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Trump’s last act – President set to lift COVID travel bans

Donald Trump is expected to wind back entry bans for most non-US citizens who arrive in the country from Brazil and much of Europe in one of his last acts as President.

The move, which will come just hours before Mr Trump is replaced by President-elect Joe Biden at midday on Wednesday (Washington time), will take effect from January 26.

Reuters first reported in November that the Trump administration had been considering lifting the restrictions, which were imposed early in 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, after winning support from coronavirus task force members and public health officials.

The restrictions are set to end under a new proclamation from Mr Trump on the same day that new COVID-19 test requirements take effect for all international visitors.

The White House did not immediately comment and it is not known if Mr Biden will overturn the decision.

The restrictions have barred nearly all non-Americans from arriving in the country if they have been in Brazil, Britain, Ireland and the 26 countries of the Schengen area in Europe that allow travel across open borders in the past fortnight.

The US restrictions barring most visitors from Europe have been in place since mid-March. The Brazilian entry ban was imposed in May.

The Trump administration imposed the bans to try to contain the coronavirus pandemic.

But coronavirus deaths are surging again in more than 30 American states as a winter spike pushes the overall toll from the pandemic toward 400,000 amid warnings that the new, highly contagious British variant is taking hold.

The Centres for Disease Control and Protection has warned that it will probably become the dominant version in the country by March.

The CDC said the variant is about 50 per cent more contagious than the virus that is causing the bulk of cases in the US.

There is also concern about other virulent strains of the virus from Brazil and South Africa.

trump coronavirus
Travellers at Orlando Airport in Florida in March, after Mr Trump announced a ban on travel from Europe. Photo: Getty

Last week, the head of the CDC signed an order requiring nearly all air travellers to present a negative coronavirus test or proof of recovery from COVID-19 to enter the US from January 26.

Airlines had hoped the new testing requirements would clear the way for the administration to lift restrictions that had reduced travel from some European countries by 95 per cent or more.

They pressed senior White House officials about the issue in recent days.

Reuters previously reported the White House was not considering lifting entry bans on most non-US citizens who have recently been in China or Iran.

Pardon me? Not on Trump’s agenda

Elsewhere, Mr Trump is apparently not considering issuing a pardon for himself as he prepares an expansive list of more than 100 pardons and commutations for release in his final hours in the Oval Office.

White House advisers have said Mr Trump has privately debated with advisers whether to take the extraordinary step of issuing a pardon for himself but some administration officials have cautioned him against a self-pardon because it would make him look guilty.

Mr Trump was impeached by the Democratic-led House of Representatives last week on charges of inciting the storming of the US Capitol on January 6 by pro-Trump protesters.

His case is to face a Senate trial and if convicted, he could be disqualified from seeking another run for the presidency in 2024.

One source said Mr Trump did not plan to pardon himself and also did not plan to issue preemptive pardons for his family members, another subject he has discussed privately with advisers.

Mr Trump, who has already issued two waves of pardons in the past month, met advisers on Sunday to finalise a list of more than 100 pardons and commutations, the source said.

CNN reported that Dr Salomon Melgen, a prominent eye doctor from Palm Beach who is in prison after being convicted on dozens of counts of health care fraud, is expected to be on the clemency list.

The source said the clemencies were expected to be issued on Mr Trump’s last full day in office on Tuesday.

Skipping Mr Biden’s inauguration, Mr Trump will leave Washington early on Wednesday to begin his post-presidency life at his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida.

-with AAP

The post Trump’s last act – President set to lift COVID travel bans appeared first on The New Daily.


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