US President Joe Biden appears in a CNN event to meet the public in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, US, on February 16, 2021. Reuters
US President Joe Biden appears in a CNN event to meet the public in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, US, on February 16, 2021. Reuters
US President Joe Biden appears in a CNN event to meet the public in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, US, on February 16, 2021. Reuters
US President Joe Biden appears in a CNN event to meet the public in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, US, on February 16, 2021. Reuters

All US citizens could receive Covid-19 vaccination by July after Joe Biden invokes defence act


  • English
  • Arabic

President Joe Biden said pharmaceutical companies agreed to sell more vaccine doses to the US faster than planned after he invoked federal law that could force their production.

It's highly unlikely that by the beginning of next traditional school year in September, we are not significantly better off than we are today

The government said last week that 300 million doses each of Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech’s vaccines would arrive in the US by the end of July, enough to inoculate all adult residents.

“We got them to move up time because we used the National Defence Act to be able to help the manufacturing piece of it, to get more equipment,” Mr Biden said at a CNN question and answer session in Milwaukee on Tuesday night.

He appeared to be referring to the Defence Production Act, a law that allows the government to nationalise commercial production in emergencies.

The “town hall” event, broadcast in prime-time, was an opportunity for Mr Biden to encourage Americans to seek vaccination and press for passage of his $1.9 trillion pandemic relief plan. He said that people should take a shot when it’s available and as soon as they are eligible, regardless of the manufacturer, and predicted the country would be better off in September, the start of the new school year, than today.

“We should be vaccinating teachers, we should move them up in the hierarchy,” he told a teacher who asked him why it was safe for schools to reopen when private gatherings are still limited.

“It’s highly unlikely that by the beginning of next year school, traditional school year in September, we are not significantly better off than we are today,” Mr Biden said. “But it matters – it matters whether you continue to wear that mask, it matters whether you continue to socially distance, it matters whether you wash your hands with hot water. Those things matter.”

He said his administration mischaracterised its own target by publicly promoting a goal of reopening most classrooms for at least one day a week, a benchmark much of the nation has already reached. “That was a mistake in the communication,” he said.

Instead, he said he hopes “a majority” of primary schools would reopen by the summer.

He told a black woman identified as a health-care worker that closing racial disparities in vaccination is also a priority and that he understood reticence to be inoculated in minority communities because “there is some history of blacks being used as guinea pigs”.

The president reassured a little girl that she was unlikely to become ill from the virus herself. “You’re the safest group of people in the whole world,” he said. “I wouldn’t worry about it, baby. I promise you.”

The White House announced earlier Tuesday that vaccine shipments to states would rise next week to 13.5 million, from 11 million, while shipments going to pharmacies would double to two million next week.

But White House officials warned governors during a call on Tuesday that inclement weather could slow deliveries in the next few days.

_____________

Gallery: Coronavirus in the US

  • Educator John Cormier receives a shot from LPN Lizmary Reyes in East Hartford, Connecticut. AP Photo
    Educator John Cormier receives a shot from LPN Lizmary Reyes in East Hartford, Connecticut. AP Photo
  • A pharmacist draws saline while preparing a dose of Pfizer's Covid-19 vaccine in Sacramento, California. AP Photo
    A pharmacist draws saline while preparing a dose of Pfizer's Covid-19 vaccine in Sacramento, California. AP Photo
  • Workers seal their feet into hazmat suits as they prepare to clean the Senate Special Committee on Aging offices after a person reportedly tested positive for coronavirus. Reuters
    Workers seal their feet into hazmat suits as they prepare to clean the Senate Special Committee on Aging offices after a person reportedly tested positive for coronavirus. Reuters
  • Chaplain Kristin Michealsen leaves a Covid-19 unit after talking to a family member of a deceased patient at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in the Mission Hills section of Los Angeles. AP Photo
    Chaplain Kristin Michealsen leaves a Covid-19 unit after talking to a family member of a deceased patient at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in the Mission Hills section of Los Angeles. AP Photo
  • People receive Covid-19 antibody tests during a free testing session in honour of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. at Southside Church of Christ in Los Angeles. AP Photo
    People receive Covid-19 antibody tests during a free testing session in honour of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. at Southside Church of Christ in Los Angeles. AP Photo
  • Daisy Ozaeta, 25, of Los Angeles, waits for Dr. Nana Afoh-Manina, co-founder of myCovidMD, to collect a blood sample from her for a Covid-19 antibody test. AP Photo
    Daisy Ozaeta, 25, of Los Angeles, waits for Dr. Nana Afoh-Manina, co-founder of myCovidMD, to collect a blood sample from her for a Covid-19 antibody test. AP Photo
  • A Covid-19 testing site at Long Beach Airport, available exclusively for Hawaiian Airlines' guests travelling to the Hawaiian Island, in Long Beach, California. AP Photo
    A Covid-19 testing site at Long Beach Airport, available exclusively for Hawaiian Airlines' guests travelling to the Hawaiian Island, in Long Beach, California. AP Photo
  • A nurse administers a coronavirus test at a drive-through centre targeting underserved communities on Martin Luther King Day in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Reuters
    A nurse administers a coronavirus test at a drive-through centre targeting underserved communities on Martin Luther King Day in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Reuters
  • A woman talks to a worker behind a locked gate at the 24-hour coronavirus mass vaccination site at the Brooklyn Army Terminal in Brooklyn, New York. Reuters
    A woman talks to a worker behind a locked gate at the 24-hour coronavirus mass vaccination site at the Brooklyn Army Terminal in Brooklyn, New York. Reuters
  • Nursing home residents line up for the coronavirus vaccine at Harlem Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation, a nursing home facility in New York. AP Photo
    Nursing home residents line up for the coronavirus vaccine at Harlem Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation, a nursing home facility in New York. AP Photo
  • Firefighter/paramedic John Kostyo Jr., administers a Covid-19 vaccination at the Tequesta Fire Department in Tequesta, Florida. AP Photo
    Firefighter/paramedic John Kostyo Jr., administers a Covid-19 vaccination at the Tequesta Fire Department in Tequesta, Florida. AP Photo
  • A medical worker talks to a person in a car as people line up at a coronavirus vaccination site at Strawberry Festival Fairgrounds in Plant City, Florida, US. Reuters
    A medical worker talks to a person in a car as people line up at a coronavirus vaccination site at Strawberry Festival Fairgrounds in Plant City, Florida, US. Reuters
  • People wait in line to receive a Covid-19 vaccine in Tucson, Arizona. Bloomberg
    People wait in line to receive a Covid-19 vaccine in Tucson, Arizona. Bloomberg
  • A mass-vaccination of healthcare workers takes place at Dodger Stadium, in Los Angeles. AP Photo
    A mass-vaccination of healthcare workers takes place at Dodger Stadium, in Los Angeles. AP Photo