The Oklahoman

Congress braces for Biden's national coronaviru­s strategy

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Congress is bracing for President- elect Joe Biden to move beyond the Trump administra­tion's stateby- state approach to the COVID-19 crisis and build out a national strategy to fight the pandemic and distribute the eventual vaccine.

The incoming administra­tion's approach reflects Democrats' belief that a more comprehens­ive plan, some of it outlined in the House's $ 2 trillion coronaviru­s aid bill, is needed to get the pandemic under control. Republican­s have resisted big spending but agree additional funding is needed. With the nation on edge but a vaccine in sight, the complicate­d logistics of vaccinatin­g hundreds of millions of Americans raise the stakes on the major undertakin­g.

“We have an incredible challenge on our hands,” said Sen. Patty Murray of Washington state, which is approachin­g the anniversar­y of its first reported case of the virus last January.

A vaccine can only go so far, Murray warned, without a distributi­on plan. “A vaccine can sit on a shelf. A vaccinatio­n is what we're talking about,” she said.

As Congress weighs a new round of COVID-19 relief, federal officials say doses of the vaccine could begin shipping within a day of Food and Drug Administra­tion approval. Three pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers — Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZenec­a — have announced early results. But the rollout faces a patchwork of state plans, a transition­ing White House and potential backlash from vaccine skeptics, despite the rising U.S. death toll of nearly 260,000 people.

Biden said Tuesday on NBC's “Nightly News with Lester Holt” that his team has started meeting with COVID- 19 officials at the White House on how to “get from a vaccine being distribute­d to a person being able to get vaccinated.”

Democrats have been sounding the alarm that the Trump administra­tion's delay in granting Biden's team access to transition materials was wasting precious time.

States submitted draft vaccinatio­n planning documents last month, but not all of them have made full plans public. Private Capitol Hill briefings by officials from Operation Warp Speed, the federal vaccine effort, left some lawmakers fuming last week over what they called a lack of coordinati­on with Biden's camp.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said Tuesday that his department “immediatel­y” started working with Biden's staff after the General Services Administra­tion formally acknowledg­ed the election results.

Azar said he wanted to ensure Biden's transition would be “in the spirit of looking out for the health and well-being of the American people and, in particular, saving lives through this COVID-19 pandemic.”

From the start, the pandemic has challenged and reflected the two parties' approaches to the public health crisis, with the Trump administra­tion largely outsourcin­g many decisions to the states and Democrats pressing for a more nationaliz­ed approach.

 ?? PRESS] [CAROLYN KASTER/ THE ASSOCIATED ?? President-elect Joe Biden puts on his face mask Tuesday after introducin­g nominees and appointees to key national security and foreign policy posts at The Queen theater in Wilmington, Del. Congress is bracing for Biden to move beyond the Trump administra­tion's state-by-state approach to the COVID-19 crisis and build out a national strategy to fight the pandemic and distribute the eventual vaccine.
PRESS] [CAROLYN KASTER/ THE ASSOCIATED President-elect Joe Biden puts on his face mask Tuesday after introducin­g nominees and appointees to key national security and foreign policy posts at The Queen theater in Wilmington, Del. Congress is bracing for Biden to move beyond the Trump administra­tion's state-by-state approach to the COVID-19 crisis and build out a national strategy to fight the pandemic and distribute the eventual vaccine.

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