With just a month to go until the election, President Donald Trump had a busy schedule during the week the coronavirus hit home. Trump tweeted early Friday that he and first lady Melania Trump had tested positive for the coronavirus. Both the president and the first lady are experiencing "mild symptoms."
Friday, Sept. 25 - Washington, D.C.
-- Ronna McDaniel, the chairwoman of the Republican National Committee, spends time with Trump, according to The New York Times. She later tests positive for Covid-19 on Wednesday.
"After a member of her family tested positive for COVID-19, the Chairwoman was tested for the virus," an RNC spokesperson says in a statement on Friday. "On Wednesday afternoon, she got confirmation she was COVID-19 positive. She has been at her home in Michigan since last Saturday.”
Saturday, Sept. 26 - Washington, D.C.
-- Trump formally announces his nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court, Judge Amy Coney Barrett, at an event that is held outdoors in the Rose Garden but at which numerous attendees do not wear masks. Utah Sen. Mike Lee, a Republican, and the president of Notre Dame University, the Rev. Rev. John I. Jenkins both are present and announce on Friday that they have tested positive for the coronavirus.
Monday, Sept. 28 - Washington, D.C.
-- Trump surveys a truck produced by Lordstown Motors on the White House South Lawn at an event attended by two members of Congress and three representatives from the Lordstown, Ohio, manufacturer.
-- Trump holds a Rose Garden event to announce an administration effort to distribute millions of coronavirus test kits to states. The event is attended by administration officials including Vice President Mike Pence, members of Congress and state officials.
Others present: Dr. Scott Atlas, advisor; Health and Human Service Secretary Alex Azar; Education Secretary Betsy DeVos; Seema Verma, administrator for Medicare and Medicaid Services; and Admiral Brett Giroir, assistant secretary of health.
Tuesday, Sept. 29 - Cleveland, Ohio
-- Trump travels to Cleveland for a 90-minute presidential debate against Democratic rival Joe Biden. The two men are both tested ahead of the debate and stand behind lecterns positioned a good distance from one another. They do not wear masks during the faceoff.
-- White House aide Hope Hicks is part of a large entourage that travels to Ohio with Trump aboard Air Force One for the debate, including members of the Trump family. Trump's adult children and senior staff do not wear masks during the debate, violating host rules.
Among those in attendance with the president: Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, Rudy Giuliani, campaign manager Bill Stepien, press secretary Kayleigh McEnany and Stephen Miller, senior advisor.
Kristin Urquiza, who has been critical of Trump's handling of the coronavirus pandemic since her father died from COVID-19, is a guest of Biden and sits in the front row of the debate hall.
"I am terrified," she says later in a statement.
Wednesday, Sept. 30 - Duluth, Minnesota
-- Trump travels to Minnesota for a fundraiser at a private home in suburban Minneapolis and an outdoor rally in Duluth.
-- Hicks is among the White House aides who accompany Trump on the trip. She feels unwell on the return trip and isolates herself aboard Air Force One.
Thursday, Oct. 1 - Bedminster, New Jersey
-- Hicks tests positive for the coronavirus.
-- Trump flies to his Bedminster resort in New Jersey for a private fundraiser. Several aides who were in proximity to Hicks scrap plans to accompany Trump. Rich Roberts, a pharmaceutical executive and major Republican donor who attended the event, told The Lakewood Scoop that about 19 people met with the president for 45 minutes to an hour.
-- Trump announces in an evening interview on Fox News that he and the first lady are being tested for the coronavirus. He later tweets that they will “begin our quarantine process!”
Friday, Oct. 2
-- Trump tweets shortly before 1 a.m. that he and the first lady have tested positive for the virus and “will begin our quarantine and recovery process immediately.”
-- Dr. Sean Conley, physician to the president, releases a statement that the president and first lady “are both well at this time, and they plan to remain at home within the White House during their convalescence.”
-- Vice President Mike Pence and Karen Pence test negative for the coronavirus Friday morning, according to the vice president's press secretary, Devin O'Malley.
-- Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, who addresses reporters without wearing a mask, confirms that the president is experiencing mild symptoms. He says that the White House learned that Hicks had tested positive before Trump's fundraiser at Bedminster, as Marine One was taking off.
-- Melania Trump tweets that she has mild symptoms as well.
It is not yet known if anyone else in the Trump administration or anyone the president had contact with this week has tested positive for the virus.