News
USA | Oct 14, 2021

US vaccine mandates are working, Biden says, but 66 million still don’t have shot

/ Our Today

administrator
Reading Time: 2 minutes
United States President Joe Biden waves as he boards Air Force One. (File Photo: REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein)


WASHINGTON (Reuters)

United States President Joe Biden touted the success of mandates in spurring vaccination against COVID-19 in the United States on Thursday (October 14) but said more needed to be done to get the 66 million people who are eligible but still unvaccinated to get the shot.

Vaccination rates against COVID-19 in the United States have risen by more than 20 percentage points after multiple institutions adopted vaccine requirements in recent months, while case numbers and deaths from the virus are down, Biden administration officials said on Wednesday.

Biden said in July federal workers needed to be vaccinated or get tested regularly. In September, he said federal workers needed to be vaccinated or face losing their jobs, and that employees at big companies needed to get jabs or be tested.

“The vaccine requirements that we started rolling out in the summer are working,” Biden said, noting that the Labor Department’s completed rule on vaccination requirements for businesses would be coming out shortly.

“We’re down to 66 million, still an unacceptably high number, of unvaccinated people,” he said. “We can’t let up now.”

57.3% FULLY VACCINATED

The latest Reuters update shows 66.3 per cent of the United States population has received at least one shot and 57.3 per cent are fully vaccinated. Administration officials said Wednesday 77 per cent of eligible Americans had received at least one shot.

Some Republicans have pushed back on the mandates, including Texas Governor Gregg Abbott, who issued an executive order rebuffing the ban.

“Vaccination requirements should not be another issue that divides us,” Biden said.

Vaccines for children ages five to 11 are expected to be approved in the United States by year-end. Biden said a decision on that authorisation by the appropriate authorities was expected in the next few weeks.

“If authorised, we are ready,” Biden said, adding the government had purchased enough vaccines for those children.

Comments

What To Read Next

News JAM Jul 8, 2025

Reading Time: 3 minutesThe Minister of Education, Skills, Youth and Information, Dana Morris Dixon is describing attacks by the parliamentary opposition on the Government’s Rural School Bus System, for which phase 1 will be rolled out starting September 2025, as baseless, unfortunate and unhelpful, particularly given the importance of the initiative to thousands of children and families across rural Jamaica.

Minister Dixon says she is particularly disappointed by remarks from Opposition Leader Mark Golding who used a political platform to disparage the buses as “old” and proposed that school children be transported by “di likkle man who have dem pro-box and AR wagon”.

News JAM Jul 8, 2025

Reading Time: 2 minutesPrime Minister Andrew Holness has urged Jamaicans to remain faithful as the government continues to work to ensure that all residents have access to an adequate water supply.

“For the communities that are without water now, your voice is heard. I personally care about it. And the government that I administer on your behalf, we are working hard to correct and improve. And you can take hope and have faith because others who were in your position now have water,” he said.

News JAM Jul 8, 2025

Reading Time: 3 minutesPrime Minister of Barbados, Mia Mottley, has called on CARICOM leaders to continue championing regional unity as the Caribbean faces growing social, economic, and geopolitical challenges.

Reflecting on her first address to the Conference of Heads of Government of CARICOM in 2018, Mottley noted that the region is now confronting perhaps its most difficult period since achieving independence.