By Philip Klein
Thursday, August
12, 2021
There is a reason why the Left needs
Governor Ron DeSantis to fail. And it isn’t just about the 2024
presidential election.
Sure, given that DeSantis has the
potential to unite the Trumpist and traditional Republican wings of the party,
Democrats would much rather have him go down in flames in the 2022 governor’s
race. Otherwise, they may have to take their chances against him with a nearly
82-year-old President Joe Biden or a deeply unpopular Vice President Kamala
Harris. But politics alone cannot explain the level of hysterical obsession
that out-of-state liberals have developed for the Florida governor.
Since early in the pandemic, liberals have
been eager to portray DeSantis as a reckless sociopath — warning that he was
the Grim Reaper, the kind of charlatan who puts “owning the
libs” ahead of protecting people’s lives. When
predictions of mass death arising from opening schools or the beaches did not
materialize last year, his critics resorted to promoting the
lies of a former health department
dashboard manager, Rebekah Jones, to claim that the state’s COVID-19 statistics
were manipulated.
So if not for politics, what explains the
overblown reaction to DeSantis?
The deeper reason the Left is so eager to
see DeSantis fail is that they don’t want to believe that they disrupted over a
year of their lives following restrictions that may turn out to have been
unnecessary. It’s comforting to believe that all of their sacrifices — forgoing
vacations, missing meetings with friends and family, depriving their kids of
in-person school, masking, and so on — served the noble goal of saving lives.
It’s much harder to accept that it may not have made much of a difference. In
an age when a crazy virus can come out of nowhere and wreak havoc, it’s human
nature for people to want to feel as though they can assert control over it.
After the initial wave in the spring of
2020, DeSantis reached the conclusion that outside of some basic prudent
measures, it made sense to allow people to get on with their lives and trust
them to make the best decisions for their own health and well-being. He allowed
businesses to thrive and schools to open, and created an environment in which
kids could be kids.
Despite dire warnings, in terms of deaths
as a share of the population, Florida ranks 27th in the United States, below the national average. It has been
much better off than many liberal states that have imposed more stringent
restrictions, including New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Michigan, and
Illinois.
Critics argue that Florida is at an
advantage, because its warmer weather enables people to keep more activities
outside for a longer period of the year. While true to an extent, it also means
that during brutal summer months, people must remain in air conditioning for longer
periods. And the weather theory also neglects other factors that work against
Florida. The state is home to one of the largest over-65 populations in the
country, has dense urban areas with demographics susceptible to COVID-19,
contains busy airports, and is one of the most popular destinations for
international travelers.
In truth, we’ll never be able to isolate
enough variables to resolve the debate over whether Florida would have had
fewer deaths were DeSantis to have imposed more restrictions. But it would be
wrong to view things myopically through the prism of the coronavirus. The
relevant question is whether a small change in the trajectory of COVID-19 would
be worth the consequences for other non-COVID societal priorities. Coming out
of the pandemic slightly below average in deaths while limiting the impact to
children, businesses, and everyday life seems like a trade-off that a lot of
people would be willing to accept.
Following the advice of Anthony Fauci and
other public-health officials to the letter, meanwhile, might not sufficiently
mitigate COVID-19 — but it does mitigate media criticism. When states such as
Michigan, California, New York, New Jersey, Illinois, and Massachusetts have
gone through surges, their governors have avoided the sort of criticism that
DeSantis has been subjected to. Instead, the spikes are treated as evidence of
how wily, infectious, and hard to control the virus is.
Of course, right now, Florida is in the
midst of a surge in COVID-19, so liberals are pouncing on the news to revive
their attacks on DeSantis. But the DeSantis decisions that have generated the
most controversy cannot explain the current surge. I happen to think that his
ban on cruise ships requiring proof of vaccination was an overreach that should
be struck down by the courts, but it’s hard to argue that that is what is
driving the statewide increase. Giving all public-school parents the choice of
whether or not to send their children to school in masks is much more
defensible. But whatever one’s position on masking children, schools have been
out of session, so that clearly isn’t the source of the spread, either.
It’s also hard to argue that the spike in
Florida is due to DeSantis’s being some sort of anti-vaxxer. He went to great
lengths to make sure that the vaccine is distributed widely across the state
and has urged people to get it, emphasizing that being vaccinated reduces the
chances of death from COVID-19 to near zero.
Though Florida isn’t the top-performing
state in terms of vaccination, it’s far from a terrible outlier. The vaccinated
share of the population in
Florida (59.9 percent having had at least one dose, 49.7 percent being fully
vaccinated) is nearly identical to that of the U.S. as a whole (59.1 percent,
50.5 percent). DeSantis has made it a particular priority to vaccinate the most
vulnerable, and 99 percent of the over-65 population has had at least one dose,
with 86.1 percent being fully vaccinated (which is higher than in California).
DeSantis has clearly decided on the
strategy of riding out the current surge as opposed to giving in to the
pressure to impose new restrictions. He is acting under the assumption that
cases will peak in the coming weeks and that schools will prove that they can
open safely without the need for masking. Los Angeles, it should be noted,
reinstituted a mask mandate last month, and, after three weeks, cases are four times what they were when the mandate went into effect. More
importantly, DeSantis recognizes that the whole point of having a freely
available vaccine is to reduce the likelihood of death or severe disease to a
low enough level so that everybody can get on with their lives — not to chase
after COVID Zero.
The Left is desperate for DeSantis to be
proven wrong, not just so he is weaker politically, but so they can feel better
about their own decisions to lock down and mask up.
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