It was a late-spring House of Representatives hearing, where members of Congress and attendees hoped to learn lessons from the pandemic. Witness Marty Makary made a plea.
鈥淚 want to thank you for your attempts at civility,鈥 Makary, a Johns Hopkins Medicine , said softly. Then his tone changed. His voice started to rise, blasting the 鈥渋ntellectual dishonesty鈥 and 鈥渧ery bizarre鈥 decisions of public health officials. Much later, he criticized the 鈥渃ult鈥 of his critics, some of whom 鈥渃lap like seals鈥 when certain studies are published. Some critics are 鈥減ublic health oligarchs,鈥 he said.
Makary was a marquee witness for this meeting of the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic. His testimony had the rhythm of a two-step 鈥 alternating between an extended hand and a harsh rhetorical slap. It鈥檚 a characteristic move of , a Republican-led effort to review the response to the pandemic. Both sides of the aisle join in the dance, as members claim to seek cooperation and productive discussions before attacking their preferred coronavirus villains.
One target of the subcommittee鈥檚 Republican members has drawn concern from public health experts: covid-19 vaccines. Because the attacks range from subtle to overt, there鈥檚 a fear all vaccines could end up as collateral damage.
During , Republican members repeatedly raised questions about coronavirus vaccines. Right-wing star (R-Ga.) emphasized the vaccines were 鈥渆xperimental鈥 and fellow , an emergency room physician, argued the government was 鈥減ushing鈥 FDA-approved boosters 鈥渨ith no evidence and possible real harm.鈥
Some Republican members, who have been investigating for months various pandemic-related matters, are keen to say they鈥檙e supportive of vaccines 鈥 just not many of the policies surrounding covid vaccines. , who chairs the subcommittee, has said he supports vaccines and claimed he鈥檚 worried about declining vaccination rates.
During the May hearing, he also two-stepped, arguing the covid shots were 鈥渟afe as we know it, to a certain point.鈥 He questioned the government鈥檚 safety apparatus, including , a database that receives reports potentially connected to vaccines. He said the committee would be 鈥渓ooking鈥 at it 鈥渢o make sure it鈥檚 honest and to be trusted.鈥
It鈥檚 this two-step 鈥 at once proclaiming oneself in favor of vaccines, while validating concerns of vaccine-skeptical audiences 鈥 that has sparked worries of deeper vaccine hesitancy taking root.
鈥淚t seems to me to be implying the government knows the vaccine to be unsafe鈥 and that it鈥檚 鈥渃overing it up,鈥 said , a political scientist at Boston University specializing in public health and vaccine politics. The implication validates some long-held fringe theories about vaccinations, without completely embracing 鈥渃onspiracism,鈥 he said.
Vaccine skeptics run the gamut from individuals with scientific credentials who nevertheless oppose public health policies from a libertarian perspective to individuals endorsing theories about widespread adverse events, or arguing against the need for multiple shots. VAERS is a favorite topic among the latter group. When one witness testifying during the May 11 hearing attempted to defend covid vaccination policies, Taylor Greene cited the number of reports to VAERS as evidence of the vaccines鈥 lack of safety.
That muddles the purpose of the database, Motta said, which gathers unverified and verified reports alike. It鈥檚 a signal, not a diagnosis. 鈥淚t鈥檚 more like a smoke alarm,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t goes off when there鈥檚 a fire. But it also goes off when you鈥檝e left an omelet on the stove too long.鈥
In a March hearing focusing on school reopening policies, Democratic members of the panel and a witness from a school nurses association frequently touted the important role covid vaccines played in enabling schools to reopen. Wenstrup offered generalized skepticism. 鈥淚 heard we were able to get more vaccines for the children,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e didn’t know fully if they needed it. A lot of data would show they don’t need to vaccinate.鈥
Witnesses can eagerly play into vaccine-skeptical narratives. After a question from Taylor Greene premised on the idea that the covid vaccines 鈥渁re not vaccines at all,鈥 and alleging the government is spreading misinformation about their effectiveness, Makary suggested that while he was not anti-vaccine, it was understandable others were. 鈥淚 understand why they are angry,鈥 he said, in response. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e been lied to,鈥 he said, before criticizing evidence standards for the newest covid boosters, tailored to combat emerging variants.
The signals aren鈥檛 lost on audiences. The subcommittee has, like most congressional panels, posted important moments from its hearings to Twitter. Anti-vaccine activists and other public health skeptics reply frequently.
鈥淚t’s hard for me to think of a historical analogue for this 鈥 it’s not often that we have a Congressional committee producing content that has its fingers on the pulse of the anti-vaccine community,鈥 Motta wrote in an e-mail, after reviewing many of the subcommittee鈥檚 tweets. 鈥淭he committee isn’t expressly endorsing anti-vaccine positions, beyond opposition to vaccine mandates; but I think it’s quite possible that anti-vaccine activists take this information and run with it.鈥
Motta鈥檚 concern is echoed by the panel鈥檚 Democratic members. 鈥淚 pray this hearing does not add to vaccine hesitancy,鈥 said , who represents Baltimore.
One witness reiterated that point. Many members “have a lot of skepticism about vaccines and were not afraid to express that,” Tina Tan, a specialist in pediatric infectious diseases at Northwestern University, told 麻豆女优 Health News. She testified at the hearing on behalf of the minority.
Polling is showing a substantial 鈥 and politically driven 鈥 level of vaccine skepticism that reaches beyond covid. A slim minority of the country is up to date on vaccinations against the coronavirus, including the bivalent booster. And the share of kindergartners receiving the usual round of required vaccines 鈥 the measles, mumps, and rubella, or MMR, inoculation; tetanus; and chickenpox among them 鈥 , according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Support for leaving vaccination choices to parents, not as school requirements, has risen by 12 percentage points since just before the pandemic, mostly due to a drop among Republicans, according to a by the Pew Research Center.
And vaccine skepticism is resonating beyond the halls of Congress. Some state governments are considering measures to roll back vaccine mandates for children. As part of a , Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch cited two vaccination mandates 鈥 one in the workplace, and one for service members 鈥 and wrote that Americans 鈥渕ay have experienced the greatest intrusions on civil liberties in the peacetime history of this country.鈥 He made this assertion even though American military personnel have routinely been required to get shots for a host of diseases.
鈥淲e can鈥檛 get to a spot where we鈥檙e implicitly or explicitly sowing distrust of vaccines,鈥 cautioned of the coronavirus subcommittee.