[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 184 (Wednesday, October 20, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7103-S7104]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Unanimous Consent Request--S. 2842
Mr. LEE. Mr. President, our Armed Forces have been asked to work
miracles over the last 18 months, and they have performed. During a
global pandemic, in the face of natural disasters, facing dangerous
missions, our men and women in uniform have risen dutifully, faithfully
to the challenge. Many of our servicemembers have contracted--and then
recovered from--COVID-19 over the last 18 months. Now these same heroes
are being placed in a corner by this administration.
President Biden's COVID-19 vaccine requirement for the Armed Forces
does not grant our soldiers, sailors, and marines the respect they
deserve, and it could pose a challenge to recruitment and even to
military readiness.
This mandate, tied with President Biden's more sweeping general
vaccine mandate, has put millions of Americans in difficult positions.
In most cases, these are just everyday Americans. They are mothers and
fathers, husbands and wives just trying to put food on the table during
what has, for many, been a difficult time.
These still unwritten but very much efficacious mandates are forcing
millions of our fellow citizens into a sort of second-class,
unemployable status, placing countless of our neighbors on the economic
and social fringes of our society.
I have heard from almost 300 Utahans in recent days who were worried
about losing their jobs due to the mandates. Some of these individuals
are heroic members of our military. These servicemembers were rightly
praised for serving during a pandemic and for dangerous missions, but
now are being forced out, possibly with limited or no retirement
benefits because of the President's mandate.
Let me just share with you a few of their stories. One soldier who
reached out to me recently has served for 10 years in the military. He
never received a single reprimand, whether written or verbal. He
honorably and proudly served his Nation. He has been informed, despite
his years of successful Active-Duty service, that he will not receive
an honorable discharge if he doesn't comply with the vaccine
requirement. Accordingly, he asked to resign from the military. His
commanders made clear that he would be barred from resignation. Then he
sought a personal religious exemption. He was summarily told that his
exemption request would be denied.
Of his situation, he said:
To be backed into a corner with two very bad options is
both disheartening and sad, especially with what I have
sacrificed and what my family has sacrificed on behalf of the
military.
Another soldier told me his story. He has been in the Army for 18
years. All along, he was planning on retiring upon reaching two decades
of service. He is about 18 months shy of reaching that point--just 18
months from that retirement point that he has been working toward for
nearly two decades. Now, because of the vaccine mandate, he is at risk
of losing his benefits and not receiving an honorable discharge.
Regarding his situation, he said:
This will cause a substantial loss in pay and quality of
life for myself and a large number of others I know.
A third soldier reached out to my office in a similar retirement
situation. This soldier has children who experienced complications with
receiving the vaccine. The soldier also has a child with significant
learning disabilities, whom he is worried about providing for.
He said:
This really could be a life-changing event for my family,
and I feel strongly enough about it that I will risk all my
benefits not to take [the vaccine]. I just wish I had a
choice.
Now, these stories just barely scratch the surface of the hundreds of
stories that I have heard from people across my State, including many
who are servicemembers. These people, like millions of other Americans,
deserve a better option. They have earned that. That is why, today, I
am asking that the Senate pass my Respecting our Servicemembers Act.
This bill would simply prohibit the Secretary of Defense from requiring
COVID-19 vaccination for our military. I am grateful to my colleagues
Senators Braun and Tuberville for joining me as cosponsors.
This is now the seventh time I have come to the Senate floor, asking
that the Federal Government take a more temperate, reasoned approach.
As I have said each time before, I am not anti-vaccine. In fact, I
believe the development of the COVID-19 vaccine is a miracle. I have
been vaccinated, and I have encouraged every member of my family to be
vaccinated, and they have done so. I think the vaccine is a good thing.
These mandates are simply the wrong way of getting it done.
Look, when we look at the employer vaccine mandate generally, the
President doesn't have the authority. In fact, the Federal Government
doesn't have that authority. This is not a power that belongs to the
Federal Government to begin with. You know, even if it did, we haven't
authorized the President to do this unilaterally. Even if we had or
even if we were now considering a measure that would give him that
authority, it is worth noting here that there are so many other better,
more reasoned ways to encourage vaccination.
That is why I am here today, and that is why I will be back for as
long as it takes to address these mandates, which are causing pain and
suffering to hard-working moms and dads who don't want to have to be
making a gut-wrenching choice between, on the one hand, receiving
medical treatment that they don't want, whether for religious reasons
or a health-related reason related to what their doctors have advised
them or some other compelling personal reason or otherwise--they
shouldn't have to choose between receiving medical treatment they don't
want and forfeiting their ability to put bread on the table for their
children. It is un-American, it is unfair, and it is immoral.
So, Mr. President, as if in legislative session, I ask unanimous
consent that the Committee on Armed Services be discharged from further
consideration of S. 2842 and that the Senate proceed to its immediate
consideration. I further ask unanimous consent that the bill be
considered read a third time and passed and that the motion to
reconsider be considered made and laid upon the table.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
The Senator from Rhode Island.
Mr. REED. Mr. President, in reserving my right to object, on August
24, the Secretary of Defense determined that the mandatory vaccination
against COVID-19 was necessary to
[[Page S7104]]
protect the force and defend the American people.
Vaccination is not mandatory for any servicemember who has a
legitimate medical or religious reason for not being vaccinated.
Mandatory vaccinations are limited to only FDA-approved vaccines. All
FDA-approved COVID-19 vaccines have been determined to be safe and
effective.
According to press reports, as of October 4, Active-Duty vaccination
rates are as follows: the Army, 81 percent; the Navy, 90 percent; the
Air Force, 80.9 percent; and the Marine Corps, 76.5 percent.
Mandatory vaccination is not a new issue for military personnel.
Mandatory vaccinations for critical illnesses are mission critical, and
requiring vaccination is almost as old as the military itself. I can
personally verify that point. Indeed, servicemembers are currently
required to get 17 different vaccinations when they enter the military
or before deploying overseas, including for measles, mumps, diphtheria,
hepatitis, smallpox, and the flu.
We need a healthy and ready force. We saw what happened when Navy
ships were contaminated with COVID. They weren't ready to deploy. They
couldn't deploy. They were tied up. Their effectiveness and ability to
defend the country were marginalized, to say the least. I think this is
absolutely incongruent with the practice and mission of the military.
One other thing I would say is that one of the most fundamental
ethics of the military is that every soldier, sailor, marine, airman,
and guardian is prepared to sacrifice for their fellow servicemember,
and the idea that one would put their own personal feelings ahead of
the potential for contaminating or sickening another servicemember and
affecting the unit is something that I don't think squares with the
ethic of the U.S. military or the effectiveness of the force.
I agree with the Secretary of Defense; therefore, I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Colorado.
Mr. BENNET. Thank you, Mr. President. I would ask the quorum call be
vitiated.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senate is not in a quorum call.
Mr. BENNET. For once, the Senate is not in a quorum call. It is
amazing. We are having an actual debate. I can't believe it. It has
been so long since that has been true.