Trump blames politics on the vaccine timeline
When confronted by Wallace about the disparity between what his public health officials are saying and what he has said about the timing of the vaccine, Trump stuck with his previous comments.
"We can have it a lot sooner," Trump said. "It's a very political thing because people like this would rather make it political than save lives."
Top U.S. government public health officials and other experts have said that it's possible -- if everything goes well, but unlikely -- that vaccine trials will have enough clear and compelling data to be available by the end of October or beginning of November. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's foremost infectious disease expert, has said he thinks there will be a "safe and effective vaccine" by "the end of this calendar year."
Fauci has also said that the United States will not return to "normal" until the middle of next year.
Biden interrupted the president by referring to Trump's previous statements earlier this year, when he said the virus would be gone by Easter and then also referenced Trump's potentially dangerous comment that people can inject bleach to get rid of the virus. Trump then responded that he said the bleach comment "sarcastically" made.
Biden turned to the hundreds of thousands of Americans who have died due to the coronavirus.
"His own head of the CDC said if we just wore masks between now -- if everybody wore masks and social distanced -- between now and January, we probably save up to 100,000 lives," Biden said.