'Gross incompetence at highest levels': ex-Obama adviser blasts Trump's Covid response
The US has shown “gross incompetence … at the highest
levels” in dealing with the Covid-19 pandemic, according to Samantha Power, who
served as US ambassador to the United Nations under Barack Obama.
Speaking to Philippe Sands for the online version of the Hay
festival, Power said that Donald Trump’s administration had failed to learn
from the countries hit by the coronavirus before the US.
“We could have had an awful lot in place before it struck in
earnest on the continent,” she said, highlighting the “gross incompetence”
shown “not by the heroic health workers and public servants who are on the
frontlines, but at the highest levels, diminishing the threat posed by the
pandemic in its early stages”.
Power served for four years as Obama’s human rights adviser
and from 2013 to 2017 in his cabinet and as US ambassador to the UN. The
coronavirus outbreak in the US has been “mishandled for a set of reasons that
go well beyond the pandemic, a scepticism about science and evidence and global
cooperation,” she said.
She admitted that the Obama administration had “definitely
underestimated the potency” of “a view represented by President Trump but
shared by millions of Americans, that the international system has ripped us
off, that we have been giving more than we’ve been getting”.
“We saw the pain
caused, of course, by economic globalisation and saw the degree to which many
in our own communities were being left behind. But the idea that that would be
laid squarely on political globalisation or on alliances or on the United
Nations, it was not accurate, it seemed like too big a leap to get the fuel and
the momentum that Trump has given it, so we were wrong to underestimate that,”
she said.
Power was asked by Sands if there was any coming back for
the US after what he called “almost irrecoverable” damage done to the support
for global order by the Trump presidency. Power said it wasn’t just about Trump
threatening to pull out of the World Health Organization, and withdrawing the
US from organisations including Unesco and the United Nations human rights
council.
“There is that. But maybe even more damaging than that is
the pullback from alliances that are at the heart of effective multilateralism
… How do you recover the belief among German, French, British, Irish, Spanish
citizens that when America attaches its name to an agreement, whether a climate
agreement, or an Iran nuclear agreement, that is going to be an enduring
signature?” she said. “What Trump has jeopardised more than anything is the
sense of American constancy, [that] we’re going to be there when you need us.
And that’s going to be the hardest thing of all, I think to build back that
trust.”
“You can holler fake news and be kind of tribal in terms of
your party mentality. But if your insulin prices have tripled, and you no
longer have a paycheck and the government subsidy you’re getting isn’t enough
to pay for insulin for your kid, there’s only so many Trump tweets and
allegations of voter fraud that are going to distract you from your own
plight,” said Power, who recently published her memoir, The Education of an
Idealist.
Asked by Sands if there was any chance that Michelle Obama
would step in as Biden’s vice-president, Power said that while there was a
“very, very, very slim” possibility because of “how much she cares about the
country”, it was unlikely.
“I suppose there is some scenario where maybe she could be
convinced that this is the only way,” Power added. “But now that Biden has at
least a modest lead in some of the polls, I think she’ll be convinced probably
that there are other paths. I’m not sure anybody who has seen the presidency up
close would volunteer for it.”




