British Prime Minister Boris Johnson addressed the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic during an interview Sunday on CBS’s “Face the Nation”, in which he said everyone should be vaccinated.
Speaking with host Margaret Brennan, the Conservative leader said he would call on the Biden government and other wealthy countries to continue to support COVAX, the World Health Organization-linked effort to deliver vaccines to poorer countries.
“There’s no point in vaccinating our population if we don’t vaccinate everyone,” Johnson said Sunday.
Johnson also spoke about his own government’s response to the pandemic during his interview, including his government’s announcement on Sunday that it had reached 15 million vaccinations. Johnson told Brennan that a total of “one in four” British adults received a dose of the vaccine.
Today we have reached an important milestone in the UK national vaccination program.
This country has done an extraordinary job, pricking a total of 15 million into the arms of some of the most vulnerable people in the country. pic.twitter.com/wPKCXPT8Td
– Boris Johnson (@BorisJohnson) February 14, 2021
“We are proceeding with caution,” he said of attempts to reopen schools and other parts of British society.
Adding the UK-born mutation of COVID-19 responsible for the most recent spike in infections in the country, Johnson added, “It is absolutely true that it is spreading faster, but what you are seeing now thanks to the efforts of the British people … you will see rates begin to fall more sharply. “
The British leader and President BidenJoe BidenBiden on Trump’s Acquittal: ‘The Content of the Accusation Is Not in dispute’ spoke on a range of issues in late January, including the COVID-19 response, as well as a “need for coordination of shared foreign policy priorities, including China, Iran and Russia,” said a White House lecture.
Johnson was also asked about the Senate’s acquittal President TrumpDonald Trump Biden on Trump Acquittal: ‘Substance of Indictment Is Not in dispute’ North Carolina GOP Convicts Burr for Impeaching Trump Toomey on Trump Vote: ‘His Treason of the Constitution’ Required Conviction MORE in his second impeachment trial on Saturday. The British leader took no position on the acquittal, adding that the events of recent weeks prove that American democracy “remains strong”.