Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin says that he wants to keep imposing the U.S. military’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate amid calls by Republicans and a small number of Democrats to scrap the rule in light of recent recruitment shortfalls.
On Nov. 30, more than 20 Republican governors sent a letter to President Joe Biden asking that the administration remove the mandate, saying it has hurt the U.S. National Guard’s ability to recruit troops. Congress may consider legislation this coming week to end the mandate as a requirement to gather enough support to pass this year’s defense budget.
Austin told reporters on Dec. 3 that he will not comment on possible legislation to block defense spending, but he stipulated that he wants the COVID-19 vaccine mandate, which has led to few religious exemptions, to stay intact. Austin announced the mandate in August 2021.
“We lost a million people to this virus,” Austin told reporters, although studies and data have shown the vast majority of people who died from COVID-19 were elderly or have compromised immune systems. “A million people died in the United States of America. We lost hundreds in DOD. So this mandate has kept people healthy.”
Austin didn’t comment on several military branches seeing recruitment shortfalls in recent months. Since he implemented the mandate last year, thousands of active-duty troops have been discharged because they wouldn’t get the vaccine.
A day before, Pentagon press secretary Brig. Gen. Patrick Ryder said the controversial mandate will remain intact and argued that it’s needed for U.S. national security.
‘Dilemma’
“The problem here is that we’re having a dilemma we haven’t had in decades—and that’s finding enough people serving,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said last week in public remarks. “Our recruiting goals are way short. The conflict in the world is getting worse, not better. We need more people in the military, not less.”“We’re taking action today by saying we will not vote to get on the NDAA—the defense authorization bill—unless we have a vote on ending this military vaccine mandate. That’s it,” Paul told reporters. “Some will argue that the vaccine mandate in the military is not new. That is correct.”
The appeals court noted that few Air Force members have been granted religious exemptions to the vaccine since it was implemented. Of the 10,000 members who requested an exemption, only around 135 have been granted to date and “only to those already planning to leave the service,” the court stated, adding that it has “granted thousands of other exemptions for medical reasons.”
“Finding that these claims would likely succeed, the district court granted a preliminary injunction that barred the Air Force from disciplining the Plaintiffs for failing to take a vaccine,“ according to the court order. ”But its injunction did not interfere with the Air Force’s operational decisions over the Plaintiffs’ duties. The court then certified a class of thousands of similar service members and extended this injunction to the class.”