Biden claims to make ‘bit of progress’ on COVID test crisis during Delaware beach trip

President Joe Biden told reporters Tuesday that he made “a bit of progress” on plans to mass-distribute COVID-19 rapid tests as the nation records a record-high rate of new cases amid a shortage of tests.

Biden made the vaguely reassuring remark as he took his new puppy Commander to the beach near his Delaware vacation home.

The president said he was on the phone most of the day to discuss a plan to make 500 million at-home rapid tests available to Americans via direct order to address the spike in infections caused by the Omicron variant.

Key details of the program, which was unveiled last week, remain unknown. For example, it is unclear how many tests each household will be allowed to request. Nor is it known how quickly they will be mailed or when a website will be launched for people to order tests.

Meanwhile, retailers have sold out of test kits and massive lines have formed at official test sites as infection rates in New York City and DC hit new peaks. More than one in 75 DC residents tested positive for the virus over the four-day Christmas weekend.

New Yorkers wait in line for blocks for COVID-19 testing in Times Square in Manhattan on Dec. 27, 2021.
New Yorkers wait in line for blocks for COVID-19 testing in Times Square in Manhattan on Dec. 27, 2021.
Stephen Yang
A member of the Salt Lake County Health Department COVID-19 testing staff performs a COVID-19 test outside the Salt Lake County Health Department, Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2021, in Salt Lake City.
Americans are flocking to get tested for COVID-19 after Christmas as the US tallies record high positive cases.
AP Photo/Rick Bowmer

On Monday, the US recorded more than 441,000 new infections, according to CDC data — blowing away the previous record of 294,000 cases on Jan. 8, 2021 — despite the overwhelming majority of Americans being vaccinated.


Follow the latest news on the Omicron variant with the New York Post’s live coverage


The wave of cases has sent hospitalization rates up steeply in New York City, although preliminary data from other countries indicates that Omicron symptoms may be less severe.

Biden has repeatedly expressed regret about not acting more quickly to make free tests more widely available. He said Monday morning that he’d have “gone harder, quicker” to distribute COVID-19 tests if he’d known the Omicron variant was going to cause a surge of new infections.

A rapid COVID-19 test swab is processed at Palos Verdes High School in Palos Verdes Estates, Calif., Tuesday, Aug. 24, 2021.
The US recorded nearly 500,000 COVID-19 positive cases on Monday following Christmas, the CDC says.
Brittany Murray/The Orange County Register via AP, File
At-home COVID-19 test kits are for sale from behind the cash register counter at a Duane Reade Walgreens pharmacy convenience store in New York City on Wednesday, Dec. 22, 2021.
Pharmacies have limited at-home COVID-19 rapid test purchases in order to avoid hoarding and scalping.
AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey

A few moments later, the president also denied that his administration in October rejected a proposal to mass-distribute rapid tests ahead of a possible winter surge in cases.

“We didn’t reject it,” Biden claimed in response to a question from The Post on the White House lawn.

Vanity Fair reported Thursday that experts from Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health, the Rockefeller Foundation, the COVID Collaborative and other groups pitched a 10-page plan to White House officials on Oct. 22 that called for the production of 732 million tests per month for a “Testing Surge To Prevent [a] Holiday COVID surge.” The plan even called for “Every American Household to Receive Free Rapid Tests for the Holidays/New Year.” 

President Joe Biden walks with his new puppy Commander in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware on Dec. 28, 2021.
President Joe Biden walks with his new puppy Commander in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware on Dec. 28, 2021.
AFP via Getty Images
Boxes of BinaxNow home COVID-19 tests made by Abbott are shown for sale Monday, Nov. 15, 2021, at a CVS store in Lakewood, Washington.
Pharmacies have sold out at-home COVID-19 rapid tests across the United States.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

A White House spokesman argued late Monday that Biden told the truth when he denied that his team rejected the plan, which called for massive test kit distribution ahead of the holidays, because its ideas are now being acted upon.

“The characterization of ‘rejection’ is not an accurate reflection of a productive meeting, and in fact, we are implementing many measures that were discussed as capacity now allows us to do,” the spokesman said. “Our work is made better by collaborating with outside partners and we will continue to work with them to expand testing capacity.”

President Joe Biden
President Joe Biden claims slight “progress” has been made in his administration’s plan to mail out 500 million at-home rapid tests in January.
AP

Biden, whose plans for a post-Christmas vacation to Puerto Rico were scrapped due to the fast-spreading variant, took his new German shepherd for a run along the shore near the end of a chilly and overcast Tuesday during which he made no other public appearances.

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