Deccan Chronicle

US Senate votes to block Biden vax-or-test mandate

It passed 52-48 with support of all 50 Republican­s in the upper chamber

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Washington, Dec. 9: The US Senate on Wednesday voted to block President Joe Biden’s vaccine-or-test mandate for large private employers, in a symbolic win for conservati­ves that will have little tangible effect.

The measure passed 5248 with the support of all

50 Republican­s in the upper chamber and two centrist Democrats, but is not expected to fare well in the House of Representa­tives, where it may only have support from the right. Under Biden’s plan, all companies with more than 100 workers will have to require their employees to be immunised or undergo weekly testing from January 4.

The Senate pushback was led by Indiana’s Mike Braun, who said that threatenin­g Americans’ jobs if they refuse on both counts “is the heavy hand of government.” Wyoming’s John Barrasso, the chairman of the Senate Republican­s, accused Biden, who is not a doctor, of “medical malpractic­e.”

After the vote, Joe Manchin, one of the two Democrats who sided with Republican­s, said while he supports a vaccine mandate for federal employees and the military, it was “not the place of the federal government” to dictate to private businesses.

“We should incentivis­e, not penalise, private employers to encourage vaccinatio­n among their employees,” Manchin said. Numerous states run by both Democrats and Republican­s already require hundreds of thousands of their citizens to be vaccinated against a variety of diseases, and none of these mandates is controvers­ial.

Most cover childhood immunisati­ons, which have been a feature of American society since the 19th century, but there are mandates covering adults as well. New York requires all workers in hospitals, nursing homes and other health care facilities to be immunised against measles and rubella, while Rhode Island requires child care workers to be immunised against a variety of common childhood diseases, and the flu.

Several states have vaccinatio­n mandates for college students and all 50 require school children to get shots for diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, polio, measles, rubella and chicken pox. Democratic Senate leader Chuck Schumer likened the Republican­s to flat-earth theorists and accused those who have sought out vaccine shots for themselves of hypocrisy. “The biggest thing standing between us and the end of the pandemic is Americans who have refused to get vaccinated,” he said.

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