President Trump announces plan to increase medical stockpile during visit to Lehigh Valley

WPVI logo
Friday, May 15, 2020
President Trump announces plan to increase medical stockpile during visit to Lehigh Valley
President Donald Trump visited the battleground state of Pennsylvania to tour a distribution center of medical and surgical products for healthcare facilities, including personal protective equipment in the fight against the coronavirus.

UPPER MACUNGIE, Pennsylvania (WPVI) -- President Donald Trump visited the battleground state of Pennsylvania to tour a distribution center of medical and surgical products for healthcare facilities, including personal protective equipment in the fight against the coronavirus.

Trump's visit Thursday is to a warehouse of Virginia-based Owens and Minor in suburban Allentown.

Inside, the president took about an hour tour of the facility that produces medical and surgical supplies.

He did not wear a mask while inside the facility.

RELATED: Share your coronavirus story with Action News

Trump did not take questions from the press. However, he did speak to the facility workers.

He thanked them for keeping the medical supply going.

"Every day you prove that American workers are truly the best in the world," Trump said.

But also pivoted his speech into what was a campaign-style event. He announced a new initiative to replenish the strategic national stockpile of medical equipment.

The emphasis of that is for most of it to be made here in the USA.

"The U.S. government will now stockpile three whole months, much of it made in the USA," Trump said.

As for the reason for a lack of equipment early on during the outbreak?

"Under the previous administration the stockpile was depleted," he said.

RELATED: Nominate a 6abc Hometown Hero

He also took a jab at Democratic Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf.

"You have to get your governor of Pennsylvania to start opening up a little bit. You have areas that are barely affected and they want to keep them closed," Trump said.

Though Governor Wolf has, in fact, done that. Restrictions have loosened in less affected parts of the state.

Trump also talked about testing.

"If you add up all of the countries in the world we've done more testing than all of the countries in the world added up together," Trump said.

And he pointed to mass testing as the reason why cases of the virus are so high here.

"We have more cases than anyone in the world, but why? Because we do more testing. When you test you have a case," he said.

In rebuttal to that, local Democratic Congressman Brendan Boyle said more testing is exactly what we need.

"If we had widespread testing and tracing right now, we would actually be able to open back up. We would be able to go back to our work, we would be able to go back on with our lives," Boyle said.

There were some protestors in the crowd, but most of the people there were supporters of the president.

It is Trump's second visit to Pennsylvania this year. Pennsylvania's 20 electoral votes are perhaps this year's premier electoral prize state after Trump's unexpected win in Pennsylvania in 2016 helped pave his way to the White House.

Trump did particularly well in the politically moderate Allentown area.

----

CASES

The Pennsylvania Department of Health confirmed 938 additional positive cases of COVID-19, bringing the statewide total to 59,636.

The state reported 4,218 total deaths, an increase from the 3,943 total deaths reported Wednesday.

Officials said there were 44 new deaths; 231 were reported as a result of a reconciliation of data over the past several weeks. This means the department added 275 total deaths to the data.

MORE COVID-19 COVERAGE

Some Pa. counties continue on path to defy governor's orders

CVS opening drive-thru COVID-19 testing sites around Philadelphia area on Friday

Warning on fake stimulus checks, phishing scams

Bill to allow cocktails to-go passes Pennsylvania Senate

Face masks and mandatory selfies for drivers: How Uber rides are about to change

Cats can infect other cats with coronavirus, researchers find

For more updates related to the coronavirus, visit 6abc.com/coronavirus.