The Pilot News

Appeals court OKS Biden federal employee vaccine mandate

- By KEVIN MCGILL

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — President Joe Biden's requiremen­t that all federal employees be vaccinated against COVID-19 was upheld Thursday by a federal appeals court.

In a 2-1 ruling, a panel of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a lower court and ordered dismissal of a lawsuit challengin­g the mandate. The ruling, a rare win for the administra­tion at the New Orleans-based appellate court, said that the federal judge didn't have jurisdicti­on in the case and those challengin­g the requiremen­t could have pursued administra­tive remedies under Civil Service law.

Biden issued an executive order Sept. 9 ordering vaccinatio­ns for all executive branch agency employees, with exceptions for medical and religious reasons. U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Brown, who was appointed to the District Court for the Southern District of Texas by then-president Donald Trump, issued a nationwide injunction against the requiremen­t in January.

When the case was argued at the 5th Circuit last month, administra­tion lawyers had noted that district judges in a dozen jurisdicti­ons had rejected a challenge to the vaccine requiremen­t for federal workers before Brown ruled.

The administra­tion argued that the Constituti­on gives the president, as the head of the federal workforce, the same authority as the CEO of a private corporatio­n to require that employees be vaccinated.

Lawyers for those challengin­g the mandate had pointed to a recent Supreme Court opinion that the government cannot force private employers to require employee vaccinatio­ns.

Twelve of 17 active judges at the 5th Circuit were nominated to the court by Republican­s, including six Trump appointees.

Judges Carl Stewart and James Dennis, both nominated to the court by President Bill Clinton, were in the majority. Judge Rhesa Barksdale, a senior judge nominated by President George H.W. Bush, dissented, saying the relief the challenger­s sought does not fall under the Civil Service Reform Act cited by the administra­tion.

The case marked ideologica­l divides at the appeals court even before Thursday's ruling.

A different panel had refused in February to block Brown's ruling pending the appeal. That panel's vote was 2-1. There were no reasons given by the majority — Judge Jerry Smith, a President Ronald Reagan nominee, and Don Willett, a Trump nominee.

But there was a lengthy dissent by Judge Stephen Higginson, a nominee of President Barack Obama, who said a single district judge "lacking public health expertise and made unaccounta­ble through life tenure," should not be able to block the president from ordering the same type of COVID-19 safety measures many private sector CEOS have ordered.

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