"I have no problem with the masks. I view it this way: Anything that potentially can help, and that certainly can potentially help, is a good thing. I have no problem. I carry it, I wear it ... and I'll continue," he added.
The comments were a dramatic about-face for a president who, for months, resisted wearing a face covering in public and complained privately he thought it would make him look weak and would focus attention on the public health crisis rather than the economic recovery.
Even as top public health officials, who initially had advised the public not to wear masks, became convinced that face coverings could effectively halt the spread of the virus and begged the public to embrace them, Trump resisted.
He mocked Democratic rival Joe Biden for wearing one, asked reporters to remove them and entertained the idea that people might be wearing them to spite him.
"I just don't want to wear one myself," he said in April. "I don't know, somehow sitting in the Oval Office behind that beautiful Resolute Desk — the great Resolute Desk — I think wearing a face mask as I greet presidents, prime ministers, dictators, kings, queens, I don't know. Somehow, I don't see it for myself. I just don't. Maybe I'll change my mind."
By today, as coronavirus cases continue to rise across much of the nation, Trump finally came around, saying, "I'm getting used to the mask."
"I will use it gladly, no problem with it," he said, urging those watching to follow his lead.
"When you can, use the mask. If you're close to each other, if you're in a group, I would put it on," he said.
But that pronouncement was too little, too late for some public health officials, who have blamed the mixed messaging and Trump's personal actions for politicising mask-wearing and fuelling a partisan social divide.
"I think it would have been enormous impact if he had done it from day one," said Lawrence Gostin, a public health expert at Georgetown University. He worried that Trump's words would have only marginal impact in moving Americans who aren't consistently wearing masks in public to do so.
If, from the beginning, "you had consistent messages at the federal, state and local level, if everyone had been on the same page all along on the importance of masks, we'd be in a different situation," Gostin said.
And Trump still declined to wear a mask at the briefing — noting that he and the reporters who cover him are frequently tested. And he was seen without one yesterday at the Trump hotel in Washington, where he attended a fundraiser and ate dinner.
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, an occasional informal Trump adviser, had urged the President to wear a mask to the briefing, saying during an appearance on Fox: "That's what's going to convince people that he's serious about this."
Trump tweeted a photo of himself in a face mask yesterday, calling it an act of patriotism. He wore one for the first time in public this month during a visit to Walter Reed National Military Medical Centre.
- AP