From News Nation:
“All-out effort to keep Biden
COVID-free at White House”
When President Joe Biden met with
U.S. governors at the White House on Monday, he was the only one given a glass
of water — lest anyone else remove their mask to take a drink. The president
was seated more than 10 feet from everyone, including Vice President Kamala
Harris and members of his Cabinet. A White House staffer who was wearing a
surgical mask when Biden entered the room was quickly handed an N95 version. These
are just some of the extraordinary efforts on the part of the White House to
keep the president from getting COVID-19, even though he’s gotten both of his
regular vaccinations and his booster. It’s no surprise that unusual steps are
taken to protect any president. But the strict precautions could also threaten
to undercut the Biden administration’s own efforts to tell Americans —
especially those who are vaccinated and boosted — that they can get on with
something closer to their normal lives in the face of the omicron wave. And
it’s emblematic of the messaging challenges surrounding the administration’s
approach to COVID-19 as the virus becomes endemic, familiar and somewhat
controlled but still menacing, with hard-to-follow guidelines often unevenly
implemented. For months, Biden aides have fretted that the people who are most
protected against COVID-19 remain the most cautious, a dynamic they view as a
drag on the nation’s economic and psychological recovery. When the highly
transmissible omicron variant hit, Biden said it was a “cause for concern, not
cause for panic.” In recent weeks, his aides and science advisers have
highlighted study after study showing the strong protection offered by the
COVID vaccines against the variant and reassuring vaccinated people they can go
about their daily lives. At a Jan. 19 news conference, Biden declared: “We have
the tools — vaccines, boosters, masks, tests, pills — to save lives and keep
businesses and schools open” and rejected the notion that still-widespread
restrictions reflect a “’new normal.” “It will get better,” he promised.
Since even before Biden was
elected, his aides have gone all-out to protect the now-79-year-old president
from potential infection. He spent much of the 2020 campaign season holding
remote events from a studio in the basement of his home, venturing out for
travel in a bubble of frequently tested aides subject to an array of
restrictions. That caution continued well after he was fully vaccinated and
living at the White House. The president has held up his administration’s
fidelity to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines as a virtue,
after they were regularly flouted by former President Donald Trump, who became
seriously ill after contracting the virus.
As the nation’s virus response
and vaccination campaign has become increasingly politicized, White House
officials have expressed both political and policy concerns over a possible
Biden infection. Though the vaccines are highly effective, a breakthrough case
could erode public confidence in the shots and be used as a political cudgel
against a president who was elected to bring an end to the pandemic. Biden
himself has at times taken a more relaxed approach to restrictions. When the
CDC last May surprised the White House by easing its guidelines on indoor
mask-wearing by fully vaccinated individuals, Biden sought to publicly model
the policy for the rest of the nation. He was meeting with vaccinated Republican
lawmakers when the change was announced and led the group in removing their
masks. But that CDC guidance proved to be premature and was reversed over the
summer, because vaccinated people could still transmit the virus, potentially
endangering the tens of millions of Americans who are still unvaccinated.
When the delta strain surged last
fall, the White House strengthened its testing protocols for everyone close to
Biden — restrictions that had been lessened once aides were fully vaccinated
and case counts began to fall nationally. In-person meetings were once again
curtailed. Aides began increasing the distance between Biden and even
vaccinated-and-tested individuals as a precaution, reminiscent of his earliest
days in office. In early January, as the nation’s capital led the country in
per capita COVID-19 cases, White House press secretary Jen Psaki highlighted
the “very strict precautions” taken to keep Biden and Harris safe, including
mandatory mask-wearing and daily testing for those coming in contact with them.
She also said the White House had taken to limiting gatherings “to under 30
people.” But there were nearly 40 participants named by the administration — as
well as two dozen members of the press — at Biden’s Monday meeting with the
governors. Psaki said the administration takes extra precautions any time the
president removes his mask to speak to a group. She noted that the nation
continues to set records in reported cases and hospital admissions. “The
president’s view is that right now we still need to keep our heads down and
stay at it to fight what is still surging in parts of the country,” she said.
“But we do have the tools to get to a point where it does not disrupt our daily
lives.” Biden, aides say, has relished opportunities outside the White House
when he can engage in the sort of political glad-handing that has been
suppressed by the pandemic. And in public, he’s chafed at some of the
precautions, saying that the first thing he aims to do differently in his
second year in the White House is “get out of this place more often.” He’s
hardly alone in his impatience. On Monday, seated across a large gap from Biden
in the East Room, Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, the chair of the governors’
association, appealed for the government to more clearly define a pathway out
of the pandemic. “We need the CDC to help us to have the right standards to end
this pandemic and move to more endemic status,” he said. “We want to go from
today to more normal.” The night before, the president and first lady Jill
Biden did attend the black-tie National Governors Association dinner at Mount
Vernon. Biden spoke, but he didn’t stay for dinner.
^ It seems a lot is doing to keep
Biden safe from Covid, but that safety has a consequence: the ordinary American
does not see him as a President they can trust or get behind. To be fair, a lot
of that is due to his political failures as President (the Afghan Withdrawal, leaving
Americans and Afghans behind in Afghanistan months later, the supply-chain
problems, Covid Test Shortages, Build Back Better stalling, lack of tough response
to China, lack of tough response to Russia, the Democrat In-Fighting, etc.) He
has a lot of work ahead of him if he wants to get the ordinary American’s trust
and he can’t do that hiding away. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/us-news/all-out-effort-to-keep-biden-covid-free-at-white-house/
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