The CDC’s decision immediately raised a flurry of questions and consequences, including a debate over whether it had suddenly gone too far
Biden administration officials greeted the news with euphoria in Washington. In the White House, the President took off his mask during a meeting with Sen. Shelley Moore Capito and other senators, the West Virginia Republican said. The President’s aides, who had been wearing masks as late as Thursday morning, put them away. Senators on Capitol Hill uncovered their faces. “Free at last,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said.
“Being able to go around without a mask, indoors as well as outdoors, is really a big step in that direction,” Fauci said. “I wouldn’t want to declare victory prematurely, but I’m saying this is clearly a step in the direction that we want to go.”
New questions
Still, the CDC’s decision immediately raised a flurry of questions and consequences, including a debate over whether an agency often criticized for being too cautious had suddenly gone too far.
The equivocation was evident Thursday in the dissonant policies even within different government agencies and entities in Washington. The White House told vaccinated staffers that they could take off their masks at work. But when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was asked whether she planned to change the rules and allow members to unmask on the floor of the House of Representatives, the California Democrat replied: “No,” then asked rhetorically: “Are they all vaccinated?”
During school pickup Thursday throughout the country, many parents still wore their masks after the announcement as unvaccinated children streamed from the doors — raising questions about what the new policies will mean at a time when vaccines are not approved for younger children. Parents are also left struggling to explain why there are now different rules for adults and kids without creating more worries among young children.
When asked why that masking requirement will still exist for vaccinated travelers, Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, told CNN’s Erin Burnett Thursday night that it makes sense for people who must sit close together in tight quarters to wear their masks.
“In circumstances where people are packed close together and you don’t know the status of immunization of everybody, it is still the better part of being cautious to wear masks on those planes and trains and buses,” Collins said. “Once we get further along with an even higher degree of immunization, and the viral infections — which are still 30,000 a day — really continue to drop down, we’ll be able to relax those as well.”
The surprise new guidance will have massive implications across the scope of national life, from restaurants, to transport, schools and offices.
At the root of the trepidation and consternation is the fact that the CDC’s new policy relies almost entirely on trust. It depends on unvaccinated people, who could harbor the new variants circulating within the US population, continuing to wear masks to protect themselves and to protect others who may not be able to get the vaccine, either for medical reasons or because they’re too young.
When asked how store or restaurant owners will know whether their customers are safe without masks, Fauci acknowledged that it will be a difficult challenge in the months ahead.
“They will not be able to know. I mean, you’re going to be depending on people being honest enough to say whether they were vaccinated or not, and responsible enough to be wearing… a mask, not only for their own protection, but also for the protection of others,” Fauci told Tapper.
“I do think that we need to send a very clear message that vaccination is your ticket back to pre-pandemic life, but frankly I was shocked by this announcement, I think they went from one extreme to another,” said Dr. Leana Wen, the former Baltimore health commissioner and a CNN medical analyst.
“If you’re going to the grocery store — maybe you’re fully vaccinated, you take off your mask at the grocery store — but who’s going to be checking to see if others are also vaccinated,” Wen said on CNN’s “Newsroom.”
“What does that mean if I’m bringing my son, my 4-year-old who is not fully vaccinated. Now he’s going to be in a grocery store potentially exposed to people who are not vaccinated who could be of danger to him. So I guess I’m kind of befuddled as to where this guidance came from. I think there’s a lot of steps that we’re missing.”
An incentive for the unvaccinated
In the short term, the fact that the new guidelines apply to vaccinated people only could give the administration an opening to convince people who are reluctant to get the shot to go ahead.
But the new CDC policy also raises the possibility that those Americans who have long chafed at mask wearing and have no intention of getting the vaccine — often conservatives — will take off their masks as well. And that could lead to further circulation of the virus.
Another area in which Americans will look to the White House for guidance will be the psychological dimension of a decision that reverses months and months of government guidance and behavior that has now become ingrained.
The masking recommendation came to symbolize the muffling of normal life during the worst health crisis in 100 years. Now, people who have long complained that those who don’t wear masks are ignoring science are in the position of having to trust the science themselves in taking off their masks.
First lady Jill Biden reflected that shock and spoke for many when she arrived maskless for a visit to West Virginia Thursday.
“We feel naked,” she said.