- Trump lashed out at his former chief of staff over his claim that Trump tested positive for COVID-19 prior to his first debate.
- Mark Meadows revealed in his forthcoming memoir that Trump tested positive on September 26.
- "The story of me having COVID prior to, or during, the first debate is Fake News," Trump wrote in a statement.
Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday lashed out at his former chief of staff, Mark Meadows, over his claim that Trump tested positive for COVID-19 prior to his first debate with Joe Biden.
Meadows revealed in his forthcoming memoir that Trump tested positive on September 26, three days before the indoor, in-person presidential debate, and later tested negative. Trump didn't dispute Meadows' claim that he tested positive.
"The story of me having COVID prior to, or during, the first debate is Fake News," Trump wrote in a statement. "In fact, a test revealed that I did not have COVID prior to the debate."
The revelation was first reported by The Guardian, which obtained a copy of Meadows' book, The Chief's Chief. Trump announced that he and then-First Lady Melania Trump both were infected with COVID-19 on October 2, three days after the debate.
Meadows, who doesn't curse, writes that Trump responded to the news that he had tested positive with expletives: "'Oh spit, you've gotta be trucking lidding me,'" Meadows writes.
Meadows writes that Trump's doctor, Sean Conley, instructed the former president's team to stop him from traveling to a campaign rally in Middletown, Pennsylvania shortly after he tested positive. But Trump refused to cancel his plans and traveled with his team and a group of reporters to the rally. Instead of protecting others from being infected by him, he talked to reporters on Air Force One without a mask on. Shortly after receiving the news of his positive test, Trump Instead of protecting others from being infected
"Nothing was going to stop [Trump] from going out there," Meadows writes, according to the Guardian.
Meadows doesn't say whether the president took another test to confirm his negative result before the debate.
"I didn't want to take any unnecessary risks," Meadows writes, "but I also didn't want to alarm the public if there was nothing to worry about – which according to the new, much more accurate test, there was not."
Fox News host Chris Wallace said Trump arrived too late at the presidential debate to get a coronavirus test. The debate organizers instead relied on an honor system. Trump's family members controversially refused to wear masks while sitting in the audience at the indoor debate venue in Cleveland.