Donald Trump’s handling of the Covid-19 pandemic while president was horrendous. He downplayed the deadliness of the novel coronavirus by equating it to a flu, he railed against lifesaving lockdowns and he mused about injecting disinfectant as a remedy. But in a rare show of good sense, Trump has recently been trying to sell his own base on the value of the Covid vaccines.
The former president wants credit for his administration’s role in the vaccines’ quick development and distribution. He might not be championing the vaccines for the right reasons, but given that he’s likely the single-most influential person in America when it comes to convincing establishment-skeptical conservatives to get the jab, the consequences are beneficial for our country. His sparring with anti-vaccine activists also speaks to tensions within his base that he’ll have to reckon with if he runs in 2024.
Trump clearly sees the development of the vaccines while he was president as an opportunity to secure his historical legacy.
In an interview for The Daily Wire with right-wing commentator Candace Owens, Trump gushed about the development of the three major Covid vaccines in the United States while he was still president, and, in true Trumpian fashion, took credit for them as if he had engineered them in the lab himself.
“The vaccine is one of the greatest achievements of mankind,” Trump said. “I came up with a vaccine — with three vaccines — all are very, very good … in less than nine months. It was supposed to take five to 12 years.”
Just going to echo former President Trump here on the safety and efficacy of the vaccines. Merry Christmas eve eve. go get boosted https://t.co/0PCffM5kHl
— Jen Psaki (@PressSec) December 23, 2021
(Trump had a mixed record on vaccine development: He politicized the process by leaning inappropriately on regulators for approval, but his investment and interest in assisting with development and deployment was helpful in speeding it up.)
When Owens replied that more people have died from Covid during President Joe Biden’s term than Trump’s (which is not correct) and suggested that it raised questions about the efficacy of the vaccines, Trump interrupted to defend them.
“The vaccine worked, but some people aren’t taking it,” he said. “The ones that get very sick and go to the hospital are the ones who don’t take their vaccine. But it’s still their choice.”
“And if you take the vaccine, you’re protected,” Trump went on. “The results of the vaccine are very good. And if you do get it, it’s a very minor form. People aren’t dying when they take their vaccine.”









