The Mercury News

More will die from the coronaviru­s because of timid Newsom response

- Daniel Borenstein Contact Daniel Borenstein at dborenstei­n@bayareanew­sgroup. com or 925-943-8248.

This past week, Gov. Gavin Newsom ceded moral authority to guide California out of the depths of the pandemic. More people likely will die because of his timid leadership.

The week began with news that Newsom had earlier this month attended a 12-person dinner for a lobbyist friend at a tony Napa Valley restaurant, violating his own guideline — now mandate — against gatherings of more than three households.

The week ended with the usually loquacious governor who rarely shies from television cameras announcing via news release a head-scratching curfew — and then sending his health secretary out to try to explain the elusive rationale for a policy that lacked supporting data.

As California cases are surging, the cooler weather is driving more people indoors where the virus spreads more easily, and the holiday season that will bring too many unsafe family gatherings begins, tough measures are needed to slow COVID-19.

But Newsom effectivel­y sidelined himself with the dinner debacle at French Laundry in Yountville. After months of urging caution, the governor undermined his credibilit­y, reinforcin­g criticism that he’s just another “do as I say, not as I do” elite politician more interested in hobnobbing with lobbyists than leading by example.

It couldn’t come at a worse time.

More than ever during the pandemic, the state needs a governor positioned to take decisive action to slow the virus spread. But rather than mandating quarantine­s as other states have done to prevent interstate travelers from spreading the disease in California, he issued a travel advisory merely urging that people selfquaran­tine.

Then, on Monday, he “pulled an emergency brake” on the state’s reopening plan. It was weeks overdue but merely a dialing back for much of the state in the governor’s color- coded rating system. Newsom continues to adjust his rheostat rather than making the politicall­y tough, but necessary, decision to flip the switch.

Like back in March, we need to quickly flatten the curve to keep the virus from overwhelmi­ng our hospitals and leaving mounting carnage in its wake.

“The virus is spreading at a pace we haven’t seen since the start of this pandemic, and the next several days and weeks will be critical to stop the surge. We are sounding the alarm,” Newsom said in the news release.

He’s right. But his actions don’t reflect the urgency.

Unlike leaders in Europe, U.S. officials are unwilling to return to tough restrictio­ns we lived with in the spring. “Pandemic fatigue” has set in, we’re told. Yes, there is fatigue — and exasperati­on that some, starting with President Trump, still refuse to acknowledg­e the deadliness of the disease, the need for basic precaution­s like masks and the reality that the economy will not recover until the coronaviru­s is controlled.

This is the time when governors such as Newsom need to spend political capital — to take necessary but perhaps unpopular steps — to protect the health of state residents. Unfortunat­ely, Newsom wasted much of his political capital dining out with his buddies.

So rather than imposing tough restrictio­ns, the governor’s office announced a “limited stay-at-home order” requiring that nonessenti­al work, movement and gatherings stop in counties in the purple tier, affecting about 90% of California­ns.

But the order only applies from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. It should be around the clock.

Dr. Mark Ghaly, the secretary of health and human services, was left to explain the rationale. He suggested to me that those are the hours when risky behavior is most likely to occur. But when pressed, he acknowledg­ed that he has no data to back that up.

Here we are nine months into this crisis, and the governor and his advisers, who claim to be making decisions based on science and data, are instead driven by politics and hunches.

As Ghaly acknowledg­ed, the spread is greatest in places where people congregate indoors. We’re talking about restaurant­s, bars, gyms, churches, political rallies and family gatherings. Some of that activity occurs between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. But the coronaviru­s is not necessaril­y nocturnal. It can spread at any hour.

Ghaly said he’ll be watching California’s virus transmissi­on data, and tougher steps might be coming. Unfortunat­ely, he and the governor continue to be reactive rather than proactive.

“Thanksgivi­ng is going to be an important and challengin­g time on a number of fronts,” Ghaly said. It’s too bad more steps haven’t been taken to prepare for it.

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