- 2021-09-10 23:58:29
- LAST MODIFIED: 2025-03-28 13:04:11
Biden’s vaccine rules ignite instant, hot GOP opposition

Photo Collected:
International Desk:
Dhaka, Sept-11,
President Joe Biden’s
aggressive push to require millions of U.S. workers to get vaccinated against
the coronavirus is running into a wall of resistance from Republican leaders
threatening everything from lawsuits to civil disobedience, plunging the country
deeper into culture wars that have festered since the onset of the pandemic.
In South Carolina, Gov.
Henry McMaster says he will fight “to the gates of hell to protect the liberty
and livelihood of every South Carolinian.” South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, a
potential 2024 presidential candidate, says she is preparing a lawsuit. And
J.D. Vance, a conservative running for a U.S. Senate seat in Ohio, is calling
on businesses to ignore mandates he describes as Washington’s “attempt to bully
and coerce citizens.”
“Only mass civil
disobedience will save us from Joe Biden’s naked authoritarianism,” Vance says.
Biden is hardly backing
down. In a visit to a school Friday, he accused the governors of being
“cavalier” with the health of young Americans, and when asked about foes who
would file legal challenges, he retorted, “Have at it.”
The opposition follows
Biden’s announcement Thursday of a major plan to tame the coronavirus as the
highly contagious Delta variant drives 1,500 deaths and 150,000 cases a day.
Biden is mandating that all employers with more than 100 workers require their
employees to be vaccinated or test for the virus weekly, affecting about 80
million Americans. Another 17 million workers at health facilities that receive
federal Medicare or Medicaid also will have to be vaccinated, as will all
employees of the executive branch and contractors who do business with the
federal government.
The move brought
Republican outrage from state capitals, Congress and the campaign trail,
including from many who have supported vaccinations and have urged their
constituents to take the shots.
“The vaccine itself is
life-saving, but this unconstitutional move is terrifying,” tweeted Mississippi
Gov. Tate Reeves.
Texas Rep. Dan
Crenshaw, who has promoted the vaccines’ safety to his constituents, said, “The
right path is built upon explaining, educating and building trust, including
explaining the risks/benefits/pros/cons in an honest way so a person can make
their own decision.”
More than 208 million
Americans have received at least one vaccine dose, but some 80 million remain
unvaccinated, driving infections. There are now about 300% more new daily
COVID-19 infections, about two-and-a-half times the hospitalizations and nearly
twice the number of deaths as at the same time last year.
While breakthrough
infections do happen among the vaccinated, those cases tend to be far less
severe, with the vast majority of deaths and serious illnesses occurring among
those who have not received shots.
The pandemic is
worsening in many of the states where governors are most loudly protesting the
president’s actions. South Carolina, for example, is averaging more than 5,000
new cases per day and has the nation’s second-highest infection rate. A
hospital system there started canceling elective surgeries this week to free
staff to help with a crush of COVID-19 patients.
In a section of Idaho,
overwhelmed hospitals have implemented new crisis standards to ration care for
patients. And in Georgia, hospitals have been turning away ambulances bringing
emergency or ICU patients.
“I am so disappointed
that particularly some Republican governors have been so cavalier with the
health of these kids, so cavalier with the health of their communities,” Biden
said during his school visit. “This isn’t a game.”
But Republicans and
some union officials say the president is overreaching his constitutional
authority. They take issue, in particular, with the idea that millions could
lose their jobs if they refuse to take the shots.
“That’s a ridiculous
choice,” said Mississippi Gov. Reeves.
Biden, however, says
he’s doing what needs to be done to fight resistance that has continued despite
months of encouragement and incentives. In his White House speech announcing
the new measures, he was visibly frustrated, criticizing the remaining holdouts
and accusing some elected officials of “actively working to undermine the fight
against COVID-19.”
“Instead of encouraging
people to get vaccinated and mask up, they’re ordering mobile morgues for the
unvaccinated dying from COVID in their communities,” he said.
Court fights are sure
to follow in a number of states.
Vaccine mandates are
supported by a small majority of Americans. An August poll from The Associated
Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found majorities support
requiring vaccinations for health care workers, teachers at K-12 schools and
public-facing workers like those who work in restaurants and stores. Overall,
55% back vaccine mandates for government workers. And about half of working
adults favor vaccine mandates at their own workplaces.
But the numbers are
deeply polarized, with Democrats far more likely to support mandates than
Republicans, who have also been less supportive when it comes to getting shots
themselves.
While demand for
vaccinations has risen over the summer, a persistent number of Americans have
said they have no intention of ever receiving them.
GOP pollster Frank
Luntz, who has held focus groups and worked with the Biden administration to
try to combat vaccine hesitance, says that, without further measures, Biden is
likely to see vaccinations top out at about 75% of the population.
“The only way to exceed
that, which he needs to for herd immunity, is to mandate it,” Luntz said. “It
will make a lot of people angry and even more resistant, but those who are
simply hesitant will act now. He’s done the best he can under the
circumstances.”
Still, many Republicans
are unmoving and unforgiving, especially those who are running for office and
see the issue as one that could motivate Republican voters to turn out in next
year’s midterm elections.
Mike Gibbons, who is
running for the U.S. Senate in Ohio, accused “Joe Biden and his Big Brother
administration” of having “crossed into authoritarian territory.”
“The American people
have a right to assess the risks and benefits of the vaccine and make the
decision on what is best for themselves and their families,” he said. “That
decision should be made by doctors and the individual, not the government.”
With the midterms
coming, Drew McKissick, South Carolina’s GOP chairman, says he imagines
Democrats in his state being tied to their party’s “radical liberal” policies.
“South Carolinians
don’t take kindly to mandates. They never have,” McKissick said, arguing the
national political tenor is “going to put (Democrats) more in a corner.”
But Steve Schale, a
Democratic strategist who leads the pro-Biden super PAC Unite the Country,
which has also done polling showing support for mandates, said he’s not
especially concerned about potential political backlash. He argued those who
are most likely to be angered by the move are probably already Biden critics.
“Of all the things I
worry about in the midterms,” he said, “that doesn’t scare me.”
White House
spokesperson Jen Psaki also dismissed the blowback.
“Yes, we do see some
loud vocal opponents of what the president announced yesterday. That’s not a
surprise. It’s unfortunate, it’s disappointing, it’s sad because, ultimately,
these steps will save lives,” she said, “but we remain confident in our ability
to move the agenda forward.”
End/Dct/Int/Sma/