Politics

Trump tests negative for the coronavirus on consecutive days, White House doctor says

Key Points
  • President Donald Trump tested negative for the coronavirus "on consecutive days," White House physician Dr. Sean Conley said Monday.
  • Trump's Covid-19 test status was revealed as the president headed to Florida for a campaign rally.
  • Trump is trailing Democratic nominee Joe Biden, who tested negative for the virus Monday, in many national presidential election polls.
President Trump is back on the campaign trail after testing negative for coronavirus
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President Trump is back on the campaign trail after testing negative for coronavirus

President Donald Trump has tested negative for the coronavirus "on consecutive days," a White House physician said Monday, the first disclosure that Trump has tested negative for the virus since he revealed his diagnosis earlier this month.

Dr. Sean Conley, in a brief memo shared hours before Trump was scheduled to host a reelection campaign rally in Florida, said that the president's latest Covid-19 results came from an antigen test from Abbott Laboratories.

But Conley's memo noted that a variety of laboratory data all show the virus is no longer active in the president's body.

"Repeatedly negative antigen tests, taken in context with additional clinical and laboratory data, including viral load, subgenomic RNA, and PCR cycle threshold measurements, as well as ongoing assessment of viral culture date, all indicate a lack of detectable viral replication," Conley wrote.

Conley's memo did not specify on which consecutive days Trump had tested negative. The White House did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment.

Since Trump announced on Oct. 2 that he and first lady Melania Trump tested positive for the virus, the White House has consistently refused to answer when asked when the president last tested negative before his positive diagnosis.

President Trump holds his first rally since contracting Covid-19 in Florida tonight
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President Trump holds his first rally since contracting Covid-19 in Florida tonight

Knowing when the president last tested negative could provide crucial information about when he was infected and by whom, as well as whom Trump may have exposed to the virus while he was contagious.

Trump, 74, had flown to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on the same day he shared his diagnosis. He stayed there for three days before returning to the White House, where he remained until Monday evening, when he boarded Air Force One for the outdoor rally in Sanford, Florida.

Since Trump tweeted out his positive diagnosis, numerous White House staffers and others who work there, including press secretary Kayleigh McEnany and multiple members of the press, have also tested positive for Covid-19.

Less than a week before his positive diagnosis, the president had gathered a large group of supporters at the White House for the announcement of his latest Supreme Court nominee, Judge Amy Coney Barrett. Multiple Republican lawmakers who attended that event, including Sens. Mike Lee of Utah and Thom Tillis of North Carolina and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, later tested positive.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told CBS News on Friday: "I think the data speaks for themselves. We had a super-spreader event in the White House."

The president has been eager to return to the campaign trail, where he has just over three weeks left before the election against Democratic nominee Joe Biden, who is currently leading Trump in the polls.

The former vice president, 77, tested negative for the coronavirus earlier Monday.

Trump has been criticized for holding in-person campaign rallies, a signature component of his winning 2016 campaign. Leading health experts, including those in his own administration, have said the gatherings are unsafe during the pandemic because of the heightened risk of transmission of the virus.

"We know that that is asking for trouble," Fauci said in a CNN interview on Monday afternoon when asked about the public-health risks of the rallies.

Trump has long downplayed the threat of the virus and pressured state leaders to lift their strict social distancing restrictions, in part to revive the U.S. economy.

Despite the U.S. holding the world-record death toll from Covid-19 — more than 214,000 deaths — and a recent uptick in the number of cases being reported daily, Trump has continued to push for "reopening" the country.

"Lockdowns are killing countries all over the world," Trump tweeted Monday evening before the rally. "The cure cannot be worse than the problem itself. Open up your states, Democrat governors. Open up New York. A long battle, but they finally did the right thing!"