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Fauci talks to Congress on COVID: Three key takeaways

In a highly anticipated hearing, Dr. Anthony Fauci on Monday testified before a House panel that largely centered on who bears responsibility for the loss of trust in public health officials. 

This marked the first time that Dr. Fauci, former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has appeared before Congress since retiring in 2022, after more than a half-century of working in public health. 

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In his first post-retirement hearing, Dr. Anthony Fauci, who became the face of pandemic response, exposed a partisan divide over what has undermined trust in public health officials.

The panel’s Republicans alleged that a lack of forthrightness about what officials knew – and didn’t know – undermined faith in public health strategies. In particular, they tried to hold Dr. Fauci accountable for his agency’s funding of bat coronavirus research in Wuhan, China, where the pandemic emerged.

Democrats, who have shown bipartisan support for investigating compliance issues around that research funding, took a different view. They accused GOP colleagues of undermining public health work by continuing a politically motivated vendetta against Dr. Fauci. 

Both sides pointed to the need to improve pandemic prevention and preparedness.

“What should have been a 9/11 moment for this country was turned into a political nightmare,” said GOP Chair Brad Wenstrup. “We need to do better.”

In a highly anticipated hearing, Dr. Anthony Fauci today testified before a House panel that largely centered on who is most responsible for the loss of trust in public health officials. 

This marked the first time that Dr. Fauci, the veteran director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has appeared before Congress since retiring in 2022 after a half-century career in public health. 

In many ways, Dr. Fauci became the face of the U.S. government’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. As such, he became perhaps one of the most polarizing figures of the greatest public health crisis in a century: a hero to supporters and a villain to critics. His previous appearances before Congress therefore became flashpoints, particularly those involving GOP Sen. Rand Paul. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

In his first post-retirement hearing, Dr. Anthony Fauci, who became the face of pandemic response, exposed a partisan divide over what has undermined trust in public health officials.

This panel, led by two doctors – one Republican, one Democrat – has arguably established greater credibility than other congressional efforts. Known as the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic, it demonstrated last month an ability to work in a serious, bipartisan way to investigate transparency and compliance concerns around U.S.-funded work on bat coronaviruses in Wuhan, China, where the pandemic began.

Today’s hearing was more contentious. Here are three key takeaways:

1. GOP and Democrats disagree on why trust in public health declined  

Republicans on the committee today alleged that a lack of forthrightness about what officials knew – and didn’t know – undermined faith in public health policy. They argued that understanding if and why officials were not transparent is necessary to implementing reforms needed to strengthen the country’s pandemic prevention and preparedness.

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