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Contact Tracing Trump: The President's Days Before Positive COVID Test

Looking at the president's recent travel and interactions is key to understanding the potential impacts of the most high-profile case of COVID-19 yet.

Contact Tracing Trump: The President's Days Before Positive COVID Test
Andrew Lawler / Newsy
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"The president is the most tested man in America," White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany told reporters July 21.

So how did he test positive for COVID-19?

As with any infection, looking at the president's recent travel and interactions — known as contact tracing — is a key step to understanding the potential impacts of the most high-profile case of COVID-19 yet.

"The number of people that potentially could be exposed and at risk of contracting the virus is significant here," said Anne Rimoin, a professor of epidemiology at UCLA's Fielding School of Public Health.

The incubation period for the novel coronavirus is thought to extend 14 days, with an average time of four to five days for people to start showing symptoms.

And five days before his positive test, President Trump announced his nominee for the Supreme Court, Amy Coney Barrett, in a Rose Garden ceremony. About 105 people were in attendance — and the event was not entirely outdoors. So far, 11 people who attended the ceremony have tested positive.

"When the event finished when they're all coming up and hugging and shaking hands and saying congratulations," said Erin Bromage, a professor of biology at UMass Dartmouth. "That's where if I was a betting person, I would be putting my money on where this occurred."

Later that day, the president traveled with White House staff to Pennsylvania for a campaign rally. Over 2,000 people were in attendance — and most were unmasked.

The next day, Sunday, the president held a press briefing at the White House, joined by Chris Christie, Rudy Giuliani and Kayleigh McEnany.

It’s Monday and three days before the president's positive test. The president takes part in two events at the White House — attended by members of Congress, Vice President Mike Pence and auto industry executives.

On Tuesday, the president travels to Cleveland for his first debate with Democratic nominee Joe Biden. Both men stand on stage about 10 feet apart. Notably, the president's adult children and his senior staff refuse to wear masks during the debate, in violation of the venue's rules. 

On Wednesday, the president travels to Minnesota for a fundraiser at a private home, then an outdoor rally attended by thousands.

Traveling with the president to and from Minnesota are White House staff, including Jared Kushner, Stephen Miller, Dan Scavino, and Trump's top aide Hope Hicks, who feels unwell on the trip back to Washington and isolates herself on Air Force One. 

The next day, Thursday, Hicks tests positive for COVID-19. While some White House staff choose not to travel, the president flies to his resort in New Jersey for a private fundraiser, shaking hands and posing for photographs there. (McEnany told reporters Friday that White House operations concluded "it was safe" for the president to travel to New Jersey for the fundraiser.)

The president confirms on Fox News and says he and the first lady are being tested.

"She tested positive, and I just went out with a test because we spend a lot of time, and the first lady just went out with a test also," the president said Thursday night in an interview with Fox News.

Early the next morning, he tweets the results of the tests: positive. 

In the fallout, other prominent figures who had contact with the president over the previous few days report their own same-day test results, including Kayleigh McEnany, Kellyanne Conway, Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien, Chris Christie, three Republican senators and RNC chairwoman Ronna McDaniel — all testing positive.

Vice President Mike PenceTreasury Secretary Steve MnuchinAttorney General William Barr, national security adviser Robert O’Brien, Education Secretary Betsy Devos, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, Defense Secretary Mark Esper, Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley, policy adviser Stephen Miller, Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett, White House aides Jared Kushner, Ivanka Trump, Dan Scavino, Mark Meadows, Trump campaign adviser Jason Miller and Rudy Giuliani — have since tested negative. Same with members of the first family, including Lara and Eric Trump; Donald Trump, Jr.; and Barron Trump.

But because tests often don't show infection until several days later, there's still a lot of uncertainty over who else in the president's inner circle or the highest levels of government could have been infected. And the impact on the election just a month away is only starting to take shape.