[Congressional Record Volume 166, Number 211 (Monday, December 14, 2020)]
[Senate]
[Page S7455]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                              CORONAVIRUS

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, now, a year that was full of bad news for 
the country is coming to an end with some very good news. Over the past 
8 to 9 months, American scientists, biochemists, and researchers rushed 
to produce a safe and effective vaccine to the COVID-19 pandemic--and 
they have succeeded in extraordinary fashion.
  We don't have just one but several candidates for a vaccine, each of 
which has shown to be 90 percent effective in clinical trials. One of 
those vaccines has been approved, authorized by the FDA for emergency 
use. And as we speak, an assembly line of workers in masks, gloves, and 
face shields are pulling doses out of the freezer, loading them into 
cold storage palettes, and onto trucks to be shipped to States across 
the country.
  The discovery of a COVID-19 vaccine within the timeframe of a 
calendar year is a crowning scientific achievement of the 21st century. 
It should bring not only a feeling of relief to the country--indeed, to 
the entire world--but also deep admiration and pride for America's 
scientists and our medical workers.
  I remember, in the early days of the pandemic, going to the window of 
our Brooklyn apartment each night to applaud our frontline workers. The 
whoops, claps, and metallic clang of pots and pans echoed for miles. 
Our medical researchers--as well as thousands of Americans who 
selflessly volunteered for clinical trials--deserve the same national 
expression of gratitude.
  We can show our gratitude here in Congress by communicating clearly 
that the COVID-19 vaccine is safe, effective, and that every American 
should inoculate themselves when it becomes available. Skepticism about 
vaccines was already too high before the pandemic. Several polls have 
shown it to be an alarming concern with respect to the COVID-19 
vaccine. It is an absolute disgrace that the Republican majority on the 
Homeland Security Committee has invited a prominent skeptic of the 
COVID-19 vaccine to deliver testimony in a hearing this week. Public 
figures at all levels should be building up confidence in a vaccine, 
not giving a platform to those who undermine it.
  At the moment, the vaccine is being distributed to medical personnel, 
doctors, nurses, frontline workers, and the most vulnerable 
populations. I myself will take the vaccine as soon as it is 
appropriate and recommended. I will not skip the line. But make no 
mistake, we should all lead by example, commit to taking the vaccine, 
and tell our constituents to take it as well.
  The CDC and our States will continue to advise which populations 
should be inoculated based on availability, and we will follow that 
guidance

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