Trump calls for withholding federal money from schools and colleges that
require COVID vaccines
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[February 15, 2025]
By COLLIN BINKLEY
WASHINGTON (AP) — Schools, colleges and states that require students to
be immunized against COVID-19 may be at risk of losing federal money
under a White House order signed Friday by President Donald Trump.
The order is expected to have little national impact because COVID-19
vaccine mandates have mostly been dropped at schools and colleges across
the United States, and many states have passed legislation forbidding
such mandates.
The order directs the Education Department and Health and Human Services
to create a plan to end vaccine mandates for COVID-19. The agencies are
asked to identify any discretionary federal grants or contracts going to
schools that violate the order, and remove funding “to the maximum
extent consistent with applicable law.”
“Given the incredibly low risk of serious COVID-19 illness for children
and young adults, threatening to shut them out of an education is an
intolerable infringement on personal freedom,” the order said.
The order didn't identify specific sources of money that could be at
risk. Most federal education money is ordered by Congress.
It aims to fulfill a campaign promise from Trump, who often said he
would “not give one penny to any school that has a vaccine mandate.”
The order applies only to COVID-19 vaccines. All states have laws
requiring that children attending schools be vaccinated against certain
diseases including measles, mumps, polio, tetanus, whooping cough and
chickenpox.
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President Donald Trump points to a reporter and India's Prime
Minister Narendra Modi during a news conference in the East Room of
the White House, Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025, in Washington. (AP
Photo/Ben Curtis)
 All U.S. states allow exemptions for
children with medical conditions that prevent them from getting
certain vaccines. Most also allow exemptions for religious or other
nonmedical reasons.
Some colleges started requiring students to be immunized against
COVID-19 during the pandemic, but most have dropped the
requirements. A few continue to require vaccines at least for
students living on campus, including Swarthmore and Oberlin
colleges. Most of those colleges allow medical or religious
exemptions.
Statewide student vaccine mandates were rare. California planned to
add COVID-19 to the list of required vaccines for K-12 students, but
it wasn’t enacted and was later dropped. Illinois had a requirement
for college students but lifted it after about a year.
Trump's order was denounced by Democrats including Sen. Patty
Murray, a member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions
Committee, who called the action unconscionable and unethical.
“Vaccine requirements are not new, nor are the exceptions that have
long existed,” Murray said in a statement. “Schools and states
decide their vaccine policies, often after consulting public health
officials, and should never be asked to sacrifice student safety for
federal funding.”
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