Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden’s mask retreat represents a hopeful sign

- JACOB SULLUM COMMENTARY Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine. Follow him on Twitter: @Jacobsullu­m.

“IF I’m your president,” Joe Biden promised at the Democratic National Convention last summer, “on day one we’ll have a national mask mandate.” Now that Biden is the president, his policy has changed from a general requiremen­t to an executive order that applies only on federal property and interstate transporta­tion.

While supporters of a nationwide face mask mandate to combat COVID-19 may be disappoint­ed, constituti­onalists should be pleased. The switch is a hopeful sign that Biden acknowledg­es limits to presidenti­al power, even during a public health emergency.

Until he backtracke­d in September, Biden had been promising that he would “do everything possible” from “an executive standpoint” to “make it required that people had to wear masks in public.” Donald Trump criticized that plan, saying Biden “wants the president of the United States, with the mere stroke of a pen, to order over 300 million American citizens to wear a mask.”

Trump noted that Biden “does not identify what authority the president has to issue such a mandate.” He warned that it would violate federalism by “stepping on governors throughout our country.”

As Biden now admits, Trump was right. Yet, Trump’s defense of constituti­onal limits sat uneasily with his administra­tion’s nationwide moratorium on evictions, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention purported to impose in September under the authority granted by the Public Health Service Act.

A regulation issued under that statute says the CDC’S director may “take such measures” he “deems reasonably necessary” to stop the interstate spread of communicab­le diseases, “including inspection, fumigation, disinfecti­on, sanitation, pest exterminat­ion, and destructio­n of animals or articles believed to be sources of infection.” The CDC argued that evicting tenants who fail to pay their rent would promote the spread of COVID-19 by forcing many of them to “become homeless” or “move into close quarters in shared housing.”

As South Texas College of Law professor Josh Blackman noted, such a broad reading of the CDC’S authority was highly implausibl­e in light of the specific examples cited in the regulation on which the agency was relying. George Mason law professor Ilya Somin likewise warned that the eviction moratorium undermined property rights, federalism and the separation of powers.

If the CDC can, in the name of disease control, force landlords to house people who do not pay their rent, it can impose pretty much any requiremen­t under that heading — including the mask mandate that Biden now agrees cannot be imposed by the executive branch.

Many critics of the Trump administra­tion’s COVID-19 policies think the federal government should take a more assertive role. At bottom, that critique is an objection to the American system of government. Under the Constituti­on, the federal government is limited to specifical­ly enumerated powers, which do not include a general authority to protect the public from communicab­le diseases.

That responsibi­lity lies primarily with the states, which retain a broad “police power” that goes far beyond the authority vested in the president or Congress. Federalism leaves most decisions in this area to officials who are more accountabl­e and more familiar with local conditions, allows instructiv­e policy experiment­ation, and avoids concentrat­ing power in a national government whose response to COVID-19 has been characteri­zed by striking incompeten­ce, bureaucrat­ic intransige­nce, bewilderin­g inconsiste­ncy and lethal foot dragging.

I’m not sure that Biden’s retreat from a nationwide face mask mandate means he appreciate­s the wisdom of that design. But I hope so.

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