Miami Herald (Sunday)

Populist leaders play political games with COVID-19, and people are dying

- BY MICHAEL TOUCHTON AND FELICIA KNAUL welcome.miami.edu

As COVID-related deaths in the United States and in Brazil have skyrockete­d to more than one a minute (1,000 per day), the pandemic reveals the grave consequenc­es of political polarizati­on and populism on public health. Brazil is now second only to the United States in terms of COVID-19 cases, and this tragedy in South America’s most populous country was largely avoidable.

Like other populist presidents, Jair Bolsonaro’s response to the pandemic has been to deny its severity and to mount only a limited publicheal­th campaign to combat the disease. On June 6, Bolsonaro ordered the Ministry of Health to stop releasing the cumulative number of cases and deaths from COVID-19. It is just one in a long list of Bolsonaro’s troubling actions. He is a polarizing politician who disdains science, a free press and evidence-based policy. Together, these biases make up the tragedy of the pandemic in Brazil.

The coronaviru­s is a national public-health crisis, not a left-wing or right-wing crisis. COVID-19 does not ask its victims about political preference. Yet, one cannot tell that from Bolsonaro’s rhetoric or from mayors’ and governors’ policy responses. Bolsonaro presides over a hyper-polarized political landscape, using public-health decisions to score political points.

Partisan affiliatio­ns go a long way to predict the policy responses in each state: Governors opposed to Bolsonaro implemente­d much more stringent distancing requiremen­ts. This means that states with opposition governors — including some of the poorest states in the country — reduced the movement of citizens (and therefore the spread of the virus) more than other states. Their determinat­ion to defy the national government binds them together in ways that will likely help them to save lives. Ironically, there is some good news for equity, as these states are not the usual suspects for top performanc­e and have some of the greatest health needs.

Like many countries with populist leaders, Brazil had time to prepare for the pandemic and chose not to. Instead, Bolsonaro wasted valuable time and claimed that COVID-19 would “disappear.” This rhetoric politicize­s the publicheal­th response at the national, state, municipal and individual levels. Governors, mayors and citizens who supported the president tended not to take the virus seriously, failed to implement measures for physical distancing and ignored recommenda­tions from scientific agencies, such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Bolsonaro’s opposition to use of face coverings and physical-distancing measures sends deliberate­ly mixed messages that create a fragmented and chaotic response — not just for individual­s, but across all three levels of Brazil’s government. Absent travel restrictio­ns, this patchwork of ineffectiv­e policy responses allowed the virus to seed itself across Brazil and spread beyond the possibilit­y of control as outbreaks ravaged dense, low-income, urban communitie­s.

The University of Miami’s Observator­y for the Containmen­t of COVID-19 in the Americas, observcovi­d.miami.edu, shows that many of Brazil’s states are relaxing restrictio­ns and re-opening even as COVID-19 cases and deaths grow exponentia­lly. This is precisely the wrong time to re-open.

Citizens are at high risk in highly polarized countries like Brazil. Populist government­s — both left and right — have proven unable or unwilling to heed science in a moment when evidence is the utmost imperative. Instead,

Bolsonaro in Brazil, Donald Trump in the United States and Andrés Manuel López Obrador in Mexico all wasted valuable time and engaged in magical thinking and hyper-partisan rhetoric. Their citizens will pay the price — in lives lost, health impaired, financial loss, and increased poverty.

A pandemic is no time to play politics. Using disinforma­tion to score political points is shortsight­ed and potentiall­y lethal. Partisansh­ip in a pandemic will ultimately cost both lives and livelihood­s across the political spectrum.

Michael Touchton is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science and faculty lead for Global Health in the Institute for Advanced Study of the Americas at the University of Miami. Felicia Knaul is director of the Institute for Advanced Study of the Americas and professor of public health at the University of Miami Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine.

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