Democrats in Floridaโs state senate said, โAiight, Imma head out,โ on Thursday rather than listen to the stateโs surgeon general, Dr. Joseph Ladapo, avoid giving direct answers about his beliefs on Covid-19 vaccines.
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Ladapo is up for formal confirmation to his post after being appointed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican who has opposed vaccine and mask mandates, in September. Floridaโs legislature is controlled by DeSantisโ party, so thereโs little change Lapado wonโt be confirmed. But Democrats in the confirmation hearing werenโt about to sit still and listen to a medical doctor refuse to acknowledge accepted medical science.
From The Associated Press
In another exchange, Book grilled the surgeon general on whether he regretted his decision to refuse a face mask when meeting with a Democratic state lawmaker in October who told him she had a serious medical issue and later revealed a breast cancer diagnosis. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says cancer patients are at a higher risk to get severely ill from COVID-19 and may not build the same immunity to vaccines.
โConsistent with my approach to clinical care and my approach to health policy issues, I think itโs very important to respect peopleโs personal preferences and I think thatโs a mutual issue,โ Ladapo said. โSo itโs important to respect peopleโs preferences and I think that when peopleโs preferences may differ, the goal ought to be to find a way where those individuals can achieve whatever outcome theyโre aiming to achieve in a way that leaves everyone mutually comfortable.โ
After several more rounds of back and forth, Book told the committee โwe donโt feel that weโre getting any answersโ and said Democrats would leave the room, refusing to vote on Ladapoโs confirmation.
That didnโt matter, because the Republicans in the room voted to move his nomination forward anyway. Lapado, a 2008 Harvard Medical School graduate, is famous for taking positions that mock the worst takes of conservative politicians on the Covid-19 pandemic, but which some of his medical colleagues call โstrangeโ.
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