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State Becomes First To BAN Vaccine Mandates
Idaho became the first state to prohibit vaccine mandates in businesses, schools, and government entities.
The Idaho Legislature passed a revised version of the “Idaho Medical Freedom Act” after Republican Gov. Brad Little vetoed the original bill.
“Beginning July 1, Idaho will enforce a new law that bars private businesses and schools from mandating medical interventions, including vaccines, medications and procedures, as a condition of employment, service or enrollment,” Becker’s Hospital Review noted.
NEW — Idaho to Become the First State to Ban Vaccine Mandates
“Idaho will soon prohibit vaccine and other medical intervention requirements for employees and students under a law set to take effect this summer.
The ban is part of legislation (SB 1210) Idaho Gov. Brad Little… pic.twitter.com/HPiFQz9tBX
— Chief Nerd (@TheChiefNerd) April 9, 2025
From Idaho Capital Sun:
Senate Bill 1210 is the Legislature’s response to a similar bill Gov. Brad Little vetoed Saturday.
The new bill still pursues a similarly broad medical mandate ban, which would bar Idaho businesses, government entities, schools and colleges from restricting entry, employment or services based on requirements for medical interventions — like vaccines, medical diagnosis or treatment.
Lawmakers spent much of Friday without taking action, as they waited for the House to attempt to amend the bill. The House amended the bill just before 2 p.m.
In the House’s debate over its new version of the bill earlier this week, critics’ main concern was that the bill would prevent workplaces from refusing service or entry to sick people.
That appears to be true under the bill.
On Friday, the House rejected an amendment attempt described as a way to shield employers from liability if sick employees who refuse to leave get injured at work.
Despite this being the third iteration of the bill the House has considered, and despite the House’s amendments earlier Friday, Rep. Todd Achilles, D-Boise, said the bill remained “deeply flawed” and it keeps the same “overly broad definition” of medical intervention.
The Idaho House passed the bill on a 44-23 vote at about 3 p.m. Friday. An hour later, the Senate passed it on a 27-6 vote.
After passing both chambers of the Idaho Legislature on Friday, the new bill — which carves out exceptions for schools to send home sick kids — now heads to the Idaho governor for final consideration.
“We want to establish a new societal norm that we alone get to make our own medical decisions without fear of being excluded from normal life. Engagement in everyday life shouldn’t be conditioned upon receiving a medical intervention. We want all Americans to be able to live free in the way that Idahoans can now,” Health Freedom Defense Fund President Leslie Manookian said.
Idaho Governor Signs Law Prohibiting Vaccine Mandates
Idaho Gov. Brad Little on Friday signed into law the Idaho Medical Freedom Act, which prohibits most medical mandates in the state.
The bill prevents businesses and Idaho local, county and state governments from… pic.twitter.com/hnr6PboF6l
— Children’s Health Defense (@ChildrensHD) April 8, 2025
“Never again will there be mandates in Idaho for masks, tests, vaccines, or vaccine cards – no ‘papers please’ in Idaho. NEVER,” Manookian added.
Never again will there be mandates in Idaho for masks, tests, vaccines, or vaccine cards – no “papers please” in Idaho. NEVER.
Who wants to follow Idaho?!?https://t.co/0QXVNU7v4y
— Leslie Manookian (@LeslieManookian) April 7, 2025
Idaho this summer will become the first state in the country to enforce a ban on vaccine mandates. MORE: https://t.co/NxVNaMpb7f pic.twitter.com/fdmLKX9VG4
— NEWSMAX (@NEWSMAX) April 9, 2025
Becker’s Hospital Review reports:
Gov. Brad Little signed the legislation, referred to as the “Idaho Medical Freedom Act,” April 4, after a last-minute push by state lawmakers to revise a similar bill he vetoed a week prior. The final version includes language referencing existing public health and school codes, which lawmakers say addresses concerns around barring schools from sending home students with contagious conditions, according to the Idaho Statesman.
The law makes Idaho the first state to explicitly prohibit vaccine mandates in both private and public sectors. However, it includes exemptions for entities that receive federal Medicare or Medicaid funds.
Critics, including Democratic lawmakers and public health experts, have raised concerns about the bill’s vague language and potential for legal challenges. It remains unclear, for example, how the law will apply to private childcare facilities, some of which currently require staff and students to be vaccinated.
Idaho leads the nation in vaccine exemptions among kindergarten students, with 14.3% having at least one exemption in the 2023 to 2024 school year, according to CDC data. Nationally, the move reflects broader trends as multiple states consider restrictions on vaccine mandates and skepticism toward certain immunization types, particularly mRNA vaccines, gains traction.