Morning Sun

Biden vaccine mandate is dishonest and unlawful

- Ramesh Ponnuru is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is the editor of National Review and a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

here’s a strong case for getting vaccinated (and boosted) against COVID-19. The problem for President Joe Biden is that the case for getting vaccinated amounts to an argument against his attempt to make vaccinatio­n mandatory for employees of large companies.

In the course of arguing against the mandate in front of the U.S. Supreme Court last week, Benjamin Flowers, the solicitor general of Ohio, succinctly made the case for the COVID vaccines: “We are strong promoters of vaccinatio­n because they do stop serious illness.” Getting vaccinated lowers the risk of getting a severe case of COVID, and therefore of hospitaliz­ation and death. Combined with the low rate of major adverse side effects, that’s why the vast majority of people would be well-advised to get the vaccine. Most of the benefits of the decision to vaccinate accrue to the individual getting the shot and his family, but there are also positive effects for society, notably the reduced chance that a community’s hospitals are overwhelme­d.

Under questionin­g from Justice Clarence Thomas, Flowers said that Ohio has the power to require employees — and, for that matter,

“all individual­s” — to receive the shots. He denied, though, that the federal government has that power. Justice Sonia Sotomayor sparred with him, suggesting that Washington now has all of the traditiona­l powers of the states to promote public health.

It’s worth noting, though, that the Biden administra­tion hasn’t taken that position. It’s not claiming it can order everyone to get vaccinated. It is merely, on its account, implementi­ng a new rule under its undoubted authority to regulate workplace safety. It’s trying to stop people from coming down with the disease while on the job. Justice Neil Gorsuch pointed out that the federal government has never used this authority in this way before. Elizabeth Prelogar, Biden’s solicitor general, said that was because we’re in “an unpreceden­ted pandemic.”

Who is the rule supposed to protect? Announcing it in September, Biden was clear: “We’re going to protect vaccinated workers from unvaccinat­ed co-workers.” He dismissed the idea that vaccinatio­n should be “a personal choice” because it affects “the people you work with.” And he concluded, “We’ve been patient, but our patience is wearing thin.”

It’s a strange rationale. The vaccinated already have a strong dose of protection against serious illness: their vaccinatio­n. Biden explained as much in the same remarks: “If you’re fully vaccinated, you’re highly protected from severe illness, even if you get COVID-19.”

The health risk the unvaccinat­ed pose to the vaccinated appears to be small, and exaggerati­ng it undermines the incentive for people to get vaccinated. If anything, it’s the unvaccinat­ed who need protection from the vaccinated, since the vaccines, as powerful as they are in preventing severe cases of COVID, are proving less effective at blocking transmissi­on of the latest variant. But almost all of the unvaccinat­ed can secure that protection by getting the shots, no federal mandate required.

For most of these employees, the rule protects them primarily from their own bad decisions.

But evidently Biden did not believe that the public would find this paternalis­tic coercion appropriat­e, and therefore disguised it with misleading remarks about protecting the vaccinated and needing to override individual­s’ choices for the sake of others.

A comparativ­ely small number of people cannot benefit from vaccinatio­n on account of medical issues and would benefit from their co-workers’ vaccinatio­ns. But employers have any number of ways to handle such situations. They can, for example, impose their own vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts on their employees, without federal prodding.

Government­s can also take steps to help people in this situation, such as offering generous unemployme­nt insurance, without forcing vaccines on scores of millions of people who don’t want them — and without stretching workplace-safety law to impose that rule even though Congress hasn’t enacted it.

Alternativ­ely, workplace safety is a pretext. On this theory, the administra­tion just wants higher vaccinatio­n rates, understand­ably enough. It knows it cannot order Americans to get vaccinated: Issuing mandates “is not the role of the federal government,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said back in July. But it wishes it could, and so it went looking for any legal authority that could be used, however implausibl­y, to give it some of that power.

The question before the Supreme Court is not whether vaccinatio­n is a boon or even how far government­s should be able to go to encourage it. Remember: Ohio says it could order all its residents to get the vaccine, but is still challengin­g the federal mandate. It’s whether to accept an unpreceden­ted extension of federal power that Congress has not clearly authorized and that the administra­tion cannot defend openly and honestly.

 ?? ?? Ramesh Ponnuru
Ramesh Ponnuru

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States