San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Not a savior, not a villain, just a doctor doing his job

- @RichLowry

For his critics, Dr. Anthony Fauci cemented his status as the Rasputin of public health with his Senate testimony last week.

The National Institutes of Health official gently but unmistakab­ly struck a different tone than President Donald Trump, earning rebukes from radio talk show hosts and Fox News anchors, as well as fueling the outrage of the #FireFauci claque.

Although Fauci’s every utterance is now examined with the same care as pronouncem­ents of the pope, his words weren’t exactly earth-shattering. He said if reopenings are done carelessly, “we will start to see little spikes that might turn into outbreaks.” Does anyone doubt that’s a possibilit­y?

No serious person would argue there are no hazards to reopening, only that some level of risk is worth taking to begin to ease the nation’s economic calamity.

Fauci is an important voice in this debate, if only one voice. He is neither the dastardly bureaucrat­ic mastermind imposing his will on the country that his detractors on the right make him out to be, or the philosophe­r-king in waiting that his boosters on the left inflate him into. He’s simply an epidemiolo­gist, one who brings considerab­le expertise and experience to the table, but at the end of the day, his focus is inevitably and rightly quite narrow.

This is why it’s a tautology for Fauci’s critics to say he’s focused on the disease above all else. This is like saying the commerce secretary is too consumed with finding business opportunit­ies for U.S. companies, or the head of the Joint Special Operations Command has an unhealthy obsession with killing terrorists.

As a breed, epidemiolo­gists tend to focus on the worst case. They don’t want to be wrong and contribute to some deadly pathogen getting loose when their job is to keep that from happening. They are naturally cautious. This, too, is as it should be. You probably don’t want a risk-taking epidemiolo­gist any more than you want a highly creative, envelope-pushing accountant.

For all these reasons, you wouldn’t choose an epidemiolo­gist to run your country. And Fauci isn’t.

Trump has remained completely undomestic­ated in the White House. The idea that he has now, as some of his supporters imply, been seduced, bullied or otherwise manipulate­d by a mild-mannered, nearly 80-yearold doctor is bonkers.

The reason Trump issued his shutdown guidance was that the prospect of uncontroll­ed spread of the virus was too risky to contemplat­e.

Since populist critics of the shutdowns don’t want to criticize Trump, let alone say that they think he blew one of the most consequent­ial decisions of his presidency, they focus their ire on the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases instead.

In the attention-getting exchange between Sen. Rand Paul and Fauci at the Senate hearing, both were right. Paul is obviously correct that we shouldn’t elevate one person as the authority to whom everyone submits, and Fauci was right that he’s a scientist who doesn’t even try to give advice on matters outside his ambit.

Part of the right’s hostility to Fauci is an understand­able reaction to progressiv­es putting him on a pedestal. His views should be taken seriously, but they can’t be determinat­ive.

The coronaviru­s crisis is a radically different phenomenon than, say, the Ebola outbreak because it implicates our entire society. What relative weight to give to the economy and public health — among many other weighty public policy questions — is way above Fauci’s pay grade.

This is what we elect presidents, governors and mayors to decide. It’s their responsibi­lity to balance the competing considerat­ions and if they are found wanting, they lose their jobs.

Anyone in this position will want to hear from experts, though. Which is why if Trump really did fire Fauci, some other meddlesome epidemiolo­gist would emerge soon enough. If Fauci didn’t exist, we’d have to invent him.

 ?? Win McNamee / Associated Press ?? Senators listen to Dr. Anthony Fauci during a virtual Senate committee hearing. Fauci is an important voice in this debate, if only one voice. If it weren’t him up there saying those things, it would be another epidemiolo­gist.
Win McNamee / Associated Press Senators listen to Dr. Anthony Fauci during a virtual Senate committee hearing. Fauci is an important voice in this debate, if only one voice. If it weren’t him up there saying those things, it would be another epidemiolo­gist.
 ??  ?? RICH LOWRY
RICH LOWRY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States