DeWine: Midwestern governors have strengthened relations during pandemic fight against “common enemy”

Governor of Ohio Mike DeWineMike DeWineDiumenge shows preview: COVID-19 relief awaiting Trump’s signing; government continues vaccine deployment DeWine says Ohio teachers and school staff will be the next group to receive the COVID-19 vaccine Progressives will gather around Turner House MORE (R) and the Michigan government. Gretchen WhitmerGretchen Whitmer Sunday shows preview: COVID-19 relief awaiting Trump’s signature; government continues to deploy vaccines in Michigan to reopen high schools and indoor entertainment amid stabilizing coronavirus rates Michigan restores pandemic-related moratorium on water closures MORE (D) said Sunday in a joint interview that the coronavirus pandemic has strengthened communication and relations between Midwestern state leaders.

“What I found good about it is that I met Gretchen, the governor of Whitmer. I met the neighboring governors and we talked a lot,” DeWine told CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

“We have a common enemy, the common enemy is this virus and we are fighting it,” he added, saying, “Certainly there would be people in my state who do not agree with what we have done.”

“This virus doesn’t stop at the state line, it doesn’t stop at the party line, it’s a common enemy and that’s how we’ve always looked at it,” Whitmer added.

Whitmer noted that while states have varied in the way they allocate the first doses of vaccine, most rulers prioritize “who has the most exposure, who is in jobs that are coming into contact with the public.” .

DeWine added that while there has been a real consensus among what we call the “A1” group, which includes first-time attendees, he predicted that there will be more lack of consensus among people in general when it comes to first group. “

Tant DeWine com Whitmer van ser els objectius del segrest de complots a principis d’aquest any per restriccions que van aplicar durant la pandèmia.

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