The Guardian (USA)

Republican Covid lies follow foreign strongmen’s lead – and are deadly for it

- Robert Reich

Ahospital in Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state, is being charged under the country’s National Security Act for sounding the alarm over a lack of oxygen that resulted in Covid deaths. The hospital’s owner and manager says police have accused him of “false scaremonge­ring”, after he stated publicly that four patients died on a single day when oxygen ran out.

Since Covid-19 exploded in India, the prime minister, Narendra Modi, seems to be trying to the control the news more than the outbreak. On Wednesday, India recorded nearly 363,000 cases and 4,120 deaths, about 30% of worldwide deaths that day. But experts say India is vastly understati­ng the true number. Ashish Jha, dean of Brown University’s School of Public Health, estimates at least 25,000 Indians are dying from Covid each day.

The horror has been worsened by shortages of oxygen and hospital beds. Yet Modi and his government don’t want the public to get the true story.

One big lesson from the Covid crisis: lying makes it worse.Vladimir Putin is busily denying the truth about Covid in Russia. Demographe­r Alexei Raksha, who worked at Russia’s official statistica­l agency, Rosstat, but says he was forced to leave last summer for telling the truth about Covid, claims daily data has been “smoothed, rounded, lowered” to look better. Like many experts, he uses excess mortality – the number of deaths during the pandemic over the typical number of deaths – as the best indicator.

“If Russia stops at 500,000 excess deaths, that will be a good scenario,” he calculates.

Russia was first out of the gate with a vaccine but has fallen woefully behind on vaccinatio­ns. Recent polling puts the share of Russians who don’t want to be vaccinated at 60% to 70%. That’s because Putin and other officials have focused less on vaccinatin­g the public than on claiming success in containing Covid.

The US is suffering a similar problem – the legacy of another strongman, Donald Trump. Although more than half of US adults have received at least one dose of coronaviru­s vaccine, more than 40% of Republican­s have consistent­ly told pollsters they won’t get vaccinated. Their recalcitra­nce is threatenin­g efforts to achieve “herd immunity” and prevent the virus’s spread.

Like Modi and Putin, Trump minimized the seriousnes­s of the pandemic and spread misinforma­tion about it. Trump officials ordered the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to downplay its severity. He declined to get vaccinated publicly and was noticeably absent from a public service announceme­nt on vaccinatio­n that featured all other living former presidents.

Trump allies in the media have conducted a scare campaign about the vaccines. In December, Fox News host Laura Ingraham posted a story on Facebook from the Daily Mail purporting to show evidence that Chinese communist party loyalists worked at pharmaceut­ical companies that developed the coronaviru­s vaccine.

As recently as mid-April, Fox News host Tucker Carlson opined that if the vaccine were truly effective, there’d be no reason for people who received it to wear masks or avoid physical contact.

“So maybe it doesn’t work,” he said, “and they’re simply not telling you that.”

Why then should anyone be surprised at the reluctance of Trump Republican­s to get vaccinated? A recent New York Times analysis showed vaccinatio­n rates to be lower in counties where a majority voted for Trump in 2020. States that voted more heavily for Trump are also states where lower percentage­s of the population have been vaccinated.

The Republican pollster Frank Luntz says Trump bears responsibi­lity for the hesitancy of GOP voters to be vaccinated.

“He wants to get the credit for developing the vaccine,” Luntz said. “Then he also gets the blame for so few of his voters taking it.”

Trump’s Republican party is coming to resemble other authoritar­ian regimes around the world in other respects as well – purging truth tellers and trucking in lies, misinforma­tion and propaganda harmful to the public.

This week the GOP stripped Liz Cheney of her leadership position for telling the truth about the 2020 election. At last week’s congressio­nal hearing about the 6 January attack on the Capitol, one Republican, Andrew Clyde, even denied it happened.

“There was no insurrecti­on,” he said. “To call it an insurrecti­on is a bold-faced lie … you would actually think it was a normal tourist visit.”

Biden says he plans to call a summit of democratic government­s to contain the rise of authoritar­ianism around the world. I hope he talks about its rise in the US too – and the huge toll it’s already taken on Americans.

Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley and the author of Saving Capitalism: For the Many, Not the Few and The Common Good. His new book, The System: Who Rigged It, How We Fix It, is out now. He is a columnist for Guardian US

 ??  ?? Indians hold masks of Donald Trump and Narendra Modi at the Sardar Patel Gujarat Stadium in Ahmedabad in February 2020. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
Indians hold masks of Donald Trump and Narendra Modi at the Sardar Patel Gujarat Stadium in Ahmedabad in February 2020. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

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