Yesterday in Austin v. U.S. Navy Seals 1-26 the Pentagon filed with the Supreme Court an Application (full text) for a stay while appeals are pending of an injunction issued by a Texas federal district court. In the case, the district court issued a preliminary injunction barring the Navy from imposing its COVID vaccine mandate on 35 Navy service members who have religious objections to the vaccines. (See prior posting.) The Pentagon sought a stay of the injunction from the 5th Circuit insofar as it precludes the Navy from considering vaccination status in making deployment, assignment, and other operational decisions. The 5th Circuit refused to grant the stay. (See prior posting.) In its Application to the Supreme Court, the Pentagon contends in part:
[E]ven if respondents’ claims had merit, respondents would not be entitled to an injunction dictating the Navy’s deployment, assignment, and operational decisions.... An injunction that trenches on core Article II prerogatives concerning which military servicemembers are qualified for which missions ... has no precedent in our Nation’s history.
The Application was filed with Justice Alito who called for appellees to respond by March 14. SCOTUSblog reports on the filing.