow the spread of the coronavirus.
A cutout of Judy Garland as Dorothy from The Wizard Of OZ is seen with a mask and sign in front of the state capitol building on April 23 in Topeka, Kansas.
Protesters calling for the reopening of the businesses closed by state order due to the COVID-19 virus outbreak gather outside the home of Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker in Swampscott, Mass., on April 23.
Protesters drive in their vehicles near the Virginia State Capitol on April 22 in Richmond, Virginia. The protesters say Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam's "stay-at-home" order and restrictions on gatherings of 10 or more people due to the COVID-19 pandemic are too excessive and want the state reopened.
Demonstrators hold signs outside of the New York State Capitol Building on April 22 in Albany, New York. Protestors are calling on New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo to reopen New York State amidst a shutdown of all non-essential businesses due to the Coronavirus pandemic.
Demonstrators are seen near Capitol Square during a rally to demand that Gov. Ralph Northam lift restrictions that have closed certain businesses in Virginia since the coronavirus outbreak in Richmond, Virginia on April 22.
A demonstrator is seen near Capitol Square during a rally to demand that Gov. Ralph Northam lift restrictions that have closed certain businesses in Virginia since the coronavirus outbreak in Richmond, Virginia on April 22.
The protesters, who want the state re-opened for business, gathered to demonstrate against Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam's "stay-at-home" order on April 22 in Richmond, Virginia.
Demonstrators are seen near Capitol Square during a rally to demand that Gov. Ralph Northam lift restrictions that have closed certain businesses in Virginia since the coronavirus outbreak in Richmond, Virginia on April 22.
A person holds a sign while gathering with others to protest stay-at-home orders put into place due to the COVID-19 outbreak on April 21 in Jefferson City, Missouri.
A man holds a flag as he attends a rally to protest stay-at-home orders put into place due to the COVID-19 outbreak on April 21 in Jefferson City, Missouri.
A person holds a sign while waving a flag during a protest against the stay-at-home orders put into place due to the COVID-19 outbreak, on April 21 in Jefferson City, Missouri.
Demonstrators gather to protest against the extended stay-at-home order to help slow the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania on April 20.
Sophia Brown, left, and her husband Bill Brown are joined by a woman who did not give her name as they participate in a rally in front of the governor's mansion during the coronavirus pandemic on April 20 in Hartford, Conn.
Protesters demonstrate at the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa., on April 20, demanding that Gov. Tom Wolf reopen Pennsylvania's economy even as new social-distancing mandates took effect at stores and other commercial buildings.
A person waves an American flag during a protest against the state's extended stay-at-home order to help slow the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at the Capitol building in Olympia, Washington, on April 19.
A person holds a sign referencing high unemployment as hundreds gather to protest against the state's extended stay-at-home order to help slow the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at the Capitol building in Olympia, Washington, on April 19.
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Vice President Pence, who heads the administration’s coronavirus task force, holds second place in speaking time at the briefings since mid-March — about 5½ hours, or roughly 12 percent of the total.
The medical professionals also received significantly less airtime than Trump. Deborah Birx, who oversees the administration’s virus response, spoke close to six hours, while Anthony S. Fauci, an infectious disease expert, spoke for just over two hours at 22 of the briefings.
Trump has also offered a response to a question posed to someone else more than a third of the time that occurred, including queries that the intended official had already answered.
Expressions of empathy from Trump are rare. The president has mentioned coronavirus victims in just eight briefings in three weeks, mostly in prepared remarks. In the first week of April, when the nation’s focus was largely on the hard-hit New York region, Trump began several briefings by expressing his condolences for the victims there.
“We continue to send our prayers to the people of New York and New Jersey and to our whole country,” Trump said on April 6, offering similar sentiments the following day: “We grieve alongside every family who has lost a precious loved one.”
On April 19 — as the death toll in the United States climbed past 40,000 and more than 22 million Americans were unemployed — a CNN reporter sparked Trump’s ire when he noted the grim milestones and asked, “Is this really the time for self-congratulations?”
“What I’m doing is, I’m standing up for the men and women that have done such an incredible job,” Trump responded. He added that he was “also sticking up for doctors and nurses and military doctors and nurses” before eventually angrily dismissing the question as “fake news.”
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said the briefings are a way for the president to keep the public informed. “Millions and millions of Americans tune in each day to hear directly from President Trump and appreciate his leadership, unprecedented coronavirus response, and confident outlook for America’s future,” McEnany said in a statement.
Like his campaign rallies, the president’s portion of the daily briefings are rife with misinformation. Over the past three weeks, 87 of his comments or answers — a full 47 minutes — included factually inaccurate comments.
Trump has mentioned the antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine as a possible coronavirus cure in at least eight of his prepared remarks and responses, despite potentially dangerous side effects and no clear medical evidence that it helps treat the virus.
“Just recently, a friend of mine told me he got better because of the use of that — that drug. So, who knows?” said Trump in mid-April, adding, “And it’s having some very good results, I’ll tell you.”
