The state of Texas filed a lawsuit Wednesday seeking to overturn U.S. President Joe Biden’s mask mandate for public transport, marking the latest longshot bid to scrap one of the President’s key COVID-19 health measures.
"Biden’s repeated disregard of the individual liberties of Texans is not only disrespectful to the U.S. Constitution, it is also troublesome that any president thinks they can act above the law while hardworking Americans standby," Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a statement. "President Biden cannot continue governing through executive edicts. Now is the time to strike down his administration’s air-travel mask mandate."
Paxton, along with the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation, filed the lawsuit in federal court on behalf of US Rep. Beth Van Duyne, a Republican whose district includes the suburbs near Fort Worth and Dallas. They allege in the lawsuit that the order, first issued by Biden shortly after he took office last year, violates U.S. law regarding how federal rules are issued and is also unconstitutional because, they say, it represents an instance in which the Executive Branch carried out the law-making function of the Legislative Branch.
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The plaintiffs are asking the court to issue a preliminary injunction and permanent injunction against Biden’s Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the two agencies named as defendants in the suit.
CNN has reached out to HHS for comment. The CDC declined CNN’s request for comment.
The lawsuit is the latest attempt txjmtzywo throw out Biden’s order, which requires travellers to wear masks on airplanes, buses, trains and boats, as well as in airports and other transportation hubs.
In July, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, one of the high court’s conservative members, rejected an emergency request to block the mask requirement that was brought by a man seeking to leave Florida by airplane who said his Generalized Anxiety Disorder prevented him from wearing one.
The man, Lucas Wall, also alleged the policy was unconstitutional and that it violated various regulatory authorities.
In December, as the Omicron coronavirus variant sparked fresh concern among health experts, the Biden administration extended the mandate through March 2022.
RELATED IMAGESview larger image
Several people looking to get tested are greeted by a security guard at a COVID-19 testing site for staff and students at Robert Vela High School in Edinburg, Texas on Jan. 3, 2022. (Delcia Lopez / The Monitor via AP)