Trump COVID-19 updates: Top Trump aide Stephen Miller tests positive
Miller's married to the VP's communications director, who tested positive in May
President Donald Trump is back in the White House and back on Twitter as he fights a coronavirus infection.
The president left Walter Reed Medical Center on Monday evening, landing at the White House shortly before 7 p.m.
After Marine One landed on the White House South Lawn, Trump walked up the steps of White House, faced the cameras and took off his mask. Trump gave a thumbs up and an extended salute to Marine One, before walking inside the residence.
Trump, who tested positive for COVID-19 on Thursday and spent several days in the hospital, tweeted Tuesday morning, "FEELING GREAT!"
The president is returning to a White House plagued by COVID-19 as 20 people in Trump's orbit have reported testing positive since last week. Questions remain about how many more people at the highest levels of government had been exposed to the virus after a week of events involving the president where social distancing and mask-wearing were lax.
Melania Trump, who has been at the White House since she tested positive for COVID-19 on Thursday, "continues to rest and is doing well," the first lady's chief of staff, Stephanie Grisham, said Tuesday.
Vice President Mike Pence and his wife tested negative for the coronavirus again on Tuesday morning, the vice president's office said, while Sen. Kamala Harris tested negative for COVID-19 on Monday, according to an aide. Pence and Harris are in Utah ahead of Wednesday night's vice presidential debate.
Latest headlines:
- Top Trump aide tests positive for coronavirus
- White House valet who traveled with Trump has tested positive
- Joint Chiefs quarantining at home after vice commandant of Coast Guard tests positive
- DC-area lawmakers want White House to share its total number of positive tests
- Facebook removes Trump's post for inflating flu death numbers
DC-area lawmakers want White House to share its total number of positive tests
Nine House Democrats representing Washington, D.C. and the city's Maryland and Virginia suburbs are calling on the White House to share more information about the White House coronavirus outbreak, which they're calling "out of control."
The lawmakers, whose constituents work at the White House, want the White House to disclose the date of Trump's last negative test, the total number of positive cases, and cooperate with local and state health departments' contact tracing efforts.
"This is no time for publicity stunts that put people at risk, or for playing down the seriousness of this pandemic," they wrote in a statement Tuesday. "The American people will never trust the Administration to keep them safe if the White House cannot protect its own staff."
ABC News' Ben Siegel contributed to this report.
Facebook removes Trump's post for inflating flu death numbers
Facebook on Tuesday removed a post by the president, and Twitter tagged the post as misleading, after Trump incorrectly cited flu death numbers in a comparison to COVID-19.
Trump, the morning after returning from the hospital to be treated for COVID-19, tweeted, "Flu season is coming up! Many people every year, sometimes over 100,000, and despite the Vaccine, die from the Flu. Are we going to close down our Country? No, we have learned to live with it, just like we are learning to live with Covid, in most populations far less lethal!!!" he wrote.
A Facebook spokesperson said in a statement, "We remove incorrect information about the severity of COVID-19, and have now removed this post."
Twitter left the message up but covered it up with a message that said it violated the platform’s rules “about spreading misleading and potentially harmful information related to COVID-19."
According to CDC estimates, the annual flu death toll has ranged between 12,000 and 61,000 since 2010.
Trump also told Bob Woodward earlier this year that coronavirus is "more deadly than even your strenuous flu."
Trump used a similar comparison early on in the pandemic, before death totals began to rapidly rise.
On March 9, Trump tweeted, "So last year 37,000 Americans died from the common Flu. It averages between 27,000 and 70,000 per year. Nothing is shut down, life & the economy go on. At this moment there are 546 confirmed cases of CoronaVirus, with 22 deaths. Think about that!"
As of Tuesday, over 210,000 Americans have died from COVID-19.
Trump tweets he plans to be in Miami for next week's debate
The morning after leaving the hospital, Trump tweeted that he plans to attend next week's presidential debate in Miami.
The debate is set for Oct. 15 -- two weeks after the president tested positive for the coronavirus on Oct. 1.
When asked about the president campaigning, Trump’s physician, Dr. Sean Conley, said Monday, "As far as travel goes, we will see.”
Trump's campaign told ABC News on Monday that "it is the president’s intention to debate."
ABC News' Will Steakin contributed to this report.
Trump campaign fundraising off president’s exit from Walter Reed
The Trump campaign is already fundraising off of President Trump's exit from Walter Reed Medical Center Monday night, urging supporters not to be, "afraid of Covid," which has killed over 200,000 Americans.
The subject of a fundraising email sent Monday night said: "I'M BACK" -- even though his doctors said earlier in the day that he's not out of the woods yet.
The email goes on to argue "under the Trump Administration, we have developed some really great drugs and knowledge," but since testing positive the president has received some of the best treatment in the world -- which most Americans don't have access to.
"This is it...I need you to step up to the front lines during this critical time," the email urges supporters.
ABC News' Will Steakin contributed to this report.