?:reviewBody
|
-
Since the beginning of U.S. President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris' term of office, news reports surfaced alleging the previous administration led by Donald Trump failed to establish a plan to distribute COVID-19 vaccines. The allegation undermined Trump's repeated claim that he had successfully created a process for delivering the immunizations and echoed comments by Biden before his inauguration in which he called the vaccine rollout a dismal failure so far. In mid-February 2021, Harris elaborated on what she described as no national strategy for getting Americans the shots prior to her and Biden's takeover of the White House. Speaking to Axios journalist Mike Allen, the conversation with the vice president went like this, according to a video recording of the interview: By using the phrase in many ways while describing the administration's work (in many ways, we are starting from scratch), the vice president alleged in some aspects — but not all — she and Biden were picking up from where the Trump administration left off with distributing vaccines. At least two unidentified people credited with direct knowledge of the new administration's work to curb the pandemic made similar comments to CNN reporter MJ Lee for a news story that published on Jan. 21. Under the headline, Biden inheriting nonexistent coronavirus vaccine distribution plan and must start 'from scratch,' sources say, the story read: Considering the news media's framing of Harris' Axios interview, as well as the above-mentioned CNN report, the underlying claim was whether the Harris-Biden administration was forced to literally start from scratch with a comprehensive COVID-19 vaccine distribution plan because their predecessors had no working plan. Before we determine the credibility of that accusation, let us note here: It was unclear why CNN did not name the sources cited in the above-mentioned report. CNN's media relations team did not respond to our request for an interview with Lee, but we will update this page if, or when, we receive a response from it. (It's common practice for journalists to grant anonymity to credible sources who fear repercussions, whether personally or professionally, for publicly speaking on sensitive matters. In such cases, however, journalists often explain to their audience why, or under what circumstances, they agreed to conceal a source's identity.) Also, while both sources alleged Biden was beginning from a point at which nothing had been completed yet, the literalness of their phrasing and the context under which they spoke to CNN were unclear. It is important to note: Other media outlets including FOX News published stories that they claimed debunked CNN's much-criticized report that alleged failure by the Trump administration to develop a distribution plan. Authored by media reporter Joseph Wulfsohn, the Fox News story, for example, called the other news outlet an anti-Trump network, implying that its reporting was an attempt to discredit the former president, violating journalistic principles of fairness and accuracy. The Fox News report transcribed comments by Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious-diseases expert, at a Jan. 21 news conference, according to a White House transcript and CSPAN's video of the event. There, an NBC reporter asked Fauci if the new administration was picking up where the Trump administration left off with distributing vaccines to Americans or whether it was starting from scratch. The reporter's exchange with Fauci, who's serving as Biden's chief COVID-19 medical adviser after working under Trump, went like this: In other words, Fauci refuted claims that the Biden administration was creating a plan from the ground up and said they would indeed use some aspects of Trump's vaccine distribution plan, while also incorporating fresh ideas. The Trump administration had named its plan Operation Warp Speed, a joint effort between various federal agencies and drug companies to develop COVID-19 vaccines. The initiative indeed delivered working immunizations in late 2020 and helped the first round of Americans get the shots, though it largely forced states to decide exactly how they wanted to distribute the immunizations. (Harris called attention to that system and framed it as ineffective in her Axios interview.) As a result, authorities and physicians across the country reported dwindling supplies and confusion over how they could vaccinate more people in Trump's final weeks, according to reputable news sources. There is a lack of a national communications plan — a lack of an understanding about what the plan is, Claire Hannan, executive director of the Association of Immunization Managers, told Politico on Jan. 17. Dr. Eric Topol, head of the Scripps Research Translational Institute, told The Associated Press that the Trump administration did not order enough vaccine, which was then bought by other countries. Then, opening the line to senior citizens set people up for disappointment because there wasn’t enough vaccine, he said. In response to those problems, Biden on Jan. 21 signed 10 executive orders to jump start his national strategy to prevent the spread of COVID-19, which is part of a broader plan totaling $1.9 trillion. According to The Associated Press the actions established a framework for the federal government to: In sum, while it is true that the Biden administration promised to revamp the country's strategy for immunizing Americans, it is false to claim that it was literally starting from scratch, or that the Trump administration had done nothing to develop a vaccine distribution plan, especially considering Fauci's assertions to the contrary.
(en)
|