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Democracy Dies in Darkness


GOP’S CLOSING ELECTION MESSAGE ON HEALTH BAFFLES STRATEGISTS, WORRIES EXPERTS

“No Obamacare.” Questioning vaccines. No fluoride in drinking water. They’re all
Republican assertions in the final days of the presidential campaign.

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3456

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Tucker Carlson at a Turning Point Action Rally with
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump in Duluth, Georgia. Trump has
said he would give Kennedy, a vaccine skeptic, a role overseeing health care
policy in his administration. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
By Dan Diamond
November 4, 2024 at 6:00 a.m. EST

First came GOP House Speaker Mike Johnson’s pledge last Monday to overhaul the
Affordable Care Act if Donald Trump wins the presidential election. Then Howard
Lutnick, the co-chair of Trump’s transition team, on Wednesday endorsed Robert
F. Kennedy Jr.’s vaccine skepticism and suggested that a future Trump
administration would empower Kennedy to help oversee vaccine data. Three days
later, Kennedy announced that Trump would seek to remove fluoride from
Americans’ drinking water as a Day 1 priority.



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The statements add up to a surreal final week of campaigning for Republicans in
which several of Trump’s top surrogates are introducing unconventional — and
generally unpopular — ideas that pit them against the health-policy
establishment ahead of Election Day on Tuesday. The assorted proposals also add
up to an agenda that would likely damage public health. Policy experts say that
if the Affordable Care Act is overhauled, vaccine confidence declines and
fluoride is removed from public water systems, the nation could see a spike in
the uninsured rate, a return of vaccine-preventable diseases and more oral
health problems, particularly in vulnerable communities.

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“The real danger extends beyond politics to public health,” said Kavita Patel, a
physician and professor at Stanford University who has previously advised the
Harris campaign. “This rhetoric could erode trust in essential health measures,
potentially leaving millions vulnerable if these ideas translate into policy.”

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Robert Blendon, a longtime pollster and professor at Harvard School for Public
Health, has spent more than 50 years analyzing presidential campaigns. He said
he could not recall a closing message on health policy like the “unusual” one
that Republicans have offered in the past week.

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“Independents favor a much more positive health policy message than being
presented here by Republicans,” Blendon wrote in an email. He and other
pollsters suggested that the stances could be a strategy to reach skeptical,
antiestablishment voters in what is expected to be a close election against Vice
President Kamala Harris.

The stances have also forced prominent Republicans to explain why top Trump
surrogates are voluntarily attacking popular, ingrained health programs and
public health interventions. The Affordable Care Act, which has become widely
popular since Trump attempted to repeal it, has been credited for helping tens
of millions of Americans gain health coverage since its 2010 passage. More than
90 percent of children born in the United States have been vaccinated against
polio and measles, mumps and rubella, helping protect them from severe
infectious diseases. Twelve presidential administrations — including Trump’s —
have overseen recommendations to add fluoride to water, which has been praised
as one of the great public health achievements of the 20th century.

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“I’m laughing because I can’t believe that we’re having a conversation about
fluoride,” Sen. Tim Scott (R-South Carolina) said on CNN on Sunday, refusing to
weigh in on Kennedy’s comments.

The Trump campaign has repeatedly declined to specify its policy plans, telling
The Washington Post in a statement on Saturday that Trump was focused on the
election and could not address Kennedy’s remarks on fluoride.

But in an interview with NBC News on Sunday, Trump said he was open to removing
fluoride from water.

“I haven’t talked to [Kennedy] about it yet, but it sounds okay to me,” Trump
said, according to NBC News. He also declined to rule out banning vaccines.


DUELING MESSAGES TO REACH VOTERS



The late-campaign pivot comes after GOP leaders have also tried to appeal to
voters using more conventional messages, such as focusing on the high cost of
prescription drugs. Health care ranks as the fourth-most important issue among
battleground-state voters behind the economy, inflation and threats to
democracy, according to a recent Washington Post-Schar School poll.

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There may be a strategy behind Republicans’ late flurry of anti-public health
stances, said Mollyann Brodie, executive vice president at KFF, a nonpartisan
health care think tank. She noted that most voters say that issues such as the
economy or abortion have influenced their vote — but those voters have probably
already decided how to vote, or even cast a vote already.

Meanwhile, there are a number of disengaged voters with more narrow interests,
such as frustration and skepticism over coronavirus vaccines, Brodie said.
Republicans may be targeting these vaccine skeptics — who tend to be
lower-educated, GOP-leaning and often younger men — with their recent messages
questioning public health interventions, Brodie suggested.



“These closing appeals are to get every last ‘undecided’ voter to decide first
to actually VOTE on Tuesday and to vote for the Trump/Vance ticket,” Brodie, who
oversees KFF’s polling operation, wrote in an email.

