Coronavirus Has Trump Well being Secretary in Bother

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Coronavirus Has Trump Well being Secretary in Bother

WASHINGTON — Two of President Trump’s high well being officers had been stewing in a colorless room on the Facilities for Illness Management and Pr


WASHINGTON — Two of President Trump’s high well being officers had been stewing in a colorless room on the Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention in Atlanta early final month as Mr. Trump and his well being secretary, Alex M. Azar II, had been concluding a laboratory tour, one which that they had been left off.

One of many officers, Dr. Jerome M. Adams, the surgeon normal, was then invited to affix the president and the secretary to shake arms. The opposite, Seema Verma, who heads the Facilities for Medicare and Medicaid Companies, was not. As an alternative, a employees member instructed the highly effective Medicare chief to go to the receiving line with the rank-and-file. Livid, she left for the airport to catch a business flight residence to Washington.

The episode from March 6, described by senior administration officers who believed Mr. Azar was behind the snub, illustrated to them why Mr. Azar’s future as secretary of well being and human companies is a continuing query, at the same time as his sprawling division battles the worst public well being disaster in a century. The place Mr. Azar goes, private conflicts appear to observe, senior administration officers say. Officers on the Division of Well being and Human Companies disputed that notion.

The division’s newly put in spokesman, Michael R. Caputo, dismissed such discuss as irrelevant.

“I can let you know that the American folks need data they’ll use to struggle the coronavirus, not palace intrigue,” he stated.

However even earlier than the coronavirus pandemic, senior White Home officers had grown deeply annoyed with Mr. Azar and his administration of the division.

Now, Mr. Azar finds himself more and more sidelined by the president and his advisers, who blame the secretary for early failures on testing and for what they describe as inconsistent stewardship of the coronavirus activity power in its first month.

“These are all arguably people who theoretically report to him, work for him, but like everything else, that has been upended in this administration, where it isn’t very clear if cabinet secretaries are choosing or even co-choosing their top political appointees,” said Kathleen Sebelius, a health and human services secretary under President Barack Obama. “I don’t have any idea how you operate in that environment when you’re excluded from meetings with your agency.”

Aides to Mr. Azar say he remains fully in charge of his department and is an integral part of the administration’s response to the virus. White House officials continue to dismiss questions about his status.

“Even with the president’s tweet on Sunday flatly denying rumors that Secretary Azar is on his way out or that he is doing anything other than an excellent job, the media is still focused on outrageous claims of palace intrigue that are only meant to distract the American people from the Trump administration’s bold leadership in response to this pandemic,” Judd Deere, a White House spokesman, said.

But the monthslong coronavirus crisis has exacerbated deep and longstanding divisions between Mr. Azar, a former pharmaceutical executive, and political officials in other parts of the administration, including some of those closest to Mr. Trump in the White House.

Mr. Azar’s allies say he was among the only people who tried to alert the West Wing to a looming public health crisis in January and early February. They note that some officials accused Mr. Azar of being “an alarmist” for his repeated warnings about the coronavirus at a time when Mr. Trump was publicly playing down the threat.

But others have said Mr. Azar was not clear enough with Mr. Trump about the magnitude of the threat. Several aides to the president said that Mr. Azar was so focused on keeping his job and preserving his standing in the White House that he gave conflicting information — dire one day, optimistic the next — that ended up confusing Mr. Trump and his senior advisers.

The incident at the C.D.C. headquarters has also reverberated with White House and health officials, some of whom saw it as an example of Mr. Azar’s pettiness. Ms. Verma had made a special effort to get to Atlanta, after traveling the day before with Mr. Pence, catching up to the president after his tour had been canceled, then abruptly put back on his schedule.

But she was left off the president’s tour, which unfolded on national television. Mr. Azar stood with Mr. Trump, who wore a red “Keep America Great” hat produced by his re-election campaign, and Dr. Robert R. Redfield, the director of the C.D.C., for almost an hour as the president extolled his administration’s work, while Ms. Verma and Dr. Adams were nowhere to be seen. To then be told to join a receiving line with other guests waiting to shake Mr. Azar’s hand infuriated Ms. Verma.

One senior administration official, who asked not to be identified in order to discuss the events, insisted that Mr. Azar had no knowledge of the staging of the C.D.C. event, and that it was dictated by White House advance officials.

Mr. Azar remains a member of the primary coronavirus task force and continues to be an active participant in the group’s meetings, though for weeks he has not appeared regularly alongside the president or vice president during the daily news conferences held afterward. In recent weeks, Mr. Azar has also made fewer national media appearances, which are coordinated through Mr. Pence’s office.

He has also been missing from the “operational check-ins” held before the task force’s meetings where officials organize and prepare. The gatherings in the Roosevelt Room are led by Mr. Grogan and include the heads of the key health agencies within Health and Human Services, including the C.D.C., the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the Food and Drug Administration.

Mr. Grogan has told associates that he purposefully excluded Mr. Azar, according to one senior administration official.

Mr. Azar is not a part of the regular meetings of a group of the administration’s senior health officials with medical degrees, including Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the federal government’s top infectious disease expert, and Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the White House’s coronavirus response coordinator.

“If you don’t have the health secretary as the lead, it’s very unclear who is the lead,” Ms. Sebelius said.

The recent tensions have prompted White House officials, including Mark Meadows, the new chief of staff, to discuss possible replacements for Mr. Azar once the coronavirus crisis stabilizes, according to senior administration officials. Among the names discussed have been Ms. Verma, Dr. Birx and Dr. John C. Fleming, a former House Republican and H.H.S. official who is now an aide to Mr. Meadows.

But some of Mr. Trump’s aides cautioned that advisers had gotten ahead of themselves by putting out word that Mr. Azar could be replaced in the coming weeks. Senior administration officials say the president will most likely wait until the summer to make a change, once the immediate crisis has diminished, if he makes one at all before the election.

Mr. Azar has told several administration officials that he wants to leave his post on his own terms.

But if Mr. Azar is removed, it will not just be the result of concerns about the administration’s response to the coronavirus. Mr. Grogan fought regularly with Mr. Azar over efforts to lower prescription drug prices, an issue Mr. Trump sees as central to his health agenda.

Mr. Trump also blamed Mr. Azar for aggressively pushing for a partial ban on flavored e-cigarettes, a decision the president made in January and then quickly regretted, advisers said. He berated Mr. Azar about it in a call on Jan. 16 in front of his political advisers.



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