This is so fascinating, and I don't know where to go. I almost feel like I need to ask the other two people a question, but I'm going to go down this road a bit.
I'm not a medical expert, like most members of Parliament aren't medical experts. I come from a business background, so I'd like to think that I have some expertise in negotiation and persuasion, and that I think is relevant here.
I wrote an op-ed on vaccine hesitancy in 2019, because I have a son with autism and I would have described myself as vaccine hesitant 20-some years ago because of the Wakefield situation coming out of the U.K. My op-ed in 2019, pre-COVID, was to convince people that vaccines don't cause autism and to address vaccine hesitancy from that standpoint. I had the chance to talk to many experts about this. The approach that I took at the time, as a parent of someone with autism, was to try to understand, show some empathy and ask the types of questions that they might ask of some of the experts I had the chance to quote in my op-ed.
I am very concerned about the way that we've communicated over the last two years with people who are vaccine hesitant. I know when you're talking about politicians...I sense that you're pointing at some politicians within my own political persuasion or sphere. However, we have one prime minister in this country and that Prime Minister referred to people who don't get vaccinated as misogynists, racists, “those people” and a lot of other things.
I think people who have chosen not to get vaccinated did so largely because they thought the vaccine was going to hurt them. I think our approach should be to persuade them, based on evidence, that they should get vaccinated, because they're safer when they get vaccinated and people around them are safer.
What would you maybe do differently in terms of communication, if you could revisit the last two years?