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posted ago by RandomNumber ago by RandomNumber +30 / -0

Supreme Court rejects challenge to law ending religious exemptions for school vaccine mandates | Without explaining how individual justices voted, the Supreme Court dismissed a case intended to restore Connecticut's law allowing religious exemptions to vaccine requirements for schools and daycares.

https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/supreme-court-rejects-challenge-to-law-ending-religious-exemptions-for-school-vaccine-mandates/

... But the June 24 order list published by the nation’s highest court confirmed that We the Patriots USA, et al, v. CT Early Childhood Dev. et al. has been dismissed, without any elaboration. How individual justices voted was not listed, but with just four votes necessary to take a case, at least six would have voted not to. ...

... “This is the end of the road to a challenge to Connecticut’s lifesaving and fully lawful vaccine requirements,” Democratic Attorney General William Tong said in a statement obtained by the Associated Press. “We have said all along, and the courts have affirmed, the legislature acted responsibly and well within its authority to protect the health of Connecticut families and to stop the spread of preventable disease.”

There are still two challenges in lower courts still to be heard:

...“If we are ultimately victorious in these two cases, students with disabilities and students at private religious schools would be able to opt out of vaccinations and receive an education in Connecticut,” the group noted. “A victory in either of these cases at the Second Circuit would also apply to students in New York, which lost its school religious exemption in 2019. Although it’s not the broad, sweeping victory we were aiming for, these cases could still open the door for hundreds of thousands – if not millions – of children to receive an education in New York and Connecticut.”

... In the area of vaccine mandates, in 2022 the Court blocked the Biden administration from forcing private businesses to mandate COVID shots while upholding a mandate for healthcare workers at federally funded facilities. On state-level mandates, the court has been consistently more deferential.