The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Biden plans to launch pandemic response immediatel­y By Yasmeen Abutaleb and Laurie McGinley

Expanding federal role will be ‘ challengin­g’ with nation deeply divided, scientists say.

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President- elect Joe Biden made his election bid a referendum­on Donald Trump’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic. But as Biden inherits theworst crisis since the Great Depression — a raging pandemic on top of a teetering economy — his plans to turn that around are set to collide with new political realities.

The closeness of the results underscore­s voters’ deep divisions about how they think the virus should be handled. And depending on the outcome of Georgia’s two Senate run off elections, it is possible Biden will have to navigate a Republican­controlled Senate disincline­d to support a greater federal role in testing and contact tracing, among other responsibi­lities now left mostly to the states.

Biden is expected to announce today a 12- member pandemic task force, in recog

nition that the global pandemic is the primary issue hemust confront. The task force could begin meeting within days.

“It’s going to be very challengin­g for Biden to implement some of the ambitious pandemic preparedne­ss and response plans he has,” said Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the Center for Infection and Immunity at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health.

Time is not on his side, either, as the country surpassed 128,000 daily cases on Friday, setting a record for the third straight day, and more than 1,000people aday are dying — a toll that is expected to grow in coming weeks as the weather turns colder and many Americans retreat indoors. Projection­s by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington suggest the worst stretch of the pandemic is likely to hit in mid- to late January, just around the time Biden would take office.

The surge is expected to continue unless Trump undertakes aggressive new measures against the virus in his final two months — a prospect considered unlikely since he has repeatedly claimed that the country is “rounding the turn” on the pandemic, even as cases and hospitaliz­ations climbed.

Even before the race was officially called Saturday, Biden made clear in a speech Friday night that addressing the public health and economic crises would be his top priority.

“I want everyone to know on Day One, we’re going to put our plan to control this virus into action. We can’t save any of the lives lost — any of those that have been lost — but we can save a lot of lives in the months ahead,” Biden said.

Biden has laid out a far more muscular federal approach than Trump, saying he would urge state and local leaders to implement mask mandates if needed, create a panel on the model of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s War Production Board to scale up testing and lay out detailed plans to distribute vaccines to 330 million people after they are greenlight­ed as safe and effective.

He also has talked about unifying the country and restoring public trust in the federal government’s message.

He plans to launch some of those efforts immediatel­y, calling Republican and Democratic governors during the transition to urge them to adopt mask mandates and to communicat­e the importance of social distancing to their constituen­ts, according to three Biden advisers who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about these matters.

Biden’s goal, these people say, is to have people hear the same message from leaders at all levels of government and from members of both parties — something that has been lacking this past year as mask- wearing became a political flash point.

Several health experts, including some advising the Biden campaign, said it will be critical for him to have an effective communicat­ion strategy that targets not only his supporters, but also red- state officials and residents. Building consensus, not relying on federal mandates, will be the strategy, they said.

Some supporters predicted that Biden, who portrays himself as “Joe Lunchbucke­t” — not a member of the “coastal elite”

— is in a good position to contact Trump supporters who may feel excluded and disrespect­ed by Democrats, and distrustfu­l of the election results. They also predicted that Biden will step up his emphasis on the economic pain caused by the pandemic.

Biden “needs to understand the split in this country,” said Walid Gellad, associate professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh. “He should spend the next three months trying to figure out howto convince the other side that is not aligned with him.”

Another thing that Biden can do without Congress is reverse Trump’s decision to withdraw from the World Health Organizati­on — which has not yet been finalized — and begin holding briefings with government scientists and health experts, as he has repeatedly vowed to do. He also can implement mask mandates on all federal property.

But other aspects of his response will be more difficult in a fractured nation. Until there is a widely available vaccine — which is not expected until midto late 2021 — much of Biden’s plan depends on persuading people to change their behavior. That task looks considerab­ly more difficult after Tuesday’s results, health experts said, especially because millions of Americans may not accept the election results.

Much of Biden’s plan also will require money from Congress, including dramatical­ly ramping up testing and contact tracing and providing schools and businesses with billions of dollars to safely reopen. Control of the Senate will hinge on the results of two runoff elections in early January in Georgia, once considered a conservati­ve stronghold, which will determine whether Democrats achieve the control of Congress they sought to pass a massive stimulus bill that was a nonstarter for Senate Republican­s.

With Trump sowing doubt about the election results, Biden officials also are preparing for Trump to block hundreds of Biden transition team members from gaining access to government resources as required by law.

The Biden campaign has spent months working with career civil servants in a process that happens every four years.

Biden’s task force focused on the pandemic will be made up of experts and people likely to take leading roles in the administra­tion. That task force includes subgroups focused on issues such as testing, personal protective equipment and vaccine distributi­on, according to three people familiar with the plans.

The task force willbeco- chaired by former surgeon general Vivek Murthy and David Kessler, a former Food and Drug Administra­tion commission­er. The pair, who have briefed Biden on the pandemic since March, briefed him and Kamala Harris lastweek about the spike in cases along with other developmen­ts to help them with plans to “get the virus under control and get our economy fully open safely,” said a campaign official.

Biden has vowed to dramatical­ly ramp up the country’s testing capacity and contact- tracing efforts, but both initiative­s will require significan­t money from Congress — and prospects for Congress to deliver any new economic relief or a health care spending package next year are highly uncertain.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R- Ky., who is likely to retain that title if Republican­s keep their majority, said lastweek that he would like to pass new COVID- 19 relief measures during Congress’ lame- duck session.

McConnell designated money for small businesses, schools and hospitals and said funding for state and local government­s — a major Democratic priority — also could be included. He also said more money might need to go toward testing, treatment and vaccine developmen­t and distributi­on.

“Clearly, the coronaviru­s is not gone,” McConnell said at a news conference Wednesday in Kentucky. “In fact, we’ve got it worse now than we had in the spring. You can keep pumping money into the economy forever and it won’t solve the problem until we kill the virus.”

It is unclear whether Democrats will support McConnell’s plan.

 ?? ANGERER/ GETTY IMAGES/ TNS DREW ?? President- elect Joe Biden wants state and local leaders to implementm­askmandate­s if needed. He also plans to require masks on federal property.
ANGERER/ GETTY IMAGES/ TNS DREW President- elect Joe Biden wants state and local leaders to implementm­askmandate­s if needed. He also plans to require masks on federal property.

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