President Donald Trump said the United States is “rounding the turn” on the CCP virus pandemic, as he addressed a crowd during a campaign rally on Oct. 25 in New Hampshire.
“We are coming around, we’re rounding the turn. We have the vaccines, we have everything. Even without the vaccines, we’re rounding the turn,” Trump told at an airport rally in Manchester. “It’s going to be over.”
“There’s no nation in the world that’s recovered like we’ve recovered,” Trump said. “Our numbers are incredible.”
“We’re about to go into a dark winter, a dark winter, and he has no clear plan. And there’s no prospect that there’s going to be a vaccine available for the majority of the American people before the middle of next year,” Biden said during the Oct. 22 debate.
Trump rejected the notion that his administration has no plan to fight the outbreak of the CCP virus and pushed back against Biden’s claim that things would get worse.
“I don’t think we’re going to have a dark winter at all,” Trump replied. “We’re opening up our country. We’ve learned and studied and understand the disease, which we didn’t at the beginning.”
“It’s going to be announced within weeks. And it’s going to be delivered. We have Operation Warp Speed, which is the military is going to distribute the vaccine,” Trump said, referring to the administration’s program to fund the manufacturing of COVID-19 vaccine and therapeutic candidates ahead of time, in case they’re approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
“More and more people are getting better,” Trump said. “This is a worldwide problem, but I’ve been congratulated by the heads of many countries on what we’ve been able to do. If you take a look at what we’ve done in terms of goggles and masks and gowns and everything else, and, in particular, ventilators—we’re now making ventilators all over the world, thousands and thousands a month, distributing them all over the world.
“It will go away. And as I say, we’re rounding the turn. We’re rounding the corner. It’s going away,” Trump said Oct. 22.
Although a number of COVID-19 vaccines are being developed, none have yet been approved for use in the United States. AstraZeneca has resumed the U.S. trial of its experimental COVID-19 vaccine, and Johnson & Johnson is preparing to resume its trial, both following pauses because of potential safety concerns.
Both companies have contracts to provide vaccines to the United States and other governments if they are cleared by regulators.
AstraZeneca said that it isn’t unusual for some trial participants to fall ill during large-scale vaccine trials but that the U.S. FDA has reviewed all safety data from the trials globally and deemed it safe to continue testing the vaccine.