Santa Fe New Mexican

GOP fights COVID mandates, then blames Biden as cases rise

- By Jonathan Weisman

WASHINGTON — Over eight hours last Thursday night and into Friday morning, Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., hit on many issues as he spoke on the House floor in an unsuccessf­ul effort to thwart House passage of President Joe Biden’s social safety net and climate change bill. But among his most audacious assertions was that Biden was to blame for the country’s failure to quell the pandemic.

McCarthy used this line of attack even as members of his own Republican Party have spent months flouting mask ordinances and blocking the president’s vaccine mandates, and the party’s base has undermined vaccinatio­n drives while rallying around those who refuse the vaccine. Intensive care units and morgues have been strained to capacity by the unvaccinat­ed, a demographi­c dominated by those who voted last year for former President Donald Trump.

As of mid-September, 90 percent of adult Democrats had been vaccinated, compared with 58 percent of adult Republican­s.

Yet McCarthy, the House Republican leader, pressed his point: “I took President Biden at his word; I took him at his word when he said he was going to get COVID under control,” he declared in the dead of night. “Unfortunat­ely, more Americans have died this year than last year under COVID.”

As cases surge once again in some parts of the country, Republican­s have hit on a new line of attack: The president has failed on a central campaign promise — to tame the pandemic that his predecesso­r systematic­ally downplayed. Democrats are incredulou­s, dismissing the strategy as another strand of spaghetti thrown at the wall.

White House spokespers­on Andrew Bates hit back hard:

“If COVID-19 and inflation had lobbyists to help them kill more American jobs, Kevin McCarthy would be their favorite member of Congress,” he said. “He is actively underminin­g the fight against COVID, which is driving inflation.”

And Chris Taylor, a spokespers­on for the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, called House Republican­s “COVID’s biggest promoter” for “recklessly hand-waving lifesaving vaccines” and for promoting ivermectin, an anti-parasitic drug falsely said to cure COVID-19.

“When Republican­s abandoned the American people in the middle of a global crisis, House Democrats amped up vaccine distributi­on to crush the pandemic, reopened schools, small businesses and delivered a massive monthly middle-class tax cut,” Taylor said.

But Republican strategist­s and pollsters say Democrats should not be so quick to brush off the criticism, even if many COVID-related deaths this year were among those who ignored Biden’s entreaties to get vaccinated.

“McCarthy’s first hit on Biden is a competence hit — that he sold himself to voters as the guy who can make a difference in the fight against COVID, yet more Americans are dying,” said Neil Newhouse, a Republican pollster who has surveyed voters on the issue. “The bottom line is that Republican­s have always been more focused on the economic impact of the pandemic, and now we’re seeing independen­ts and swing voters expressing concern about those impacts as well: supply chain, inflation, jobs, stores not being open or having what they need.”

He added, “There is a sense that Biden’s presidency is falling short on its promises.”

The Thanksgivi­ng wave is the latest surprise in a pandemic that is nearing its two-year mark. The nation’s 14-day average of new infections is up 25 percent to more than 94,000 new cases a day, with the upper Midwest again the hottest of hot spots. At the same time, the efficacy of the coronaviru­s vaccines is holding, according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Unvaccinat­ed people are 5.8 times as likely to test positive than fully vaccinated people and 14 times as likely to die if infected.

The partisan gap in infection and vaccinatio­n rates is only slightly narrowing. The most Republican counties have 2.78 times as many new cases than the most Democratic counties, down from three times as many a month ago, according to Democratic health care analyst Charles Gaba, using data from Johns Hopkins University. The death rate in those Republican counties is nearly six times as high as the death rate in the Democratic counties.

It is unclear whether the continuing pandemic or the vaccine mandates devised to beat it are causing the president’s approval ratings to slide. Newhouse’s firm, Public Opinion Strategies, found Biden’s overall approval rating for his handling of the pandemic to be a relatively fine 51 percent in October, down from 69 percent in April but only from 53 percent in August.

But in the suburbs, where the 2020 presidenti­al race was won, the president’s approval rating on the pandemic has slipped since August from 51 percent to 45 percent. And among white men, the slide is more pronounced, from 58 percent in April to 43 percent in August and 32 percent in October.

Republican lawmakers are continuing to try to block vaccine mandates at the local, state and federal levels. In September, a proposal by Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., an obstetrici­an, to block the use of federal funds to carry out the president’s vaccine mandate for businesses with at least 100 employees failed by one vote, after all 50 Republican­s in the Senate backed it.

Later that month, Republican senators introduced legislatio­n to prohibit federal agencies from requiring proof of vaccinatio­n. And Marshall and 10 other senators wrote a letter this month to Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. and the majority leader, vowing to “oppose all efforts to implement and enforce” vaccine mandates “with every tool at our disposal, including our votes on spending measures.”

As McCarthy faulted Biden for failing to stop the virus, he also criticized him for demanding people get vaccinated — even health care workers. Biden, he said, “fired workers who were working because they wouldn’t comply with his COVID mandates. These were the same people who were heroes a year before.”

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