The United States was a pretty divided place at the start of 2020.
Partisanship was running rampant, thanks in large part to the passions that boiled over during the 2016 election and continued to simmer in President Donald Trump’s first three years in the White House.
Americans had hunkered down in their respective ideological silos, with partisan media and the echo chamber of social media fanning the growing flames of distrust and vitriol.
It seemed like it would take a miracle to reunite the nation, that something monumental would have to take place for Americans to call a truce.
In March, that happened.
That’s when COVID began spreading its deadly tentacles across the country. The national health crisis created widespread fear that suddenly thrust Americans together in a fight against a common enemy.
Of course, it didn’t last long.
Within a few months, Americans had retreated back to their partisan camps, with the pandemic becoming the new and fashionable thing to squabble over.
So what happened? How did the country wind up so divided again so quickly? And what does that mean for how the country deals with future crises?
A moment of unity
The initial response to the pandemic was fairly unified.
With case counts and deaths rapidly rising in parts of the country, Trump issued a national state of emergency on March 13.
That same month he signed into law a historic $2.2 trillion stimulus package as the American public and economy fought the devastating spread of COVID.
The CARES Act was, at that time, the largest emergency legislation in the history of the nation.
Key elements of the package included sending checks directly to individuals and families, a major expansion of unemployment benefits, money for hospitals, financial assistance for small businesses and loans for distressed companies.
Dr. John Kennedy, a political science professor at West Chester University in Chester County, said that it is important to remember that the early moves to address the pandemic had support across party lines.
“The government did come together to pass some very important and incredibly expensive legislation during the pandemic to keep the economy afloat,” he said. “You had a Republican administration and a Democratic Congress that did work together.”
With the government working together, the public followed suit. For the most part, people understood the need for widespread shutdowns and other mitigation efforts in the face of a deadly, highly infectious disease that health experts knew frighteningly little about.
“I think for a short period of time the world was so shocked and scared, frankly, that there was a coming together at that time and it lasted for a little while,” Kennedy said. “But somewhere along the line, it got political.”
Dr. Steve Lem, chairman of the department of philosophy and government at Kutztown University, said the first signs of the politicization of the pandemic came from the White House.
“The power of the president in this kind of response is mostly rhetoric,” he said. “In that sense, could Trump have done a better job portraying the pandemic as a serious event in the beginning? Probably. But there were also arguments that we didn’t want to create mass hysteria and see a run on medical supplies that hospitals needed.”
Despite the frantic efforts to thwart the pandemic and the historic measures being taken to slow the spread of COVID, Trump repeatedly downplayed the potential impact. He publicly stated several times that the virus would disappear quickly, and that mitigation efforts would likely end by summer.
While the pandemic didn’t disappear by summer, the unified response to it did.
The tides turn
Feelings about the pandemic began to change by the summer of 2020 after Americans endured months of stay-at-home orders, school and business closures and requirements to wear masks in public spaces put in place to fight rising case counts and deaths.
The fear of COVID lessened, and with it the unity that fear had created. Sides started forming, mostly around party lines, between those who wanted to ditch the measures put in place to fight the pandemic and those who wanted them to stick around.
The differing opinions about how to deal with the pandemic quickly turned nasty. There was a lot of anger stemming from the sacrifices people had been forced to make, and where to direct it was unclear.
“We had never had this kind of invisible enemy, so to speak, in the modern era,” Lem said. “As we’re seeing right now with the war in Ukraine, it’s easier to come together when you have an external enemy. But the pandemic has the opposite effect here.
“We became more divisive,” he continued. “When you have an invisible enemy, where do you target that collective hostility?”
Lem said that the frustration of wanting to find someone to blame but not having a clear target manifested itself as a partisan conflict.
That partisanship only grew over time, Dr. Amy Widestrom, associate professor of politics and government at Arcadia University in Montgomery County, said.
“By the end of the first year of the pandemic, it became increasingly common to see people having verbal and physical altercations with those who held opposing viewpoints,” she said. “And if your elected official wasn’t from the party that you trust, then you sort of resorted back to the thinking that they’re not doing the right thing.”
Politicians took notice of the growing divide and took advantage.
Widestrom said that politicians could have used their influence to encourage unity, but many chose not to.