After Trump’s comments on injecting disinfectants at the Thursday briefing, aides and other loyalists initially said the president’s remarks had been taken out of context. Then Trump claimed, despite his serious tone when making the suggestion, that he was just speaking “sarcastically” to get a rise out of reporters.
Some administration officials, outside Republicans and other Trump allies say the briefings have increasingly become a distraction, and they fear they are doing more to harm than help the president’s reelection hopes. They worry that Trump is squandering the opportunity to demonstrate presidential leadership and be the “wartime president” he has claimed to be by picking petty fights and appearing childish and distracted.
But they also acknowledge they are unlikely to change Trump’s behavior. Over the past three weeks, the president has tweeted five times about the briefing’s “ratings,” which he frequently says are “through the roof.”
In recent days, aides have begun discussing adding an economic component to the virus response that would be separate from the daily briefing with public health officials, in part because they say one of the president’s strengths is the economy. He might appear with executives of small businesses beginning to reopen or with manufacturers of personal protective equipment, a senior administration official said.
Advisers are also considering cutting the number of briefings or having the president attend less frequently, as well as discussing getting the president out on the road in the next few weeks.
Some Republicans see value in Trump’s regular appearances in the briefing room. Much like the 2016 campaign, where he seemed to benefit from being ubiquitous if controversial, the coronavirus news conferences offer Trump an elevated platform, especially in the absence of regular campaign events, said Cliff Sims, a former White House aide.
Residents listen at a "social distance" as singer/guitarist Phil Angotti performs songs from the back of a pick-up truck on April 26 in Oak Park, Illinois. Owner Will Duncan of Fitzgerald's nightclub, a suburban music venue and restaurant shuttered due to the COVID-19 pandemic, created a "Stay-at-Home Concert Series" to bring music from local Chicago artists each weekend to fans in suburbs close to the club.
Golfers maintain proper social distancing as they relax after playing a round at Birch Creek Golf Club, on April 26 in Union, Mo. Golf courses in Franklin County, Mo., are among a handful of businesses being allowed to reopen this weekend as the county begins to relax restrictions put in place to help slow the spread of the coronavirus.
Opera singer Victoria Robertson, who has taken to performing each Sunday from the porch of her home, sings to a gathering of neighbors on April 26 in San Diego, California.
Gigi Gorgeous and Nats Getty speak during GLAAD presents "Together in Pride: You are Not Alone," a star-studded livestream event highlighting the LGBTQ response to COVID-19 and benefiting CenterLink on April 26.
Cars parade during the drive-by birthday party for World War II veteran Lt. Colonel Sam Sachs, who turned 105 today, amid the coronavirus pandemic on April 26 in Lakewood, California. The planned birthday celebration inside his retirement home was cancelled due to the spread of COVID-19 but members of the community turned out on foot and in vehicles outside the home to help him celebrate. He also received thousands of cards from well wishers across the country.
Rev. Msgr. Kevin O'Neill walks down the aisle of the Cathedral of St. Helena to begin mass in Helena, Mississippi, on April 26. The Roman Catholic cathedral was one of the churches across Montana to resume services with reduced capacity and enforced social distancing as part of the state's first phase of easing coronavirus restrictions.
Members of the University of Pittsburgh marching band, play on a computer screen in Pittsburgh during a virtual Commencement for the Class of 2020, on April 26.
Supporters of a group called "Open Texas" rally to re-open Texas businesses, schools and religious services shut down by restrictions, as they gather in a park outside City Hall in Frisco, on April 25.
San Francisco resident Maggie Gunn holds a cardboard standup of singer Tony Bennett from the window of her home across the street from the Fairmont San Francisco hotel, where hotel workers sang the song "I Left My Heart In San Francisco", on April 25, in San Francisco.
A Walgreens employee talks with a person in line for COVID-19 testing in Dallas on April 25. The location began testing for the new coronavirus on Friday with a drive-through process and is provided to eligible individuals at no cost. Persons wanting to be tested are asked to go online to their website to determine their eligibility. The nasal swab test is self administered with directions from a store pharmacist.
Medical workers hold signs outside NYU Langone Health hospital as people applaud to show their gratitude to medical staff and essential workers on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic on April 25 in New York City.
People wait in line at a New York State Department of Health COVID-19 antibody testing center at Steve's 9th Street Market on April 25 in Brooklyn, New York.
A man and a woman ride bicycles near a sign advising people to stay away from the beach, along the Great Highway near Ocean Beach in San Francisco on April 25.
Despite caution tape blocking off a seating section, people still sit down to enjoy a spring afternoon at Brooklyn's Coney Island, on April 25, in New York City.
Vehicles line up to receive food during a donation drive by World Central Kitchen in the parking lot of the Camden Yards Sports Complex, on April 25, in Baltimore, Maryland. World Central Kitchen conducted its food relief operation to help relieve food insecurity faced by the city's vulnerable communities, at the request of Governor Larry Hogan.
A person in a mask walks through the glass and steel structure called the Oculus, which serves as the World Trade Center Station, a transportation hub in the heart of the 9-11 Ground Zero, in New York City, on April 25.
