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Friday, April 19, 2024

Governor, AG Sue Defense Department Over Vaccine Requirement

'This week, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin declared his intention to proceed with unconstitutional punishment that individually targets Oklahoma National Guard soldiers and airmen, including withholding their pay...'

(Headline USA) Oklahoma’s Republican governor and the state attorney general filed a federal lawsuit on Thursday, challenging the Defense Department‘s COVID-19 vaccination mandate for the Oklahoma National Guard.

In a statement, Gov. Kevin Stitt argued that the Biden administration’s defense secretary, Lloyd Austin, overstepped his constitutional authority by subjecting the National Guard to the mandate, which applies to active-duty military members.

“This week, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin declared his intention to proceed with unconstitutional punishment that individually targets Oklahoma National Guard soldiers and airmen, including withholding their pay,” Stitt said.

The Pentagon couldn’t immediately be reached for comment on the lawsuit.

Stitt had asked Austin to suspend the mandate for the Oklahoma National Guard and directed his new adjutant general to assure members that they would not be punished for not being vaccinated.

However, Austin rejected that exemption and said any National Guard members not vaccinated against COVID-19 would be barred from federally funded drills and training required to maintain their Guard status.

Stitt said that although National Guard members are paid by the federal government, he remains their commander in chief under federal and state constitutional and statutory law unless the president orders their mobilization.

The Oklahoma rebuke comes as the latest in a series of setbacks for the Biden administration’s overreaching vaccine mandate. U.S. district judges from Louisiana and Kentucky have both issued injunctions against the vaccine mandates.

“If the executive branch is allowed to usurp the power of the legislative branch to make laws, two of the three powers conferred by our Constitution would be in the same hands,” wrote Louisiana Western District U.S. Judge Terry Doughty.

“If human nature and history teach anything,” he continued, “it is that civil liberties face grave risks when governments proclaim indefinite states of emergency.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press

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