After President Joe Biden, a Democrat, said on Thursday he will
enforce the mandate starting Jan. 4, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
said he will join the governors of Georgia and Alabama as well as
private plaintiffs to file suit.
"The federal government can't just unilaterally impose medical
policy under the guise of workplace regulation," DeSantis said at a
press conference.
The Republican governors of Indiana, Iowa and Nebraska also vowed to
challenge the move in court.
The regulation was implemented as a rarely used emergency rule from
OSHA, or Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the federal
workplace regulator.
"Biden just announced his plan to wield OSHA to mandate vaccines on
private businesses," Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a
Republican, wrote on Twitter on Thursday. "I'm announcing my plan to
sue him once this illegal, unconstitutional regulation hits the
Federal Register."
Texas is among the Republican-led states which have issued executive
orders or enacted laws that ban COVID-19 vaccine mandates or prevent
employers from seeking an employee's vaccination status.
OSHA said the rule takes precedence over conflicting state laws. It
will go into effect on Friday when it is due to be published in the
federal register.
At least two lawsuits were initiated against the mandate on
Thursday, one by Phillips Manufacturing & Tower and Sixarp LLC and
the other by Bentkey Services LLC, which owns The Daily Wire, a
conservative media company. Both were filed in the 6th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in Cincinnati.
Responding to opponents of the rule, a senior administration
official said OSHA clearly has the authority to act to protect
workers from health and safety hazards. COVID-19 has killed more
than 745,000 people in the United States.
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Biden said in September that
patience was wearing thin with the 30% of
Americans who remain unvaccinated and who made
up the vast majority of those hospitalized
during the most recent wave of COVID-19
infections.
Mandates have been used by private businesses and local
governments to drive up COVID-19 vaccination rates and courts have
generally upheld them because states typically have the power to
regulate healthcare within their borders.
A wide range of opponents have signaled their intention to sue.
Previous uses of OSHA's emergency rule have a history of being
blocked in court. Even if the mandate is upheld by
the courts, some states still might not implement the rule.
OSHA applies to private workplaces in 29 states. The remaining
states, including Indiana and Iowa, have their own state-run OSHA
which is required to adopt the federal rule.
OSHA issued a similar COVID-19 rule for healthcare settings in June,
and in October the federal agency threatened to take over the
state-run OSHA agencies in Arizona, South Carolina and Utah for
failing to adopt it. Arizona and South Carolina have since said they
have started the process to adopt the rule. Officials in Utah did
not respond to a request for comment.
(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Additional reporting
by Nandita Bose in Washington and Karen Pierog in Chicago; Editing
by Daniel Wallis)
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