<p>When vaccine mandates were announced in the United States, there were dire warnings they would cause mass layoffs or walkouts. But they didn't. In fact, figures show they are working.</p>.<p>There are pockets of resistance to rules requiring employees be protected against Covid-19, notably among police and firefighters, but they have nudged more people towards getting the jab.</p>.<p>"Mandates, so far, seem to be the most effective thing we have to overcome the vaccine hesitancy," Bradley Pollock, professor of Public Health Sciences at the University of California at Davis, told the <em>Sacramento Bee</em> last month. "It's more than good; it's very good."</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/what-is-the-the-us-vaccine-mandate-for-private-employers-1047399.html" target="_blank">What is the the US vaccine mandate for private employers?</a></strong></p>.<p>Around 58 per cent of the total US population was fully vaccinated as of early November, up from half in August as mandates began to be announced.</p>.<p>President Joe Biden on Thursday set a January 4 deadline for employees in large companies to be fully vaccinated -- a rule the administration says will affect more than two-thirds of the country's workforce.</p>.<p>"Vaccination is the single best pathway out of this pandemic," he said.</p>.<p>"Businesses have more power than ever before to accelerate our path out of this pandemic, save lives, and protect our economic recovery."</p>.<p>The government rules follow mandates announced by several major employers -- to impressive effect.</p>.<p>They included United Airlines, which told its 67,000 US-based staff to get the jab or face termination.</p>.<p>By Thursday, 2,000 had sought medical or religious exemptions and all but a handful of the rest had complied.</p>.<p>Tyson Foods, one of the biggest meatpacking companies in the world announced in early August that all of its 120,000 staff would need to be vaccinated.</p>.<p>Around 96 per cent of its staff have now fallen into line, the <em>New York Times</em> reported.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/are-covid-19-boosters-the-same-as-original-vaccines-1047260.html" target="_blank">Are Covid-19 boosters the same as original vaccines?</a></strong></p>.<p>The US military, which has told all serving personnel they must be jabbed -- or face consequences -- reports take-up is above 95 per cent in all services.</p>.<p>On the whole, workers like the mandate and want to be vaccinated, with the AFL-CIO, the umbrella grouping for unions, calling it "a step in the right direction."</p>.<p>But there are notable pockets of resistance, usually couched in terms of an objection to the mandate, rather than to the vaccine per se -- even if the two attitudes often go hand-in-hand.</p>.<p>That vein of skepticism is particularly thick in police departments, despite the toll the virus has taken on them.</p>.<p>Covid-19 has claimed more than 260 police officers' lives this year -- five times the number shot dead, according to the Officer Down Memorial Page, which tracks deaths in the line of duty.</p>.<p>Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva said this week that just 43 per cent of his officers had been jabbed, and called on his bosses to suspend a rule that could see unvaccinated staff fired.</p>.<p>"Sadly," he said, the executive order is "actually disrupting our ability to provide public safety services."</p>.<p>In Chicago, several thousand police officers face being placed on unpaid leave after refusing to disclose their vaccine status.</p>.<p>New York City's police officers make up around half of the city employees who have applied for religious or medical exemptions.</p>.<p>No major religion has barred followers from taking a vaccine scientists say is safe and effective.</p>.<p>While hesitancy is concentrated in the more conservative-leaning professions, there is skepticism across society.</p>.<p>Caleb Macy, who helps build the antennas for NASA's Deep Space Network arrays was this week among dozens of staff demonstrating at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.</p>.<p>Like other federal employees, he faces the possibility of losing his job if he has neither a religious exemption nor full vaccination by December 8.</p>.<p>But he says that's something he is prepared for.</p>.<p>"I can assure you I will never get this vaccination. Because once you tell me that I have to... I draw the line at that point. It's no longer a choice when it's forced," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>He acknowledged, however, that he would not get what he called an "experimental" vaccine under any circumstances.</p>.<p>Holdouts are getting succor from right-wing politicians, who have declared mandates everything from "overreach" to "dictatorship."</p>.<p>Despite reams of scientific evidence about their safety and efficacy, vaccines and other anti-pandemic measures like masks continue to rile Republicans, as the latest rallying cry in the US culture wars.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/us-to-advise-boosters-to-most-americans-8-months-after-covid-19-vaccination-1020575.html" target="_blank">US to advise boosters to most Americans 8 months after Covid-19 vaccination</a></strong></p>.<p>Jeremy Boreing, founder and chief executive of right-wing outlet <em>The Daily Wire</em> said his company would not be enforcing the mandate, and would be challenging it in court.</p>.<p>"Joe Biden isn't your mom. The government isn't your mom and your employer sure as hell isn't your mom.</p>.<p>"We've already retained legal counsel and we're prepared to go to battle with this administration to put an end to their unconstitutional bullshit."</p>.<p><strong>Watch the latest DH Videos here:</strong></p>
