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Republican lawmakers accuse White House of pressuring airlines on vaccines

Published 10/07/2021, 08:26 PM
Updated 10/07/2021, 08:35 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A traveler walks past a Christmas tree as he makes his way through the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, in Arlington, Virginia, U.S., December 22, 2020.  REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo

By David Shepardson

(Reuters) - Two senior U.S. lawmakers on Thursday accused the White House of pressuring U.S. airlines to require their employees be vaccinated for COVID-19 by a Dec. 8 deadline for federal contractors or face firing.

Representative Sam Graves, top Republican on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, and Garrett Graves, senior Republican on the aviation subcommittee, wrote President Joe Biden on Thursday, saying it "is unacceptable that your administration is using the threat of contractual measures as a coercion to single out American workers in a vital national industry."

The lawmakers, who are not related, cited a Reuters story reporting that White House COVID-19 coordinator Jeff Zients had called the chief executives of American Airlines (NASDAQ:AAL), Delta Air Lines (NYSE:DAL) and Southwest Airlines (NYSE:LUV) on Sept. 30, urging them to follow United Airlines' lead in mandating employee vaccines.

Zients on Wednesday praised airlinesfor mandating vaccines. "Vaccination requirements work. New data reinforces that fact each day," he said.

Three of the airlines and the White House declined comment. Southwest did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Both Southwest Airlines and American Airlines have since announced they will meet the Dec. 8 deadline for federal contractors. Delta Chief Executive Ed Bastian said on Sunday that the airline has not madea decision.

President Joe Biden on Thursday https://www.reuters.com/world/us/biden-tout-vaccine-mandates-large-companies-chicago-trip-2021-10-07 was in Illinois to tout vaccines and praised United's vaccine mandate after meeting with United CEO Scott Kirby (NYSE:KEX).

The letter noted Congress since March 2020 awarded U.S. airlines a total of $54 billion in taxpayer funding for payroll costs, which only ended last week.

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"We strongly urge you to rethink this ill-conceived mandate which will result in the termination of employees whose jobs were saved over the last 18 months at enormous taxpayer expense," they wrote.

"This unilateral mandate and arbitrary deadline will serve only to disrupt airline operations and increase the likelihood of canceled flights."

Biden signed an executive order last month requiring federal contractors to mandate employee vaccines, with the White House later setting the Dec. 8 deadline.

A growing number of federal contractors are opting to comply, with IBM (NYSE:IBM) announcing Thursday it would mandate employee vaccines.

Latest comments

Being generous, 50% of airline employees have CHOSEN to remain unvaxxed.  After all the social pressure, it's reasonable to assume they feel strongly (Southwest pilots are already suing the airline, as are various other employee groups.  Vast majority (everyone except pilots and executives?), can EASILY replace their income elsewhere, even working remotely.  Imagine a holiday season where 25% of all airline employees have been terminated for not sticking themselves with a vaccine that is now 65% effective, and for only three months, and has no long term safety data.  The airlines survived the last 25% Covid drawdown only with government paying the payroll (yeah, that just expired). Gary Kelly, the soon-to-quit CEO of Southwest will leave a legacy of an angry shell of the once great company Herb Kelleher left him. And Biden's legacy will be of a failed attempt to stop a pandemic no one even blamed him for, by becoming a tyrant over free Americans.  God Bless the United States.
what a surprise
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