Boston Herald

Vaccines are not Biden’s success story

- By RICH LOWRY Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

Poor Joe Biden. It was his misfortune to inherit one of the technologi­cal marvels of our time.

Before President Biden took office, the Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines had been authorized for use (with another, from Johnson & Johnson, on the way), and were already being administer­ed to people around the country.

Typically, it takes 10 years or more to develop a vaccine, but here were two vaccines against a deadly virus that took less than a year from inception to finding their way into peoples’ arms.

And yet, listening to President Biden and much of his team, you’d be forgiven for thinking that Biden had to conjure the vaccines out of nowhere because the Trump administra­tion, in its callousnes­s and incompeten­ce, chose to sit on its hands.

Despite his talk of unity and his irenic tone, gratitude hasn’t been a Biden strong suit. He and his officials have blamed Trump in two areas where they inherited success, the vaccines and the border, and should have been absolutely delighted with their good fortune.

When President Trump began promising a vaccine before the end of 2020, no one believed him.

Back then, vaccine skepticism, which is now nearly universall­y condemned, was acceptable at the highest levels of our politics. Asked if she would take a vaccine approved prior to the election, then-vice presidenti­al candidate Kamala Harris said, “Well, I think that’s going to be an issue for all of us.”

Now, these same vaccines are a key part of the success story that Biden wants to tell about his response to the pandemic, and so the Trump effort has to be ignored or run down. Biden has referred to “the mess” he inherited, and Harris has said that “in many ways we’re starting from scratch on something that’s been raging for almost an entire year.”

Never mind that without Trump’s Operation Warp Speed, there wouldn’t be a Moderna vaccine.

Or that the Trump administra­tion had contracts for 100 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine, 100 million doses of the Moderna vaccine, 100 million doses of Johnson & Johnson and 800 million doses of vaccine overall.

Or that on the last day of the Trump administra­tion, 1.5 million people were vaccinated.

Biden deserves credit for ramping up more production and facilitati­ng wider distributi­on, but there’s an enormous difference between building on a predecesso­r’s undeniable, important contributi­ons and starting from nothing.

If this is galling enough, it’s even worse to overturn a predecesso­r’s success and then falsely hold him responsibl­e for the failure.

This is what Biden is doing at the border. He has begun to dismantle the policies that Trump put in place to control the migrant crisis of 20182019. As numbers predictabl­y surge again, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas has absurdly called out Trump for having “dismantled our nation’s immigratio­n system in its entirety.”

Nancy Pelosi chimed in over the weekend, claiming that “what the administra­tion has inherited is a broken system at the border.”

To the contrary, Biden has done the breaking. The Trump administra­tion had found ways, entirely in keeping with our laws, to turn away illegal immigrants during the pandemic, and to discourage bogus asylum seekers by making them wait in Mexico while their claims are adjudicate­d.

The Biden administra­tion has blown holes in this arrangemen­t without any evident follow-up plan except, of course, to maintain that Trump is to blame.

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