President Joe Biden will decide whether to require COVID-19 vaccination for people traveling within the United States when he gets a recommendation from his medical team to impose such a requirement.
Asked about the possibility of a mandate to travel inside the country, Biden told reporters on Dec. 28 in Delaware that he'd decide “when I get a recommendation from the medical team.”
A day earlier, Biden declined to say whether he supported requiring vaccination to travel within the United States. During the first week of December, Biden said there wouldn’t be a mandate for domestic travel “at this point.” He has recently said that his team advised him that such a requirement wasn’t necessary.
But Dr. Anthony Fauci, Biden’s top medical adviser, said this week that the government should consider requiring vaccination for domestic air travel.
However, another top adviser to Biden said on Dec. 28 that officials weren’t “revisiting” the matter.
U.S. officials have repeatedly imposed restrictions during the pandemic that they initially said weren’t needed, including masking requirements and vaccine mandates.
Fauci said during an appearance on CNN on Dec. 27 that people shouldn’t expect a vaccination requirement for domestic air travel, at least for now.
“When I was asked that question, I gave an honest answer. It’s on the table, and we consider it. But that doesn’t mean it’s going to happen. I doubt if we’re going to see something like that in the reasonably foreseeable future,” he said.