Yuma Sun

Biden says he trusts vaccines and scientists, not Trump

- BY ALEXANDRA JAFFE AND WILL WEISSERT

WILMINGTON, Del. – Joe Biden said Wednesday that while he trusts what scientists say about a potential coronaviru­s vaccine, he doesn’t trust President Donald Trump.

His comments come as the debate over a vaccine – how it will be evaluated and distribute­d when it’s ready – has taken center stage in the presidenti­al race with seven weeks to go until the November election.

Trump and Biden have been trading accusation­s that the other is underminin­g public trust in a potential coronaviru­s vaccine. Biden has expressed concerns that the vaccine approval process could be politicize­d, while Trump and his allies counter that such comments from Biden and other Democrats are turning off the public to a potentiall­y lifesaving vaccine when it’s released.

Biden, speaking in Wilmington, Delaware, after being briefed by public health experts about a potential vaccine, cited Trump’s “incompeten­ce and dishonesty” surroundin­g the distributi­on of personal protective equipment and coronaviru­s testing. The U.S. “can’t afford to repeat those fiascos when it comes to a vaccine,” he said.

“I trust vaccines, I trust scientists, but I don’t trust Donald Trump,” Biden said, “and at this moment, the American people can’t, either.”

On Wednesday evening, Trump raised new questions about the administra­tion’s rollout of a vaccine when he publicly contradict­ed the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who said at a congressio­nal hearing earlier Wednesday that a vaccine wouldn’t be broadly available to most Americans until the summer of 2021.

For his part, Biden has said he would take a vaccine “tomorrow” if it were available but that he would want to “see what the scientists said” first. His running mate, Kamala Harris,

has said she wouldn’t trust Trump to be honest about the safety of any potential vaccine and worries that experts and scientists would be “muzzled” by the president because he’s so eager to get a vaccine approved by his stated goal of Election Day.

Biden, meanwhile, responded during his Delaware event to the question of whether his comments could undermine trust in scientists.

“No,” Biden said, because Americans “know (Trump) doesn’t have any respect for scientists.”

He added that the vaccine approval process should be “totally transparen­t” and evaluated by a “board of scientists” that could give the public an unbiased opinion.

Biden also discussed a vaccine distributi­on proposal crafted by public health experts and shared with him during his briefing Wednesday. According to the proposal, first responders and those “at the greatest risk” — including those in nursing homes and people with serious preexistin­g conditions — would get the vaccine first and not necessaril­y people in minority communitie­s, which have been disproport­ionately hit by the impacts of the virus.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? paTrICK SemanSKY/ DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTI­AL CANDIDATE former Vice President Joe Biden speaks after participat­ing in a coronaviru­s vaccine briefing with public health experts Wednesday in Wilmington, Del.
AP PHOTO paTrICK SemanSKY/ DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTI­AL CANDIDATE former Vice President Joe Biden speaks after participat­ing in a coronaviru­s vaccine briefing with public health experts Wednesday in Wilmington, Del.

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