'Not a king': Trump gets pushback for total authority claim


Governors fight back after US president insists he 'calls the shots' in deciding measures against coronavirus outbreak


'Not a king': Trump gets pushback for total authority claim

US President Donald Trump has claimed he has "total" authority to decide how and when to reopen the economy after weeks of strict physical-distancing guidelines aimed at fighting the novel coronavirus.
But governors from both parties were quick to push back, noting they have primary responsibility for ensuring public safety in their states and would decide when it was safe to begin a return to normal operations.
Trump would not offer specifics about the source of his asserted power, which he claimed, despite constitutional limitations, was absolute.
"When somebody is president of the United States, the authority is total," Trump said on Monday at the White House. "The governors know that."
The comments came not long after the opposition Democratic leaders in the northeast and along the West Coast announced separate state agreements to coordinate their efforts to scale back stay-at-home orders or reopen businesses on their own timetables.

The US constitution gives public health and safety responsibilities primarily to state and local officials.

Also Read: White House: Trump is not firing top scientist Dr Anthony Fauci
The pandemic, which originated in China last December, has wreaked havoc in the US, which now has the highest number of coronavirus cases and deaths. More than 582,000 are infected and 23,649 people have died across the country.


Anxious to put the crisis behind him, Trump has been discussing with senior aides how to roll back federal social-distancing recommendations that expire at the end of the month.

'Joint effort'

While Trump has issued national recommendations advising people to stay home, it has been governors and local leaders who have instituted mandatory restrictions, including shuttering schools and closing non-essential businesses. Some of those orders carry fines or other penalties and in some jurisdictions extend into the early northern summer.
And governors made it clear on Monday they would not tolerate pressure to act before they deem it safe.
"All of these executive orders are state executive orders and so therefore, it would be up to the state and the governor to undo a lot of that," New Hampshire Republican Governor Chris Sununu said on CNN news organisation.
"The government doesn't get opened up via Twitter. It gets opened up at the state level," said Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat.
New York's Governor Andrew Cuomo, another Democrat, also dismissed Trump's "legal analysis".
"The president does not have total authority. We have a constitution, we don't have a king, we have an elected president," he told CNN. 

Mississippi Republican Governor Tate Reeves, a supporter of Trump, said the question of when to lift restrictions would be "a joint effort" between Washington and the states.
Meanwhile, governors were banding together, with New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Delaware and Rhode Island agreeing to coordinate their actions. The governors of California, Oregon and Washington announced a similar pact.
New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy, a Democrat, stressed the efforts would take time.
"The house is still on fire," Murphy said on a conference call with reporters. "We still have to put the fire out, but we do have to begin putting in the pieces of the puzzle that we know we're going to need ... to make sure this doesn't reignite."
Trump, however, insisted it was his decision to make.
"The president of the United States calls the shots," he said, promising to release a paper outlining his legal argument.
Trump's claim that he could force governors to reopen their states also represents a dramatic shift in tone. For weeks Trump has argued that states, not the federal government, should lead the response to the crisis.
"The President can informally put pressure on local/state governments. He can mess with emergency funding. And he can even order the federal workforce back to their offices. But largely because he's left so much to local authorities so far, this, too, is ultimately up to them," Stephen Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas, said on Twitter. 

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