Thursday, September 9, 2021

Biden Declares sweeping new vaccine Mandate, Republicans call it Unconstitutional

RNC says it intends to sue the Biden administration on its unconstitutional mandate
“Joe Biden told Americans when he was elected that he would not impose vaccine mandates. He lied.”

WASHINGTON (AP) — In his most forceful pandemic actions and words, President Joe Biden on Thursday announced sweeping new federal vaccine requirements affecting as many as 100 million Americans in an all-out effort to increase COVID-19 vaccinations and curb the surging delta variant.

Speaking at the White House, Biden sharply criticized the roughly 80 million Americans who are not yet vaccinated, despite months of availability and incentives.

“We’ve been patient. But our patience is wearing thin, and your refusal has cost all of us,” he said, all but biting off his words. The unvaccinated minority “can cause a lot of damage, and they are.”

Republican leaders — and some union chiefs, too — said Biden was going too way too far in trying to muscle private companies and workers, a certain sign of legal challenges to come.

Gov. Henry McMaster of South Carolina said in a statement that “Biden and the radical Democrats ... have declared war against capitalism (and) thumbed their noses at the Constitution.”

AFL-CIO National President Everett Kelley insisted that “changes like this should be negotiated with our bargaining units where appropriate.”

The expansive rules mandate that all employers with more than 100 workers require them to be vaccinated or test for the virus weekly, affecting about 80 million Americans. And the roughly 17 million workers at health facilities that receive federal Medicare or Medicaid also will have to be fully vaccinated.

Biden is also signing an executive order to require vaccination for 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.

Biden announced the new requirements in a Thursday afternoon address from the White House as part of a new “action plan” to address the latest rise in coronavirus cases and the stagnating pace of COVID-19 shots that has raised doubts among the public over his handling of the pandemic.

Just two months ago Biden prematurely declared the nation’s “independence” from the virus. Now, despite more than 208 million Americans having at least one dose of the vaccines, the U.S. is seeing about 300% more new COVID-19 infections a day, about two-and-a-half times more hospitalizations, and nearly twice the number of deaths compared to the same time last year.

“We are in the tough stretch and it could last for a while,” Biden said of the current state of the pandemic.

After months of using promotions to drive the vaccination rate, Biden is taking a much firmer hand, as he aides blamed people who have not yet received shots for the sharp rise in cases that is killing more than 1,000 people per day and imperiling a fragile economic rebound.

In addition to the vaccination requirements, Biden moved to double federal fines for airline passengers who refuse to wear masks on flights or to maintain face covering requirements on federal property in accordance with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines.

Biden announced that the federal government will work to increase the supply of virus tests, and that the White House has secured concessions from retailers including Walmart, Amazon, and Kroger to sell at-home testing kits at cost beginning this week.

The administration was also sending additional federal support to assist schools in safely operating, including additional funding for testing. And Biden will call for large entertainment venues and arenas to require vaccinations or proof of a negative test for entry.

The requirement for large companies to mandate vaccinations or weekly testing for employees will be enacted through a forthcoming rule from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration that carries penalties of $14,000 per violation, an administration official said. The White House did not immediately say when it would take effect, but said workers would have sufficient time to get vaccinated.

The rule would also require that large companies provide paid time off for vaccination.

Meanwhile, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services will extend a vaccination requirement issued earlier this summer — for nursing home staff — to other healthcare settings including hospitals, home-health agencies and dialysis centers.

Separately, the Department of Health and Human Services will require vaccinations in Head Start Programs, as well as schools run by the Department of Defense and Bureau of Indian Education, affecting about 300,000 employees.

Biden’s order for executive branch workers and contractors includes exceptions for workers seeking religious or medical exemptions from vaccination, according to Psaki. Federal workers and contractors will have 75 days to get fully vaccinated. Workers who don’t comply will be referred to their agencies’ human resources departments for counseling and discipline, to include potential termination.

“We would like to be a model” to other organizations and business around country, Psaki said of the federal workforce.

An AP-NORC poll conducted in August found 55% of Americans in favor of requiring government workers to be fully vaccinated, compared with 21% opposed. Similar majorities also backed vaccine mandates for health care workers, teachers working at K-12 schools and workers who interact with the public, as at restaurants and stores.

Biden has encouraged COVID-19 vaccine requirements in settings like schools, workplaces and university campuses, and the White House hopes the strengthened federal mandate will inspire more businesses to follow suit. On Thursday, the Los Angeles Board of Education was expected to vote on requiring all students 12 and older to be fully vaccinated in the the nation’s second-largest school district.

Walmart, the nation’s largest private employer, said in late July it was requiring that all workers at its headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas, as well as its managers who travel within the U.S. be vaccinated against COVID-19 by Oct. 4. But the company stopped short of requiring shots for its frontline workers.

CVS Health said in late August it would require certain employees who interact with patients to be fully vaccinated by the end of October. That includes nurses, care managers and pharmacists.

In the government, several federal agencies have previously announced vaccine requirements for much of their staffs, particularly those in healthcare roles like the Department of Veterans Affairs, and the Pentagon moved last month to require all servicemembers to get vaccinated. Combined, the White House estimates those requirements cover 2.5 million Americans. Thursday’s order is expected to impact nearly 2 million more federal workers and potentially millions of contractors.

