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Apoorva Ramaswamy says she doesn鈥檛 regret taking COVID-19 vaccine, breaking with husband Vivek

Apoorva Ramaswamy says she doesn鈥檛 regret taking COVID-19 vaccine, breaking with husband Vivek
DO AS THEY LOOK TO THE NEXT DEBATE? VIVEK RAMASWAMI IS TALKING WITH REPORTERS. LET鈥橲 GO. WE鈥橰E JUST GOING TO WALK OVER HERE. HERE AND TRY TO DIP IN ON THIS AND SEE WHAT HAPPENS. WELCOME TO THE SPIN ROOM, FOLKS. ACTUAL ALTERNATIVE VISION OF OUR OWN. AND I THINK I WAS THE ONLY CANDIDATE ON THE STAGE DOING THAT TONIGHT. AND I鈥橫 GOING TO CONTINUE TO LEAD THE WAY AND ACTUALLY ARTICULATING WHAT IT MEANS TO BE AN AMERICAN, REVIVE THOSE 1776 IDEALS, MERITS OCRACY THE PURSUIT OF EXCELLENCE, FREE SPEECH, THE RULE OF LAW, WHICH I AM GLAD THAT WE TALKED A LOT ABOUT TONIGHT SELF-GOVERNANCE IN THE FORM OF SHUTTING DOWN THAT ADMINISTRATIVE STATE, REVIVING THE AMERICAN DREAM ITSELF. WE HAVE TWO LEFT WILL FEED US RACE, GENDER, SEXUALITY AND CLIMATE. AND WE CAN COMPLAIN ABOUT THAT ALL WE WANT. WHAT WE HAVE TO TALK MORE ABOUT IS THE VALUE OF EACH INDIVIDUAL, THE FAMILY, WHICH I SPOKE ABOUT SEVERAL TIMES TONIGHT. THE NATION AND GOD, INDIVIDUAL FAMILY, NATION, GOD. THAT鈥橲 WHAT WE鈥橰E RUNNING TO, NOT JUST WHAT WE鈥橰E RUNNING FROM. AND I THINK I鈥橫 THE ONLY CANDIDATE IN THIS RACE IN THE FIRST SIX MONTHS OF THIS CAMPAIGN AND EVEN TONIGHT WHO鈥橲 INDEPENDENT OFFERING THAT VISION. AND I SAY THIS AS SOMEBODY WHO BELIEVES I鈥橫 GOING TO NEED EACH OF THOSE OTHER PEOPLE TO PLAY THEIR ROLE. THERE鈥橲 SOME GOOD GOVERNORS ON THAT STAGE, SOME OF WHOM ARE CURRENT GOVERNORS THAT I NEED TO STAY IN THEIR SEAT AS GOVERNOR TO DO WHAT THEY鈥橰E BEST AT DOING. BUT WHEN IT COMES TO THE WHITE HOUSE, WE鈥橰E GOING TO NEED AN OUTSIDER FROM A DIFFERENT GENERATION TO DELIVER A LANDSLIDE. AND I THINK I鈥橫 THE ONLY CANDIDATE IN THIS RACE WHO CAN ACTUALLY FORMER PRESIDENT MISSED TONIGHT. YOU KNOW, I THINK THAT I鈥橫 FINE WITH HIM MISSING THE FIRST COUPLE OF DEBATES. I EXPECT HIM TO SHOW UP SOMETIME. AND FRANKLY, PROBABLY CLOSER TO WHEN IT鈥橲 A TWO HORSE RACE BETWEEN ME AND HIM, WHICH I THINK IS SOONER THAN LATER WHEN THAT鈥橲 COMING OVER HERE. SEVERAL TIMES. JUNEAU SAID YOU HAD THE BEST PERFORMANCE TONIGHT. I WAS PLEASED WITH THAT, YEAH. WOULD YOU CONSIDER BEING ON TRUMP鈥橲 TICKET TO THE WHITE HOUSE AS VICE PRESIDENT? I EXPECT TRUMP TO BE ONE OF MY MOST VALUABLE ADVISORS AS I TAKE OVER FOR THE WHITE HOUSE IN JANUARY 2025. JUST BECAUSE I LOOK. DO I THINK TRUMP CAN BEAT BIDEN IN A GENERAL ELECTION? ACTUALLY, I THINK HE CAN, BUT IT WOULD BE NARROW. AND I JUST THINK THIS WE鈥橰E IN SKATING ON THIN ICE AS A COUNTRY. THIS CAN鈥橳 BE 50.1. THIS HAS TO BE A MORAL MANDATE, BRINGING ALONG YOUNG PEOPLE IN DROVES, BRINGING ALONG PEOPLE WHO HAVEN鈥橳 TRADITIONALLY THOUGHT OF THEMSELVES AS ALIGNED WITH THE REPUBLICAN PARTY. I CAN DO THAT AS A MEMBER OF A DIFFERENT GENERATION COMING IN FROM THE OUTSIDE. FRANKLY, WE鈥橰E ALREADY DOING IT IN THIS CAMPAIGN. 40% OF OUR DONORS ARE FIRST TIME EVER DONORS TO THE GOP. THAT NUMBER IS 2% FOR NORMAL REPUBLICANS. THAT IS STAGGERING. AND I THINK THAT I FEEL A SENSE OF RESPONSIBILITY TO DELIVER THAT UNIFYING RESULT OF A LANDSLIDE. AND THAT WILL POSITION ME TO TAKE THE AMERICA FIRST AGENDA. VIVEK RAMASWAMY SPEAKING ABOUT HOW HE B
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Apoorva Ramaswamy says she doesn鈥檛 regret taking COVID-19 vaccine, breaking with husband Vivek
