(Headline USA) New York Gov. Kathy Hochul‘s divisive and exploitative use of religion to smear vaccine hesitant individuals and spread COVID fearmongering could bolster a conservative group’s challenge of the state’s vaccine mandates, according to a recent court filing.
Earlier this week, the Democrat governor told a gathering of people at the Christian Cultural Center in Brooklyn that God had led scientists, doctors and researchers to successfully develop the coronavirus vaccine.
Those who are vaccinated are the “smart ones,” she said, and added that “you know there’s people out there who aren’t listening to God and what God wants. You know who they are.”
But a lawyer argued before a federal appeals court Wednesday that the Democrat’s comments about God could be encouraging hospitals and nursing homes to ignore court orders that—for now—are supposed to prevent them from punishing workers who won’t take the vaccine because of religious objections.
Health care institutions across New York this week began suspending workers who failed to meet a state deadline to get a COVID-19 shot.
Statewide, about 92% of hospital and nursing home staff had received at least one dose as of the vaccine as of Wednesday morning, according to figures from Hochul’s office.
New York’s vaccine mandate for health care workers doesn’t include a religious exemption, but because of legal challenges, courts have temporarily barred employers from enforcing the mandate against people with a sincerely held religious belief against vaccination.
During court arguments Wednesday before the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan, Cameron Lee Atkinson, an attorney with We The Patriots USA Inc., argued that Hochul’s comments about God were discouraging health care employers from granting religious exemptions.
However, the arguments seemed to move the dial little with the court’s three-judge panel.
One judge said Atkinson’s claim that Hochul is telling people “that God wants you to get the vaccine” was not the same as ordering employers to fire workers.
Attorney Steven Wu, New York’s deputy solicitor general, told the appeals court judges that the state is in “full compliance” with a temporary restraining order granted this month by U.S. District Judge David N. Hurd that prevents disciplinary action against health care workers who have sought a religious exemption.
Hurd is scheduled to rule by Oct. 12 on a request for a more permanent order.
The fact that Hurd’s temporary order is already in place left the 2nd Circuit questioning Wednesday whether it needed to take action at all. It made no immediate rulings.
The state health department has set up an operations center to monitor health care staffing, and Hochul tweeted Wednesday that “zero health care facilities across the state have been reported closed.”
“Our 24/7 Operations Center is constantly monitoring developments and working with facilities to troubleshoot any issues,” she tweeted. “We stand ready to take additional action as needed.”
Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press