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Trump's imprint on Biden's Covid-19 vaccine success 3
A few weeks ago, the US vaccination campaign was still `staggering`, but the production of two vaccines has now accelerated, partly due to requests and directives from the President’s Covid-19 task force.
But the announcement was also a public relations success.
However, if we look more closely, in fact, the key factors that help Biden speed up the vaccine production process were established before he came to power.
President Biden (left) and his predecessor Trump.
The Biden administration has taken two important steps that will help accelerate vaccine production in the short term.
Biden’s top aides also pressured Johnson & Johnson to require a key subcontractor to operate 24/7 to release the vaccine faster.
At a vaccine meeting at the White House on March 10, Biden announced the purchase of an additional 100 million doses of Johnson & Johnson vaccine by the end of this year, with the goal of having enough vaccine to vaccinate children and, if necessary, booster vaccinations.
At the same time, Biden benefits greatly from the wave of vaccine production that the Trump administration has launched.
Biden entered the White House less than a month when Moderna announced it could deliver 200 million doses by the end of May, a month earlier than expected, simply because they could produce it faster.
All of this helped Biden announce that his administration would have enough vaccine by the end of May to inoculate all 257 million American adults, two months earlier than he had previously promised just a few weeks.
For aides during the Trump administration, the cheers praising the new administration were deafening.
However, commentator LaFraniere believes that the Biden administration is better than Trump in that it sends different messages than its predecessor.
`The goals are set carefully to avoid being seen as empty promises,` said David Axelrod, a senior strategist for Barack Obama’s 2008 and 2012 campaigns.