The New York Times attributed to strategists and even senior aides to President Donald Trump that he would face harsh judgment from the electorate, saying that with his health and the country's stability at risk, the race for the presidency had immediately turned, and raised great doubts about the president's behavior towards the epidemic And the future of his campaign, just 32 days before the elections.

A newspaper report on the US President's infection with the virus today listed the difficulties that Trump was facing due to his neglect - and in some cases his underestimation - basic precautions, such as wearing the mask that his health advisers were urging Americans to take to protect themselves.

The report added that Trump's personal indifference to the virus is currently threatening his health, the country's stability, and his poor hopes for re-election.

Expectations of harsh judgment from the electorate

With stock futures falling today, bipartisan strategists - and even Trump's top aides - said the president would face a harsh verdict from voters to throw the country into greater uncertainty, after one of the most difficult years in American history.

"It's hard to imagine that this does not end Trump's hopes for re-election," said Republican counselor Rob Stutzman.

A year later, he began questioning the president, which included an epidemic, then an economic meltdown, racial justice protests, and urban unrest, in addition to the death of Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg last month;

The current surprise could also prompt voters to seek a respite from the unrest and get rid of Trump, who has been denying the seriousness of the virus that has killed 207,000 Americans.

The report indicated that the remaining two debates between Trump and his rival, the Democratic candidate, Joe Biden, will certainly be canceled, as the following is scheduled to take place on the 15th of this month.

Republican Chancellor Rob Stutzman: It's hard to imagine that this does not end Trump's hopes for re-election (Reuters)

Undermining one of his arguments against Biden

Moreover, one of Trump's central arguments against Biden, he said, is that the latter - aged 77 - is weak and unfit to lead the country, and has now been undermined by doubts about the president's health.

He drew attention to Trump's lagging behind in opinion polls in part because of his difficulties with older voters, a group that typically leans toward Republicans but is also at risk of contracting the virus.

In the early hours of Friday, some of Trump's aides were discussing ways for the public to see him later in the day, so he could inform them that he was still leading the country.

A person familiar with the discussions said that one of the options was to address the nation, but at the same time they were candid that the president had comorbidities that could make him more vulnerable to a severe outbreak of the virus.

The first president to suffer a health crisis near the elections

The report added that no modern president has publicly suffered from a health crisis near the elections, noting that Trump, since he began his unexpected political rise 5 years ago, has been the sole driving force behind his campaign, then his presidency, and his rejection of the advice of experts in politics and government, and most recently in public health.

To highlight the enormity of the president’s denial of the danger of the virus, which the New York Times has repeatedly said he would rebel against, the newspaper drew readers ’attention to the fact that Trump said in his recent debate with Biden,“ I don’t wear masks like him. Every time you see him, he is wearing a mask. He can talk to me. After 200 feet of you, it appears with the largest mask I have ever seen. "

Until yesterday, Thursday, after his close aide Hope Hicks had symptoms of the virus, Trump made remarks from the White House on the occasion of the annual Alfred E Smith Foundation memorial dinner, where he falsely insisted that "the end of the epidemic is approaching."