‘Trump Death Clock’ by filmmaker Eugene Jarecki in New York claims to count avoidable COVID-19 deaths in US

A Trump Death Clock which calculates the portion of US COVID-19 deaths caused by President Trumps delayed response to the coronavirus pandemic was unveiled by Eugene Jarecki in Times Square. (Photo: Getty Images/AFP)


The worst hit country in the world the United States with more than 80,000 deaths and the most severely affected state, New York with with 26,682 fatalities came up with a newly erected billboard in the Times Square that shows the number of coronavirus deaths. Its creator says these deaths could have been avoided if President Donald Trump had acted sooner — and it’s called the “Trump Death Clock.”

Created by filmmaker Eugene Jarecki, the “clock” was installed on the roof of a Times Square building, empty due to the pandemic. As of Monday, the counter showed more than 48,000 deaths out of a total of more than 80,000, by far the highest tally in the world.

The “clock” ticks on the assumption that 60 percent of COVID-19 deaths in the United States could have been prevented had the Trump administration implemented mandatory social distancing and school closures just a week earlier than it did, on March 9 instead of March 16, Jarecki explained in a post on Medium.

The New York-based filmmaker, who has twice won awards at the Sundance Film Festival, explained that 60 percent was a conservative estimate calculated by specialists following remarks made in mid-April by leading US infectious diseases expert Anthony Fauci.

Fauci, who has become the trusted face of the government’s virus response, had said that if “you had started mitigation earlier, you could have saved lives.”

“The lives already unnecessarily lost demand we seek more responsible crisis leadership,” Jarecki wrote in his Medium post.

“Just as the names of fallen soldiers are etched on memorials to remind us of the cost of war, quantifying the lives lost to the president’s delayed coronavirus response would serve a vital public function.”

While, America witnessed less than 900 coronavirus deaths in 24 hours for the second consecutive day but even after indicating a dip in COVID-19 fatalities the United States death toll crossed past 80,000-mark and the total number of confirmed positive cases stand at  13,44,512, according to Johns Hopkins University data.