Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Biden shows the world that the U.S. government can work again

- By Fareed Zakaria

The Biden presidency is still in its early days, but it is not too soon to point to its most impressive accomplish­ment, one that will have major implicatio­ns for years to come. The COVID-19 vaccinatio­n program has been transforme­d. The federal government has establishe­d or expanded more than 450 vaccinatio­n centers, and the country is carrying out 2 million vaccinatio­ns per day, more than double the rate when President Joe Biden was inaugurate­d.

The president says he has secured enough supply to vaccinate the entire adult population in the next three months, well ahead of every major country except Britain. The United States has administer­ed about 80 million doses of the vaccine, compared to the European Union’s 35 million and China’s 50 million. More than 15% of Americans have received at least one dose, about five times the rate in China. In short, Mr. Biden is demonstrat­ing to Americans and to the world that the U.S. government can, once again, work.

The Trump administra­tion deserves credit for Operation Warp Speed, the program that helped to fund the vaccines, and the private sector deserves credit for the miraculous speed and effectiven­ess with which it developed the vaccines. But, for the most part, President Donald Trump left the rollout to the states. Last March, Ron Klain, now Mr. Biden’s chief of staff, observed that the Trump administra­tion was approachin­g the pandemic, a massive national crisis, as if the country were still living “under the Articles of Confederat­ion.”

Mr. Trump did this for two reasons. First, it was clear the pandemic was going to create big problems, and he didn’t want to bear responsibi­lity for them. The sentiment was: “Let the governors own the lockdowns. We will own the recovery.” Second, Republican­s have for years denigrated the federal government, arguing that it was incompeten­t and dysfunctio­nal, that Washington was corrupt and that the private sector could handle everything better. Mr. Trump’s initial solution to the pandemic was to line up a bunch of private companies and announce that they would quickly set up websites and testing centers to cover the population. Little of that actually happened.

Mr. Biden came into office intent on reversing Mr. Trump’s approach. He owned the crisis, releasing a 200-page national strategy that outlined, for example, exactly how the government would use its powers and resources to ramp up vaccinatio­ns. That included ordering millions more vaccines; using the Defense Production Act to ensure that additional production could happen fast; enlisting the armed forces, National Guard, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and other agencies to support vaccinatio­n sites; and shipping vaccines directly to pharmacies, thus creating another network of vaccinatio­n centers across the country.

The result: a massive ramp-up of the supply, production and administra­tion of the vaccines. With some luck, the United States could soon be vaccinatin­g 3 million people a day.

Government is hard. American government is harder still. It’s a political system designed to prevent tyranny, not facilitate speedy action. Power is checked, divided and shared. Making it all work takes energy, ingenuity and, above all, a belief in government.

Mr. Biden clearly learned from his experience running the stimulus program as President Barack Obama’s vice president. Mr. Klain, who coordinate­d the response to Ebola in 2014-2015, is impressive­ly focused on execution. Mr. Biden’s

COVID-19 coordinato­r, Jeffrey Zients, is a talented executive who has excelled in the private and public sectors. (He may be best remembered for fixing the Obamacare website.)

A senior White House official told me, “You have to work every day at all the details, grind the stuff out, persuade, cajole and force everyone to get on the same page. The federal government has amazing people working within it —

FEMA, for example, has some real miracle workers — but they have to be led and managed. It can be done. The answer is not that a consulting group can do this better. For people like us who believe in government, task No. 1 is to make government work.”

The contrast with Mr. Trump is easy to draw, because Mr. Trump didn’t really view his job as diligently administer­ing the federal bureaucrac­y. For him, the presidency was a reality television show and politics was a series of symbolic acts. But there is a broader view of the federal government that grew out of the Vietnam War, Watergate and some of the excesses of the Great Society programs, one that President Ronald Reagan gave voice to when he said in his first inaugural address, “Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.”

Mr. Biden can show us that Reagan was wrong. It was the American government that put a man on the moon and created the internet. And in today’s world, there are crucial challenges that only government, well led and administer­ed, can solve.

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