https://www.nationalreview.com/news/media-ignore-desantiss-minority-outreach-to-smear-florida-vaccine-effort/
On a cool Valentine’s Day in northern Florida, more than 500 people braved heavy rain to get COVID-19 vaccination shots at St. Paul AME Church in Jacksonville.
The vaccination event was part of the annual Founder’s Day celebration for the church, which is located in one of the most heavily Democratic voting precincts in the city, said the church’s pastor, Marvin Clyde Zanders II. Despite the rain, he said, it was “very well orchestrated.”
The vaccination event at St. Paul AME is one of more than 50 vaccination events that have been held at churches and recreation centers over the last few weeks in a concerted effort to get more shots in the arms of Floridians living in underserved communities.
The events have been spearheaded by the Florida Division of Emergency Management and the Department of Health, at the direction of the state’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis. More than 42,000 people have been vaccinated at the one-day clinics, according to the DOE.
“Our communities need access to the vaccine, and I think there is an effort to get it done,” Zanders said, “because all are vulnerable. Every individual that’s a human is vulnerable.”
Those efforts to vaccinate people in underserved Florida communities were largely ignored by most mainstream media outlets this past week during a flap over a pop-up vaccination event at a wealthy community along the state’s Gulf Coast. During the three-day pop-up event, 3,000 doses of vaccine were administered in a planned community with a large number of seniors called Lakewood Ranch in Manatee County, just south of St. Petersburg.
Democrats charged that DeSantis was playing politics with vaccine distribution, and favoring white, wealthy Republicans. State Representative Michele Rayner, a St. Petersburg Democrat, accused the governor of prioritizing “affluent neighborhoods in Manatee County over our underserved populations.” Niki Fried, Florida’s agriculture commissioner and the only Democrat elected to statewide office, accused DeSantis of “rationing vaccines based on political influence.”
DeSantis, with his pugnacious style, fired back that the community – which is below the statewide average for vaccinated seniors – should be “thankful” that it was receiving an additional 3,000 vaccine doses, on top of its regular allocation.