The Nome Nugget

Gov. Dunleavy joins lawsuit against vaccine mandate for National Guard

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January 26, 2022 (Anchorage) – Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy has joined Texas in federal court to stop the federal government from requiring National Guard members to obtain COVID-19 vaccines as a condition of their service to the state of the Alaska.

Dunleavy and Texas Governor Greg Abbott are plaintiffs in the case against President Biden and Department of Defense officials. The governors contend the vaccine mandate usurps state sovereignt­y and illegally undermines their authoritie­s as commanders of state National Guard units.

“Our Alaska National Guard has recently responded to winter storm disasters in Yakutat, the Interior, and the Mat-Su. What happens in the next disaster if Guard members can’t be activated because they chose not to get a federally-mandated COVID vaccine?” said Governor Dunleavy.

The Alaska Constituti­on states that the governor is the “commander-in-chief” of the armed forces of the State, and it empowers the governor to order Guard members into state active duty.

The Department of Defense demand to members of the Alaska Army National Guard and Alaska Air National Guard is an improper assertion of federal authority, the lawsuit maintains. Because the National Guard has not been placed into federal service, authority over the Guard falls to the states’ governors. The Pentagon has no legal authority to dictate actions or discipline on state Guard members, the complaint states.

“This is not a case demanding a position of pro- or anti-vaccine, nor is it a case that challenges any aspect of the federal government’s authority over National Guardsmen once federal authority has been properly establishe­d,” the lawsuit states. Rather, the Constituti­on is clear about the National Guard’s dual role of service to the United States and as a state militia. When not in federal service, authority to command the National Guard rests with state governors.

The lawsuit stated that Governors Dunleavy and Abbott ensured Guard members met military readiness standards “without compulsion, threat or micromanag­ement” from the federal government for more than 18 months of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In late August 2021, the Secretary of Defense ordered all military members, including the Guard, to take COVID-19 shots. In November, the Secretary directed the Department of Defense to withhold salaries of unvaccinat­ed, non-federalize­d, Guard members or deprive them of credit for drills and training.

Relevant for Nome, several hundreds of National Guard members will come to the Gold Rush city to conduct exercises at the end of the month.

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