Biden set to deliver remarks following Covid-19 vaccine authorization for kids ages 5 to 11
CNN
By Maegan Vazquez, CNN
President Joe Biden will deliver remarks Wednesday afternoon regarding the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s authorization of the Covid-19 vaccine for kids ages 5 to 11.
On Tuesday evening, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky endorsed a recommendation for vaccinating children ages 5-11 against Covid-19, clearing the way for immediate vaccination of the youngest age group yet in the United States. The recommendation expands to include about 28 million children in the United States, according to the CDC.
The President said in a statement Tuesday night that the authorization marks “a turning point in our battle against COVID-19” and “a major step forward for our nation in our fight to defeat the virus.”
Earlier Wednesday, the White House outlined how the Biden administration is ramping up the vaccination program for children.
“Following the FDA’s authorization last Friday, teams immediately began packing vaccines specifically formulated for kids ages 5-11 into specialized containers and they’ve been working 24/7 to ship millions of doses to thousands of vaccination sites across the country,” White House Covid-19 response coordinator Jeff Zients said.
Zients said that starting next week, the vaccination program for children will be fully up and running with about 20,000 “trusted and convenient locations” available for parents to get their kids vaccinated including pediatricians, family doctors, pharmacies, community health centers and children’s hospitals. Some of those locations have already started scheduling vaccine appointments for children and others, including CVS and Walgreens, will open scheduling systems on Wednesday.
He also said that by the end of the week, parents and guardians can go to vaccines.gov to search for locations near them offering vaccinations for kids ages 5-11.
First comments since Tuesday’s elections
Wednesday’s speech at the White House will mark Biden’s first public comments since the Virginia gubernatorial candidate he endorsed and campaigned for, Democrat Terry McAuliffe, lost to Republican Glenn Youngkin.
While Tuesday’s elections were also marked by Democratic wins in other parts of the country, the Virginia governor’s race has largely been seen as a marker for Democrats’ chances in the midterm elections next year.
A Biden adviser acknowledged McAuliffe’s loss in Virginia is a warning sign for Democrats’ chances in the midterms, but warned against drawing sweeping conclusions from a single election.
“It’s incumbent on Democrats to be loud and clear about what we’re for and not just running against Donald Trump,” the Biden adviser said. “It’s also clear that voters are unhappy about inaction and this drives home the point that Democrats in Congress should move quickly on our agenda.”
The adviser said Biden’s team is optimistic that many of the headwinds McAuliffe faced in Virginia on Tuesday — including the pandemic and the pending passage of the infrastructure and reconciliation packages which are a key part of Biden’s agenda — will be improved in time for the midterms next year.
“Voters were clear that they were unhappy with inaction and nitpicking,” a source close to the White House told CNN. “And Democrats widely agree that there is greater impetus to go ahead, faster, with bills that will be economic game-changers for middle class families and ensure the economy delivers for hard-working people in their daily lives, not just those at the top.”
“If voters are frustrated with inaction, the obvious response is to be more decisive and pass bills based on an agenda for the middle class that received a record-breaking 81 million votes last year,” the source added. “And there’s a strong consensus about that across the party. Doing less is plainly the opposite of what people want.”
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CNN’s Jeremy Diamond, Arlette Saenz, Jason Hoffman and Maggie Fox contributed to this report.