President Donald Trump participates in a signing ceremony for H.R.266, the Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care Enhancement Act, with members of his administration and Republican lawmakers in the White House in Washington D.C., on April 24.
A sign that reads "Ramadan Kareem" is seen near the front entrance of the Masjid Al-Salaam mosque and Dearborn Community Center on the first full day of Ramadan on April 24 in Dearborn, Michigan.
Healthcare workers react to the applause at Brooklyn's Kings County Hospital Center at a 7 o'clock ceremony during the coronavirus pandemic on April 24 in New York.
A woman is given a rose after receiving a rapid, point of care pinprick coronavirus (COVID-19) IgM and IgG antibodies test at a myCovidMD free testing center for under and uninsured people, founded by three black women doctors in Los Angeles, California on April 24.
Tim Bailey prepares to drive a remote-controlled model of the novel coronavirus, also known as SARS-CoV-2, during a protest against the state's extended stay-at-home order to help slow the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at the Capitol building in Madison, Wisconsin on April 24.
A COVID-19 specimen collection kit is prepared by personnel of the District of Columbia COVID-19 testing site in United Medical Center's parking lot in Washington D.C., on April 24.
Post-it notes for first responders are posted on the wall of the Anderson Mall during the coronavirus pandemic, on April 24, in Anderson, South Carolina.
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi conducts a news conference in the Capitol Visitor Center shortly before President Trump signed an additional COVID-19 relief package on April 24.
Chains separating the back half of a public bus from the driver's space hang to protect MTA bus drivers from COVID-19 exposure on April 24, in New York.
Food Bank for New York City volunteers hand out packages at a mobile food pantry during the coronavirus pandemic at Barclays Center on April 24, in New York.
NFL superstar Vernon Davis (C) and restaurateurs Sahil Rahman (L) and Rahul Vinod (R), through a partnership between the Vernon Davis Foundation and RASA Restaurant, help to prepare free meals for frontline healthcare workers battling the coronavirus pandemic at the George Washington University Hospital on April 24, in Washington, D.C.
In this image from video, the vote on approving the almost $500 billion coronavirus package is displayed on the floor of the House of Representatives at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on April 23.
Raelene Critchlow, receives a visit from her granddaughter Maddie Carter, and great-grandchildren Beckett, Levi, and Camille, at Creekside Senior Living, on April 23, in Bountiful, Utah. Window visits help seniors connect to families despite coronavirus restrictions.
A healthcare worker writes “cute dimples” on a sign as a firefighter appears at her window during a parade of thanks at UCLA hospital, in California, on April 23.
Yen Vo, the co-owner of Madam Vo, fills containers with food to donate to a hospital on April 23 in New York City.
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“Everybody in the country is talking about one thing, and it happens to be the one thing that Donald Trump is the dominant player in, and he’s leading that conversation,” Sims said. “Even visually, you still have Trump on your TV screen, in front of the White House logo in the briefing room, flanked by his advisers. And then you have Joe Biden very small on your computer screen, having a Zoom conversation with Al Gore.”
The most frequent target of Trump’s attacks during the briefings was Democrats (48 times, over roughly 30 minutes), including former president Barack Obama and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (Calif.). His next-favorite subjects for criticism were the media (37 times, over roughly 25 minutes); the nation’s governors (34, over 22 minutes); and China (31 times, over nearly 21 minutes).
Much like his rallies — where Trump often harangues the media from the stage and encourages chants of “CNN sucks!” — he uses his briefings as an opportunity to spar with and berate the press.
On Thursday, when a Post reporter noted that people tuning into the briefings “want to get information and guidance and want to know what to do,” Trump turned his frustration on the reporter, whom he dismissed as “a total faker.”
“I’m the president, and you’re fake news,” Trump said.
Cecil, the Democratic super PAC head, said his reaction was initially mixed when Trump began dominating the briefings. “You always have to be concerned when one side monopolizes so much of the coverage,” he said.
But Cecil said he thinks the daily routine will “ultimately hurt” Trump, especially as voters assess the president’s performance against their own suffering. His super PAC has already produced ads using Trump’s words from the briefings against him and plans to continue doing so going forward.
“It’s much different to process these press conferences when the coverage before and after is the unprecedented number of people dying, the fact that we don’t have tests,” he said. “Long term, it is hurting the president because people can see with their own eyes and what they are feeling in their own communities what the consequences are.”
philip.bump@washpost.com
ashley.parker@washpost.com
Yasmeen Abutaleb contributed to this report.
34 days of pandemic: Inside Trump’s desperate attempts to reopen America .
Though Trump remained fixated on reopening the economy, he and his administration fell far short of making that a reality. The factors that health and business leaders say are critical to a speedy and effective reopening — widespread testing, contact tracing and coordinated efforts between Washington and the states — remain lacking. “We wasted two months denying it. We’re now wasting another two months by just dithering around,” said Kathleen Sebelius, a former Kansas governor and health secretary in the Obama administration.