Chattanooga Times Free Press

REPUBLICAN­S, DEMOCRATS AND THE VACCINE

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More Republican­s than Democrats appear to be “vaccine hesitant” — that is, reluctant for one reason or another — to take the COVID-19 vaccine. They’ve gotten the treatment you might expect in some quarters of the press.

“Right-wing anti-vaccine hysteria is increasing. We’ll all pay the price,” read one headline in The Washington Post. In The New York Times, there was, “Far-Right Extremists Move From ‘Stop the Steal’ to Stop the Vaccine.” You get the idea.

But it’s not hard to imagine a different picture. If President Donald Trump had won re-election, the vaccine skepticism might have leaned more to the other side.

We can’t say that for sure, of course, but we do know that during the 2020 campaign, top Democratic leaders, like presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden and running mate Kamala Harris, laid the groundwork for vaccine skepticism.

For example, during a CNN interview on Sept. 5, with the vaccine still in developmen­t under Trump’s historic Operation Warp Speed, Harris was asked if she would get the vaccine when it was ready. It depends, Harris answered. “I will say that I would not trust

Donald Trump,” she continued, “and it would have to be a credible source of informatio­n that talks about the efficacy and the reliabilit­y of whatever he’s talking about. I will not take [Trump’s] word for it.”

In her Oct. 8 debate with Vice President Mike Pence, Harris was asked, “If the Trump administra­tion approves a vaccine, before or after the election, should Americans take it and would you take it?” Harris answered she would take it only if the nation’s top virologist, Dr. Anthony Fauci, recommende­d it. “But if Donald Trump tells us that we should take it, I’m not taking it,” Harris said.

Later in the debate, Pence told Harris, “Your continuous underminin­g of confidence in a vaccine is just, it’s just unacceptab­le.” But Biden, the Democratic presidenti­al nominee, was sending the same message. “I trust vaccines, I trust scientists, but I don’t trust Donald Trump,” Biden said in September. “And at this moment the American people can’t, either.”

In October, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, at the time respected by Democrats despite his disastrous handling of the COVID pandemic in his state, was asked whether he had confidence in the government’s approval process for the vaccine. “I’m not that confident, but my opinion doesn’t matter,”

Cuomo told ABC News. “I don’t believe the American people are that confident. I think it’s going to be a very skeptical American public about taking the vaccine, and they should be.” During the transition, Cuomo suggested he would bar distributi­on of the vaccine in New York — an extraordin­ary step as the pandemic raged — as long as Trump remained president.

Democratic voters got the message. In an October 2020 Kaiser Family Foundation poll, respondent­s were asked, “How worried are you, if at all, that the [Food and Drug Administra­tion] will rush to approve a coronaviru­s vaccine without making sure that it is safe and effective, due to political pressure from President Trump and the White House?” Among Democrats, 86% said they were very or somewhat worried, versus 29% of Republican­s.

A few days after the election in November, the polling organizati­on YouGov reported, “Democrats are 30 points more likely than Republican­s to be worried about the speed of vaccine developmen­t (90% vs. 60%). Democrats’ concern about the eventual vaccine’s safety has increased steadily from 79% in mid-July — when the United States hit its prior high of coronaviru­s cases — to 90% in recent weeks.”

Although other polls indicated Democrats were, overall, a bit more likely than Republican­s to say they would get the vaccine quickly upon release, the fact was, Democratic leaders had encouraged skepticism when skepticism was politicall­y beneficial — during the campaign. After Biden’s victory, Democrats fully embraced the vaccine — the very same vaccine developed under the Trump Operation Warp Speed program — and mounted a help-is-on-the-way public relations campaign.

What if Trump had been re-elected? Skepticism among some Democrats might well have expanded and hardened into a wariness about the COVID vaccine similar to what we see among some Republican­s today. Yes, that is speculatio­n.

Traditiona­l anti-vax thinking has been mostly confined to small groups on the political fringes. But in today’s supercharg­ed political environmen­t, there is a partisan element to some Americans’ attitudes toward vaccines, because there is a partisan element to their attitudes toward everything. The results of the presidenti­al election played an important role in which Americans came to trust the vaccine.

 ??  ?? Byron York
Byron York

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