CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NEW
COVID NUMBERS SHOW CALIFORNIA BEATS FLORIDA AND TEXAS BY A LOT”
It just
might turn out that the Delta variant of the coronavirus becomes the best thing
that’s happened to California Gov. Gavin Newsom in quite awhile.
At the very moment mail-in ballots
for the Sept. 14 recall election went out, new figures showed Newsom’s handling
of the COVID-19 pandemic has been far superior to what’s been done by his
counterparts in Texas and Florida, Republicans Greg Abbott and Ron DeSantis.
Months ago, pre-Delta, it was
already plain California handled the
plague better than the other big Sun Belt states to which it is often compared.
But here
are numbers, as of mid-August: Texas, with 63.6 percent as many people as
California, had 80 percent as many cases since the pandemic began. That’s a 17
percent differential in California’s favor. The contrast with Florida is as
dramatic: The Sunshine state, with 53 percent as many people, had 70 percent as
many cases, also a 17 percent differential.
Those numbers translate to
human lives. California has had 1,637 Covid deaths for every 100,000 residents,
Texas 1,881 and Florida 1,890.
Of the three, then, California
has been by far the healthiest place to live over the last 18 months and
Florida the least.
So why does Newsom face a
recall, while Abbott and DeSantis sit pretty despite their states’ dismal
numbers? Florida and Texas do not allow recalls of state officials.
Why has California been more
effective at handling COVID-19 and its variants? Newsom shut down most of this
state’s businesses before any other governor acted similarly, while DeSantis
and Abbott left things open far longer and reopened sooner.
California
has had tougher and more universal masking rules, too, especially since Abbott
and DeSantis canceled requirements imposed by some of their states’ largest
counties. Plus, Newsom put far more emphasis than his colleagues on getting
vaccines into arms.
For
awhile, especially during this state’s winter surge in cases, it appeared the
others might be right. But things are working out much better in California.
This
could have political importance elsewhere, too, with Abbott and DeSantis up for
reelection next year, and now seeing their poll numbers dip almost daily as the
Delta variant takes its toll.
Not so
long ago, Newsom’s handling of the pandemic seemed like an impediment in the
recall. Things may be different now.
For one
thing, California fatalities are down enormously even with raw case numbers up
from June and July. On some days during the last two months, the official state
death toll has been as low as two, three or six persons. On Aug. 16, it was 11.
On Aug. 17, it was seven. The numbers in Florida and Texas are higher, despite
their smaller populations.
Yes, the
average Floridian is slightly older; but vaccination has made that factor
almost negligible; over-65s are far more likely to be vaccinated than younger
people.
By
mid-August, 74 percent of all Californians has received at least one vaccine
shot, to 54.6 percent in Texas and 61.2 percent in Florida. The California
advantage is even more striking than the raw percentage because of Florida’s
higher average age.
All this
debunks the claim made all year that Newsom is incompetent next to DeSantis and
the recently Covid-positive Abbott.
That
can’t end the stigma of hypocrisy from Newsom’s notorious French Laundry incident,
where he flouted his own regulations of the moment.
But the
most recent numbers take much of the wind out of recall backers’ claim that
Newsom is not up to his job.
The
bottom line here is that Covid death rates were always higher in Florida and
Texas than California, but the difference has lately increased.
Newsom is
often blasted for countenancing school closures longer than absolutely
necessary, while DeSantis brags that Florida public schools never shut down.
But thousands more lives were saved here than would have been under the Florida
and Texas rules, which consistently allowed proportionately more deaths.
It all
means California’s anti-virus performance might be Newsom’s best argument
against the recall. It’s a warning, too, that replacing him with an anti-masking,
anti-vaccination mandate figure like talk show host Larry Elder could quickly
put this state right down there with Florida and Texas.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at
tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising
Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now
available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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