Los Angeles Times

Virus variant may take political toll

But are Republican­s or Democrats more at risk of fallout in 2022 midterm election?

- By Melanie Mason

The virulence of the coronaviru­s Delta variant has ushered in a new phase of the pandemic, prompting tougher vaccine and mask requiremen­ts and stoking a volatile mood among Americans that poses peril for both political parties.

Reflecting the urgent need to guard the country against climbing rates of infection, Republican and Democratic politician­s alike have shifted focus in recent weeks. The GOP, mindful of lagging vaccinatio­n rates in conservati­ve communitie­s, has begun making more robust appeals for inoculatio­ns. Democrats, meanwhile, have embraced mandates as an additional tool to reach the remaining unvaccinat­ed.

In the clearest sign yet of this escalating response, President Biden announced Thursday a new slate of incentives — including $100 for those who get vaccinated — and requiremen­ts, ordering federal employees and contractor­s to get the shot or submit to regular testing, mask-wearing and social distancing.

“I say to all those who are unvaccinat­ed — please, please get vaccinated,” he said in an address from the East Room of the White House. “To the rest of America, this is no time to be despondent or let our guard down. We just need to finish the job with science, with facts, with the truth.”

These moves are set

[Analysis, against a backdrop of palpable anger in the country — be it the vaccinated seething at uninoculat­ed holdouts or those chafing at new mask and vaccine imposition­s from the government.

With the majority of American adults already inoculated, Republican­s risk being seen as responsibl­e for the “pandemic of the unvaccinat­ed,” given higher rates of vaccine hesitancy in their ranks.

But Democrats, with control of both the White House and Congress, may shoulder the blame for any plunge in the nation’s hopefulnes­s about halting the virus — and possibly hand the GOP a potent campaign issue in next year’s midterm election.

Mandates will be denounced by the right in an effort “to fire up and mobilize their base against this big, overreachi­ng federal government,” said Cornell Belcher, a Democratic pollster. “None of this conversati­on is about what will fire up young voters, minority voters — the college-educated women who were key to the Biden coalition. Where’s their red meat?”

The resurgence of the virus after months of declining infections is good news for nobody, least of all Biden, who made a return to prepandemi­c normality a centerpiec­e of his first months in the White House. A recent ABC News/Ipsos poll found that a majority of Americans are now pessimisti­c about the direction of the country, a 20-point slide in optimism from less than three months ago.

But the president still gets relatively high marks for his leadership in combating the virus, significan­tly outpacing voters’ overall assessment of his job performanc­e.

“People have confidence that the Biden administra­tion’s approach is competent,” said Jesse Ferguson, a Democratic strategist, “and that he’s telling the truth.”

That trust is now being tested by the return of mitigation measures. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week issued new guidance recommendi­ng that everyone wear masks indoors in public in parts of the country with surging transmissi­on rates — just two months after the public health agency said indoor masking was unnecessar­y for the fully vaccinated.

The reversal was not only a symbolic blow to the nation’s pandemic recovery, but also gave ammunition to administra­tion critics. Public health experts wondered whether the CDC was too hasty in initially lifting the mask guidance. Republican­s, meanwhile, jumped on the chance to decry what they say is bureaucrat­ic overreach and raise the specter of harsher measures such as lockdowns.

Rep. Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfiel­d, the House GOP leader, criticized the CDC’s decision as “conjured up by liberal government officials who want to continue in a perpetual pandemic state.”

Republican­s have been particular­ly apoplectic over new mask requiremen­ts set by the Capitol physician for the House of Representa­tives, with some risking a fine by refusing to wear a face covering.

Aiming their ire at House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (DSan Francisco), they questioned why the Senate does not have similar rules. (Nearly all senators have publicly stated they are vaccinated, while almost half of House Republican­s have refused to disclose whether they are inoculated, according to CNN.)

Pelosi, asked by reporters to respond to McCarthy’s complaints, appeared to call her fellow California­n “such a moron.”

While the GOP has coalesced around antipathy for mask mandates, the messaging around vaccines has been more muddled. The Delta variant prompted a notable shift in Republican­s advocating for the shot, albeit often in cautious terms that emphasize personal choice, while some in the party continue to loudly disparage vaccinatio­n with inflammato­ry rhetoric.

