Nikki Haley (And Her Opponents) Struggle With a Vaccine Message
Former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley portrays herself as a voice of reason in the Republican Party. 鈥淟et鈥檚 find consensus,鈥 she said about abortion during the first GOP primary debate. 鈥淟et鈥檚 treat this like a respectful issue.鈥
It鈥檚 talk like that 鈥 and in a hypothetical matchup against President Biden 鈥 that has helped position Haley to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis as the GOP鈥檚 鈥減lan B鈥 presidential candidate.
But an examination of her record on vaccination shows how she鈥檚 also tuned her positions to the views of the Republican base.
Many of the GOP presidential candidates have struggled to fine-tune their message on vaccination, , as their voters grow increasingly skeptical of shots that most doctors will tell you are vital for public health. Former president Donald Trump, for example, has tried to simultaneously claim credit for his 鈥淥peration Warp Speed鈥 program to accelerate development of coronavirus vaccines and also for promoting vaccination to Floridians.
Forty percent of Republicans believe that parents should be able to 鈥 about double the rate in 2019, according to a from KFF. Support for vaccination among Democrats has remained stable, by comparison, with 84 percent saying they should be required for public school students.
It鈥檚 an especially tricky subject for Haley as she tries to hold herself out as the sensible GOP candidate. Her basic message: Covid vaccines are good but shouldn鈥檛 be required.
During the height of the pandemic, Haley praised the Trump administration鈥檚 efforts to expedite vaccine development 鈥 and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates鈥 donations for vaccine manufacturing plants.
But she鈥檚 since declared her opposition to vaccine mandates, saying in a with the Christian Broadcasting Network: 鈥淢andates are not what America does.鈥 And she鈥檚 encouraged some anti-vaccine themes.
鈥淒id I get it, did my family get it? Yes,鈥 she said in the CBN interview. 鈥淏ut if you ask a woman who wants to get pregnant, and she鈥檚 worried about it, or you ask a parent whose child might be compromised, and they鈥檙e worried about it, that鈥檚 a personal family decision.鈥
The idea that the coronavirus vaccine may interfere with fertility is a common fear stoked by anti-vaccine activists. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that there is 鈥渘o evidence that any vaccines, including COVID-19 vaccines, cause fertility problems.鈥
Early in her political career as a state legislator, Haley co-sponsored a bill mandating vaccinations for HPV 鈥 a common sexually transmitted virus, some variants of which can cause cervical and other cancers as well as genital warts.
The benefits of HPV vaccination are hard to dispute. tracking nearly 1.7 million Swedish girls and women over 11 years found a nearly 90 percent reduction of risk for cervical cancer for those who began vaccination before age 17, compared with the unvaccinated. HPV vaccination can also help protect boys against some cancers.
But Haley, and the rest of the South Carolina legislature, faced a lobbying blitz by evangelicals, who feared that the vaccine would encourage children to have sex. Support for the bill cratered; Haley kept her name on as co-sponsor but later voted against the legislation. As governor, Haley vetoed a bill that would have encouraged 鈥 not mandated 鈥 HPV shots.
Haley鈥檚 primary positioning on vaccines is less extreme than that of some of her rivals; biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, for example, has said he regrets getting the covid shot.
But her long history on vaccination issues looks today like a premonition. Megan Weis, a research assistant professor at the University of South Carolina medical school, said of the state鈥檚 struggle over the HPV vaccine: 鈥淚n retrospect, that was the beginning of some of the vaccine misinformation movement.鈥
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