DeWine: Midwestern governors strengthen ties during pandemic fight against ‘common enemy’

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWineMike DeWine Sunday shows preview: COVID-19 relief awaits Trump’s signature; the government continues to vaccinate DeWine says teachers in Ohio, the school staff to become the next group to receive COVID-19 vaccine. Progressive rally around Turner’s House offers MORE (R) and Michigan Gov. Gretchen WhitmerGretchen Whitmer Sunday shows preview: COVID-19 relief awaits Trump’s signature; the government continues to vaccinate Michigan to reopen high schools, indoor entertainment amid stabilizing coronavirus rates, Michigan reinstalls moratorium on water closure more (D) said in a joint interview on Sunday that the coronavirus pandemic has strengthened communication and relations between state leaders in the Middle East.

“What I liked about it was that I got to know Gretchen, the Whitmer government. I got to know our neighboring governors and we talk quite a bit, ‘DeWine said on CBS’ ‘Face the Nation’.

“We have a common enemy, the common enemy is this virus and we are fighting back against it,” he added. “There are probably people in my state who do not agree with what we did.”

“This virus does not stop at the state line, it does not stop at the party line, it is a common enemy and that is always how we looked at it,” Whitmer added.

Whitmer noted that although states have been diverse in allocating the first vaccine doses, most governors prefer “who has the most exposure, who is in positions that come into contact with the public.”

DeWine added that although there was a real consensus between what we call the ‘A1’ group, ‘which includes first responders, but predicts that there will be a greater lack of consensus among people in general if you go beyond the first group arrives. “

Both DeWine and Whitmer were reportedly the targets for the abduction of plots earlier this year due to restrictions they imposed during the pandemic.

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