Irate Governor Cuomo demands ban on U.K. flights as dangerous COVID-19 variant surges

December 22, 2020

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo (D) called on the Trump Administration on Sunday, December 20,  to enact a ban on travel from the U.K. or require mandatory testing as a new, significantly more dangerous—and highly contagious—strain of the coronavirus emerges there, The Huffington Post reports.

The new variant in the U.K. could be up to 70% more transmissible” than the current version, Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned at a press conference Saturday.

“Today that variant is getting on a plane and landing at JFK,”  an irate Cuomo said in a statement.

“How many times in life do you have to make the same mistake before you learn?” he asked, referring to a lack of action on the pandemic by the Trump Administration. “The federal government is being grossly negligent just like the spring. All it takes is one person” to transmit the virus, he noted.

“We have done absolutely nothing,” Cuomo added. “To me, this is reprehensible.” He said the thought that the variant may already have crossed the sea to New York “kept me up last night.”

According to the HuffPost report, at least six European nations—the Netherlands, France, Austria, Belgium, Italy and Germany—already have shut down or are about to stop all U.K. flights. But the United States has taken no new action. As many as 120 countries—but not the U.S.A.—require a negative COVID test for travelers before they leave the U.K.

Foreign nationals currently are banned from flying into the U.S.A., if they’ve been in any of several European and other countries in the past 14 days. But American citizens are free to fly back and forth. There are currently six daily flights from the U.K. to New York, Cuomo noted.

Britain this week instituted stiff new coronavirus restrictions for England, with particularly stringent limits in the South-East, East, and in London, where households are prohibited from mixing even over Christmas.

The government announced the frightening rates of transmission of the new strain as cases burgeoned in southern and eastern regions of England. The strain was first detected in September, but its rates of transmission have only recently been understood.

The new danger from abroad comes just as the U.S. is grappling with a record number of cases and deaths. A post-Thanksgiving spike is expected to grow as cases surge after the winter holidays. The death toll in the U.S. is nearing 318,000, and there have been nearly 18 million cases.

Research contact: @HuffPost

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