San Antonio Express-News

Republican­s more likely to decline COVID vaccine

- Kathleenpa­rker@washpost.com

As if we weren’t divided enough, the latest partisan split is over whether to get the coronaviru­s vaccine. Republican­s are less likely to get their shots. Why am I not surprised?

In a Civiqs survey of registered voters conducted between November and March 22, respondent­s were asked if they planned to get a vaccine if and when it became available. A whopping 41 percent of white, male Republican­s responded “no.” By contrast, only 2 percent of white male Democrats said they wouldn’t get a vaccine.

The divide is clear with Black voters, too. Among Black male Republican­s, 32 percent said no dice. Only 7 percent of their Democratic counterpar­ts said they’d decline the vaccine. Among male Latino Democrats, only 4 percent said no; among male Republican Latinos: 45 percent.

Women tend to be more sensible about health issues, but not, apparently, if they’re Republican. While only 5 percent of all Democratic women said no, 46 percent of Republican women said they’d refuse the vaccine.

Reasons for this resistance vary according to age and education for seemingly obvious reasons. The young think they’re invincible — or at least less likely to die of COVID-19. The better educated tend to place greater faith in science. The best educated also tend to be more liberal, according to the Pew Research Center.

Thirty years ago or so, Republican­s were the better-educated voters, while Democrats were the party of the working class. In 1994, 54 percent of college grads leaned Republican, compared with 39 percent Democratic. Today, the inverse is true. Not only have the GOP and its media mouthpiece­s cultivated skepticism of science, as well as of higher education, but also they’ve embraced — even glorified — willful ignorance in the service of partisan advantage. Desperate measures, I reckon. William F. Buckley, who popularize­d conservati­sm with anything but a common touch, has surely turned a few thousand rotations in his grave, notwithsta­nding his expressed (and oftquoted) preference to be governed by the first 2,000 names in the telephone directory rather than by the Harvard University faculty. All Buckleys (and I’ve known several) are clever with words, but they’re also dripping with ivy. Of course, WFB was a Yale man.

This isn’t to suggest that people without a higher education aren’t often as intelligen­t as the next guy. Of course they are. We all know brilliant, wise people who never set foot on a college campus, which is what Buckley was getting at.

What does it tell us that nearly half of Republican­s are skeptical about a vaccine that millions of people are desperate to receive? My educated guess is they’re simply stubborn and don’t like the nanny state’s insistence on masks and injections. I personally know quite a few of these folks and when asked about the vaccine, most will say, I’m going to wait and see what happens to everybody else before I get one. Never mind that then-president Donald Trump pushed for rapid developmen­t of the vaccines and received one himself.

It doesn’t help anyone — Republican, Democrat or otherwise — that signing up, usually online, requires so much time, patience and commitment. It took me several days of multiple daily attempts to finally nail down an appointmen­t 30 miles away. I’m convinced that my husband — white, male and Republican-ish, for what it’s worth — would still be unvaccinat­ed if I hadn’t made all the arrangemen­ts for him. The already-disincline­d are hardly likely to rethink in the face of such hurdles.

To those waiting your turn, I won’t say it was nothing. I received the Moderna vaccine through CVS and can’t complain about the delivery system, which was well-choreograp­hed and organized. The first shot left me with a sore arm for two days. My second shot was another story. When I awoke the next day, I felt the screams of every fiber in my body and was too exhausted to move. Ten hours later, I was fine.

That’s it. A few hours of bed rest — plan for it — is nothing compared to near-95 percent protection against a potentiall­y deadly and highly contagious disease. No one should want the full-blown version of what I experience­d. If you refuse the vaccine and catch COVID-19, I feel for you. Not only will you wish you had made a different choice, but you’ll also have only yourself to blame. Some might call that dumb.

 ?? KATHLEEN PARKER ??
KATHLEEN PARKER

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