Las Vegas Review-Journal

Crowd boos Trump over booster vaccine

- By Azi Paybarah and Lauren Mccarthy

Former President Donald Trump, who for years falsely claimed vaccines were dangerous and pointedly declined to be seen getting vaccinated against COVID-19 while in office, was booed at an event in Houston after saying publicly for the first time that he had received a booster shot.

Trump was in Texas on Sunday as part of a speaking tour with Bill O’reilly, the author and former Fox News host, when O’reilly said that both he and Trump “are vaxxed.”

O’reilly then asked, “Did you get the booster?”

“Yes,” Trump said.

“I got it too,” O’reilly said.

The crowd in Houston began to boo, according to a video distribute­d by one of O’reilly’s social media accounts.

“Don’t, don’t, don’t, don’t,” Trump said, waving his arm to dismiss the naysayers and downplayin­g the size of the reaction by pointing to what he said was “a very tiny group over there.”

The exchange comes as the rapidly spreading omicron variant has fueled a sharp rise in new cases and hospitaliz­ations, with several states mobilizing the National Guard to help with hospital staffing shortages. Omicron is now the dominant version of new coronaviru­s cases in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Vaccinated people without booster shots are believed to be more vulnerable to infection by omicron, and government officials say boosters are the best response to the new variant.

Just before the booing, Trump said that his supporters should get vaccinated because, he suggested, unwillingn­ess to do so represente­d a victory for liberals. “What we’ve done is historic,” he said of the three COVID vaccines in use in the United States that were developed while he was in office. “Don’t let them take away, don’t take it away from ourselves. You’re playing right into their hands when you sort of like, ‘oh, the vaccine.’ ”

He then reiterated his opposition to vaccine mandates, which the Biden administra­tion, localities across the country and many employers have embraced to boost vaccinatio­n rates. “You shouldn’t be forced to take it, no mandates. But take credit,” Trump said.

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