The Columbus Dispatch

Arizona AG files lawsuit over Biden vaccine rules

- Jonathan J. Cooper

PHOENIX – Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich filed the first lawsuit Tuesday to block President Joe Biden’s new vaccine requiremen­ts that could affect 100 million workers.

Brnovich, who is running in a crowded Republican primary for U.S. Senate, claims Biden is illegally treating U.S. citizens and legal immigrants differently from people caught crossing the border illegally, many of whom are offered vaccines but not required to accept them. Brnovich’s lawsuit is the first of many expected challenges to Biden’s proposed vaccine rules. But while many details about the rules remain unknown, Biden appears to be on firm legal ground to issue the directive in the name of protecting employee safety, according to several experts interviewe­d by The Associated Press.

Biden said last week that his administra­tion will require employers with at least 100 workers to ensure everyone is either vaccinated or tested weekly for COVID-19, affecting about 80 million workers. The roughly 17 million workers at health facilities that receive federal Medicare or Medicaid also will have to be fully vaccinated. So will employees of the executive branch and contractor­s who do business with the federal government – with no option to test out. That covers several million more workers.

“The Biden administra­tion has no authority under the Constituti­on to mandate COVID-19 vaccines, period,” Brnovich said. “This is a heavy-handed attempt by the federal government that shows big government at its worst, not its best.”

Brnovich told reporters in a conference call that Biden is oversteppi­ng his constituti­onal powers and argued that Congress has delegated too much power to the president. But his lawsuit is focused on what he claims is the differential treatment of U.S. citizens and those living in the country illegally.

“It is not a sensible argument,” said Paul Bender, a constituti­onal law professor

at Arizona State University. “It’s worse than nonsensica­l. It’s really laughable.”

The lawsuit is based on “a lie” that Biden’s vaccine rules will exclude immigrants, Bender said. If immigrants living illegally in the country are working without authorizat­ion at an employer covered by Biden’s vaccine rules, they will have to follow them.

Even if a court were to buy Brnovich’s argument, the most likely outcome would be to impose the same vaccine and testing requiremen­ts for immigrants, not to eliminate them for citizens, Bender said.

Picking fights with the Biden administra­tion could help Brnovich as he faces well-funded opponents in a tough primary to challenge Democratic U.S. Sen. Mark Kelly.

The White House is gearing up for a wave of lawsuits from Republican officeholders and potentiall­y affected employers that oppose the rules. White House press secretary Jen Psaki outlined the legal justification Friday, saying the Department of Labor has an obligation to keep workplaces safe.

“The law basically requires the Department of Labor take action when it finds grave risk to workers,” Psaki said. “And certainly a pandemic that killed more than 600,000 people qualifies as grave risk to workers.”

 ?? BOB CHRISTIE/AP, FILE ?? Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich said President Joe Biden’s vaccine rules are “big government at its worst.”
BOB CHRISTIE/AP, FILE Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich said President Joe Biden’s vaccine rules are “big government at its worst.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States