From the AP:
“Melania Trump is having a moment
during coronavirus pandemic”
Melania Trump is having a moment
in the midst of a pandemic. After catching some criticism for not mentioning
the coronavirus in a March speech to a parent-teacher group, the first lady has
increased her engagement on the issue, mostly through social media since she is
staying home like most Americans. This week, she posted a photo of herself
wearing a white face mask — something her husband, President Donald Trump, has
said he will not do. It was her way of reinforcing the Center for Disease
Control and Prevention’s recommendation that everyone cover their nose and
mouth in public. “It is another recommended guideline to keep us safe,” she
said in a video released Thursday. Like everyone else, the first lady is
retooling her spring plans because of the virus threat. Before the pandemic
shut down activity in the U.S., she was preparing for the annual Easter Egg
Roll, once set for Monday. She also was planning an April state dinner for
Spain’s king and queen, now postponed. Her debut as a fundraiser for her
husband’s reelection campaign was nixed, as was her annual spring break week
with son Barron at the family’s Mar-a-Lago private club in Palm Beach, Florida.
Instead, she's been burning up the
long-distance phone lines checking in with her counterparts in U.S.-allied
countries that also are struggling to control the virus, including Spain,
Canada, France, Italy and Japan. Canada's Sophie Grégroire recently recovered
from the disease. The first lady is also using her social media accounts to
provide a steady stream of guidance and tips for coping under stay-at-home
orders, including reposting CDC guidance about frequent hand-washing, keeping a
social distance from others and other suggestions for avoiding infection. She
has thanked medical professionals, urged blood donation, suggested email and
FaceTime as alternatives for keeping in touch with friends and family, and
shared resources from Scholastic for the millions of K-12 students now learning
online at home because their schools are closed. “I encourage parents to let
children know this will not last forever,” the first lady said in one video
message. She also has shared links to sites where astronauts on the
International Space Station read story books to children, pointed to where
Washington's cherry blossoms could be seen on a video feed and where people can
amuse themselves on virtual tours of the 132-room White House. Like students
around the country, 14-year-old Barron, an eighth-grader, is at home keeping up
with school online but missing playing his favorite sport, soccer. “He's happy,
but he's not as happy as you could be. He'd like to be playing sports,” the
president said.
Last month, Melania Trump
generated an online backlash after she posted photos of herself in a hard hat
overseeing construction of a tennis pavilion on the south grounds of the White
House. Critics deemed the pics insensitive during the global scare over the new
coronavirus. She pushed back by tweeting at the naysayers to “contribute
something good & productive in their own communities.” She signed off with
the hashtag for “Be Best,” her program to teach online civility to children. If
Trump is a wartime president, Melania Trump is now a wartime first lady, and
that means she has to figure out how to contribute to the effort, said Anita
McBride, who was chief of staff to first lady Laura Bush. Mrs. Bush became a
champion for women's rights in Afghanistan after the U.S. went to war there.
Her appearance before the Senate education committee on Sept. 11, 2001 was
scuttled after the attack on the World Trade Center. Eleanor Roosevelt visited
war zones during World War II. “These are things that are thrust upon you,”
McBride said in an interview. “You're not planning for how you're going to be
the cheerleader for the recovery from a pandemic.” McBride would like to see
Mrs. Trump do something for children, like an online story time, since many are
home and cut off from school, friends and group sports. “She's great at
connecting with kids and they could really use her presence right now,” McBride
said. Myra Gutin, a first lady scholar at Rider University, wondered whether
Melania Trump would visit hospitals in places considered “hot spots” once the
situation improves and travel restrictions are lifted. The first lady visits
hospitals in the U.S. and abroad for her youth initiative. Gutin said Melania
Trump is doing what she can under the circumstances. “Everyone was waiting to
see how things shook out, how the situation evolved,” Gutin said.
^ It’s good to see the First Lady
following the CDC’s advice (even if her husband refused to) as well as doing
what she can to encourage people to stay connected even while apart. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/melania-trump-having-moment-during-180842525.html
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