President Biden says he will make a choice about vaccination requirements for domestic travel when he gets 'a recommendation from the medical team'



President Joe Biden reportedly said that he will make a decision regarding COVID-19 vaccination requirements for domestic travel when he receives "a recommendation from the medical team."

The president made the comment in response to a question, according to Sabrina Siddiqui of the Wall Street Journal.

"Asked when he would make a decision on vaccine requirements for domestic travel, President Biden tells reporters he would do so 'when I get a recommendation from the medical team,'" Siddiqui tweeted.

Asked when he would make a decision on vaccine requirements for domestic travel, President Biden tells reporters he would do so "when I get a recommendation from the medical team."
— Sabrina Siddiqui (@Sabrina Siddiqui) 1640731575

COVID-19 vaccination mandates imposed by the public and private sectors during the pandemic have proven to be very controversial, so if the president were to advance a vaccination requirement for domestic travelers, it would likely be very unpopular with a large portion of the public.

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious director Dr. Anthony Fauci, who also serves as chief medical advisor to President Biden, has told CNN's Jim Acosta that he does not expect a vaccine requirement for domestic air travel to be implemented anytime soon.

"I doubt if we're gonna see something like that in the reasonably foreseeable future," Fauci said.

Earlier this month, when responding to someone who mentioned the idea of requiring COVID-19 vaccination or a test for domestic air travel, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said that "nothing is off the table ... including domestic travel."

"The reason is that with the sheer volume of new cases that we are having and that we expect to continue with Omicron, one of the things we want to be careful of is that we don't have so many people out," Dr. Anthony Fauci explains why CDC changed Covid isolation guidelines.pic.twitter.com/g48XwcDdJh
— The Situation Room (@The Situation Room) 1640648827

Dr. Fauci: Expect cruise lines and airlines to require proof of vaccination before you can travel



In the absence of federally mandated vaccine passports, Dr. Anthony Fauci expects multiple U.S businesses to impose their own requirements for customers to show proof of vaccination to receive service.

Fauci, the White House's top medical adviser, said Thursday that businesses like airlines and cruise ships will likely require customers to show proof of receiving both doses of a COVID-19 vaccine before being allowed on board. He also noted that several universities have already begun requiring students to be vaccinated before returning to campus this fall.

"There are organizations, particularly universities and colleges who are saying, not withstanding what the federal government is requiring, if you want to come into campus and be in in-person learning, you're going to have to show proof of vaccination," Fauci said at a Bloomberg Businessweek conference.

"Cruise ships will likely be doing that. Airlines will likely be doing that. So you're going to have at, a local, independent-level, things that the federal government is not going to be mandating," he added.

The Biden administration said in March that there will be no federal mandate requiring people to show proof of vaccination to enter public spaces and no centralized, universal federal vaccinations database. The White House is instead leaving it up to the private sector to determine how businesses should fully reopen as more Americans become vaccinated against COVID-19 and the government's health restrictions are eased.

The adoption of vaccine passports, which have proved controversial, has so far been decentralized. Some MLB and NBA sports teams, for example, are requiring fans to use an app called Health Pass to provide digital proof that they have gotten their COVID-19 shots before they can enter stadiums to attend games.

But some states are limiting the use of vaccine passports, or outright banning them. Texas and Florida were among the first states to ban government agencies and private businesses from requiring vaccine passports for service. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) said the passports "would create two classes of citizens based on vaccination." Arizona, Utah, and more states followed suit with legislation limiting the use of vaccine passports, though in some cases private businesses are allowed to create their own policies.

Though last week the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued new guidance stating individuals fully vaccinated against COVID-19 no longer need to wear face coverings, the CDC still requires those traveling on planes, buses, trains, or other forms of public transportation to wear masks over their nose and mouth. The CDC also advices Americans to obey local coronavirus restrictions or those imposed by individual businesses.