US President Donald Trump, on Tuesday evening, arrived in Arizona, on a rare trip outside Washington, where he inspects a factory to produce masks in Arizona, which he hopes will win votes in the November elections.

The presidential plane landed at Phoenix Airport where the Hani Well International Complex for masks, and in moments, Trump, with a staff of intelligence officers, intelligence officers, and military personnel, arrived at the airport, noting that they did not wear protective masks on the face.

Upon his arrival, the lenses picked up an embarrassing position, and another stranger during that visit. The first situation was when Trump got off the plane, as he confused himself during the peace and embraced someone who was waiting for him, but he retreated at the last minute, and was confused; to pat his shoulder and laugh.

As for the second position, it was inside the factory itself, where Trump insisted that the muzzle not be worn in spite of the factory's crowding with workers, and was satisfied with wearing protective glasses.

Trump has so far been reluctant to use the muzzle, which provoked his ire against him earlier, and his deputy Mike Pence also criticized for not putting the muzzle during a recent visit to the famous Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, at a time when the federal government encouraged the use of masks To avoid spreading the infection even if they do not experience any of the symptoms of corona-induced disease.

During his tour of Honeywell Gags, Trump spoke to an official inside the Trump factory without a muzzle, but he wore realistic glasses.

Trump's visit to the masks factory, his first trip outside the White House two months ago, highlights the refusal to wear one until now during the emerging Corona virus crisis.

Before leaving Washington for the factory in Arizona, Trump indicated that he would take this into consideration, but only if there was a "masking environment".

The visit is part of Trump's effort to encourage an opening of the country's declining economy due to measures of closure and social divergence to counter the virus.

And just six months before the presidential elections, the Republican president is seeking to win a second term to change the national mood and market his work to quickly return the economy to its previous era among voters.

However, with the death toll in the United States due to corona virus infection reaching about 70,000, without signs looming on the horizon that the epidemic is ending, accusations of opponents against him continue to turn his back on the crisis for personal political gains.

The N-95 gags produced by the Honeywell plant are a symbol of these conflicting visions.

Surveys show that Democrats support covering the face as a sign of shared responsibility, while some Republicans see it as a major threat to individual freedom.

However, medical experts at the White House and even First Lady Melania Trump are promoting muzzles as a critical tool in fighting the spread of the virus.

But the president, who took the side of his right-wing grassroots base, downplayed the importance of having to place a muzzle based on his own vision.

"I might think of wearing a muzzle and I salute the heads and heads of government, dictators, kings and queens, I don't know," Trump said in April, noting that the muzzle was not worthy of the presidential protocol and added "one way or another, I don't think I will use it."

Trump won the Arizona state vote in the 2016 election in front of Democratic candidate and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, but polls show that he is now behind the presumed Democratic nominee in the 2020 election, former Vice President Joe Biden, in that southwestern state.

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