Olivia Troye, Mike Pence's former lead staffer on the White House coronavirus task force, on Thursday became the fourth former Trump administration official to endorse Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, declaring that Donald Trump is a danger to the United States and that a vote for Biden is putting "country over party."
Troye, who served as homeland security adviser to Pence, said in a video that Trump only cares about his reelection, and that his selfishness led to his failed coronavirus response.
"Towards the middle of February, we knew it wasn't a matter of if COVID would become a big pandemic here in the United States, it was a matter of when," Troye said in the video, in which she later endorsed Biden. "But the president didn't want to hear that, because his biggest concern was that we were in an election year, and how was this going to affect what he considered to be his record of success?"
She added that Trump mused at one coronavirus task force meeting that the virus may be a "good thing" because it would allow him to stop having to touch his supporters.
Troye said Trump commented at the meeting, "I don't like shaking hands with people. I don't have to shake hands with these disgusting people."
Troye joins a growing contingent of ex-Trump administration officials denouncing their former boss and endorsing Biden:
Other former Trump administration officials haven't said they are voting for Biden, but have urged people not to vote for Trump.
Former national security adviser John Bolton trashed Trump in a book he published earlier this year and said he will not vote for Trump in November, but also said he wouldn't vote for Biden.
And former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis has called Trump a threat to the Constitution but has not said he's voting for Biden.
In an op-ed in the Atlantic in June, after military police tear-gassed peaceful protesters so Trump could stage a photo-op, Mattis wrote: "When I joined the military, some 50 years ago, I swore an oath to support and defend the Constitution. Never did I dream that troops taking that same oath would be ordered under any circumstance to violate the Constitutional rights of their fellow citizens—much less to provide a bizarre photo op for the elected commander-in-chief, with military leadership standing alongside."