Donald Trump 'looks like the Lone Ranger' in a mask and likes it

The US president has been reluctant to wear a face mask in public but says others should 'if people feel good about it'

US President Donald Trump says he likes wearing a mask that makes him look like the Lone Ranger, left. Getty and Reuters 
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After long resisting wearing a mask in public, President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that he thought it made him look like the Lone Ranger – and he liked it.

The US president said he had no problem covering his face and that others should too “if people feel good about it.”

“I’m all for masks. I think masks are good,” Mr Trump told Fox Business on Wednesday. “People have seen me wearing one.”

Mr Trump’s comments came a day after Republican legislators suggested that he wear a mask in public to set a good example for Americans.

“If I were in a tight situation with people, I would absolutely,” Mr Trump said.

The president has long resisted being photographed in a mask. In early April, the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention recommended that people wear cloth face coverings in public places where other social-distancing measures were difficult to maintain.

The president immediately undercut the CDC guidance by flatly stating that he wouldn’t be following it, suggesting it would be unseemly for the commander in chief to wear a mask as he meets with heads of state.

On Wednesday, he sounded a different tone, saying, “I had a mask on. I sort of liked the way I looked. OK. I thought it was OK. It was a dark black mask, and I thought it looked OK.

“It looked like the Lone Ranger,” he continued, a reference to the fictional law-and-order character from the American Old West who wore a black eye mask. “I have no problem with that, and if people feel good about it, they should do it.”

In recent days, many Republicans and members of the White House coronavirus task force have been saying Americans must wear face masks in public places as infections have surged in large territories of the South and West.

The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, said last week that he would pursue a federal mask mandate, if elected. Mr Trump suggested a federal mandate was unnecessary and continued to frame mask-wearing as a matter of choice.

Even so, Mr Trump criticised Mr Biden for wearing a mask while he is some distance away from his audience and for speaking through the covering at times.

“When there’s nobody around, I don’t see any reason to be wearing it,” Mr Trump said in a separate interview on Wednesday on “America This Week.”

About the virus, Mr Trump continued to characterise it as a nuisance that he hopes will just go away.

“I think we are going to be very good with the coronavirus. I think that, at some point, that’s going to sort of just disappear, I hope,” Mr Trump said on Fox Business.

White House senior adviser Kellyanne Conway said  on Wednesday that Mr Trump was regularly tested for the coronavirus, as were his aides. White House visitors and members of the media who are in close proximity to him and Vice President Mike Pence are also tested.

Six months of coronavirus: facts and figures

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“I’ve said wear them, the first lady has said wear them, the president’s administration has said wear them,” Ms Conway said.

Mr Trump also told Fox Business that people had seen him wearing a mask. But only one image has surfaced of the president wearing a mask. He donned it for a behind-the-scenes tour of a Ford centre in Michigan in May. Reporters were not allowed to accompany Mr Trump on the tour.

Afterwards, he told reporters he had worn a mask in a “back area” only because “I didn’t want to give the press the pleasure of seeing it.”

Other world leaders, including Canada’s Justin Trudeau and France’s Emmanuel Macron, have worn masks in public to encourage their use.

Mr Trump on Wednesday also continued to push back against the notion that some states may have been too quick to reopen. Several states, including Florida, New York and Texas, have paused or slowed down reopening amid the recent increase in confirmed cases.

Mr Trump suggested Democrats are hyping concerns about the surge to politically damage him.

“I think the Democrats would like to see the country stay closed as long as possible because they figure that’s probably good for the election, because it would be bad a little bit for jobs, and maybe a lot for jobs,” Mr Trump said.