Biden’s measures should help, but what’s really needed is a change in mindset for many people, said Dr. Joshua Sharfstein, vice dean at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore.

“There is an aspect to this now that has to do with our country being so divided,” said Sharfstein. “This has become so politicized that people can’t see the value of a vaccination that can save their lives. Our own divisions are preventing us from ending a pandemic.”

American Federation of Government Employees, the largest union of federal employees, said that while it strongly encourages vaccinations, workers should have a say in new mandates affecting them.

“Put simply, workers deserve a voice in their working conditions,” said national President Everett Kelley. “We expect to bargain over this change prior to implementation, and we urge everyone who is able to get vaccinated as soon as they can do so.”

Larry Cosme, president of the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association, called the mandate for federal workers “ill conceived,” saying, “Vaccination should be promoted through education and encouragement – not coercion.”

More than 177 million Americans are fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, but confirmed cases have shot up in recent weeks to an average of about 140,000 per day with on average about 1,000 deaths, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Most of the spread — and the vast majority of severe illness and death — is occurring among those not yet fully vaccinated. So-called breakthrough infections in vaccinated people occur, but tend to be far less dangerous.

Federal officials are moving ahead with plans to begin administering booster shots of the mRNA vaccines to bolster protection against the more transmissible delta variant. Last month Biden announced plans to make them available beginning on Sept. 20, but only the Pfizer vaccine will likely have received regulatory approval for a third dose by that time.

Officials are aiming to administer the booster shots about eight months after the second dose of the two-dose vaccines.

15 comments:

  1. I'm 100% pro vax but this is going way too far. This is not an issue of protecting workers where I understand government intervention. This is the government making medical decisions for you

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    1. Wrong.

      It is about making decisions for the public good. Justice Holmes said that the right to swing my fist ends where the next guy's nose begins. (think about mask mandates).

      Those who are not vaccinated are harming the public. This was clear with smallpox in the 1870s until it was eradicated. A NY Times article reports that men would go house to house to force people to vaccinated in the late nineteenth century. The Supreme Court heard the issue in 1905, in Jacobson v. Massachusetts and said, that the Constitution “does not import an absolute right in each person to be, at all times and in all circumstances, wholly freed from restraint. . . .Real liberty for all could not exist under the operation of a principle which recognizes the right of each individual person to use his own, whether in respect of his person or his property, regardless of the injury that may be done to others.”

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    2. Anonymous 6:10

      Even assuming you are right in general about the government having the right to force vaccines there is no way I can support a private business being told that it is your responsibility to make sure your employees are vaccinated or test for Corona.

      I am vaccinated.

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    3. Can you provide even a shred of evidence that vaccination is necessary for those who got covid?

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    4. My body my choice, no?

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    5. Covid is no protection against covid. Hundreds in Lakewood got it twice

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    6. "Covid is no protection against covid. Hundreds in Lakewood got it twice"

      Do you have evidence and data to back that up
      How many of those that got it twice were vaccinated

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  2. Vaccines don't work though

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    1. Overwhelmingly the data is showing that the vaccine is successful at reducing hospitalizations and deaths.
      You're going to need to back that statement up with evidence.

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    2. ...And a study out of Israel proved that those who had Covd are 27 times LESS likely to get it than those who are vaccinated

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  3. Who says it’s for the public good? Besides I have antibodies (hence natural immunity much better than any vaccine) so there is no reason at all for me to get the vaccine.

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  4. Forcing people with antibodies to take the vaccine is a crime and a distortion of Medicine .
    It is The Ultimate Proof that these mandates are politically motivated and not based on Data or medical research.

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  5. But by getting the vaccine you are protecting others because even though you got it you could still spread the virus. Even though you got the vaccine you should still wear a mask because others could still infect you and you could infect them and cause a huge spike in the numbers so be safe get the vaccine wear a mask. Don’t be afraid to take this pointless vaccine because it’s clear that it works and it’s safe and the President even said it’s “FDA approval”. Vaccines work! If you don’t get the vaccine you will need to wear a mask.

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    Replies
    1. Vaccinated people can also infect others.
      Try again to misinformation.

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  6. The government and the medical establishment's decision not to recognize antibodies (to get everyone to mask and vaccinate) is by far the biggest blunder of the covid response. At first they made everyone mask even those that had antibodies. Many people with antibodies didn't listen and lost their trust of the medical world - Even worse it caused those without any antibodies to join with their own reasons creating a large block of people who refuse to mask and have little faith in the medical establishment. Next they gave the vaccine to anyone who was eligible regardless of their antibody status - had they actually given it first to people without antibodies, Things may have turned out differently, The wave would have ended earlier, we could've given the surplus of shots to other countries and just maybe the delta variant would not have spread the way it did. Even If you say we didn't want to wait to have everyone test for antibodies, at the very least we could've prioritized the people who were pretty certain they did not get covid. Now we are up to boosters, just maybe now we should require antibody testing to see if you need a booster? Or that is going to ruin the idea of vacinated everyone as those that got covid may actually have the same antibodies as those with the vaccine...

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