This month, President Donald Trump issued an executive order prohibiting discretionary federal funds from going to schools, colleges, or universities that require students to get a COVID-19 vaccine. However, no states currently require vaccines, and only a few colleges or universities continue to have such a mandate.
“The order is expected to have little national impact because COVID-19 vaccine mandates have mostly been dropped at schools and colleges across the United States, and many states have passed legislation forbidding such mandates,” the Associated Press reported in a story about the order that Trump signed.
Yet during the 2024 presidential campaign, Trump often promised that if elected, he would “not give one penny to any school that has a vaccine mandate.” His Feb. 14 order — titled “Keeping Education Accessible and Ending COVID-19 Vaccine Mandates in Schools” — targets COVID-19 vaccines exclusively.
“Some school districts and universities continue to coerce children and young adults into taking the COVID-19 vaccine by conditioning their education on it, and others may re-implement such mandates,” the order said. “Parents and young adults should be empowered with accurate data regarding the remote risks of serious illness associated with COVID-19 for children and young adults, as well as how those risks can be mitigated through various measures, and left free to make their own decisions accordingly.”