The following editorial originally appeared in the Los Angeles Times:
One of President Donald Trump’s smartest moves in response to the COVID-19 pandemic was naming Dr. Anthony Fauci to the White House’s coronavirus task force. The head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Fauci is a public health hero who has led the agency through six presidents and won’t bend the facts or deny science to appease egos.
He didn’t do it when he warned President Ronald Reagan that HIV was a serious public health threat that required fast federal action. And he’s not doing it now as he stands with Trump at regular task-force briefings, sometimes contradicting or correcting the misleading information coming from his commander in chief.
In a meeting with pharmaceutical officials earlier this month, Trump repeatedly insisted he was hearing that a coronavirus vaccine would be ready in just a few months. Finally, Fauci stepped in. “Would you make sure you get the president the information that a vaccine that you make and start testing in a year is not a vaccine that’s deployable,” he said to the pharmaceutical executives. “And that is going to be, at the earliest, a year to a year and a half, no matter how fast you go.”
More recently, Fauci has poured cold water on Trump’s enthusiasm for the potential of an anti-malaria drug, chloroquine, to treat COVID-19 patients. As Fauci has pointed out, the evidence of the medicine’s ability to safely and effectively treat COVID-19 patients is still just anecdotal.