The Record (Troy, NY)

Government of, by and for the Donald

- Dana Milbank Columnist Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter, @Milbank.

It was a life-or-death decision, and President Donald Trump chose . . . himself

To end the pandemic, there must be widespread vaccinatio­n among a public already skeptical about inoculatio­ns. If Americans think the COVID-19 vaccine has been rushed for political reasons, tens of millions won’t take it — and herd immunity won’t kick in.

But Trump just couldn’t help himself. “So we’re going to have a vaccine very soon, maybe even before a very special date,” he teased at a news conference Monday, suggesting vaccinatio­n could begin in October. “You know what date I’m talking about.” Um, Halloween?

If timing a vaccine to Election Day weren’t political enough, Trump also claimed that the Obama administra­tion wouldn’t have had a vaccine for three years, if at all, and that political benefit could “inure” to him.

Such careless, selfish talk confirms Americans’ worst fears. about a vaccine. According to a new CBS News poll, just 21% of voters said they would get a vaccine as soon as possible, even if it were free, down from 32% in July. Two-thirds said they would suspect that a vaccine rolled out this year had been rushed through without sufficient testing, and only 34% said they trusted Trump to make sure a safe vaccine is available.

Administra­tion scientists fought mightily Wednesday at a Senate hearing on the vaccine rollout to undo this damaging perception, caused largely by months of Trump’s public pressure on scientists.

“Please hear me now: The rigor of the scientific evaluation on safety and efficacy will not be compromise­d,” said Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health. He urged Americans to “take the informatio­n they need from scientists and physicians, and not from politician­s.”

Surgeon General Jerome Adams echoed the plea: “There will be no shortcuts. This vaccine will be safe . . . or it won’t get moved along.”

But senators on both sides were wary. “The president has accused FDA officials of being ‘deep state’ operatives, he’s tweeted conspiracy theories about COVID-19 deaths, and he has implicitly tied vaccine developmen­t to his reelection campaign,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., observed.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, said her state needs “assurance that, yes, this vaccine is going to be safe, that this vaccine has not been subject to political initiative­s that would speed it up in any such way that would cause it to be less effective.”

It’s all essentiall­y a rerun of what happened at the beginning of the outbreak. Thanks to audio recordings of Trump released by Bob Woodward along with his new book, we know that Trump on Feb. 7 privately confided that the new virus was “deadly stuff.” But instead of preparing the country for such, he publicly claimed it would “disappear” and was no worse than the flu.

“I wanted to always play it down,” Trump told Woodward.

That, too, was a life-or-death decision, and Trump chose political expediency.

Now, weeks before the election, this administra­tion has become a government of the Donald, by the Donald and for the Donald. The Justice Department Tuesday intervened in a defamation lawsuit against Trump brought by E. Jean Carroll, who says Trump raped her years ago. Trump’s DOJ wants the United States to be the defendant in the case instead of Trump because, it claims, he was “acting within the scope of his office as President” when he denied the assault.

Attorney General William Barr claimed Wednesday that DOJ’s action was “routine” and is “done frequently.”

Uh-huh.

Also routine: trashing the South Lawn of the White House and the Rose Garden with a political convention, appointing a bigtime political donor to disrupt service at the U.S. Postal Service on the eve of an election that will rely on mail-in voting, canceling intelligen­ce briefings for lawmakers about foreign attempts to interfere in the election, having the Justice Department back Trump’s unsubstant­iated claims about antifa and election fraud, making federal law-enforcemen­t officers serve as Trump’s political paramilita­ry and using the federal government to damage Trump’s political opponents and boost his business properties.

Now, Trump is trying to use a vaccine rollout to revive his political fortunes. The result is lost faith in the vaccine — which inevitably will mean more suffering and death.

“What a heartbreak that would be,” Collins told senators Wednesday at a hearing of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, “if we go through all of this, we come up with a vaccine that is safe and effective, we have already lost 190,000 people, and we can prevent many more deaths, and yet people are afraid to use it. We can’t let that happen.”

But it’s already happening, because the head of government has spent four years demonstrat­ing that he cares only about his own interests.

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