<p>When vaccine mandates were announced in the United States, there were dire warnings they would cause mass layoffs or walkouts. But they didn't. In fact, figures show they are working.</p>.<p>There are pockets of resistance to rules requiring employees be protected against Covid-19, notably among police and firefighters, but they have nudged more people towards getting the jab.</p>.<p>"Mandates, so far, seem to be the most effective thing we have to overcome the vaccine hesitancy," Bradley Pollock, professor of Public Health Sciences at the University of California at Davis, told the <em>Sacramento Bee</em> last month. "It's more than good; it's very good."</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/what-is-the-the-us-vaccine-mandate-for-private-employers-1047399.html" target="_blank">What is the the US vaccine mandate for private employers?</a></strong></p>.<p>Around 58 per cent of the total US population was fully vaccinated as of early November, up from half in August as mandates began to be announced.</p>.<p>President Joe Biden on Thursday set a January 4 deadline for employees in large companies to be fully vaccinated -- a rule the administration says will affect more than two-thirds of the country's workforce.</p>.<p>"Vaccination is the single best pathway out of this pandemic," he said.</p>.<p>"Businesses have more power than ever before to accelerate our path out of this pandemic, save lives, and protect our economic recovery."</p>.<p>The government rules follow mandates announced by several major employers -- to impressive effect.</p>.<p>They included United Airlines, which told its 67,000 US-based staff to get the jab or face termination.</p>.<p>By Thursday, 2,000 had sought medical or religious exemptions and all but a handful of the rest had complied.</p>.<p>Tyson Foods, one of the biggest meatpacking companies in the world announced in early August that all of its 120,000 staff would need to be vaccinated.</p>.<p>Around 96 per cent of its staff have now fallen into line, the <em>New York Times</em> reported.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/are-covid-19-boosters-the-same-as-original-vaccines-1047260.html" target="_blank">Are Covid-19 boosters the same as original vaccines?</a></strong></p>.<p>The US military, which has told all serving personnel they must be jabbed -- or face consequences -- reports take-up is above 95 per cent in all services.</p>.<p>On the whole, workers like the mandate and want to be vaccinated, with the AFL-CIO, the umbrella grouping for unions, calling it "a step in the right direction."</p>.<p>But there are notable pockets of resistance, usually couched in terms of an objection to the mandate, rather than to the vaccine per se -- even if the two attitudes often go hand-in-hand.</p>.<p>That vein of skepticism is particularly thick in police departments, despite the toll the virus has taken on them.</p>.<p>Covid-19 has claimed more than 260 police officers' lives this year -- five times the number shot dead, according to the Officer Down Memorial Page, which tracks deaths in the line of duty.</p>.<p>Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva said this week that just 43 per cent of his officers had been jabbed, and called on his bosses to suspend a rule that could see unvaccinated staff fired.</p>.<p>"Sadly," he said, the executive order is "actually disrupting our ability to provide public safety services."</p>.<p>In Chicago, several thousand police officers face being placed on unpaid leave after refusing to disclose their vaccine status.</p>.<p>New York City's police officers make up around half of the city employees who have applied for religious or medical exemptions.</p>.<p>No major religion has barred followers from taking a vaccine scientists say is safe and effective.</p>.<p>While hesitancy is concentrated in the more conservative-leaning professions, there is skepticism across society.</p>.<p>Caleb Macy, who helps build the antennas for NASA's Deep Space Network arrays was this week among dozens of staff demonstrating at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.</p>.<p>Like other federal employees, he faces the possibility of losing his job if he has neither a religious exemption nor full vaccination by December 8.</p>.<p>But he says that's something he is prepared for.</p>.<p>"I can assure you I will never get this vaccination. Because once you tell me that I have to... I draw the line at that point. It's no longer a choice when it's forced," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>He acknowledged, however, that he would not get what he called an "experimental" vaccine under any circumstances.</p>.<p>Holdouts are getting succor from right-wing politicians, who have declared mandates everything from "overreach" to "dictatorship."</p>.<p>Despite reams of scientific evidence about their safety and efficacy, vaccines and other anti-pandemic measures like masks continue to rile Republicans, as the latest rallying cry in the US culture wars.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/us-to-advise-boosters-to-most-americans-8-months-after-covid-19-vaccination-1020575.html" target="_blank">US to advise boosters to most Americans 8 months after Covid-19 vaccination</a></strong></p>.<p>Jeremy Boreing, founder and chief executive of right-wing outlet <em>The Daily Wire</em> said his company would not be enforcing the mandate, and would be challenging it in court.</p>.<p>"Joe Biden isn't your mom. The government isn't your mom and your employer sure as hell isn't your mom.</p>.<p>"We've already retained legal counsel and we're prepared to go to battle with this administration to put an end to their unconstitutional bullshit."</p>.<p><strong>Watch the latest DH Videos here:</strong></p>