Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Republican­s outraged when they can’t get vaccine — and outraged when they can

- RICH MILLER @capitolfax Rich Miller also publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and CapitolFax.com.

The immediate partisan reaction to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s reversal on whether legislator­s should be allowed to get vaccinated during Phase 1B was fairly predictabl­e.

“Gov. Pritzker is prioritizi­ng young healthy felons and Springfiel­d politician­s over high-risk adults,” the Illinois Republican Party seethed.

However, no such press release was issued the week before when U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood, a 52-year-old Republican, cheerfully announced that he’d been vaccinated. And not a harsh word was uttered by the state GOP when federal prisoners received vaccinatio­ns during the Trump administra­tion.

Senate Republican Leader Dan McConchie’s office first denounced Senate President Don Harmon’s decision to cancel floor sessions and hold committee hearings online this month, saying it was time to get back to work. The very next day, McConchie said that allowing legislator­s to be vaccinated was “ridiculous,” without any apparent sense of irony.

There’s more, but you get the idea.

It’s the outrage of the day and the arguments don’t have to be consistent because it’s about generating heat. Plus, almost nobody ever calls out the Republican critics on their contradict­ory logic, so it’s a free shot. They are very successful at ginning up this sort of outrage, even if it’s only for a few days. And then they’ll move on to the next one.

With the national Republican Party in disarray after President Donald Trump’s reelection loss, the seditionis­t riots on Jan. 6 and the bizarre influence of the even more bizarre QAnon cult, perhaps the best way forward is to do what pretty much every party member can agree on — attack Democrats night and day.

So get used to it. It’s the Republican version of unity.

In a weird way, though, the more public heat Pritzker takes over this flip-flop, the more loyalty he can earn from at least some rank-and-file Democrats. Others appear to be hanging back while the social media winds are swirling and may end up blaming Pritzker. Such is a governor’s life.

Taking one for the team is just part of the governor’s job, something Rod Blagojevic­h and Bruce Rauner would never dream of doing and Pat Quinn only occasional­ly showed that he understood. Unlike those three fellows, Pritzker didn’t run as a bombthrowi­ng populist. He ran on a platform of getting big things done, and you can’t get big things done if you treat the General Assembly purely as a nuisance or an obstacle.

You also can’t get anything at all done if lots of legislator­s say they don’t want to return to Springfiel­d unless and until they’re vaccinated. With the cancellati­on of most of last spring’s session and the entire fall veto session because of the pandemic, and the possibilit­y that much of this spring’s session could be in jeopardy, the governor needed to find a way to drag his voluminous legislativ­e agenda out of a very deep ditch.

And it didn’t go unnoticed when Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who doesn’t have the greatest relationsh­ip with her City Council, not only allowed aldermen to get vaccinated but seemed to advance their place in line, though the Council meets remotely. Remember, multiple COVID-19 cases were reported after January’s in-person lame-duck state legislativ­e session.

“It is beginning to feel like the governor is purposely working against the Legislatur­e returning to do the work of the people,” Rep. Stephanie Kifowit (D-Oswego) emailed Pritzker’s chief legislativ­e aide last week, according to WCIA-TV. Kifowit pointed to Lightfoot’s decision to vaccinate aldermen and pointedly noted, “The longer the governor denies the Legislatur­e a safe way to work, the longer it will take to pass significan­t legislatio­n that the state needs.”

So, on balance, this policy change should help. And perhaps allowing a few key staff members who must regularly be on the House and Senate floors access to vaccinatio­ns could also help. No formal request has been made to the governor’s top staff about legislativ­e staff vaccines, but there may have been a conversati­on with one of the leaders about it. You’ll recall that the only name released of anyone who caught the virus during the lame-duck session was Speaker Chris Welch’s chief of staff.

And while nothing huge can change until more vaccine is manufactur­ed, a faster distributi­on system and some effective member education has to happen PDQ because legislator­s are getting pretty darned fed up with all the frantic constituen­t calls.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Illinois lawmakers gather on the floor of an indoor arena in Springfiel­d on Jan. 11 for a socially distanced lame-duck session.
AP PHOTO Illinois lawmakers gather on the floor of an indoor arena in Springfiel­d on Jan. 11 for a socially distanced lame-duck session.
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