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CNN's Jake Tapper to Trump: 'What is the plan for a way out of this?'

To end Sunday's "State of the Union" on CNN, anchor Jake Tapper took a few moments to ask President Donald Trump directly if he had answers to questions surrounding the coronavirus pandemic. Below is a full transcript of Tapper's remarks:

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By
Jake Tapper, Anchor
and
Chief Washington Correspondent
CNN — To end Sunday's "State of the Union" on CNN, anchor Jake Tapper took a few moments to ask President Donald Trump directly if he had answers to questions surrounding the coronavirus pandemic. Below is a full transcript of Tapper's remarks:

President Trump is taking questions from reporters nearly every day, but that does not mean he's answering them. The President continually responds to urgent questions from the media about the coronavirus pandemic by attacking the journalists asking the questions, no matter how relevant or vital.

"You're a third-rate reporter. And what you just said is a disgrace," Trump said on Monday.

"That was a nasty question from CNN," Trump said on April 4.

"You're just incapable of asking a question in a positive way," Trump said on Monday.

You heard that right. Amid a global pandemic and tens of thousands of infected and dead Americans, the President is upset that journalists are not asking questions in a positive way and are instead asking him challenging questions, questions he clearly does not want to answer, questions that he does not want you to think about, such as the April 6 HHS inspector general report that surveyed 323 US hospitals that lacked enough testing equipment, to say nothing of PPE, masks, ICU beds, or more, asked about by FOX News' Kristin Fisher.

"I know you don't want to talk about the inspector general report, but testing is still a big issue in this country," Fisher said.

"We're the federal government. We're not supposed to stand on street corners doing testing," Trump said on Monday. "You should say, 'Congratulations, great job,' instead of being so horrid in the way you ask a question."

There's nothing horrid about the question. Mr. President, on March 6, you visited the CDC, and you said anyone who wants a test can get a test. That was not true then. It remains untrue today.

Any responsible path out of this situation requires much more widespread testing than the US is doing right now. What is the plan to ramp it up even more, sir? How many more Americans will be tested? And by when? Then there's this question from CBS' Weijia Jiang.

"Yesterday Jared Kushner said the notion of the federal stockpile was it's supposed to be our stockpile. It's not supposed to be state stockpiles that they then use. What did he mean by 'our'?" Jiang said.

The President responded by calling that a gotcha question. It's not. And saying that the reporter should be ashamed of herself. She shouldn't.

But, Mr. President, the American people want to know, what responsibility do you believe the federal government has when it comes to aiding states with supplies from the federal stockpile? Colorado's Democratic governor said that FEMA had swooped in and grabbed ventilators that his state was trying to get, and then days later, you announced that you were giving ventilators to Colorado because of the efforts of a vulnerable Republican senator from that state.

What do you and Jared Kushner mean when you say "our" stockpile? What is the plan with the stockpile? Then there's this question from McClatchy's Francesca Chambers.

"The Paycheck Protection Program has got off to a confusing start for some small businesses --," Chambers said.

"I don't think so," Trump said.

Trump interrupted to disagree and criticized Chambers for not asking him a -- quote -- "positive question," about how the program had gotten off to a -- quote -- "tremendous start." Look, Mr. President, everyone wants this program to work, but the fact remains, that there are issues with the Paycheck Protection Program.

How are those kinks being fixed? What is the plan? Attacking journalists who ask questions does not make those questions go away. It only reveals that you might not have the answers.

Again, sir, respectfully, what is the plan for a way out of this? Do you have one?

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