Former South Carolina Senator Jim DeMint weighed in on pandemic-related government mandates, saying citizens should be allowed to make an informed decision as to whether they want to be vaccinated, instead of being subject to mandates from the federal government.
The rule would have required companies to make employees either get a COVID-19 vaccine or submit to weekly COVID-19 testing while wearing masks in the workplace.
DeMint said that while he is vaccinated, he does not believe the federal government has the authority under the U.S. Constitution to order people to take the vaccine. In addition, he said a mandate is not a law.
“If Congress actually passes a law that requires something and the president signs it, then it’s in what we call statute, it’s something that carries a whole lot more weight. And the Supreme Court would have to strike that down as being unconstitutional,” said DeMint. “But it goes to the bigger point of whether or not they’re even justifiable at this point.”
“I don’t think we have the evidence to suggest that we know enough to say that you have to take a vaccine, or that you have to wear a mask or businesses have to close down. I think countries like Israel, almost everyone was vaccinated there and they have one of the highest rates of infection.”
Israel, with nearly half of its citizens having received three shots, is leading the world in new daily cases per capita, according to Jan. 20 data.
“We’re seeing that there’s no correlation with lockdowns and fewer infections, all the mandates. Vaccines, actually, if you look at evidence worldwide, some that suggest that it might make you more vulnerable to get a disease, but then it would make the symptoms less serious,” said DeMint.