East Bay Times

Democrats ease up on approach to the coronaviru­s

- By Zeke Miller and Will Weissert

WASHINGTON >> “People are tired,” Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock says in the opening ad for his reelection campaign.

There's not a face mask to be seen in the Democrat's video montage of scenes across Georgia, as he goes on to say people that are “wondering when things will get back to normal, and at the same time not knowing what normal even means anymore.”

The ad reflects a shifting narrative on COVID-19 restrictio­ns across the country: Democrats are now increasing­ly supportive of easing mandates as they struggle to address voter frustratio­n with the lingering pandemic.

They're hoping a shift in policy could serve to blunt incoming political attacks with the midterm elections — when control of Congress is at stake — now less than nine months away. But their appeals for a return to normalcy, both in symbols and practice, are putting new pressure on President Joe Biden.

More than a year after he was sworn into office pledging to bring about an end to the pandemic, the virus' persistenc­e has taken a toll on Biden's approval in the midterm election year as COVID-19 restrictio­ns and mask-wearing requiremen­ts move to the forefront of the nation's culture wars.

After months of sparring with Republican governors for standing in the way of public health measures like face-coverings and social distancing, the sudden shift on the part of Democrats in recent days has caught White House officials off guard and left them seemingly out of sync with their own party.

While the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention continues to recommend indoor masking in more than 99% of the country, even Democratic states from New York to California began easing mandates for the public, and New Jersey announced plans to roll back its face-covering requiremen­t in schools.

“Some people may call what's happening now the `new normal,'” Biden said last month, acknowledg­ing the frustratio­ns. “I call it a job not yet finished.”

Yet Biden, even some members of his own party contend, isn't moving swiftly enough to finish the job. Governors in both parties have appealed to the federal government for new, clearer guidelines as COVID-19 becomes endemic and less of a public health emergency.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States