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Post overstates Trump’s exposure to coronavirus, raising alarms
If Your Time is short
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There is no evidence President Donald Trump came into direct contact with a coronavirus sufferer.
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Trump shook hands at a conference with Matt Schlapp, chairman of the American Conservative Union and Conservative Political Action Conference.
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Schlapp days earlier had had contact with a man who has been confirmed to have the coronavirus.
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Schlapp reportedly has no symptoms.
A Facebook post on March 9, 2020, the day stock markets were rattled by news about the coronavirus, carried this headline about President Donald Trump and the Conservative Political Action Conference:
"Trump shakes hands with CPAC Chairman — President Trump has come into contact with a potential coronavirus sufferer!"
The post, shared by United Kingdom-based Daily Mail, was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)
The headline exaggerates what happened and raises alarm over the possibility that Trump has been exposed to coronavirus. Based on current reporting, that’s not what we know.
A Daily Mail spokesman told us the post would be edited to make it clearer. Indeed, before we published this check, they changed it to read, "The chairman of the American Conservative Union has revealed that he interacted with a 55-year-old man infected with coronavirus before shaking hands with Donald Trump."
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Let’s take a look.
The Daily Mail post includes a looping video clip of Trump on stage at CPAC and shaking hands with a white-haired man before taking the lectern for his speech.
Trump spoke on the final day of that conference, which was sponsored by the American Conservative Union and held in National Harbor, Md., Feb. 26-29, 2020.
The words that appear as the Daily Mail video plays state that the man, identified as the CPAC chairman, said he had "interacted with an infected man recovering in New Jersey" before greeting Trump.
On March 7, 2020, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan announced that someone who’d traveled to the state Feb. 27-March 1 for the conference was confirmed to have COVID-19. "Those who attended or worked at the conference may be at some risk for acquiring COVID-19," Hogan’s statement read.
The next day, March 8, 2020, the Washington Post reported the following:
The man Trump shook hands with is Matt Schlapp, chairman of the American Conservative Union and CPAC.
Schlapp said he briefly interacted personally early in the four-day conference with a man infected with the coronavirus. The man has not been identified.
Schlapp said he used hand sanitizer regularly during the conference and had not had any symptoms before or after shaking hands with Trump. He said he has been in touch with his own doctor and with the infected patient, who is being quarantined in New Jersey.
The White House has maintained that Trump was never in direct contact with the infected person and does not have any symptoms.
Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Tex., said in a statement on March 8, 2020, that he "briefly interacted" with the infected person while at CPAC and would self-quarantine at his Texas home "out of an abundance of caution."
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Rep. Paul A. Gosar, R-Ariz., tweeted that same day that he and three of his staff members are under self-quarantine "after sustained contact at CPAC" with the person who has the virus.
Schlapp told the New York Times he had had incidental contact with the infected person. The Times reported March 9, 2020, that the man, a 55-year-old New Jersey resident, was in stable condition in a hospital.
As for the spread of coronavirus, we’ve reported that:
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Older people and those with preexisting health conditions are more at risk of developing complications from the coronavirus.
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For the American public, the immediate risk of coronavirus remains relatively low.
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The best ways to prevent the spread of the virus are to wash your hands, avoid touching your face, cover your sneezes and coughs, and disinfect your home.
A headline on a Daily Mail video shared on Facebook claimed Trump has come into contact with a "potential coronavirus sufferer."
Trump shook hands with Matt Schlapp, a man who says he had been in contact days earlier with someone who is reportedly being treated for the virus. Schlapp says he has had no symptoms of the illness.
Some may argue third-hand contact indicates possible exposure for Trump, but such a conclusion ignores available evidence. While the Daily Mail did qualify its assertion by using the word "potential" in "potential coronavirus sufferer," the headline (which ended in an exclamation point) nevertheless led readers to believe that Trump’s exposure is worthy of alarm. Indeed, anyone in a population could be a "potential" coronavirus sufferer.
Based on what is verifiable, we rate the statement Mostly False.
Our Sources
Facebook, post, March 9, 2020
Washington Post, "Coronavirus case at CPAC brings outbreak closer to Trump, threatening to upend his routine amid reelection bid," March 8, 2020
New York Times, "CPAC Attendee Has the Coronavirus, Officials Say," March 9, 2020
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, statement, accessed March 8, 2020
The Hill, "CPAC chairman: Infected attendee had no contact with Trump, Pence," March 8, 2020
Interview, DailyMail.com chief brand officer Sean Walsh, March 10, 2020
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Post overstates Trump’s exposure to coronavirus, raising alarms
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