Fox News viewers who see the network’s personalities and guests discussing vaccination against COVID-19 are now overwhelmingly likely to see attacks on the immunization campaign. Media Matters found a whopping 78% of the network’s vaccine segments included claims undermining vaccinations during the eight-week period from January 1 through February 25.
That figure represents a sizable increase since Media Matters last analyzed Fox’s coverage of the COVID-19 vaccines in the summer of 2021. At that time, we reviewed Fox vaccine segments from June 28 through August 8, 2021, and found that 59% featured arguments undermining vaccination. And claims that the vaccines are unnecessary or dangerous have nearly doubled, from a still-too-high 33% of vaccine segments in the 2021 study to 63% this year.
The vaccines provide crucial protection from a virus that has killed millions of people, including more than one million Americans, over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic. Without the vaccines, studies show the toll would have been far worse.
“The Covid-19 vaccines have kept more than 18.5 million people in the US out of the hospital and saved more than 3.2 million lives,” CNN reported of a study from the Commonwealth Fund and Yale School of Public Health that was published in December, adding that the researchers say their “estimate is most likely a conservative one.” At the time, the Biden administration was encouraging people to take vaccine boosters in order to decrease their vulnerability to the virus.
Fox’s rejection of the vaccines since they were first deployed in December 2020 betrayed the viewers who count on the network for information. The network defied its unique moral responsibility to try to persuade its audience to take the potentially life-saving shots, instead choosing to stoke fears that they were ineffective or dangerous and that their distribution was part of a sinister plot to control Americans. The results were deadly for Republicans, who were vaccinated against COVID-19 at lower rates and died from it at higher ones.
A filing from Dominion Voting Systems’ ongoing $1.6 billion lawsuit against Fox revealed that host Tucker Carlson once responded to election fraud claims from former President Donald Trump’s lawyers by saying, “Our viewers are good people and they believe it,” even though he knew the claims were false. The same principle applied to the network’s vaccine coverage – Fox’s viewers believed that the vaccines were dangerous, and its hosts were more than willing to affirm their beliefs to boost ratings, no matter the human toll.