Widestrom said there was a certain tone missing starting with the federal lawmakers down to the state lawmakers on how to deal with the health crisis. She said there is the hard power that comes from policymaking, but there is a soft power of relational work that happens among politicians across levels of government.
“I think politicians missed an opportunity to lead,” she said. “But politicians want to get reelected and this happened during a high-stakes election cycle so when they saw the polarization that was happening they were going to do what it took to win.”
Widestrom noted that the partisanship may not have taken hold as quickly had it not been a year in which there was a presidential election. She’s confident it still would have happened, just maybe not that fast.
“Politicians are motivated by their own ambitions,” she said. “ So when they realized that this was going to be a big campaign issue, they also retreated to their partisan positions.”
Widestrom said that the political rhetoric and the public’s growing frustration with the pandemic fed off of each other. And that derailed any hope of a unified fight.
“Rather than taking this enormously disruptive opportunity to sort of reimagine the way parties could respond to crises in a more united way, politicians retreated because that would have taken some real political risk and there was no electoral incentive to do that,” Widestrom said.
Kennedy said he was not surprised by the political divide that developed, saying it mirrors what’s been going on for quite some time.
“This goes back to the underlying ideology of two parties when it comes to what is the role of government as far as society is concerned,” he said. “Some tend to favor less government involvement, and others tend to favor a strong national government. That was kind of to be expected.”
Kennedy said that debate became the central theme of the presidential election.
“Ultimately, the public decided in November of 2020 what the overall approval was of the way President Trump handled the pandemic because that was the overarching issue of the election,” he said. “His defeat was actually pretty rare because, historically, Americans have decided to stick with the same leadership during these moments of national crisis.”
Lem said that another factor in the growing divide was how decisions about COVID were being made. After its initial efforts, the federal government basically punted the issue to the states.
“It really shows one of the challenges of having a federal structure in the United States,” he said. “Even though President Trump was the person in charge of the country, most of the pandemic response fell to individual states and governors became really important.
“It came down to states to impose those mandates, lockdowns and restrictions,” he added. “So federalism is really one of the culprits for why we didn’t have a better national response.”
Lost in echo chambers
The growing political divides that began in the summer of 2020 and crescendoed with the election were exacerbated by the way Americans consume media.
More and more over the last two decades, people have retreated to the comfort of news sources that reinforce their own beliefs. Twenty-four-hour networks cater to certain political perspectives, and social media has become a platform for misinformation.
Widestrom said she believes these fractured news sources and heightened public engagement helped speed up the country’s departure from its brief moment of unity.
“I think the reason it frayed pretty quickly is that we had an enormous trust gap in terms of news sources and where we were getting our information,” she said. “So while a virus is decidedly nonpartisan, there was a point where our news sources and our own biases sort of came back.”
Widestrom said that since people have so many different ways to choose the information they receive, those biases started to influence the way they viewed the subsequent response to the pandemic. She said that was when people began to retreat into those hyperpartisan responses to what elected officials were doing.
Lem said that another issue adding to the divide was that it was not crystal clear whether mitigation efforts were working well. That left people searching for answers, and often bristling when they didn’t like the ones they heard.
“I think the evidence bears out that, on average, Americans are probably not as well informed about medical science as they could be, which means they’re more reliant on experts to tell them what the effectiveness of these strategies are,” he said. “And that hasn’t been well communicated by politicians or the medical community.”
Dr. Anthony Fauci became a sort of de facto spokesperson when it came to the pandemic. But even though he’s not a politician, he became a political figure because people weren’t happy with what he was telling them, Lem said.
“There’s really no spokesperson for that kind of information,” he said. “Dr. Fauci was to some extent, but then it looked to some that he was walking back some of these recommendations rather than understanding that we were constantly getting new information.”
And how people felt about the guidance that was coming from places like the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was often determined by how they consume media, Lem said. There has been a growing distrust of media in some circles, which leads people to unreliable and sometimes intentionally dishonest sources like social media.
Or, to their preferred politicians, who were more than willing in many cases to focus on pleasing their constituents to score political points.
Were any lessons learned?
So what does the experience of the pandemic say about the state of the country? What should people expect if there’s another wave of COVID or a different pandemic down the road or some other national crisis?
Will people come together or remain divided? Have we learned anything?
