NYC mayor calls for UK travel ban
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is calling for "an immediate travel ban from the United Kingdom to the United States."
New York state has 12 cases of the U.K. coronavirus variant, de Blasio said. One of the two cases confirmed in New York City was someone who traveled to the U.K., he said.
“Someone who was in the U.K. has brought the variant back here. We need that stopped. Flights from the United Kingdom should be canceled immediately by the federal government,” de Blasio said.
Beginning Jan. 26, those flying to the U.S. from foreign countries must take a COVID-19 test within three days before their flight, and airlines must confirm the negative test before they board, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced Tuesday.
The U.K. variant appears to spread more easily but there’s no evidence that it is more deadly.
Meanwhile, as New York vaccinates more residents, the mayor said, “even with normal supplies that we expect to have delivered next week, we will run out of vaccine as some point next week unless we get a major new resupply because so many New Yorkers want the vaccine and we have the ability to give it to them.”
“We need the federal government, the state government and the manufactures to step up and get us more supply immediately,” he said.
ABC News’ Rachel Katz contributed to this report.