Ten minutes at the teleprompter: Inside Trump's failed attempt to calm coronavirus fears
Washington Post
In the most scripted of presidential settings, a prime-time televised address to the nation, President Trump decided to ad-lib and his errors triggered a market meltdown, panicked travelers overseas and crystallized for his critics just how dangerously he has fumbled his management of the coronavirus.
Even Trump a man practically allergic to admitting mistakes knew hed screwed up by declaring Wednesday night that his ban on travel from Europe would include cargo and trade, and acknowledged as much to aides in the Oval Office as soon as hed finished speaking, according to one senior administration official and a second person, both with knowledge of the episode.
Jared Kushner, his son-in-law and senior adviser who has seized control over some aspects of the governments coronavirus response, reassured Trump that aides would correct his misstatement, four administration officials said, and they scrambled to do just that. The president also told staffers to make sure other countries did not believe trade would be affected, and even sent a cleanup tweet of his own: The restriction stops people not goods, he wrote.
Other administration officials rushed to alert the public that U.S. citizens would be exempt from the travel ban, after scores of Americans, upon digesting Trumps speech, phoned government offices and raced to airports in Europe out of concern that they would not be able to fly home.