Apoorva Ramaswamy, wife of Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, said she does not regret taking the COVID-19 vaccine, breaking with her husband on a central issue of the biotech entrepreneur's outsider campaign thus far. Ramaswamy, a throat cancer surgeon at Ohio State University, said she would take the COVID-19 vaccine again if given the chance, stressing the importance of being vaccinated while treating her patients. She also emphasized the importance of "autonomy" in recommending medical treatments to her patients and said her decision to take the vaccine was different for her than for her "young, healthy husband." "For every person, that's a different decision. So for my young, healthy husband, that's a different decision than for me when I am taking care of patients who are cancer survivors, and they trust me to, you know, be in their airway every day," she said in an interview released Monday. "It's a very different discussion. And I think giving people that autonomy is the most important part." Her view on the vaccine differs from that of her husband, who has previously said he regrets taking the COVID-19 vaccine and has repeatedly lambasted the federal government's efforts to produce and distribute the vaccine, arguing that the government lied about its efficacy and its possible side effects. In a podcast interview in July, Ramaswamy said he is vaccinated against COVID-19 but regrets taking it in light of information he's learned about the vaccine since taking it. Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the Ramaswamy campaign, confirmed he has taken the vaccine and regrets doing so. "If Vivek had the information in 2021 that he has now, yes, he would have made a different medical decision," McLaughlin told CNN. The split between the couple draws into focus the campaign's handling of an important issue for Republican primary voters, many of whom reacted negatively to state and federal rules around wearing masks, self-quarantining and taking vaccines during the COVID-19 pandemic. Ramaswamy has sought to align himself with those voters at campaign events in Iowa and New Hampshire. He has said he's against any mask mandates, vaccine mandates or lockdowns, pledged to remove liability protections for vaccine manufacturers, called for "accountability" for prominent public health officials like Dr. Anthony Fauci, who advocated for the vaccine. Ramaswamy has also advanced conspiracy theories about the origins of COVID-19, the impacts of the COVID-19 vaccine and the federal government's level of knowledge about the vaccine's impact. Video below: GOP Primary candidate Ramaswamy refuses to say why he thought Trump鈥檚 actions were 鈥榓bhorrent鈥� on Jan. 6"It's not principles of logic. It's a new religion, it's a cult. In this case, it was a cult of COVID-ism in this country," Ramaswamy said of the federal government mandates during the COVID pandemic at a campaign event in Newport, New Hampshire, earlier this month. But Ramaswamy's past comments around COVID-19 and his background working with the pharmaceutical industry have raised questions about whether he's sufficiently opposed to the vaccine manufacturing industry. In 2020, he said on social media that a proposal by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders to deliver masks to all Americans "strikes me as a sensible idea" and that "wearing a mask = personal responsibility."Voters at campaign events have also expressed skepticism about his previous work developing and selling new drugs as the founder of biotech firm Roivant Sciences. Ramaswamy oversaw the development of five FDA-approved medicines as head of Roivant before stepping down as CEO in 2021, rising to prominence during that time for working on a highly-publicized drug to cure Alzheimer's disease that ultimately failed its clinical trial. "Here's my thing鈥� you come from what we fear, right? You come from the pharmaceutical industry," New Hampshire native Bill Gay asked Ramaswamy at a Lancaster, New Hampshire, campaign event earlier this month. "What do you say when people say 'Hey you're a product of big pharma, you're a product of the Ivy League?' Why should I trust you?" "I have seen the corruption front row," Ramaswamy responded, arguing challenges caused by government regulation slowed the development of drugs he said could have saved lives.

