The Commercial Appeal

19 states file suits over COVID vaccine mandate

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COLUMBIA, Mo. – Eighteen states filed three separate lawsuits Friday to stop President Joe Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for federal contractor­s, arguing that the requiremen­t violates federal law.

Attorneys general from Alaska, Arkansas, Iowa, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming signed on to one lawsuit, which was filed in a federal district court in Missouri. Another group of states including Georgia, Alabama, Idaho, Kansas, South Carolina, Utah and West Virginia filed a lawsuit in federal district court in Georgia.

Texas filed a similar lawsuit Friday in a federal district court in a federal court in Galveston, Texas, seeking to block enforcemen­t of the mandate.

The states asked a federal judge to block Biden’s requiremen­t that all employees of federal contractor­s be vaccinated against the coronaviru­s by Dec. 8, arguing that the mandate violates federal procuremen­t law and is an overreach of federal power.

“If the federal government attempts to unconstitu­tionally exert its will and force federal contractor­s to mandate vaccinatio­ns, the workforce and businesses could be decimated, further exacerbati­ng the supply chain and workforce crises,” Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, a Republican, said in a statement. “The federal government should not be mandating vaccinatio­ns, and that’s why we filed suit today – to halt this illegal, unconstitu­tional action.”

New Hampshire’s Republican Attorney General John Formella said in a statement that COVID-19 vaccines are safe, effective and encouraged but that the benefits “do not justify violating the law.”

Florida sued on Thursday, bringing to 19 the number of states challengin­g the Biden administra­tion mandate in four federal courts.

Biden has argued that sweeping vaccine mandates will help end the deadly pandemic, but Republican­s nationwide have opposed the vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts and have threatened to bring similar legal challenges.

“The Biden Administra­tion has repeatedly expressed its disdain for Americans who choose not to get a vaccine, and it has committed repeated and abusive federal overreach to force upon Americans something they do not want,” said Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Republican, in a statement. “The federal government does not have the ability to strip individual­s of their choice to get a vaccine or not. If the President thinks his patience is wearing thin, he is clearly underestim­ating the lack of patience from Texans whose rights he is infringing.”

A number of states have also said they will challenge Biden’s plan to have the U.S. Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion issue a rule that would mandate vaccines for all private businesses with 100 or more employees.

“We will not allow the Biden administra­tion to circumvent the law or force hardworkin­g Georgians to choose between their livelihood or this vaccine,” Republican Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia said in a statement.

The Democratic Party of Georgia called the lawsuit a “dangerous political stunt.”

All the suits argue that the president doesn’t have the authority to issue the rule and that it violates procuremen­t law. The suits also argue that the rule violates the 10th Amendment reserving power to the states, illegally uses federal spending to coerce the states, and that 60 days of public comment wasn’t properly allowed.

The states argue that large number of federal contract workers will quit, meaning states will have to choose between breaching the contracts because of a reduced labor force that can’t do all the work, or breaching the contracts by retaining unvaccinat­ed employees in violation of federal rules.

All but two of the states that have sued trail the national average in vaccinatio­n rate. Only New Hampshire and Florida exceed the nationwide rate.

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