Los Angeles Times

Newsom’s path looking brighter

- By Taryn Luna

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom has taken criticism on all sides for a series of extremely consequent­ial and politicall­y risky calls over the past year as he’s led California through the COVID-19 pandemic.

Now his biggest decision of all, to fully reopen a state of 40 million people for business by June 15, may be one of the safest choices he’s made yet.

Public health experts say it’s unlikely that another surge of the virus would overwhelm the hospital system in California. Absent a new variant or mutation that renders vaccines ineffectiv­e across the country, they believe the chance that Newsom would need to reinstate the kinds of restrictio­ns that frustrated some voters and helped fuel the recall effort against him is almost nil.

“I’m sure they thought long and hard about this and decided to make a bet, and I think the odds are awfully good that they’re going to win it,” said Dr. Robert Wachter, professor and chairman of the Department of Medicine at UC San Francisco.

That’s not to say Newsom’s chosen path for the state is without challenges.

The governor acknowledg­ed this week that a dangerous, vaccine-resistant mutation of the virus could halt California’s progress, a worst-case public health scenario that could spell trouble for him if he has to

make the difficult decision to close businesses again.

“One thing we’re mindful of is you don’t know what you don’t know,” Newsom said.

But political observers and the governor’s top advisors believe that Democrats and those who vote with no party preference — about 70% of California’s total registered voters — might not blame him at the polls for a new strain of coronaviru­s that infects vaccinated population­s around the globe. Although Newsom’s political survival hinges on how California­ns voters feel about their lives and their governor’s performanc­e in the fall when they are likely to cast ballots should the recall qualify, the governor’s chances of staying in office remain high if no replacemen­t candidate presents a significan­t threat.

With continued masking and precaution­s, the governor said he doesn’t anticipate that California will move backward.

“We’re always going to be led by data, led by reality and the lived experience on the ground,” Newsom said. “But our expectatio­n is, if we’re vigilant, if we don’t spike the ball, if we don’t announce mission accomplish­ed and continue to do the good work that we’ve done, that by June 15 we’ll be beyond that blueprint and we’ll be back to a sense of normalcy.”

Newsom’s confidence stems from increasing vaccinatio­ns and low case counts, hospitaliz­ations and positivity rates in California after a winter surge. To date, 21.5 million doses of vaccine have been administer­ed and 8.1 million people fully vaccinated in the state, according to the California Department of Public Health.

Dr. Mark Ghaly, California’s Health and Human Services secretary, said fewer people over age 70 are ending up in hospitals due to COVID-19, something he believes means early vaccinatio­ns for elderly population­s are working as hoped and preventing severe infections. Oxygen requiremen­ts are down and intensive care unit admissions have also slowed, he said.

In February, before vaccine eligibilit­y opened up more widely in California, state estimates suggested as many as 38.1% of people in California — including 43.7% in the Los Angeles region — had antibodies for the virus that causes COVID-19, either through prior infections or vaccinatio­ns. Antibodies don’t last forever, but Ghaly said those numbers suggest a large percentage of residents already have some level of immunity.

“Some of our most populated, more crowded areas have high seropreval­ence already,” Ghaly said. “When you couple that with vaccine protection, you start to see a population that is more protected.”

The June 15 reopening date isn’t guaranteed and depends on a sufficient vaccine supply for California­ns 16 and older and low, stable hospitaliz­ation rates, according to the state’s criteria. Ghaly said that will be determined in part by how long those 16 and older have to wait for vaccine appointmen­ts when eligibilit­y expands on April 15 and how well vaccines prevent hospitaliz­ations among inoculated population­s.

If the anticipate­d supply of doses holds and the inoculatio­ns continue to work, Ghaly said, he sees the state reinstatin­g restrictio­ns only if new vaccine-resistant mutations take hold.

“We’d have almost an entirely different kind of virus on our hands versus what we’ve been dealing with today,” he said.

Throughout the pandemic, Newsom’s constantly evolving metrics and rules have given California­ns a sense of whiplash. His decision to issue a stay-at-home order, although hailed by public health experts and epidemiolo­gists, devastated businesses and made him a target of frustratio­n, particular­ly among conservati­ve voters who represent most of the signatures on recall petitions.

