The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Early vaccines: Leading by example or cutting in line?

- By Nicholas Riccardi

WASHINGTON » As the first round of COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns trickled out across the United States, many members of Congress lined up at the Capitol physician’s office to get inoculated.

President-elect Joe Biden got vaccinated, too, as did Vice President Mike Pence. Both rolled up their sleeves live on television to receive their shots.

For some of America’s political leaders, there are practical imperative­s for getting vaccinated early: their own risk factors, ensuring continuity at the highest reaches of the U.S. government and helping build public confidence in the vaccine. But there are also tricky optics for politician­s to navigate, particular­ly with supplies of the vaccines still exceedingl­y limited and millions of elderly Americans and essential workers weeks away from being inoculated.

“We want to ensure that everyone feels safe about this vaccine and sees some of the more prominent members of society getting it, but also ensure people don’t say ‘what about us?’” said Utibe R. Essien, an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh.

With the pandemic raging across the country, and more than 320,000 Americans already dead, some lawmakers with access to the vaccine said they were indeed planning to wait until more Americans could get their shots before getting theirs.

“I intend to take the vaccine,” tweeted Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, a Republican. “But, because I’m healthy & relatively young, I’m going to wait until seniors & frontline workers have the opportunit­y to take it first.”

Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar, a liberal Democrat who lost her father to the virus, tweeted that it was “disturbing to see members be 1st to get vaccine while most frontline workers, elderly and infirm in our districts, wait.”

The debate over politician­s’ access to the vaccine is relatively specific to the

United States. Though a handful of foreign leaders, like Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, have gotten publicly vaccinated, many have refrained.

In Canada, for example, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he has no problem waiting for his shot.

“When there’s a time for healthy people in their 40s to get their vaccine, when it’s our turn, I will be as close to the front

of that line as I can get,” Trudeau told CP24 television. “I am super enthusiast­ic about getting vaccines, and I certainly want to show people that they’re safe and that we trust our doctors, but there’s a lot of vulnerable people who need to get these vaccines much quicker than I will, and we’re going to make sure that they get it first, because that’s the priority.”

Canadian historian Robert Bothwell said there’s less of an imperative in his country for political leaders to get the vaccine because they don’t face the same skepticism of public health guidance as in the U.S.

“Canadians have trusted more in government,” Bothwell said.

Indeed, the pandemic and the guidance of health authoritie­s in the U.S. has gotten tied up in the nation’s broader partisan divides. Democrats have lauded public health officials like Dr. Anthony Fauci, who called for tight restrictio­ns to slow the spread of the virus, while some Republican­s chafed against those same measures.

There are also real concerns that many Americans will be skeptical about taking the vaccines, which were developed and approved far faster than any previous vaccines. An Associated Press-NORC poll conducted earlier this year, before the FDA approved vaccines from pharmaceut­ical companies Pfizer and Moderna, found only half the U.S. population planned to get vaccinated.

“I’m hopeful that people say ‘this senator got vaccinated, this congressma­n got vaccinated, and I may not trust the public health system but I trust them,” Essien said. “The messenger has to be different.”

The politician­s lining up to get vaccinated in the U.S. cross the political spectrum.

Virginia Rep. Don Beyer, a Democrat who was one of the first in line for his shot, said: “Millions of Americans are waiting for shots, many of whom are workers on the front lines of this pandemic. I am not more important than they are, but national leaders must lead by example.”

Several conservati­ves, who have been more likely to oppose strict pandemic control measures, cast the vaccinatio­ns as a necessary step toward getting Americans back to work and stabilizin­g small businesses. Texas Rep. Mike McCaul, a Republican, said in a video after receiving the vaccine that it will “get our economy back on track to support hard-working Americans.”

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 ?? STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA VIA AP ?? In this image made from video released by the State of West Virginia, a nurse administer­s a coronaviru­s shot to west Virginia Gov. Jim Justice, Monday, Dec. 14, 2020, in Charleston, W.Va.
STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA VIA AP In this image made from video released by the State of West Virginia, a nurse administer­s a coronaviru­s shot to west Virginia Gov. Jim Justice, Monday, Dec. 14, 2020, in Charleston, W.Va.

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