“I don’t think we will learn much from our mistakes,” Lem said. “If anything, what people may learn is that, unless there are really dire circumstances, these more restrictive measures will not be accepted a second time around. I think we’ve hit that point of fatigue with the restrictive measures.”
To see a more unifying effect, we would have to see an even more deadly virus — or other dangerous threat — than what we have gone through, Lem guessed.
Even then it’s not clear that the country would come together, at least not for long. COVID has shown that Americans have become difficult to unite, and eager to divide.
Widestrom said that a lot will depend on politicians, and how they decide to lead when facing tough decisions. She said there are two models of representation in our democracy.
Some elected officials imagine themselves going to Washington or Harrisburg to be delegates on behalf of their constituents, so they are there to do what their constituents want them to do, she said. That means it doesn’t really matter what the information and data shows, they see themselves as an extension of their voters.
Then there is the trustee model. They imagine themselves going to Washington or Harrisburg being entrusted to take the information and data they receive and make the best decision on the behalf of their constituents, she said.
“And the challenge in a representative system is that the elected officials operate with their own understanding of what they are: delegates or trustees,” she said. “Lately, especially as information has become more available to voters, we’ve seen a trend toward that delegate style of representation.”
And that’s a tricky spot, she said, because it can lead to politicians and their constituents feeding each other in an endless cycle of political vitriol and partisan division.
HALIFAX – Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston says it’s “disgraceful and demeaning” that a Halifax-area school would request that service members not wear military uniforms to its Remembrance Day ceremony.
Houston’s comments were part of a chorus of criticism levelled at the school — Sackville Heights Elementary — whose administration decided to back away from the plan after the outcry.
A November newsletter from the school in Middle Sackville, N.S., invited Armed Forces members to attend its ceremony but asked that all attendees arrive in civilian attire to “maintain a welcoming environment for all.”
Houston, who is currently running for re-election, accused the school’s leaders of “disgracing themselves while demeaning the people who protect our country” in a post on the social media platform X Thursday night.
“If the people behind this decision had a shred of the courage that our veterans have, this cowardly and insulting idea would have been rejected immediately,” Houston’s post read. There were also several calls for resignations within the school’s administration attached to Houston’s post.
In an email to families Thursday night, the school’s principal, Rachael Webster, apologized and welcomed military family members to attend “in the attire that makes them most comfortable.”
“I recognize this request has caused harm and I am deeply sorry,” Webster’s email read, adding later that the school has the “utmost respect for what the uniform represents.”
Webster said the initial request was out of concern for some students who come from countries experiencing conflict and who she said expressed discomfort with images of war, including military uniforms.
Her email said any students who have concerns about seeing Armed Forces members in uniform can be accommodated in a way that makes them feel safe, but she provided no further details in the message.
Webster did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
At a news conference Friday, Houston said he’s glad the initial request was reversed but said he is still concerned.
“I can’t actually fathom how a decision like that was made,” Houston told reporters Friday, adding that he grew up moving between military bases around the country while his father was in the Armed Forces.
“My story of growing up in a military family is not unique in our province. The tradition of service is something so many of us share,” he said.
“Saying ‘lest we forget’ is a solemn promise to the fallen. It’s our commitment to those that continue to serve and our commitment that we will pass on our respects to the next generation.”
Liberal Leader Zach Churchill also said he’s happy with the school’s decision to allow uniformed Armed Forces members to attend the ceremony, but he said he didn’t think it was fair to question the intentions of those behind the original decision.
“We need to have them (uniforms) on display at Remembrance Day,” he said. “Not only are we celebrating (veterans) … we’re also commemorating our dead who gave the greatest sacrifice for our country and for the freedoms we have.”
NDP Leader Claudia Chender said that while Remembrance Day is an important occasion to honour veterans and current service members’ sacrifices, she said she hopes Houston wasn’t taking advantage of the decision to “play politics with this solemn occasion for his own political gain.”
“I hope Tim Houston reached out to the principal of the school before making a public statement,” she said in a statement.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 8, 2024.
REGINA – Saskatchewan Opposition NDP Leader Carla Beck says she wants to prove to residents her party is the government in waiting as she heads into the incoming legislative session.
Beck held her first caucus meeting with 27 members, nearly double than what she had before the Oct. 28 election but short of the 31 required to form a majority in the 61-seat legislature.
She says her priorities will be health care and cost-of-living issues.
