Happy Thursday Democrats!
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FEDERAL
Vaccination Persuasion
When the Kaiser Family Foundation conducted a poll at the start of the year and asked American adults whether they planned to get vaccinated, 23 percent said no.
But a significant portion of that group — about one quarter of it — has since decided to receive a shot. The Kaiser pollsters recently followed up and asked these converts what led them to change their minds. The answers are important, because they offer insight into how the millions of still unvaccinated Americans might be persuaded to get shots, too.
Nationwide, more than 99 percent of recent deaths have occurred among unvaccinated people, and more than 97 percent of recent hospitalizations have occurred among the unvaccinated, according to the C.D.C. “Look,” President Biden said on Friday, “the only pandemic we have is among the unvaccinated.”
What helps move people from vaccine skeptical to vaccinated? The Kaiser polls point to three main themes.
1. Seeing that millions of other Americans have been safely vaccinated.
Consider these quotes from Kaiser’s interviews:
“It was clearly safe. No one was dying.” — a 32-year-old white Republican man in South Carolina
“I went to visit my family members in another state and everyone there had been vaccinated with no problems.” — a 63-year-old Black independent man in Texas
“Almost all of my friends were vaccinated with no side effects.” — a 64-year-old Black Democratic woman in Tennessee
This suggests that emphasizing the safety of the vaccines — rather than just the danger of Covid, as many experts (and this newsletter) typically do — may help persuade more people to get a shot.
A poll of vaccine skeptics by Echelon Insights, a Republican firm, points to a similar conclusion. One of the most persuasive messages, the skeptics said, was hearing that people have been getting the vaccine for months and it is “working very well without any major issues.”
2. Hearing pro-vaccine messages from doctors, friends and relatives.
For many people who got vaccinated, messages from politicians, national experts and the mass media were persuasive. But many other Americans — especially those without a college degree — don’t trust mainstream institutions. For them, hearing directly from people they know can have a bigger impact.
“Hearing from experts,” as Mollyann Brodie, who oversees the Kaiser polls, told me, “isn’t the same as watching those around you or in your house actually go through the vaccination process.”
Here are more Kaiser interviews:
“My daughter is a doctor and she got vaccinated, which was reassuring that it was OK to get vaccinated.” — a 64-year-old Asian Democratic woman in Texas
“Friends and family talked me into it, as did my place of employment.” — a 28-year-old white independent man in Virginia
“My husband bugged me to get it and I gave in.” — a 42-year-old white Republican woman in Indiana
“I was told by my doctor that she strongly recommend I get the vaccine because I have diabetes.” — a 47-year-old white Republican woman in Florida
These comments suggest that continued grass-roots campaigns may have a bigger effect at this stage than public-service ad campaigns. The one exception to that may be prominent figures from groups that still have higher vaccine skepticism, like Republican politicians and Black community leaders.
3. Learning that not being vaccinated will prevent people from doing some things.
There is now a roiling debate over vaccine mandates, with some hospitals, colleges, cruise-ship companies and others implementing them — and some state legislators trying to ban mandates. The Kaiser poll suggests that these requirements can influence a meaningful number of skeptics to get shots, sometimes just for logistical reasons.
“Hearing that the travel quarantine restrictions would be lifted for those people that are vaccinated was a major reason for my change of thought.” — a 43-year-old Black Democratic man in Virginia
“To see events or visit some restaurants, it was easier to be vaccinated.” — a 39-year-old white independent man in New Jersey
“Bahamas trip required a COVID shot.” — a 43-year-old Hispanic independent man in Pennsylvania
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January 6th Investigation Selection Committee
Speaker Pelosi has rejected 2 choices of Representative Kevin McCarthy to serve on the January 6th Investigation Select Committee. It’s pretty obvious why.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/pelosi-rejects-jordan-banks-for-jan-6-committee/ar-AAMpb7F?ocid=msedgntp
McCarthy then decided not to participate in the select committee investigating the Jan. 6 riot on the Capitol, yanking all of his GOP picks in protest of Speaker Nancy Pelosi's (D-Calif.) decision to reject two top Republicans.
"Unless Speaker Pelosi reverses course and seats all five Republican nominees, Republicans will not be party to their sham process and will instead pursue our own investigation of the facts," he said in a statement.
Let’s remember Kevin McCarthy’s desperate phone call to Donald Trump on January 6th when the Capitol was being breached. He implored the President to call off the insurrectionists. Then, on the floor of the House, one week after the insurrection, McCarthy commented, “The president bears responsibility for Wednesday’s attack on Congress by mob rioters. He should have immediately denounced the mob when he saw what was unfolding. These facts require immediate action by President Trump to accept his share of responsibility, quell the brewing unrest and ensure President elect Biden is able to successfully begin his term.” We cannot forget McCarthy’s revisionist history. He knows the truth and so do we! Enough of the Republicans’ hysteria over the January 6 Commission.
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