The incoming Biden administration is promising a cohesive national strategy to combat the worsening coronavirus outbreak, something many public health officials and Democratic governors say they welcome after months of mixed messaging under the Trump administration.
Consistency about the need to wear a mask to reduce the virus spread is just a start. Among other things, they say they need help with testing and contact tracing, deploying an eventual vaccine and more money to shore up their budgets, including to help keep schools open.
Biden on Monday announced members of a coronavirus task force and his staff started reaching out to governors. In New Mexico, Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham praised Biden for "leading with science and de-politicizing the federal government's pandemic response."
Lujan Grisham was an early adopter of aggressive pandemic restrictions that included a mask mandate, self-quarantine orders for travelers and a ban on public gatherings -- now capped at five people. Despite that approach, daily statewide infections and deaths have surged steadily to new heights in October and November.
"New Mexico is an example of the fact that even the best state-level policies are insufficient on their own," she said in a statement. "The entire country, including the people of New Mexico, deserves the full force of the federal government to address the ongoing emergency and it is encouraging to see President-elect Biden preparing to do exactly that."
Another Democrat, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, praised Biden's embrace of a national strategy to combat the virus. Minnesota's per-capita new case counts are better than neighboring Wisconsin and the Dakotas, which have some of the country's highest transmission rates, but have still raised alarm with the state's health officials. Walz planned to announce new steps Tuesday aimed at younger adults.
"Conscious decisions were made in states to approach this differently, and some states had better outcomes. But here's the deal: it was only a matter of time before we're in this with all 50 states, and it's bleeding over," he said. "So I have been asking for a long time for a concerted national strategy around this. I think that starts today."
Biden's announcement of a virus task force on Monday coincided with tougher actions or statements from a number of governors, including Republicans, as COVID-19 cases soared past 10 million in the U.S. and deaths were approaching 240,000.