Beck says people need affordability help right now and will press Premier Scott Moe’s Saskatchewan Party government to cut the gas tax and the provincial sales tax on children’s clothing and some grocery items.
Beck’s NDP is Saskatchewan’s largest Opposition in nearly two decades after sweeping Regina and winning all but one seat in Saskatoon.
The Saskatchewan Party won 34 seats, retaining its hold on all of the rural ridings and smaller cities.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 8, 2024.
HALIFAX – Nova Scotia‘s growing population was the subject of debate on Day 12 of the provincial election campaign, with Liberal Leader Zach Churchill arguing immigration levels must be reduced until the province can provide enough housing and health-care services.
Churchill said Thursday a plan by the incumbent Progressive Conservatives to double the province’s population to two million people by the year 2060 is unrealistic and unsustainable.
“That’s a big leap and it’s making life harder for people who live here, (including ) young people looking for a place to live and seniors looking to downsize,” he told a news conference at his campaign headquarters in Halifax.
Anticipating that his call for less immigration might provoke protests from the immigrant community, Churchill was careful to note that he is among the third generation of a family that moved to Nova Scotia from Lebanon.
“I know the value of immigration, the importance of it to our province. We have been built on the backs of an immigrant population. But we just need to do it in a responsible way.”
The Liberal leader said Tim Houston’s Tories, who are seeking a second term in office, have made a mistake by exceeding immigration targets set by the province’s Department of Labour and Immigration. Churchill said a Liberal government would abide by the department’s targets.
In the most recent fiscal year, the government welcomed almost 12,000 immigrants through its nominee program, exceeding the department’s limit by more than 4,000, he said. The numbers aren’t huge, but the increase won’t help ease the province’s shortages in housing and doctors, and the increased strain on its infrastructure, including roads, schools and cellphone networks, Churchill said.
“(The Immigration Department) has done the hard work on this,” he said. “They know where the labour gaps are, and they know what growth is sustainable.”
In response, Houston said his commitment to double the population was a “stretch goal.” And he said the province had long struggled with a declining population before that trend was recently reversed.
“The only immigration that can come into this province at this time is if they are a skilled trade worker or a health-care worker,” Houston said. “The population has grown by two per cent a year, actually quite similar growth to what we experienced under the Liberal government before us.”
Still, Houston said he’s heard Nova Scotians’ concerns about population growth, and he then pivoted to criticize Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for trying to send 6,000 asylum seekers to Nova Scotia, an assertion the federal government has denied.
Churchill said Houston’s claim about asylum seekers was shameful.
“It’s smoke and mirrors,” the Liberal leader said. “He is overshooting his own department’s numbers for sustainable population growth and yet he is trying to blame this on asylum seekers … who aren’t even here.”
In September, federal Immigration Minister Marc Miller said there is no plan to send any asylum seekers to the province without compensation or the consent of the premier. He said the 6,000 number was an “aspirational” figure based on models that reflect each province’s population.
In Halifax, NDP Leader Claudia Chender said it’s clear Nova Scotia needs more doctors, nurses and skilled trades people.
“Immigration has been and always will be a part of the Nova Scotia story, but we need to build as we grow,” Chender said. “This is why we have been pushing the Houston government to build more affordable housing.”
Chender was in a Halifax cafe on Thursday when she promised her party would remove the province’s portion of the harmonized sales tax from all grocery, cellphone and internet bills if elected to govern on Nov. 26. The tax would also be removed from the sale and installation of heat pumps.
“Our focus is on helping people to afford their lives,” Chender told reporters. “We know there are certain things that you can’t live without: food, internet and a phone …. So we know this will have the single biggest impact.”
The party estimates the measure would save the average Nova Scotia family about $1,300 a year.
“That’s a lot more than a one or two per cent HST cut,” Chender said, referring to the Progressive Conservative pledge to reduce the tax by one percentage point and the Liberal promise to trim it by two percentage points.
Elsewhere on the campaign trail, Houston announced that a Progressive Conservative government would make parking free at all Nova Scotia hospitals and health-care centres. The promise was also made by the Liberals in their election platform released Monday.
“Free parking may not seem like a big deal to some, but … the parking, especially for people working at the facilities, can add up to hundreds of dollars,” the premier told a news conference at his campaign headquarters in Halifax.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 7, 2024.