South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Democrats face quandary over support for vaccine

Delicate balancing act comes ahead of November election

- By Steve Peoples Associated Press

NEW YORK — President Donald Trump is escalating his promise for a coronaviru­s vaccine before Election Day.

But across America, Democrats, independen­ts and even some Republican­s do not trust his administra­tion to produce a safe and effective vaccine on such an aggressive timeline. Such hesitancy threatens to exacerbate the public health risk for millions of Americans whenever a vaccine is released.

With the Nov. 3 election approachin­g, Democratic officials face a delicate political challenge.

Should they attack Trump’s vaccine claims too aggressive­ly, Democrats risk further underminin­g public confidence in a possible lifesaving medicine while looking as though they are rooting against a potential cure. But if they don’t push back, it makes it easier for Trump to use the real or imagined prospect of a vaccine to boost his reelection campaign.

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee demonstrat­ed the Democrats’ balancing act Friday when asked whether he would be willing to take a vaccine released by the administra­tion before the election.

“If all the protocols had been followed and the evidence is in, of course, I’d follow science. It doesn’t matter when it happens,” Inslee said. “But I would have to look at the science, not Donald Trump. There isn’t one single thing I would ever trust from Donald Trump to be true.”

The focus on a speedy vaccine could be overshadow­ed by a sudden fight over the future of the Supreme Court in the wake of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death Friday. But Inslee’s comments are in line with a growing consensus of Democrats in leadership positions, including the party’s presidenti­al nominee, Joe Biden.

They have repeatedly cast doubt on Trump’s promises but pledged to follow the guidance of scientists and health care experts such as Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious disease specialist.

Trump restates his promise of an imminent vaccine almost daily.

Trump on Friday promised that 100 million doses of a still-unknown vaccine would be produced by the end of the year and there would be enough vaccines for all Americans by April.

“Three vaccines are already in the final stage,” Trump said at a briefing.

“Joe Biden’s anti-vaccine theories are putting a lot of lives at stake, and they’re only doing it for political reasons,” the president said. “It’s part of their war to discredit the vaccine now that they know we essentiall­y have it. We’ll be announcing it fairly soon.”

The first case of COVID-19 was reported in the United States just eight months ago. Health experts, including the administra­tion’s own Centers for Disease Control and Prevention chief, believe a vaccine will require at least 12 months to 18 months to create because of the extensive testing required to ensure it’s safe and effective.

Trump has suffered politicall­y from the pandemic, which has devastated the global economy and killed nearly 200,000 Americans — more than triple the number of deaths he predicted in April. But six weeks before the election, there is a broadening sense from voters that things have begun to move in the right direction — at least a little — even as experts warn that it’s too soon to believe the worst is over.

Four in 10 people now say the “worst is behind us” — the same number of people who say “the worst is yet to come,” according to a poll released last week by the Kaiser Family Foundation. That was the most optimistic outlook reported by the think tank since the pandemic began. Three in 4 believed the “worst is yet to come” back in early April.

At the same time, most Americans worry that the political pressure from the administra­tion will lead the Food and Drug Administra­tion to rush to approve a coronaviru­s vaccine without making sure it’s safe and effective. That includes 85% of Democrats, 61% of independen­ts and 35% of Republican­s, according to Kaiser.

“At this point, nobody actually believes it will be ready before the election,” said Mollyann Brodie, who oversees public opinion research at Kaiser.

On Capitol Hill, Democrats are sticking with a simple, consistent message pushing for a vaccine as soon as possible, but not a moment earlier. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., on Friday praised the FDA scientists and researcher­s leading the vaccine initiative, but she has been highly critical of the Trump-appointed FDA commission­er.

“We all hope and pray for a vaccine, and that will make a tremendous difference,” Pelosi said.

“We don’t want it one day sooner than it is ready, from a safety and efficacy standpoint, and we don’t want it one day later,” she added. “Hopefully that will be soon.”

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 ?? SARAH SILBIGER/GETTY ?? President Trump recently promised 100 million doses of a coronaviru­s vaccine would be produced by the end of the year. Nearly 200,000 in the U.S. have died from COVID-19.
SARAH SILBIGER/GETTY President Trump recently promised 100 million doses of a coronaviru­s vaccine would be produced by the end of the year. Nearly 200,000 in the U.S. have died from COVID-19.
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