Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox. Sign up here.

After skipping President Trump's remarks at the beginning of Tuesday's coronavirus press briefing, CNN avoided the majority of Wednesday's briefing and even slammed the president for what the network described as a "bait-and-switch" with military leaders addressing efforts to combat cartels in Central America.

The network again chose not to air Trump's prepared statements at the beginning of the briefing, cut in briefly to hear remarks from Defense Secretary Mark Esper, but cut away again as the president took questions about the apparent attack that Iran was planning against U.S. troops in Iraq because of the briefing's focus on the administration newly-announced narcotics operations conducted by the military to halt the flow of drugs from coming into the U.S.

"We're going to continue to monitor this briefing and see if they get back to the issue of the coronavirus," CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer told viewers. "That's what we're primarily interested in right now given the horrible numbers that we've been told over the past couple of days maybe 100,000 maybe as many as 240,000 Americans in the coming weeks or months may end up dead as a result of this virus."

CHINA'S GOVERNMENT-RUN PROPAGANDA VIDEO INCLUDES CNN, MSNBC JOURNALISTS, HILLARY CLINTON, CELEBS

While Blitzer repeatedly said that the network was "anxiously waiting" for the arrival of Dr. Anthony Fauci and Dr. Deborah Birx, other CNN personalities took turns to slam President Trump as the briefing was underway.

President Donald Trump speaks about the coronavirus in the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House, Wednesday, April 1, 2020, in Washington, as from left, Adm. Karl Leo Schultz, commandant of the Coast Guard, national security adviser Robert O'Brien, Attorney General William Barr, Defense Secretary Mark Esper, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Mark Milley, and Navy Adm. Michael Gilday, Chief of Naval Operations, listen. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

"It is remarkable, and some would say shameless," CNN chief national correspondent John King reacted. "This is a coronavirus task force briefing. The country is in a middle of a pandemic. Americans are afraid. They tune into these briefings to try to get information from the White House. ... You could schedule an event at the Pentagon, at the Justice Department, or in the White House briefing room if you think it's that big of a deal, but call it what it is. Say you have an announcement on the war on drugs. Instead, they walk up into the coronavirus task force briefing and the president is trying to have a bit of a political statement here."

CNN ANALYST MOCKED FOR CLAIMING IT'S A 'GOP CAMPAIGN MESSAGE' TO BLAME CHINA FOR VIRUS OUTBREAK

Jim Acosta, reporting outside the White House, called it a "bait-and-switch" since the president has a "built-in audience" who tune in to these briefings. He also claimed that Trump was trying to "play cleanup" at Tuesday's briefing over his handling of the coronavirus outbreak.

The liberal network eventually returned to the briefing as the president was taking questions for reporters and was accompanied by Fauci and Birx as well as Vice President Mike Pence, but cut away again roughly 20 minutes before the briefing wrapped.

CNN ended up airing less than 42 minutes of the roughly 104-minute long briefing. MSNBC aired roughly 75 minutes. Fox News ran the entire briefing uninterrupted.

On Monday, CNN anchor Don Lemon called for his network to not air the coronavirus briefings live.

CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

"I have said I don't think that you should really listen to what he says, you should listen to what the experts say," Lemon told his colleague Chris Cuomo during their nightly handoff. "I'm not actually sure, if you want to be honest, that we should carry that live. I think we should run snippets. I think we should do it afterwards and get the pertinent points to the American people because he's never, ever going to tell you the truth."

The next day, the network notably skipped Trump's prepared remarks at the beginning of the briefing and aired the rest after Birx took the podium.