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Pence’s press secretary tests positive for coronavirus

President Donald Trump said he was not worried about the virus spreading in the White House.

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Vice President Mike Pence’s press secretary has tested positive for the coronavirus.

Katie Miller is the second person working at the White House complex who is known to have tested positive this week.

President Donald Trump, who publicly identified Ms Miller, said he was “not worried” about the virus spreading in the White House.

Nonetheless, officials said they were stepping up safety protocols for the complex.

Pence spokeswoman Katie Miller, who tested positive on Friday, had been in recent contact with Mr Pence but not with the president.

She is married to Stephen Miller, a top Trump adviser.

Virus Outbreak Pence Aide
President Donald Trump’s White House adviser Stephen Miller with his wife Katie Miller (Patrick Semansky/AP)

Ms Miller had tested negative on Thursday, a day before her positive result.

“This is why the whole concept of tests aren’t necessarily great,” Mr Trump said. “The tests are perfect but something can happen between a test where it’s good and then something happens.”

The positive test for the senior Pence aide came one day after White House officials confirmed that a member of the military serving as one of Mr Trump’s valets had tested positive for Covid-19.

Six people who had been in contact with Ms Miller were scheduled to fly with Mr Pence on Friday to Des Moines, Iowa, on Air Force Two. They were removed from the flight just before it took off, according to a senior administration official.

None of those people were exhibiting symptoms but were asked to get off so they could be tested “out of an abundance of caution”, a senior administration official told reporters. All six later tested negative, the White House said.

The official said staff in the West Wing are tested regularly but much of Mr Pence’s staff — which works next door in the Executive Office Building — are tested less frequently. Ms Miller was not on the plane and had not been scheduled to be on the trip.

White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said the administration was stepping up mitigation efforts already recommended by public health experts and taking other unspecified precautions to ensure the safety of the president.

Mr Meadows said the White House was “probably the safest place that you can come,” but he was reviewing further steps to keep Mr Trump and Mr Pence safe.

The White House requires daily temperature checks of anyone who enters the White House complex and has encouraged social distancing among those working in the building.

The administration has also directed regular deep cleaning of all work spaces. Anyone who comes in close proximity to the president and vice president is tested daily for Covid-19.

“We’ve already put in a few protocols that we’re looking at, obviously, to make sure that the president and his immediate staff stay safe. But it’s not just the president, it’s all the workers that are here … on a daily basis,” Mr Meadows said.

Mr Trump’s valet’s case marked the first known instance where a person who has come in close proximity to the president has tested positive since several people present at his private Florida club were diagnosed with Covid-19 in early March.

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