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Supreme Court permits Maine's healthcare worker vaccine mandate to go into effect without any religious exemptions
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Supreme Court permits Maine's healthcare worker vaccine mandate to go into effect without any religious exemptions

On Friday, the United States Supreme Court declined to grant a temporary injunction against a Maine law that mandated vaccination for all healthcare workers, without providing any exemptions for religious objectors. The court's four liberal justices did not explain why they chose not to grant the injunction, although Justices Gorsuch, Alito, and Thomas issued a lengthy dissent from the majority's decision, and Justices Barrett and Kavanaugh indicated in a concurrence that they might be willing to eventually overturn the law, after full briefing and argument. Thus, the plaintiffs' challenge to the Maine law may not be permanently dead, although healthcare workers in Maine will for now be forced to choose between getting the vaccine and at least temporarily losing their jobs.

The law in question was enacted in Maine in 2019 before the outbreak of the COVID pandemic, and eliminated religious exemptions for the state's general vaccine requirements for healthcare workers. According to the New York Times, the state promulgated a regulation in August of 2021 that added the COVID-19 vaccine to the list of vaccines covered by the law, and required all health care workers in the state to be vaccinated by October 29th. A number of healthcare workers sued, arguing that the regulation infringed on their First Amendment rights.

The Plaintiffs' suit was rejected in federal district court in Maine, which was then affirmed by a unanimous panel of judges on the First Circuit. The plaintiffs then applied to the Supreme Court for emergency relief, asking for the court to grant them an injunction against the law taking effect while the court decided whether to hear their case. In their concurrence, Justice Kavanaugh and Barrett specifically signaled that they were planting a marker regarding perceived abuse of the court's "shadow docket" and left open that they might still be willing to vote to hear the case with the benefit of "full briefing and oral argument," but that they were unwilling to grant the injunction the plaintiffs asked for in the meantime.

When combined with the votes of the three dissenting justices, it seems that at least five justices are potentially willing to hear the case, if presented to them in the correct procedural posture. In order for a case to be heard by the Supreme Court, only four justices need to agree to grant a writ of certiorari.

Writing for the dissent, Justice Gorsuch noted that he would have granted the immediate relief sought by the plaintiffs, noting, "with Maine's new rule coming into effect, one of the applicants has already lost her job for refusing to betray her faith; another risks the imminent loss of his medical practice. The applicants ask us to enjoin further enforcement of Maine's new rule as to them, at least until we can decide whether to accept their petition for certiorari. I would grant that relief."

Although the court may eventually overturn Maine's mandate, the fact that they refused to grant the plaintiff's application for temporary injunction means that the law will be permitted to go into effect, for now, which means that healthcare workers will be required to get the vaccine or lose their jobs, at least until the court eventually hears the case and rules on it.

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