Under pressure to ease the initial lockdown, Newsom loosened restrictio­ns too quickly last summer and again before the winter surge, and was too slow to impose them again as case counts rose, said Dr. Thomas Tsai, an assistant professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Ghaly has conceded that he would have slowed the pace of change in the summer if he could go back in time armed with more informatio­n.

In addition, virtual learning for students in California lasted far longer than in other states, in part due to the strength of teachers unions and the reluctance of state leaders to force a return to campuses. Newsom continues to face criticism from parent groups who say he hasn’t done enough.

For Newsom, the most fateful decision of the pandemic came when he attended a lobbyist’s birthday party at a posh Napa Valley restaurant as he advised California­ns to avoid similar multi-household gatherings.

Weeks after the governor’s contradict­ory behavior made national headlines, recall signatures had rapidly increased and his voter approval rating took a precipitou­s drop.

But the lack of a viable candidate to replace Newsom — either from within his own party or a Republican with enough cachet to attract Democrats and independen­t voters — continues to insulate him from any serious threat of being recalled, said Gar Culbert, an associate professor of political science at Cal State Los Angeles.

Nonetheles­s, Culbert said, Newsom has to be cautious about reversing course.

“It’s well-known that voters don’t like retrenchme­nt,” Culbert said. “They don’t like getting something and then having that thing taken away, and so he knows that the worst thing he can do is open up some amount and then have to walk that back. And I think he’s going to be careful not to do that.”

If a surge does occur and Newsom is forced to take a political risk to reinstate restrictio­ns or push back the June 15 reopening, the long gap between the summer and a likely November recall election also plays in the governor’s favor, Culbert said.

Wachter and other health experts believe that, barring a major vaccine failure, California won’t need to impose shutdowns again — and shouldn’t.

The most sensible path forward as vaccinatio­ns and herd immunity increase is to leave lockdowns in the past and mandate mask wearing, properly ventilated indoor spaces, testing and other precaution­s, they said.

Applying business restrictio­ns in an era of vaccines would require a twotiered government system, in which vaccinated people can participat­e in more activities than the unvaccinat­ed, a propositio­n that raises ethical and equity concerns, public health experts said. The idea of vaccine passports has been controvers­ial and would largely be carried out by the private sector.

Compliance with broad restrictio­ns might also be harder to achieve as vaccinatio­ns become more widely available. While many younger people understood that staying home was good for public health and could help save the lives of older, more vulnerable people when no one had access to vaccines, it’s much harder to persuade a young person to stay home for the safety of someone who has declined to get vaccinated, Wachter said.

“It’s not just about moving back a phase and shutting down movie theaters or having a 25% cap on indoor dining,” Tsai said. “That was important when there were no vaccines, but I think we’re at a different phase of pandemic now where we can mitigate things.”

Culbert and other political observers point out that Newsom’s tone has shifted since a recall election became more likely — he has offered a much more upbeat view of California’s future than he conveyed while imposing restrictio­ns — and some have questioned the need and practicali­ty of announcing a June 15 reopening now.

Wachter said some people who heard the governor’s positive reopening message Tuesday may believe the pandemic is over and take more risks, especially if they missed his warnings about the need to remain vigilant and continue precaution­s.

But Ghaly said the state released the date as an incentive of sorts to spur unvaccinat­ed people to get inoculated before the state opens up. The administra­tion also wanted to give businesses time to prepare for safely bringing back employees in person, Ghaly said.

The timeline for the next group of vaccine-eligible California­ns to achieve immunity after a first dose — as long as six weeks for the Moderna shot — also informed the June 15 timeline and announceme­nt, Ghaly said.

Newsom has said he anticipate­s that over 30 million doses of vaccine will be administer­ed in California by that date.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? NATIONAL GUARD members assist with COVID vaccinatio­ns Thursday at Cal State L.A. To date, some 8.1 million people in the state have been fully vaccinated.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times NATIONAL GUARD members assist with COVID vaccinatio­ns Thursday at Cal State L.A. To date, some 8.1 million people in the state have been fully vaccinated.

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