Fearing omicron variant, celebrations are being curbed
LONDON (AP) — Christmas revelers across Europe are lying low, and U.S. officials are intensifying calls for unvaccinated Americans to get inoculated in the face of the new omicron variant, which threatens to wipe out a second holiday season that many hoped would bail out pandemic-battered industries.
Scotland and Wales on Friday pledged millions of pounds for businesses hurt in
Britain's latest infection surge, a move that heaped pressure on Prime Minister Boris Johnson's government to do the same in England. Treasury chief Rishi Sunak held talks with business representatives who have demanded more
support, decrying a "lockdown by stealth" in which government officials recommend people cut back on socializing as
much as possible without officially imposing the strict rules of past shutdowns.
In the United States, President Joe Biden's administration resisted tightening any restrictions, but also sketched out dire scenarios for the unvaccinated in a plea for hesitant Americans to get the shot.
"For the unvaccinated, you're looking at a winter of severe illness and death, for yourselves, your families, and the hospitals you may soon overwhelm," White House coronavirus response coordinator Jeff Zients said Friday.
The new variant is already in "full force" in New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio said, with
new cases hitting a one-day record of more than 8,300 on Thursday. But new hospitalizations and deaths – so far – are well below their spring 2020
peak and even where they were this time last year, city data shows.
The coronavirus is also interrupting sports in the U.S. again, with the NFL saying Friday that three games would be pushed from the weekend to
next week because of outbreaks. The league has not specified whether the cases came from the omicron variant.
Several European countries are warily watching the spread of omicron. On Friday, Denmark decided to close theaters, concert halls, amusement parks and museums in response to a rapid rise in virus cases. In Spain, friends and classmates canceled traditional year-end dinners.