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Why it matters that Trump kept his COVID vaccination under wraps

If Trump had just been straight with people, telling the public the truth about his own personal COVID experiences, it could've saved lives.
Image: President Trump Departs For Florida At The End Of His Presidency
President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump acknowledge waiting supporters at Joint Base Andrews before boarding Air Force One for his last time as president on Jan. 20, 2021 in Joint Base Andrews, Md.Pool / Getty Images

Among Donald Trump's strangest habits was sharing information he should've kept secret, and keeping secret information he should've shared. While in office, for example, the Republican repeatedly blurted out highly sensitive information related to U.S. national security for no apparent reason.

On the flip side, Trump and his team failed to fully disclose the severity of the then-president's coronavirus illness when he was hospitalized last fall, and as NBC News reported, they also failed to tell the public that Trump and his wife received vaccinations before the Republican's term ended two months ago.

Former President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump quietly received the Covid-19 vaccine at the White House in January, a Trump advisor told NBC News on Monday. It is not clear which type of vaccine they received and they were not disclosed at the time by the Trump White House.

This was a secret that Trump didn't need to keep.

On the surface, there's no obvious reason for the former president to have kept such a thing under wraps. It doesn't benefit him in any obvious way.

But just below the surface, the significance of this is even greater. As Rachel explained on the show last night, had Trump and his team disclosed his vaccination, it might very well have had significant public health consequences.

Remember, Trump politicized the pandemic to such an ugly and gratuitous extent that many Republicans are more skeptical than Democrats and independents about getting the shot(s). That was evident in the latest Civiqs poll, which found Democratic voters more than twice as likely as GOP voters to express interest in getting the vaccine, and it was bolstered by a recent Monmouth University poll, which found very similar results.

Or put another way, for everyone's benefit, the United States needs the public to get vaccinated, but Republicans are among the nation's most stubborn skeptics.

It is precisely why Trump -- who, for reasons I don't understand, is considered highly trustworthy and reliable among millions of GOP voters -- was in a position to change the political calculus. Had he disclosed the extent of his illness in October, it might have helped remind his followers that COVID-19 was (and is) a potentially deadly threat that people need to take seriously, and had he disclosed his vaccination three months later, it might have helped encourage his followers to follow his lead.

Or put another way, if Trump had just been straight with people, telling the public the truth about his own personal experiences, it could've saved lives.

But he nevertheless maintained his habit of sharing information he should've kept secret, and keeping secret information he should've shared.