Donald Trump is back at campaigning. US President Donald Trump turned to campaign with a speech from the White House on Saturday, saying he was “feeling great” and the Covid-19 pandemic was “disappearing”. He is programmed to address a rally in Florida on Monday, and in Pennsylvania and Iowa later in the week. His Democratic competitor Joe Biden was in Pennsylvania for the 11th time, soliciting the battleground state that will play an important role in deciding the election.
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Trump was no longer a synchromesh risk to others, his physician Sean Conley announced in a statement, adding the president had been without fever for 24 hours, all his symptoms had improved and there was no “longer evidence of actively replicating virus” in his body. “First of all, I’m feeling great. I don’t know about you. How’s everyone feeling? Good?” Trump said from a White House balcony facing his supporters who stood around below. He went on to declare the pandemic was disappearing and vaccines and therapeutics were on their way.
Doctor in the White House gave this statement regarding US Prez's health
Termed as a “peaceful protest in support of law and order,” the event marked the resumption of campaigning by the president a break forced by his illness. “We’re starting very, very big with our rallies…because we cannot allow our country to become a socialist nation,” Trump said. Trump trails Biden by 9.6 points in the RealClearPolitics average of national polls and by 10.1 points in FiveThirtyEight’s weighted average of national polls. The gap is narrower in battleground states, which eventually determine the outcome in presidential elections because of the electoral college.