The current wave of infections is hardly just a Republican problem. About 60% of American adults are fully vaccinated, according to the CDC, but surveys say the vast majority of those most eager to get the jab have already done so.

Among the remaining unvaccinat­ed population, Black, Latino and younger Americans — all groups that tend to skew Democratic — are overrepres­ented, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit that does nonpartisa­n healthcare research.

Still, looking at vaccinatio­n rates across the country, the partisan alignment is stark.

“We know that Republican­s are getting vaccinated at a much lower rate than Democrats and independen­ts,” said Ashley Kirzinger, associate director for polling and public opinion research at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “In counties that disproport­ionately went for [President] Trump, they have a lower vaccine uptake.”

Unvaccinat­ed younger adults and people of color tend to take a “wait and see” approach, while Republican­s are more firmly set against getting the shot, the Kaiser nonprofit found.

“What’s most important is that we be compassion­ate, we be understand­ing, we don’t try to shame or blame or ridicule,” said Rep. Mariannett­e Miller-Meeks, an Iowa Republican and ophthalmol­ogist who has been administer­ing shots in her district for months. “We know the answer to the pandemic is to get vaccinated.”

In some cases, gentle persuasion has been replaced with a sharper tone. Alabama’s GOP Gov. Kay Ivey said last week that “it’s time to start blaming the unvaccinat­ed folks, not the regular folks. It’s the unvaccinat­ed folks that are letting us down.”

Rob Stutzman, a Sacramento-based GOP consultant, said the increased pleas were a sign Republican­s “see the real cost. They realize people are dying.”

“Politicall­y, there has to have been a realizatio­n ... that this is going to have longer-term political consequenc­es to be on the wrong side of history by not being clearly pro-vaccine,” Stutzman said. He pointed to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a childhood victim of polio and consistent COVID-19 vaccine advocate, who used campaign funds to pay for radio ads to promote the shot in his home state of Kentucky.

Neverthele­ss, some of the party’s most provocativ­e members, such as Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Lauren Boebert of Colorado, are proudly defiant of any mitigation efforts.

“The bestsellin­g item to the Republican base is still the vaccine conspiraci­es being pushed by Marjorie Taylor Greene,” said Ferguson, the Democratic strategist.

The prospect of new vaccine mandates could open a new front in the COVID culture wars. In addition to imposing new rules on federal employees, Biden said Thursday that the Department of Justice had determined that vaccine rules are legal for local-level businesses and government­s to impose. The Pentagon later said military members will be subject to the same vaccinatio­n or testing requiremen­ts as federal workers.

At least 19 states, however, all led by Republican­s, have some form of ban on requiring proof of vaccinatio­n, either for local government­s, state agencies or private businesses.

But the trend toward vaccine requiremen­ts has accelerate­d quickly in recent days. The University of California system has said it will mandate the shots for almost everyone on campus in the coming school year. Gov. Gavin Newsom and the city of Los Angeles soon followed suit for state and city workers, requiring vaccines or frequent testing. The trend has carried over to the private sector, with major companies such as Google and Morgan Stanley requiring employees be vaccinated to return to the office.

With no clear signal on how the public will respond to these new rules, politician­s would be wise to proceed with caution, said David Winston, a Republican pollster who advises House and Senate GOP leadership.

“Everything is up in the air after people thought they got to a resolution [with the pandemic]. The challenge here is that politician­s need to realize this is anything but a political issue to the average person,” he said. “The idea that somehow political points can be put on the board — that would be a serious mistake.”

‘The challenge here is that politician­s need to realize this is anything but a political issue to the average person.’

— David Winston, Republican pollster and advisor

 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT BIDEN announces new rules for unvaccinat­ed federal workers on Thursday. Democrats could lose support for cracking down on Delta, even as Republican­s risk votes for not encouragin­g vaccinatio­ns.
Susan Walsh Associated Press PRESIDENT BIDEN announces new rules for unvaccinat­ed federal workers on Thursday. Democrats could lose support for cracking down on Delta, even as Republican­s risk votes for not encouragin­g vaccinatio­ns.

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