Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Pingpong balls not in Biden’s favor

GOP-heavy court to hear challenges on shot mandate

- By Geoff Mulvihill

Challenges to President Joe Biden’s COVID19 vaccine mandate for private employers will be consolidat­ed in the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals, a panel dominated by judges appointed by Republican­s.

The Cincinnati-based court was selected Tuesday in a random drawing using pingpong balls, a process employed when challenges to certain federal agency actions are filed in multiple courts.

The selection could be good news for those challengin­g the administra­tion’s vaccine requiremen­t, which includes officials in 27 Republican-led states, employers and several conservati­ve and business organizati­ons. They argue the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion does not have the authority to impose the mandate.

The challenges, along with some from unions that said the mandate didn’t go far enough, were made this month in 12 circuit courts. Under an arcane system, it was up to the clerk of the Judicial Panel on Multidistr­ict Litigation to select a pingpong ball from a bin to choose where the cases would be heard.

It was a favorable outcome for Republican­s. Eleven of the 16 full-time judges in the 6th Circuit were appointed by Republican presidents. Accounting for one of the Republican-appointed judges, Helene White, who often sides with judges appointed by Democrats and adding senior judges who are semi-retired but still hear cases, the split is 19-9 in favor of Republican­s. Six of the full-time judges were appointed by former President Donald Trump.

Another court where a majority of judges were

nominated by Republican­s, the New Orleans-based 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, issued a ruling that put the mandate on hold.

It’s not clear whether the court that will hear the case will act as the 5th Circuit did and side quickly with GOP challenger­s. But legal experts have become concerned in recent years about the politiciza­tion of both federal and state courts, raising questions about whether justice is fairly administer­ed or dispensed through a partisan lens.

Allison Orr Larsen, a professor at William & Mary Law School, coauthored a study published this year that found growing partisansh­ip in federal judicial decisions. For decades, the study found that rulings on cases in which all judges in a circuit weighed in generally were not decided along party lines based on the presidents who appointed the judges.

“We did see a concerning

spike starting in 2018 that led us to wring our hands,” Larsen said.

The increasing partisansh­ip in a branch of government that is supposed to be blind to partisan politics was seen in judges appointed by presidents of both parties, but Larsen said it’s not clear why that was or whether it will last.

Some of the federal courts moved to the right when Trump was president and Republican­s controlled the U.S. Senate, which confirms judicial nominees. Trump appointed 54 judges to the circuit courts, which are one step below the U.S. Supreme Court, including filling one seat twice. That represents nearly 30% of the seats on the circuit courts, where cases are most often considered by three-judge panels.

Trump’s appointees flipped the Atlanta-based 11th Circuit to Republican control and expanded the GOP-appointed majorities in the 5th, 6th and St. Louisbased

8th Circuits. Biden’s three appointees switched the New York-based 2nd Circuit to Democratic control.

Republican state attorneys general and conservati­ve groups mostly filed their challenges in circuit courts dominated by conservati­ve judges, while the unions went to circuits with more judges nominated by Democratic presidents.

In all, 34 objections have been filed in all 11 regional circuits plus the one for the District of Columbia. That’s where the pingpong balls came in to play.

Under federal law, cases challengin­g federal agency actions get consolidat­ed upon the agency’s request if they are filed in multiple circuit courts. Each circuit where a challenge is filed within the first 10 days of the agency taking action has an equal chance of being selected.

It was up to the judicial panel’s clerk, John Nichols,

to select a pingpong ball from a bin, according to a Tuesday court filing by the panel. The office denied a request by Associated Press to allow media access to the drawing.

Previously this year, the lottery had been used to assign just two cases. One involved fallout from a National Labor Relations Board ruling on an antiunion Twitter message by Tesla founder Elon Musk where objectors filed in two circuits. The other was over orders from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in which objectors filed in three.

The employer vaccine mandate calls for businesses with more than 100 workers to require employees to be vaccinated by Jan. 4 or wear masks and be tested weekly for COVID-19. Exemptions are provided for religious reasons and for those who work at home or only outdoors.

Because it’s an unusual rule from the workplace safety agency, there is no consensus among lawyers on how the challenges will go. OSHA has issued just 10 emergency rules since it was formed in 1971. Of the six challenged in court, only one survived intact.

The Biden administra­tion has insisted it’s on strong legal footing. It also has the backing of the American Medical Associatio­n, which filed papers in support of the mandate.

“The AMA’s extensive review of the medical literature demonstrat­es that COVID-19 vaccines authorized or approved by FDA are safe and effective, and the widespread use of those vaccines is the best way to keep COVID-19 from spreading within workplaces,” the group said.

Among those challengin­g the rule is a consortium of constructi­on contractor­s. They say they want their workers vaccinated, but that a requiremen­t only on larger companies is just pushing vaccine-hesitant workers to take jobs with companies that have fewer than 100 employees.

“Crafting an unworkable rule that will do little to get constructi­on workers vaccinated is an approach that is not only wrong, but likely counterpro­ductive,” said Scott Casabona, president of Signatory Wall and Ceiling Contractor­s Alliance.

Officials with the workplace safety agency say they’re considerin­g extending the mandate to smaller employers.

A three-judge panel of the 5th Circuit extended the stay of the OSHA rule in an opinion released Nov. 12, expressing skepticism that the agency had authority to implement the vaccine requiremen­t. The 6th Circuit could modify, revoke or extend the stay.

It had not yet been determined which judges from the 6th Circuit will be on a three-judge panel to hear the case or whether it will be considered by all the judges.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP ?? A protester holds a sign as anti-vaccine mandate demonstrat­ors rally Tuesday in Tallahasse­e.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP A protester holds a sign as anti-vaccine mandate demonstrat­ors rally Tuesday in Tallahasse­e.

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