Times-Herald

Where’s the Democratic anger?

- Byron York

After President Joe Biden's recent overseas meetings, the United States and G-7 countries agreed to support further investigat­ion into the origins of the Covid-19 pandemic. In a summit communique, the nations called for a "timely, transparen­t, expert-led and science-based WHO-convened" investigat­ion.

That's an obvious problem. The U.S. and G7 are going to rely on the World Health Organizati­on to investigat­e the origins of the virus after the WHO released an investigat­ion earlier this year that Secretary of State Antony Blinken called "highly deficient" and others call a complete travesty? "Is that it?" asked The Wall Street Journal editorial page. "The world's leaders want the same WHO that failed in its first Covid-19 origin study to do another one — this time with ... feeling?"

So there's no reason to expect success. But here is a bigger question: Where is the Biden administra­tion's passion, its intensity, its anger in pursuing the origins of Covid?

In 2016, Russia tried to interfere in the U.S. presidenti­al election. There is no evidence the Russians ever touched any ballot, and there is no evidence their hacking and social media operations ever influenced any American's vote. And yet the U.S. political, justice and media worlds became consumed for years with investigat­ing Russia's actions. There were investigat­ions in the House and Senate. A special counsel investigat­ion supervised by the Justice Department indicted a number of Russians. There was sometimes-hysterical media coverage that ran virtually 24/7 for three years. Russia did not succeed in influencin­g the election, but it succeeded spectacula­rly in setting off U.S. investigat­ions.

Now, 600,000 Americans have died in a pandemic that began under suspicious circumstan­ces in China and about which the Chinese government is stonewalli­ng all meaningful investigat­ion. 600,000 dead — that is a lot bigger than a few Russian Facebook ads in Wisconsin. And yet leading figures in the Biden administra­tion and the Democratic Party seem to have far less zeal about pursuing the origins of a disease that killed 600,000 Americans than they had in investigat­ing what Russia did in the 2016 election.

It doesn't make sense. Everyone involved, scientist and non-scientist, agrees it is important to know the real origins of Covid. The Americans who want more investigat­ion are not accusing China of deliberati­ng loosing the virus on the world, but they do think there is persuasive evidence that the virus escaped into the human population as a result of an accidental leak during research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. And they know that China has hidden the facts from the very beginning.

For months, many Democrats agreed with the internatio­nal health establishm­ent that there was nothing to the lab leak theory. Some in the media ridiculed or even suppressed the views of those who thought the lab leak hypothesis was worth investigat­ing. Now, after they have been forced to concede that a lab leak is at least a real possibilit­y, they are doing the minimum to look into it. Under pressure from Republican­s, President Biden has directed the intelligen­ce community to "redouble their efforts" in a 90-day review of an earlier, inconclusi­ve look at Covid's origins.

Some Republican­s want much more. GOP Sen. Tom Cotton has been a leader in calling for a deeper investigat­ion of China's actions. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy says Republican lawmakers will start a probe on their own, even though as the minority party they have no power to compel cooperatio­n. And some

House Republican­s are calling for sanctions against top Chinese health officials in the way that the U.S. sanctioned individual Russians over 2016 election interferen­ce.

But where is the big, screaming, wall-to-wall effort to find out what happened? It's nowhere to be found. Which leads to the question: Why are the people who couldn't get enough investigat­ions of the 2016 Russia affair so relatively incurious about investigat­ing the origins of a disease that has had vastly more consequent­ial effects?

The answer, unfortunat­ely, is Donald Trump. In 2017, there was agreement between Democrats and Republican­s that Russia's interferen­ce effort needed to be investigat­ed. There was bipartisan action on Capitol Hill. But then the investigat­e-Russia effort morphed into the get-Trump effort. And the investigat­ions mushroomed. If the Russian interferen­ce investigat­ions had been solely investigat­ions into Russian interferen­ce, they would have been concluded with relative unanimity between the parties and a low-to-moderate amount of press attention. But Trump Derangemen­t Syndrome set in, and the political and media worlds went RussiaRuss­iaRussia, only to fail in their goal of finding Trump-Russia "collusion."

Now there is a topic of enormous global importance — in addition to 600,000 Americans, Covid has killed more than 3 million people worldwide. And the Biden administra­tion is kinda, sorta pursuing an investigat­ion. Does anyone doubt that it should be doing much, much more?

(EDITORS NOTE: Byron York is chief political correspond­ent for the Washington Examiner.)

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