The White House sought Monday to repair the frayed relationship with Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert, saying he and President Donald Trump continued to work well together despite recent public criticism levied by the president and White House officials.
"The notion there's opposition research, that there's Fauci vs. the president, couldn't be farther from the truth. Dr. Fauci and the president have always had a very good working relationship," White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany told reporters.
Over the weekend, White House officials circulated a dossier to reporters of guidance Fauci had made early in the pandemic that was subsequently reversed. And last week, Trump publicly criticized Fauci in a pair of television interviews.
But McEnany denied it was released to discredit Fauci. "We provided a direct response to a direct question, and that's about it."
"Dr. Fauci is a nice man, but he's made a lot of mistakes," Trump said in an interview Thursday with Fox News. The president said Fauci had opposed his decision to ban travel from China toward the beginning of the pandemic, a move the White House argues saved hundreds of thousands of lives.
Two days earlier, Trump said he disagreed with Fauci's assessment that the country was still "knee-deep" in the first wave of the pandemic.
'I Disagree With Him'
"I disagree with him," Trump told Gray Television. "Dr. Fauci said don't wear masks and now he says wear them."
Fauci has defended the advice that Americans forgo wearing masks early in the pandemic by saying the administration wanted to preserve supplies for health care workers on the front lines. And health officials long warned their advice for avoiding the spread of the disease would change as they gathered more information, he said.
"We were concerned. The public health community, and many people were saying this, were concerned that it was at a time when personal protective equipment, including the N95 masks and the surgical masks, were in very short supply," Fauci told TheStreet.
Fauci, known for his data-driven approach to managing the crisis, was from the start of the pandemic on a collision course with Trump, whose focus on blaming China for the pandemic and reopening the U.S. economy as quickly as possible overshadowed - and many times contradicted - messages from the nation's top public health officials.
In an interview published last weekend by the Financial Times, Fauci said he had not briefed the president in more than two months, and hadn't seen him in person at the White House since early June.
That separation has corresponded with a number of misstatements by the president, including his July 4 claim that 99% of coronavirus cases were "harmless." Fauci said he was "trying to figure out where the president got that number" but still insisted he was "sure" his messages were being received by the president.
Fauci has also openly clashed with some White House officials, including top trade adviser Peter Navarro, who has fanned the administration's promotion of the antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine to combat coronavirus.
Fauci and other government scientists warned that anecdotal reports about hydroxychloroquine were not supported by the data, and warned that taking the drug could result in serious side effects. The Food and Drug Administration cautioned against using the drug and discontinued a study of its effectiveness, citing health risks.
Sagging Polls
But Trump has openly championed it "" even opting to take hydroxychloroquine when a White House staffer contracted the disease.
"The idea that this is a dangerous drug - it's just silly," Navarro, an economist with no known medical training, told reporters Tuesday at the White House.
The president, always attuned to public opinion polls, has openly marveled at the high approval rating his health team has earned, even as judgment of his performance has soured. Just one-third of Americans approved of his handling of coronavirus, while two-thirds disapproved, according to an ABC News/Ipsos poll released Friday.
The same survey showed that 59% of Americans believed that the U.S. was reopening the economy too quickly "" a push that Trump has led and Fauci has resisted.
One administration official with knowledge of the relationship downplayed the friction, saying Fauci had not internally expressed alarm over the situation. The divergence boiled down to a president who was optimistic about the country's ability to emerge from the pandemic interacting with a health official fundamentally conservative in his approach, the person said.
Others within the president's orbit chalk up the disagreement to understandable frustration on Trump's part.
"I don't think we should necessarily focus on that personal reaction between the president and Dr. Fauci because again, these are real relationships, ordinary relationships and if you've been wrong a couple of times, it makes somebody wonder whether you're wrong again," former chief of staff Mick Mulvaney said in an interview with CNBC on Monday.