WASHINGTON, May 27 — New York Governor Andrew Cuomo will press President Donald Trump to invest in the nation’s roads, bridges and rails during a White House meeting today as US states begin to reopen after the coronavirus outbreak left the economy in tatters.
Cuomo’s visit to Washington comes as his hard-hit state begins to see drops in rates of hospitalisations and deaths, while other states relax lockdowns and partygoers flout precautions aimed at curtailing the novel coronavirus.
Twenty US states reported an increase in new cases for the week ended Sunday as the death toll nears 100,000, according to a Reuters analysis. Florida reported a nearly 6 per cent increase, while New York registered a double-digit decline.
Businesses across the country are opening doors after shuttering in mid-March as states and local governments took drastic measures to slow the spread of Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, almost bringing the country to a halt. The economy contracted at its steepest pace since the Great Recession in the first quarter and lost at least 21.4 million jobs in March and April.
With a focus on infrastructure as a way to revive the economy, Cuomo, a Democrat, will hit a topic close to Trump. The Republican president has long embraced the idea of updating the country’s infrastructure.
Cuomo, who has sparred with Trump over the federal government’s pandemic response, wants to revive the economy by undertaking major transport and other projects. He told reporters yesterday he would discuss a federal role in investments to modernise the nation’s bridges, roads and rail systems.
"This is one of the things I want to talk to the president about ... You want to reopen the economy. Let’s do something creative, let’s do it fast, let’s put Americans back to work,” Cuomo said.
Trump has said he believed infrastructure spending could help the economy recover from the pandemic, embracing a massive US$2 trillion plan at the end of March. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said in April that legislation was separate from coronavirus spending and would have to wait.
States have sought more help from the federal government to get through the crisis. Democrats who control the House of Representatives passed legislation on May 15 that would provide nearly US$1 trillion for state and local governments, but the bill was rejected by Trump and Republican leaders of the US Senate.
The Memorial Day holiday weekend saw Americans flock to beaches and lakes in large groups even as US health experts warned that reopening too quickly could trigger outbreaks of Covid-19.
Dr Anthony Fauci, a top infectious disease expert on the White House coronavirus task force, said the Memorial Day weekend scenes of unmasked revelers gathering in large groups was disturbing.
"That’s very troubling because that’s inviting there to be an issue,” he told CNN today.
He said a second wave of infections was not inevitable if people adhered to recommendations to minimise exposure to the virus, including effective identification, isolation and contact tracing. — Reuters
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