2- "While Maine has among the highest vaccination rates in the nation, some fully vaccinated people are still contracting the coronavirus – and some have been hospitalized or died."
As with all these stories, first acknowledge the obvious. Then spring to the defense.
3- "That’s because the vaccines do not prevent infection with the coronavirus. Instead, vaccines are designed to teach the body how to fight off an infection by triggering an aggressive immune system response that will hopefully prevent severe illness."
"The growing split between Biden’s team and outside health experts on boosters threatens to disrupt a key source of support the administration has relied on to sell its vaccination drive to the American public."
2- "It undermines credibility not just for [federal health] agencies but for the administration overall,” said Irwin Redlener, director of the Pandemic Resource and Response Initiative at Columbia University. “Somebody needs a communication lesson. Maybe many people do.”
Ouch.
3- "The Sept. 27 call was originally planned for the week before. The White House abruptly rescheduled it after the CDC’s independent vaccine advisory committee recommended that the Pfizer-BioNTech booster be reserved for high-risk groups, including the elderly."
2- "But the lack of tangible progress ... are testing the legislative acumen of a president who prides himself as a consummate creature of Capitol Hill."
Lol imagine writing "creature of Capitol Hill" like it was a positive attribute.
3- "Biden is coping with House Democrats ... as well as senators who prize their independence and may be impervious even to presidential pressure."