New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, a Republican, said Wednesday he’s opposed to bringing back a mask mandate in the state following a guidance reversal by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that now calls for some fully vaccinated people to wear facial coverings indoors.
Calling the COVID-19 vaccines “the single greatest tool individuals have to protect themselves and their family,” Sununu encouraged New Hampshire residents to get inoculated, according to the statement.
At the same time, Sununu has stressed he views vaccinations as a matter of personal choice.
“Right now, it’s folks’ individual responsibility. If someone hasn’t been vaccinated at this point, they’ve made that conscious decision not to,” Sununu said on July 22. “The government’s job is to provide that open door. If you want the vaccine, here it is, nice and easy.”
“So you have every tool in the toolbox available to you and your family to make that decision,” he added.
“Every person has the natural, essential, and inherent right to bodily integrity, free from any threat or compulsion by government to accept an immunization,” the bill reads.
The new law leaves in place state regulations requiring vaccinations for admission to school and it allows mandatory vaccinations in prisons and jails.
While the CDC’s revised guidance isn’t binding, it’s closely followed by health departments, businesses, and other entities across the country, which often calibrate enforceable policies according to the agency’s recommendations.
Mask-wearing amid the COVID-19 pandemic has become a hot-button issue, with some questioning the efficacy of facial coverings and others opposing mandates on grounds of personal liberty. Advocates tend to have taken a better-safe-than-sorry approach in the face of underpowered efficacy studies on mask-wearing, while generally viewing mandates as a minor inconvenience that helps protect people who are prone to serious complications if they get infected.