Omicron: Biden denies failure in Omicron testing response

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US President Joe Biden has denied any failure in his administration's response to the emergence of the Omicron variant.

He told a TV network that "nobody" could have predicted it, although his top adviser Dr Anthony Fauci has said experts did foresee variants.

It comes a day after the White House unveiled plans to order 500m at-home coronavirus tests amid a shortage.

There have been long waits for in-person tests as Christmas looms.

"I don't think it's a failure," Mr Biden said in a sit-down interview with ABC News on Wednesday. "I think it's - you could argue that we should have known a year ago, six months ago, two months ago, a month ago."

The Democratic president said he wished he "had thought" about ordering the 500m test kits "two months ago".

One year ago Mr Biden lambasted a shortfall in Covid-19 testing under the Trump administration as "a travesty".

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

People queue for a coronavirus test in Miami, Florida

On Wednesday, New York City recorded nearly 29,000 new cases - a new single day record during the pandemic and a 30% jump from the record set earlier this week.

Pressed by ABC on US Vice-President Kamala Harris' remarks to the Los Angeles Times last week that the White House did not see Delta or Omicron coming, Mr Biden laughed.

"How did we get it wrong?" he responded. "Nobody saw it coming. Nobody in the whole world. Who saw it coming?"

On Tuesday, the White House also pledged to open more testing sites around the country.

In a briefing on Wednesday, Biden spokeswoman Jen Psaki was unable to provide specifics about how and when the free test kits would be distributed.

On Sunday, top White House coronavirus adviser Dr Fauci dismissed any suggestion that the emergence of new Covid variants could not have been predicted.

"We certainly were anticipating that there were going to be variants," he told CNN. "Because when you have so much replication going on in the community, if you give a virus enough opportunity to replicate you know it's going to ultimately mutate.

"And sometimes those mutations become a new variant, and that's what happened with Delta, and certainly with Omicron."

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Watch: US v UK: Where have our rapid tests gone?

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