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GOP lawmakers pressure DC to ditch indoor vaccine mandate despite Omicron wave

Brent D. Griffiths   

GOP lawmakers pressure DC to ditch indoor vaccine mandate despite Omicron wave
PoliticsPolitics2 min read
  • 19 House Republicans want D.C. to repeal its impending indoor COVID-19 mandate.
  • They say that the proof of vaccination requirement will make it harder for people trying to visit the nation's capital.

Nineteen House Republicans are pressuring DC Mayor Muriel Bowser to back down from the city's indoor vaccine mandate days before it goes into effect and as the region deals with a surge in COVID-19 cases amid the Omicron variant.

"The spread of the omicron variant among the vaccinated population indicates the Order will be ineffective at stopping viral spread while imposing significant costs to the District, its residents, its economy, and Americans across the nation who wish to visit their capital," the group of Republicans write, led by Rep. James Comer, the top Republican on the powerful House Oversight committee.

Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton, a Democrat and D.C's lone delegate, told Insider that her colleagues' constituents are largely unaffected by the city's mandate. She chalked up their efforts at the latest in the GOP's saga to control how the District of Columbia governs itself.

"The mayor would not try to harm our own restaurants and bars unless she had to," Norton told Insider. "This ought to be seen as the District willing to enact penalties on itself, recognizing how serious this virus has become in the capital and this entire region ..."

The Republicans' letter cites a misleading point about COVID-19 vaccinations. While fully vaccinated people can contract COVID-19, healthcare experts and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say they are very unlikely to experience serious illness, require hospitalization, or die. The CDC cites studies showing masks limit the spread of droplets from infected people, and also may filter out some of these by uninfected mask wearers.

DC Mayor Muriel Bowser announced late last year the nation's capital would join other major cities by requiring people 12-years-old and older to show proof of their COVID-19 vaccination before entering places like restaurants, bars, and gyms. The policy is set to go into effect on January 15.

Washington and the larger region are experiencing a surge in COVID-19 cases with limited states of emergency declared in both Virginia and Maryland as hospitals struggle to keep up, The Washington Post reports. Before Christmas, per The Post, "the region saw the highest seven-day averages of new cases at any point since the pandemic began."

Washington is susceptible to the whims of Congress because it is not a state. Lawmakers can introduce disapproval motions to overrule new DC laws and they can also tie the city's hands due to their power over the district's budget. It's extremely unlikely that Republicans will succeed in their effort to overturn the vaccine mandate given that Democrats control all levers of power in Washington.

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