It’d be an overstatement to say every prominent Republican official has condemned President Joe Biden’s new vaccine policy. Vermont Gov. Phil Scott, for example, was quite complimentary, expressing his appreciation for the White House’s approach.
It came a day after the Republican governor created a new vaccine requirement for public-sector employees in the Green Mountain State.
Scott does not, however, have a lot of company in the contemporary GOP. The NBC affiliate in Columbia, S.C., for example, reported yesterday on South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster’s response to Biden’s efforts.
“The American Dream has turned into a nightmare under President Biden and the radical Democrats,” said McMaster. “They have declared war against capitalism, thumbed their noses at the Constitution, and empowered our enemies abroad.” In the following tweet McMaster quoted: “Rest assured, we will fight them to the gates of hell to protect the liberty and livelihood of every South Carolinian.”
To be sure, when evaluating furious reactions, it’s tough to top “fight them to the gates of hell,” but McMaster wasn’t the only Republican who sounded hysterical in response to the White House’s efforts to end the pandemic.
Rep. Dan Crenshaw of Texas, for example, accused the Biden administration of “trying to start a full-on revolt.” Josh Mandel, a GOP Senate hopeful in Ohio, called on Americans to reject the president’s policy, adding that they “know what to do” when “the gestapo show up at your front door.”
J.D. Vance, Mandel’s primary rival in Ohio, also called for “mass civil disobedience.”
The question I’d love Vance and others like him to answer is simple: How would mass civil disobedience help end the pandemic? To borrow the South Carolina governor’s line, how would fighting the Biden administration’s vaccine policies “to the gates of hell,” bring this public health nightmare to an end?









