Top Trump Administration Officials Disagree on Whether the CDC’s COVID-19 Response ‘Let the Country Down’

Does the Trump Administration believe the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) let the country down with its coronavirus response? It depends on who you ask.

The CDC has faced mounting criticism during the pandemic for first delivering a test that failed to accurately detect the novel coronavirus, and then for the speed at which it ramped up its national testing capabilities.

On Sunday morning, White House Advisor Peter Navarro said, “early on in this crisis, the CDC, which really had the most trusted brand around the world in this space, really let the country down with the testing,” while Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar suggested the opposite.

Navarro told Meet the Press host Chuck Todd, “Not only did (the CDC) keep the testing within the bureaucracy, they had a bad test and that did set us back.”

WATCH: @chucktodd asks WH Adviser Peter Navarro: “Does the president have confidence in the CDC?” #MTP @PeterNavarro45 : “You should ask the president that question, not me. … The CDC, which really had the most trusted brand … really let the country down with the testing.” pic.twitter.com/GSE99pXJun

— Meet the Press (@MeetThePress) May 17, 2020

Later in the morning, host of CBS’ Face the Nation Margaret Brennan asked Azar, “Your colleague Peter Navarro has said that the CDC let the country down. Given the CDC reports up to you, do you take responsibility for that?”

“I don’t believe the CDC let this country down,” Azar said. “I believe the CDC serves an important public health role and what was always critical was to get the private sector to the table.”

“I don’t believe the CDC let the people down” @HHSGov ’s @SecAzar tells @margbrennan when pressed over the @CDCgov ’s early missteps in tackling the #coronavirus pandemic. pic.twitter.com/WSXwwT48pl

— Face The Nation (@FaceTheNation) May 17, 2020

Azar said the coronavirus pandemic created a completely unprecedented challenge.

“There has never been a national immediate testing regime across public and private sectors. We have had to literally build this from the ground up,” Azar said, adding that the CDC’s role is to develop tests that health labs will conduct for an initial diagnosis “but then we count on the private sector actually to scale up” large test capacities and “that’s what we’ve done in historic time.”