Covid-19 in the United States: Biden approves the end of the national state of emergency

US President Joe Biden officially ended the national state of emergency related to Covid-19 on Monday April 10. This system had been in place for three years in the United States, a country which officially paid the heaviest price for the pandemic, with more than 1 million deaths.

The White House said in a statement that the president had ratified legislation passed by Congress “ending the national state of emergency related to the Covid-19 pandemic.” The considerable funds allocated since 2020 to provide Covid tests, free vaccines, and other emergency measures, will no longer be available.

The separate state of health emergency is due to expire on May 11. Its end should go hand in hand with the expiration of a measure put in place in 2020 under the Trump administration, which allows the deportation without delay of migrants without a visa, even potential asylum seekers.

The US executive said it wanted to lift this measure known as “Title 42” and replace it with a different legal mechanism to regulate the flow of migrants. A senior White House official told Agence France-Presse that the use of this measure “should cease on May 11”.

While the US government publicly turns the page on the Covid-19 pandemic, it says it is already working on the next generation of vaccines and other measures to combat any future variants of the virus. “The NextGen project will accelerate and streamline the rapid development of the next generation of vaccines and treatments through public-private partnerships,” a senior government official told Agence France-Presse.

Funds amounting to at least $5 billion are available to “promote scientific advances”, and to “stay ahead of the rapidly evolving virus that causes Covid-19”.

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