Celebrating nation's birth, Biden urges Americans to help end COVID-19
pandemic
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[July 05, 2021]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
(Reuters) - President Joe Biden celebrated
the nation's 245th birthday on Sunday by opening the gates of the White
House and calling on Americans to do their part to end the COVID-19
pandemic once and for all.
"This year, the Fourth of July is a day of special celebration for we
are emerging from the darkness of ... a year of pandemic and isolation,
a year of pain, fear and heartbreaking loss, Biden told a White House
party opened to around 1,000 people, including military families and
workers involved in the COVID-19 response.
We never again want to be where we were a year ago today, he added.
The largest White House event since Biden took office in January
included burgers and fireworks and was geared toward giving Americans
something to celebrate as signs of normalcy have returned following a
coronavirus pandemic that has killed more than 600,000 Americans.
Still, the country has fallen short of Biden's goal to have 70% of U.S.
adults get at least one vaccine shot by Sunday. The figure is around
67%, as some people have resisted getting inoculated, raising concerns
among health officials as the more aggressive Delta variant threatens to
generate another surge.
Biden mourned the people who died, praised Americans who aided in the
country's emergency response and said vaccines were the best defense
against new variants of the virus.
Its the most patriotic thing you can do, he said of getting
vaccinated.
But his administration was also eager to celebrate what it sees as its
signature accomplishment - restoring some normality for a country weary
of pandemic restrictions and hardship, burdens that have eased but not
disappeared with the widespread availability of inoculations.
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President Joe Biden delivers remarks at the White House at a
celebration of Independence Day in Washington, U.S., July 4, 2021.
REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
The pandemic forced cancellation of nearly all
celebrations last year and led to a toned-down January inauguration
for the Democratic president, who had to do without traditional
black-tie galas and bipartisan comity as Republican former President
Donald Trump disputed his election loss.
Fortress-like security around Washington following the Jan. 6 attack
on the U.S. Capitol was eased as crowds marked the Declaration of
Independence from Britain in 1776.
Fencing surrounding the White House has been dramatically scaled
back, and the streets filled on Sunday with people who snapped
photographs of the president's motorcade returning from a weekend
trip to a Michigan cherry farm, the golf course and his Delaware
family home.
Speaking to people on the south lawn of the White House who had shed
their masks to eat watermelon slices and drink beer, Biden said the
coronavirus "no longer paralyzes our nation, and it's in our power
to make sure it never does again."
After the speech, the president greeted guests and posed for
photographs ahead of a 17-minute fireworks display to be set off
later from both sides of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in Washington; Additional reporting
by Simon Lewis; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Peter Cooney)
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