Australia Prepares to Discuss Vaccination Targets to Avoid Lockdowns

Australia Prepares to Discuss Vaccination Targets to Avoid Lockdowns
People are seen queuing to enter a mass COVID-19 vaccination hub in Sydney, Australia, on May 10, 2021. Mark Kolbe/Getty Images
AAP
By AAP
Updated:

Scott Morrison and state and territory leaders are set to discuss vaccination targets to eliminate lockdowns and border restrictions.

The prime minister will chair a virtual national cabinet meeting from Canberra on Friday.

Mr Morrison has spent weeks arguing there is no magic number of vaccinations that will trigger Australia to reopen its international borders and ending domestic restrictions.

But with more than 12 million people in lockdown across Australia, he now concedes it is time to set clear expectations around what percentage of the population needs to be vaccinated.

“It’s time to start laying it out for the Australian public,” Morrison told The Australian.

“It is imperative the premiers, chief ministers and I address that question. It comes down to the medical science and what are the magic numbers.”

The prime minister said modelling had already been done on the Alpha variant and was almost complete on the more contagious Delta variant.

“The package the public deserves needs a consolidated agreement from all of us.”

The national cabinet will also discuss reducing the number of international arrivals in hotel quarantine until more Australians are vaccinated.

Queensland, Victoria and Western Australia want the returned traveller cap slashed by up to 80 per cent.

The federal government has left the door open to further tightening the international border.

State premiers also want to tighten the eligibility criteria for Australians to travel overseas and return home, concerned too many people are being allowed to come and go as they please.

As well, they want nationally agreed vaccination targets that would allow for different quarantine arrangements for incoming travellers based on risk.

The perennial topic of Commonwealth-led alternatives to hotel quarantine that can be used in the short-term will also be thrashed out.

Emerging from two weeks of quarantine at The Lodge, the prime minister said it was time for the country to switch gears after getting through the last 18 months.

“The country is very much keen for us to chart that way out of where we are,” he said.

Morrison said he was encouraged by Thursday’s record day for vaccinations, with more than 160,000 people receiving their jab nationwide.

He said Australia remained on track to vaccinate all eligible adults by the end of the year.

Almost eight per cent of Australian adults are now fully vaccinated, but the nation lags far behind all other comparable countries.

The national cabinet meeting will focus on the bungled national rollout and mixed messaging around the AstraZeneca jab.

The prime minister triggered a week of competing claims about vaccine advice after highlighting a path for younger people to receive AstraZeneca after consulting with their GP.

After days of confusion and conflicting statements, Australia’s expert immunisation panel reiterated its advice that Pfizer was preferred for all people aged under 60.

Their advice is based on the small risk of rare blood clots associated with the AstraZeneca jab