Apoorva Ramaswamy, wife of Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, said she does not regret taking the COVID-19 vaccine, breaking with her husband on a central issue of the biotech entrepreneur's outsider campaign thus far.

Ramaswamy, a throat cancer surgeon at Ohio State University, said she would take the COVID-19 vaccine again if given the chance, stressing the importance of being vaccinated while treating her patients. She also emphasized the importance of "autonomy" in recommending medical treatments to her patients and said her decision to take the vaccine was different for her than for her "young, healthy husband."

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"For every person, that's a different decision. So for my young, healthy husband, that's a different decision than for me when I am taking care of patients who are cancer survivors, and they trust me to, you know, be in their airway every day," she said in an interview released Monday. "It's a very different discussion. And I think giving people that autonomy is the most important part."

Her view on the vaccine differs from that of her husband, who has previously said he regrets taking the COVID-19 vaccine and has repeatedly lambasted the federal government's efforts to produce and distribute the vaccine, arguing that the government lied about its efficacy and its possible side effects.

In a podcast interview in July, Ramaswamy said he is vaccinated against COVID-19 but regrets taking it in light of information he's learned about the vaccine since taking it. Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the Ramaswamy campaign, confirmed he has taken the vaccine and regrets doing so.

"If Vivek had the information in 2021 that he has now, yes, he would have made a different medical decision," McLaughlin told CNN.

The split between the couple draws into focus the campaign's handling of an important issue for Republican primary voters, many of whom reacted negatively to state and federal rules around wearing masks, self-quarantining and taking vaccines during the COVID-19 pandemic. Ramaswamy has sought to align himself with those voters at campaign events in Iowa and New Hampshire. He has said he's against any mask mandates, vaccine mandates or lockdowns, pledged to remove liability protections for vaccine manufacturers, called for "accountability" for prominent public health officials like Dr. Anthony Fauci, who advocated for the vaccine.

Ramaswamy has also advanced conspiracy theories about the origins of COVID-19, the impacts of the COVID-19 vaccine and the federal government's level of knowledge about the vaccine's impact.

Video below: GOP Primary candidate Ramaswamy refuses to say why he thought Trump鈥檚 actions were 鈥榓bhorrent鈥� on Jan. 6

"It's not principles of logic. It's a new religion, it's a cult. In this case, it was a cult of COVID-ism in this country," Ramaswamy said of the federal government mandates during the COVID pandemic at a campaign event in Newport, New Hampshire, earlier this month.

But Ramaswamy's past comments around COVID-19 and his background working with the pharmaceutical industry have raised questions about whether he's sufficiently opposed to the vaccine manufacturing industry. In 2020, he said on social media that a proposal by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders to deliver masks to all Americans "strikes me as a sensible idea" and that "wearing a mask = personal responsibility."

Voters at campaign events have also expressed skepticism about his previous work developing and selling new drugs as the founder of biotech firm Roivant Sciences. Ramaswamy oversaw the development of five FDA-approved medicines as head of Roivant before stepping down as CEO in 2021, rising to prominence during that time for working on a highly-publicized drug to cure Alzheimer's disease that ultimately failed its clinical trial.

"Here's my thing鈥� you come from what we fear, right? You come from the pharmaceutical industry," New Hampshire native Bill Gay asked Ramaswamy at a Lancaster, New Hampshire, campaign event earlier this month. "What do you say when people say 'Hey you're a product of big pharma, you're a product of the Ivy League?' Why should I trust you?"

"I have seen the corruption front row," Ramaswamy responded, arguing challenges caused by government regulation slowed the development of drugs he said could have saved lives.