Fauci is receiving threats, hate mail — so disease expert has security detail, he says
Dr. Anthony Fauci said he has been given personal security after he and his family received hate mail and threats.
The backlash toward the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases compares to what he saw while advancing HIV/AIDS research in the 1980s and 90s, he said on CNN’s “The Axe Files” podcast.
Fauci, an infectious disease expert who has appeared alongside Donald Trump as a member of the White House coronavirus task force, has been a frequent target during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“The kind of, not only hate mail, but also serious actual threats, are not good,” he told the podcast’s host, David Axelrod, who was the chief strategist for former President Obama’s presidential campaigns. “I don’t see how society does that.
“It’s tough. Serious threats against me, against my family, my daughters, my wife — I mean, really?” he continued. “Is this the United States of America? But it’s real.”
Trump told Fox News’ Chris Wallace last week that, despite a growing number of coronavirus cases in the United States, Fauci is “a little bit of an alarmist,” according to The Hill. Trump added that Fauci has “made some mistakes” in his approach to the pandemic.
Fauci has become a frequent target of some congressional Republicans and those in the White House.
Peter Navarro, White House trade advisor, accused Fauci of being “wrong about everything” in an opinion piece published in USA Today. U.S. Rep. Andy Biggs, a Republican from Arizona, said Trump should get rid of Fauci because he is “undermining” the president on the pandemic, The Hill reported. News outlets including NBC and CNN reported that U.S. Rep Liz Cheney, a Republican from Wyoming, was criticized during a closed-door meeting of House Republicans for her public support of Fauci.
Cheney later called the closed-door discussion “a healthy exchange of views,” CNN reported.
Earlier this month, Fauci said he hadn’t seen Trump in person since June 2 and had not briefed him in at least two months, USA Today reported. Trump and the White House resumed their coronavirus press briefings on Tuesday without Fauci, who said he was not made aware of the plans or invited to join them.
Attacks made against Fauci reflect “the divisiveness of our society at a political level,” he said on CNN’s podcast.
While he received hate mail while battling the HIV/AIDS crisis, it was not as threatening as what he has received this year, he said.
“I’ve seen a side of society that I guess is understandable, but it’s a little bit disturbing,” he said. “Back in the day of HIV when I was being criticized with some hate mail, it was, you know, people calling me a gay-lover and ‘why the hell are you wasting a lot of time on that?’ I mean, things that you would just push aside as being stupid people saying stupid things.”
“As much as people — inappropriately, I think — make me somewhat of a hero, which I’m not a hero, I’m just doing my job,” he later said regarding current criticism. “People get very angry at thinking I’m interfering with their life because I’m pushing a public health agenda.”
https://www.sacbee.com/news/coronavirus/article244460877.html