Saturday, July 1, 2023

Opinion Today: The myth of early-pandemic partisanship

How divided were Americans early on in the pandemic? The answer might surprise you.

When Covid arrived on American shores, the United States did not have to collapse into Covid partisanship, with citizen turning against citizen and each party vilifying the other as the source of our national misery.

Ibrahim Rayintakath
Author Headshot

By David Wallace-Wells

Opinion Writer

Now that the pandemic emergency looks to be, to most Americans, fully behind us, the age of retrospectives and autopsies has begun in earnest. For many looking back on the brutality of the past three years, the story of America's failure in the face of Covid-19 begins with partisanship — with liberals generally blaming Republicans for doing too little to stop the spread of the disease, conservatives generally blaming Democrats for having done too much in the name of mitigation and almost everyone on both sides believing that polarization hamstrung the country right from the start.

As persuasive as those accounts may seem, on first blush, they turn out to be almost entirely wrong. This is one of the central revelations of "Lessons From the Covid War, an Investigative Report," written by 34 experts and published in April by PublicAffairs — which is likely to be as close as the country gets to a 9/11 Report-style pandemic retrospective.

As counterintuitive as the proposition sounds, it is borne out by almost every statistical measure of the U.S. Covid response: For almost all of the first year of the pandemic, there was essentially no policy difference at all between red states and blue states. Shelter-in-place orders were issued by Republican governors and Democratic governors at almost exactly the same time, and while those in blue states lasted on average seven weeks rather than five, the difference was only two weeks in what became a 171-week federal pandemic emergency. Business restrictions were almost uniform across the country through the summer and fall of 2020, as were masking guidance and even school policy.

There were rhetorical differences throughout the first year of the pandemic, of course, embodied by the polarizing and dismissive performance of President Donald Trump. But at the state and local level, red states and blue states moved almost perfectly in unison. For the most part, red and blue people seemed to, as well.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

Data drawn from every aspect of mitigation policy tells the same story: Covid partisanship only became significant with the presidential election and the arrival of vaccines. Which means that, while there may be many reasons to feel fatalistic about the American pandemic response, polarization probably shouldn't inherently be one of them. For almost a full year, Covid policy actually showed no sign of our seemingly unavoidable culture wars. Believe it or not.

THE WEEK IN BIG IDEAS

Article Image

Nora Williams for The New York Times

GUEST ESSAY

I Teach at an Elite College. Here's a Look Inside the Racial Gaming of Admissions.

The end of affirmative action will only cause students and parents to get even more creative about gaming college admissions.

By Tyler Austin Harper

Article Image

Eleanor Davis

JESSICA GROSE

What Churches Offer That 'Nones' Still Long For

Houses of worship are, uniquely, one-stop shops of meaning, continuity and support.

By Jessica Grose

Article Image

Yann Kebbi

GUEST ESSAY

75 Years Ago, 'The Lottery' Went Viral. There's a Reason We're Still Talking About It.

"The Lottery" is a classic short story because of its power to unsettle us. Too bad readers today are losing their appetite for discomfort.

By Ruth Franklin

Article Image

Emily Aragones/Searchlight Pictures, via Associated Press

GUEST ESSAY

'Flamin' Hot' Is So Bad, It Burns

By depicting a world in which Latinos need the approval of white people to feel good about ourselves, it reinforces the myth of white superiority.

By Adrian J. Rivera

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

Subscribe Today

New York Times Opinion curates a wide range of views, inviting rich discussion and debate that help readers analyze the world. This work is made possible with the support of subscribers. Please consider subscribing to The Times with this special offer.

Games Here are today's Mini Crossword, Wordle and Spelling Bee. If you're in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Forward this newsletter to friends to share ideas and perspectives that will help inform their lives. They can sign up here. Do you have feedback? Email us at opiniontoday@nytimes.com.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

If you have questions about your Times account, delivery problems or other issues, visit our Help Page or contact The Times.

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for the Opinion Today newsletter from The New York Times.

To stop receiving Opinion Today, unsubscribe. To opt out of other promotional emails from The Times, including those regarding The Athletic, manage your email settings. To opt out of updates and offers sent from The Athletic, submit a request.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitterinstagram

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

No comments:

Page List

Blog Archive

Search This Blog

DOD Featured Photos

On the Horizon A Marine Corps CH-53E Super Stallion particip...