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Friday, February 21, 2025

Trump Executive Order Targets COVID-19 Vaccines No Longer Required for Most U.S. Students

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.”

The order went on to say that “discretionary Federal funds should not be used to directly or indirectly support or subsidize an educational service agency, State educational agency, local educational agency, elementary school, secondary school, or institution of higher education that requires students to have received a COVID-19 vaccination to attend any in-person education program.” It directs the secretary of the Department of Education to work with the secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services to devise a plan to end any mandates and deliver to the president a list of federal grants and contracts going to non-compliant institutions.

Since a White House fact sheet about Trump’s order also said, “[s]ome schools and universities have recently enforced or continue to enforce COVID-19 vaccine mandates,” we asked the White House to identify those schools and universities. We received no response.

Broadly, no states require students in kindergarten through 12th grade to get a COVID-19 vaccine, according to the National Academy for State Health Policy. NASHP has published a U.S. map that tracks state policies, and it was last updated in January 2024. It also shows that at least 21 states have banned schools from requiring COVID-19 shots for students.

The nonpartisan research organization is working on an update to its tracker. Still, a spokesperson confirmed in an email that no U.S. states currently have COVID-19 vaccine mandates for K-12 schools.

NASHP said that many states began “winding down” prior mandates after the federal COVID-19 public health emergency expired in May 2023, about three years after a pandemic was declared by the World Health Organization in March 2020.

In addition, in an interview with CBS News, which called Trump’s order “largely symbolic,” Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease physician and senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, emphasized that at the local level “zero” public school districts across the U.S. “have a [COVID-19] vaccine requirement for entry.”

In contrast, all 50 states and Washington, D.C., require students to be vaccinated against other diseases or infections, such as measles, polio, and chickenpox. All states allow exemptions for medical reasons and some for religious or personal reasons.


As for institutions of higher education, No College Mandates, an advocacy group against mandatory vaccines for students, recently identified just 15 U.S. colleges or universities that it said accept federal funding and still require at least some students to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

But even that list is outdated because it includes Morehouse College, Spelman College and Clark Atlanta University. Those three private institutions are part of the Atlanta University Center Consortium, and its policy for the 2024-2025 school year says that the COVID-19 vaccine is “strongly recommend[ed]” but “not mandated for faculty, staff, and students.” An AUC Consortium spokesperson told us that the policy went into effect in August.

Meanwhile, at a minimum, 34 states and D.C. “require some type of [other] vaccination for students who are attending college or university classes,” according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

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-- By Michael R. Thomas

© Copyright 2025 JWT Communications. All rights reserved. This article cannot be republished, rebroadcast, rewritten, or distributed in any form without written permission.


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James Thomas, Owner JWT Communications

James Thomas, Owner JWT Communications
James Thomas is a radio talk show host and civil rights activist. He can be heard every Monday morning on 94.7 FM | 106.9 FM & 1300 AM WTLS Radio (News-Sports-Talk). RADIO TALK SHOW HOST, ACTIVIST, AUTHOR James is a civil rights activist, and groundbreaking radio personality. He has built a legacy of using his voice to help oppressed people and those who are powerless against the injustices affecting them in their everyday lives. His radio program, “’TELL IT LIKE IT IS’ Talk Show”, airs every Monday morning. During his program, Mr. Thomas, also known as “JT”, talks about political and social issues, brings attention to social injustices around the world, and challenges himself and his listeners daily to “do something about it.” Because he is always taking action to help rectify the issues discussed on his show, TALKERS magazine ranked Mr. Thomas’s show in the top 50 of their 100 Most Important Radio Talk Show Hosts in America over one dozen times. He has interviewed President Barack Obama, First Lady Hillary Clinton, Congresswoman Terri Sewell, Senator Chuck Schumer, Spike Lee, and hundreds of people around the world.

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