New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio on Sunday sharply criticized President
Donald Trump's response to the coronavirus pandemic, arguing that the federal
government has not done enough to ramp up production of life-saving medical
supplies like masks and ventilators and asking the president to deploy the military
across the country to help in the public-health crisis.
“The president of the United States is from New York City and he will not lift a
finger to help his hometown, and I don’t get it," de Blasio said Sunday on NBC’s
“Meet the Press.”
"I don’t get it. Right now, I have asked repeatedly for the military to be
mobilized, for the Defense Production Act to be used to its fullest to get us things like
ventilators, so people can live who would die otherwise," he continued. “If the
president doesn’t act, people will die who could have lived otherwise — senior
citizens, folks who are members of families.”
De Blasio, who ran for the Democratic presidential nomination last year, said the
president should order all military personnel with medical training to deploy to hot
spots in America and to help the country ferry ventilators to them.
“Why are they at their bases? Why are they not being allowed to serve? I
guarantee you they are ready to serve, but the president has to give the order,” he
said.
The comments sparked a back-and-forth with Gov. Larry Hogan of Maryland, a
Republican, who said that looking backward is not productive.
“I don’t think just talking about what was done wrong yesterday or last week or
last year is really that helpful in the discussion,” Hogan said.
“We are getting some progress. Now, it’s not nearly enough, it’s not fast enough,
we’re way behind the curve,” he said, adding that the unified effort is making
progress on getting respirators, masks and tests.
“It’s not a perfect situation, but we are trying to ramp up, order things on the open
market, get some things produced here. It’s going to take the federal, state and local
governments all stepping up and doing whatever it takes regardless of who is
supposed to do what,” he added.
De Blasio countered that “it’s not about blaming people for what happened in the
past,” but said he’s trying to sound the alarm on ways he feels the response has been
inadequate.
He specifically pointed to the Defense Production Act, a federal law that allows
the federal government to push business to ramp up production of certain products to
protect the nation. Trump has said he would invoke the act “in a worst-case
scenario,” but Democratic leadership has called on him to do so now.
“The American government is not at full bore right now," the mayor said. "The
Defense Production Act, it’s been activated. We’ve gotten no indication of any
factory on 24/7 shifts, we’ve gotten no shipments and the U.S. military is at its bases
instead of at the front lines."
“We cannot be gentle about this point — right this minute, from this minute
forward, our federal government needs to be in this fight instead of on the sidelines.”
FEMA Administrator Pete Gaynor told "Meet the Press" that his agency is
shipping supplies daily across the country and that states would get reimbursed by the
federal government if they bought important supplies on the open market. He went on
to call the Defense Production Act an “insurance policy” and a “lever” that hasn’t
been flipped yet.
“We haven’t had to use it yet. Will we have to use it? Maybe. But right now, this
is what makes America so great — every company pitching in to make sure we can
beat this virus,” Gaynor said.
There are at least 26,747 confirmed coronavirus cases in the United States,
according to data analyzed by Johns Hopkins University, as more than 80 million
Americans are living under stay-at-home orders.
The New York State Department of Health reported 10,356 positive
coronavirus cases in the state as of Saturday afternoon, and the Maryland Emergency
Management Agency reported 190 confirmed coronavirus cases.
Around the world, Hopkins reported, there are almost 312,000 coronavirus cases
globally, while more than 13,000 people have died from the virus and almost 94,000
have recovered.
2. Determine the Tense and Voice of the underlined verbs.
3. Transform the direct speech into reported speech:
1) “Why are they at their bases? Why are they not being allowed to serve? I
guarantee you they are ready to serve, but the president has to give the order,” he
said.
2) “The American government is not at full bore right now," the mayor said.
3) “It’s going to take the federal, state and local governments all stepping up and
doing whatever it takes regardless of who is supposed to do what,” he added.