Key Events: WHO declares COVID-19 a global pandemic after it reaches at least 114 countries; nationwide lockdowns issued in countries including France, Italy, United Kingdom, and India; most U.S. states order nonessential businesses closed and issue shelter-in-place orders; Trump declares national emergency; U.S. officially takes global lead in confirmed cases.
Worldwide, as of March 31: 863,184 total recorded cases, 44,043 recorded deaths.
United States, as of March 31: 193,353 total recorded cases, 5,151 recorded deaths.
March 5: Trump told Fox town hall, “It's going to all work out.” During a Fox town hall, Trump praised his handling of the coronavirus, saying “that's why we have only, right now, 11 -- it's a lot of people, but it's still 11 people -- versus tremendous numbers of thousands of people that have died all over the world. We have 11.” He later added, “It's going to all work out. Everybody has to be calm. It's all going to work out.”
March 6: Trump said he was getting information about coronavirus from Fox -- as the network downplayed its lethality. During remarks from CDC headquarters in Atlanta, Trump said that he had been watching Fox for updates about the virus, telling reporters, “As of the time I left the plane with you, we had 240 cases -- that's at least what was on a very fine network known as Fox News.” Trump’s comment came during a period in which the network was aggressively minimizing the threat posed by the coronavirus in an effort to shield the president from political backlash. Fox hosts and personalities were arguing that the virus was, in the words of then-Fox Business host Regan, “yet another attempt to impeach the president,” and falsely claiming it was no more dangerous than the flu.
March 7: Fox host Carlson met with Trump and urged him to take the coronavirus more seriously. Tucker Carlson revealed in an interview that he had gone to Trump’s Mar-A-Lago resort and met with the president for two hours, warning him that coronavirus “could be really bad” and “may have missed the point where we can control it.” Trump frequently seeks advice from Fox hosts, and Carlson reportedly played a key role in U.S. foreign policy in 2019.
March 9: Carlson monologue on coronavirus was a “turning point” that reportedly caught Trump’s attention. On his first show after his meeting with Trump, Carlson said during his opening monologue, “People you know will get sick. Some may die. This is real. That’s the point of this script — to tell you that.” Without directly chastising the Trump administration or his colleagues, Carlson criticized people who “have spent weeks minimizing what is clearly a very serious problem,” including by suggesting it was partisan politics and just like the flu. The Washington Post reported that this was a “turning point” because “Carlson’s riff caught Trump’s attention and was one of the factors that led the president to start to reconsider his position” on the virus.
March 13-17: After Carlson meeting and show, Trump declared national emergency -- triggering sea change in other Fox coronavirus coverage. After Trump declared on March 13 that the coronavirus constituted a national emergency, Fox’s tone shifted sharply (albeit temporarily) to properly treat it as a “crisis.” “Until then,” The Washington Post reported, “Trump’s allies on Fox News were inclined to take the same stance that the president himself promoted for several weeks -- that this coronavirus that had sickened and killed thousands of people in China was no worse a threat than the seasonal flu.” On March 16, the White House issued its “15 Days to Slow the Spread” social distancing guidelines. The next day, Fox hosts began practicing social distancing on-air.
Mid-March: Polls showed Fox viewers were taking coronavirus less seriously, GOP pollster warned that its coverage endangered the base. Six different polls conducted in March found that Fox viewers were taking the coronavirus less seriously than people who got their news from other sources. Republican pollster Neil Newhouse reportedly warned GOP leaders in a mid-March memo that Fox’s coverage was endangering the lives of the party’s base by influencing them not to take steps to protect themselves from the virus.
March 19-20: Trump publicly touted antimalarial drugs after Fox hosts promoted them as a coronavirus treatment, leading to shortage. Chloroquine and its derivative hydroxychloroquine are drugs approved by the FDA to treat malaria, lupus, and arthritis that are being tested for their effectiveness in treating the coronavirus. Carlson and Ingraham ran segments on March 16 and 18 touting their purported benefits as a virus treatment, hosting lawyer Gregory Rigano, who cited small, flawed studies by a French microbiologist. Trump then became obsessed with the drugs. He repeatedly promoted them during press briefings on March 19 and 20, publicly contradicting his own top health officials, who warned that their effectiveness was unproven, that evidence was anecdotal, and that the drugs needed to be tested in clinical trials. The president’s promotion led to soaring demand for the drugs, causing a major shortage that made it more difficult for patients who take them for other conditions.
March 21: Live-tweeting Ingraham, Trump highlighted “game changer” treatment -- then asked advisers about it during an Oval Office meeting. Apparently responding to an Ingraham segment from the night before highlighting the results of a “small and hastily designed” French study, Trump tweeted: “HYDROXYCHLOROQUINE & AZITHROMYCIN, taken together, have a real chance to be one of the biggest game changers in the history of medicine.” He added that the drugs should “be put in use IMMEDIATELY. PEOPLE ARE DYING, MOVE FAST,” and tagged the Twitter handles of the Food and Drug Administration and CDC. He reportedly asked about the drug combination during a subsequent Oval Office meeting, forcing the head of the FDA to explain that it could cause heart toxicity.
March 21: Trump personally pressured health officials on antimalarials after Fox segments, leading to new CDC guidance on drugs as possible coronavirus treatment. According to Reuters, during March 21 conversations, Trump “personally instructed top officials at the Centers for Disease Control, the Food and Drug Administration and the National Institutes of Health to focus on the two drugs [chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine] as potential therapies.” Later that day, the CDC issued guidance to doctors proposing the drugs as coronavirus treatments, “the first time the federal government’s disease control agency had officially floated the idea.” Reuters noted that “Trump’s push for action came after” Fox News ran multiple segments about the benefits of the drugs.
March 22: Trump sends Fox live-tweet that “we cannot let the cure be worse than the problem itself,” kicking off his push for economic reopening. Fox host Steve Hilton argued against social distancing measures and stay-at-home orders on his March 22 Fox show, saying, “You know that famous phrase, ‘The cure is worse than the disease’? That is exactly the territory we’re hurtling towards.” A few hours later, Trump tweeted, “WE CANNOT LET THE CURE BE WORSE THAN THE PROBLEM ITSELF. AT THE END OF THE 15 DAY PERIOD, WE WILL MAKE A DECISION AS TO WHICH WAY WE WANT TO GO!” Leading Trump associates subsequently began signaling that it was time to focus energy on reopening the economy, not stopping the virus, an argument recklessly promoted by others on Fox.
March 24: In Fox interview, Trump pushes for Easter reopening of economy. During a Fox town hall in which the network’s anchors repeatedly failed to challenge his assertions, Trump indicated that he wanted the economy reopened by Easter. He explained: “Easter is a very special day for me. And I see it sort of in that timeline that I'm thinking about. And I say, wouldn't it be great to have all of the churches full?” As The New York Times reported, “Public health officials were horrified by Mr. Trump’s statement, which threatened to send many Americans back into the public square just as the peak of the virus was expected.” The president subsequently reversed himself and extended social distancing guidelines.
March 29: Following weeks of Fox promotion, FDA authorizes use of antimalarials to treat coronavirus. The FDA issued an emergency use authorization enabling doctors to prescribe chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine in certain cases as treatments for COVID-19. Fox had heavily promoted the drugs, doing so 146 times between March 23 and 29. The Washington Post reported that the decision “was widely seen as an effort to placate Trump,” who “kept hearing about the controversial anti-malarial drug on his favorite Fox News Channel programs.” Former FDA leaders criticized the move, stating that it could actually impede clinical trials, contribute to drug shortages, and undermine the FDA’s scientific authority.