The Atlantic

The New Pandemic Division Tearing Europe Apart

France and Austria have modeled two very different ways of encouraging people to get vaccinated.
Source: Jan Hetfleisch / Getty

For a while, during the worst of the pandemic last year, European governments largely seemed to reach a consensus. Barring a few exceptions (such as Sweden), countries in the region locked down their economies, keeping people at home in a bid to slow the pace of infection. In time, bolstered by plentiful vaccines, the continent has seen a resumption of near-normalcy: Public-health restrictions have loosened, and travel has restarted.

But as temperatures drop, and as rising cases place Europe back of the pandemic, the continent is once again being forced to grapple with tougher measures in a desperate bid to alleviate pressure on hospitals that are coming under strain. This time, however, European countries are no longer in broad agreement on

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