Marysville Appeal-Democrat

COVID-19’S persistenc­e leads GOP, Democrats to same measures

- The Detroit News (TNS)

In the pandemic’s first months, the gulf between Republican and Democratic governors was vast. Allied with President Donald Trump, most Republican­s refused to impose basic public-health restrictio­ns such as mask-wearing, while Democrats closed huge swaths of their states’ economies.

Today, many find themselves implementi­ng similar, somewhat halfhearte­d measures — a bipartisan weariness aimed less at deep change than easing the strain on medical systems and buying time until a vaccine arrives.

In California, Governor Gavin Newsom has imposed an almost-statewide curfew of 10 p.m., a move that closes bars and restaurant­s early but stops far short of the broad shutdowns ordered in March. The Democrat said data show he needs to stop an increase in virus-related hospitaliz­ations.

North Dakota’s Republican governor, Doug Burgum, reversed course after months of opposition to mandatory mask-wearing and imposed a statewide order for facial coverings. He also closed restaurant­s for in-person dining at 10 p.m., put steeper capacity restrictio­ns on events, and paused winter sports.

In announcing the restrictio­ns, Burgum said he, too, was taking a datadriven approach to address a surge in hospitaliz­ations: “Our situation has changed, and we must change with it.”

“They have two crises that they have to balance, and they’re looking for that middle ground,” said Joel Fox, a Republican campaign strategist and newsletter editor in Los Angeles. “One is the economy, the other is the pandemic.”

In theory, governors of both parties have room to enact tougher, more effective restrictio­ns, but they face opposition and economic consequenc­es, said Janet Baseman, a professor of epidemiolo­gy at the University of Washington in Seattle. What’s emerging, she said, is a Swiss cheese model of partial restrictio­ns, creating holes that let the virus in.

More Republican-led states, including New Hampshire and Iowa, have introduced mandatory mask wearing. Others are leaning in that direction. In Wyoming, Governor Mark Gordon responded to a spike in cases by restrictin­g the size of gatherings, with exemptions for faith-related meetings. He refrained from ordering business closings, but has suggested a mask order could be next.

“There will be changes,” said Gordon, who faces hospitals nearing capacity. “They will be more restrictiv­e.”

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