President Trump’s decision to drive by well-wishers outside Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Sunday was widely criticized by medical experts as irresponsible for unnecessarily exposing Secret Service agents inside the vehicle to the virus.
“By taking a joy ride outside Walter Reed the president is placing his Secret Service detail at grave risk,” tweeted Dr. Jonathan Reiner, professor of medicine and surgery at George Washington University. “This is the height of irresponsibility.”
Yet many far-right commenters called it something else: A miracle. They said it was evidence that the president was overcoming his illness from the coronavirus.
The Gateway Pundit, a website notorious for regularly spreading misinformation and falsehoods, published an article calling Mr. Trump’s drive-by to greet fans a “miracle in Maryland.”
“I believe in miracles,” said another tweet on Sunday afternoon, after Mr. Trump’s doctor said he could return to the White House as early as Monday. “We are going to see another one in November!”
Others reposted and repeated Mr. Trump’s own words in a video he released on Saturday that his hospitalization and process of recovery constituted a “miracle from God coming down.”
Alex Plitsas, the vice chairman of the Fairfield Republican Town Committee in Connecticut and a contributor to the conservative news and opinion site The Daily Caller, said that the people criticizing Mr. Trump’s trip past supporters on Sunday were hypocritical. He said that they advocated wearing masks to stop the spread of the virus, but when Mr. Trump wore one they said that was not enough to please them.
Mr. Plitsas did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Greg Price, another contributor to The Daily Caller, implied that the Secret Service agents accompanying Mr. Trump during the drive-by must not have been at increased risk of the coronavirus because they had been around the president during his bout of illness.
This was rebutted by Dr. James Phillips, an attending physician at Walter Reed, who tweeted that the “Presidential SUV is not only bulletproof, but hermetically sealed against chemical attack.” He added that the risk of Covid-19 transmission was “as high as it gets outside of medical procedures.”
Mr. Price did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The C.D.C. says cloth face coverings help prevent the person wearing the mask from spreading Covid-19 to others, but it doesn’t say that wearing a mask fully prevents the spread of the virus. The drive angered some members of the Secret Service, The Washington Post reported.
“Many of the statements that are being pushed by Trump’s supporters have been debunked by medical experts, but at this time, no one is being rational,” said Claire Wardle, executive director of First Draft, an organization that fights online disinformation. “These tweets and the online conversation is not about science or expertise, it’s about emotions and partisanship.”