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But Democrats are also treating Republicans’ recent comments on health policies
and public health as a political gift, given that their party typically enjoys
more support on health care issues. Harris has a 19-point lead on which
candidate voters trust to handle abortion and a 9-point lead on health care
costs, two of her strongest issues, according to KFF.

The Harris campaign seized on Johnson’s vow, issued at an event in Pennsylvania,
to pursue “massive reform” of the Affordable Care Act — particularly when the
House speaker agreed that a goal for early next year would be “no Obamacare.”
Democrats said that the comment represented a pledge to repeal the health law.

Vice President Kamala Harris said on Nov. 2 that the House speaker's comments
were further evidence of “Trump's intention to implement Project 2025.” (Video:
The Washington Post, Photo: Jacquelyn Martin/AP/The Washington Post)

Johnson’s office disputed Democrats’ interpretation, with a spokesman accusing
Harris of “lying about Speaker Johnson” by claiming that he had pledged to
repeal the law. But Johnson’s office declined to comment on what health-care
changes the House speaker would pursue next year or whether he would rule out an
attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

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The Trump campaign said that he did not support repealing the Affordable Care
Act.



GOP leaders have generally backed away from proposals to overhaul the Affordable
Care Act after the party’s failed repeal effort in 2017 catalyzed new support
for the health law and led to a backlash with voters. Sixty-two percent of
adults held favorable views of the law in April, KFF found, up from 43 percent
in November 2016, the month that Trump was elected to the White House.

Republicans also have struggled to respond to questions on Kennedy and other
Trump surrogates’ recent messages on vaccines, fluoride and other public heath
interventions. Scott, who introduced legislation in 2018 to support the
fluoridation of public water, did not respond to a request for comment on this
story.


‘THE NARROWEST MESSAGE POSSIBLE’



Many of the tensions have been driven by Kennedy, a longtime vaccine skeptic who
suspended his independent presidential campaign in August and endorsed his
onetime rival Trump in August. Kennedy and Trump surrogates soon unveiled a
policy platform that was focused on removing chemicals from food, reducing the
influence of industry on federal regulations, fighting chronic disease, and
other initiatives that generally had bipartisan support — and all grouped under
the platform “Make America Healthy Again,” a deliberate riff on Trump’s longtime
slogan, “Make America Great Again.”

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But that agenda has received less attention as the election approaches, with
public health experts focusing more on Kennedy’s history of vaccine criticism
and the possibility that he could soon oversee vaccine approvals and safety. The
Washington Post reported last week that Kennedy is poised to hold a major role
working on food and health in a potential Trump administration, possibly as a
White House czar overseeing several health agencies.

Kennedy also has drawn scorn from critics who say that he knows little about the
health system that he may soon be tapped by Trump to help regulate.

Those critics include life sciences executives, public health professors, former
Trump health officials — and even Martin Shkreli, who became known as the
“Pharma Bro” after hiking the price of a lifesaving drug and was sent to prison
for financial crimes. Writing on social media last week, Shkreli slammed
Kennedy’s pledge to overhaul the Food and Drug Administration, saying that
Kennedy would attempt “to fix what is not broken.”



Trump has fed anxieties about Kennedy by repeatedly asserting that Kennedy will
have a free hand to implement policy, telling supporters last Sunday that
Kennedy will “go wild” on food and medicines in his administration. Trump on
Friday also pledged that Kennedy would work on reproductive health issues in his
administration — further alarming public health advocates who have asked why
Kennedy, whose expertise is environmental law, is equipped for that role.

Trump’s decision to elevate Kennedy is a signal to Americans that a second Trump
administration “would be infinitely more chaotic than the first,” said Lis
Smith, a Democratic strategist.

“Usually at the end of a long campaign, you try to close with a unifying,
broadly appealing message,” Smith wrote in a message. “Trump is doing the
opposite — closing with the narrowest message possible.”


ELECTION 2024

Follow live updates on the 2024 election, Vice President Kamala Harris and
former president Donald Trump from our reporters on the campaign trail and in
Washington.

Presidential polls: Check out how Harris and Trump stack up, according to The
Washington Post’s presidential polling averages of seven battleground states.
We’ve identified eight possible paths to victory based on the candidates’
standing in the polls and created a guide to the seven swing states.

Voting: We mapped where millions of Americans have cast a ballot in the 2024
election through mail and in-person early voting. Here’s when polls close in
each state and how long it may take to count votes.

Policy positions: We’ve collected Harris’s and Trump’s stances on the most
important issues — abortion, economic policy, immigration and more.

House and Senate control: Senate Democrats are at risk of losing their slim
51-49 majority this fall. The Post broke down the nine races and three long
shots that could determine Senate control. In the House, 10 competitive races
will determine whether Republicans will retain their narrow control of the
chamber next year.

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