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During a town hall moderated by CNN's Anderson Cooper on Feb. 16, 2021, U.S. President Joe Biden discussed the country's work to prevent the spread of COVID-19 following former President Donald Trump's departure from the White House. During Biden's appearance, Kayleigh McEnany, Trump's former press secretary, alleged via the below-displayed tweet that Biden falsely claimed a vaccine did not exist when he began his term roughly one month earlier. Sharing a video segment of the town hall, McEnany claimed in a tweet: Biden says there was no vaccine when he came into office. That is abjectly FALSE. She was correct in that epidemiologists developed vaccines (one by Pfizer and BioNTech and the other by Moderna and the National Institutes of Health) and received FDA approval for distributing the shots in late 2020, under the Trump administration. Additionally, the video in McEnany's tweet did include authentic comments by Biden, according to footage of the event on CNN's website and a White House transcript. The president indeed said the following on stage with Cooper: In other words, McEnany's accusation was true at face value; the president at one point during the town hall said his administration did not have the vaccine when it took over the White House. But based on his other comments at the event, as well as an email correspondence Snopes had with the White House to determine the intention behind the president's phrasing in that brief moment, it was misleading to claim Biden erroneously attempted to erase the success of scientists who developed COVID-19 vaccines under the Trump administration or that he literally believed a vaccine did not exist before his term. Seconds before the above comment, the president not only acknowledged a COVID-19 vaccine existed before he took his oath of office but he elaborated on the nation's stock of shots at that time. He and Cooper had the below-transcribed exchange, according to the CNN video and White House document. Then, the president advertised his national plan for distributing the vaccines after states and hospitals reported dwindling supplies and unclear guidelines for how to immunize Americans under Trump. Moments later, the president made the alleged comment shown in the video in McEnany's tweet, while stressing the importance of expanding the number of people who administer the shots and places that offer them nationwide. Snopes reached out to the White House to determine the president's intention behind the phrase we didn’t have [the vaccine] when we came into office, and asked whether he was trying to erase success by vaccine developers under Trump with the statement. A spokesperson responded to us via email, refuting the latter claim, and emphasized the alleged lack of shots ready for distribution when Biden took over. When we came into office, vaccines existed, but were already allocated, the spokesperson told Snopes. There was no stockpile really. In sum, while it was true Biden literally at one point said, we didn’t have [the vaccine] when we came into office at the CNN town hall on Feb. 16, it was a false interpretation of that moment to frame it as the president trying to convince Americans that epidemiologists did not develop vaccines under Trump. For those reasons, and those outlined above, we rate this claim a mixture of truth and misleading information.
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