
Elizabeth Hovde of the Washington Policy Center would like the governor to remove his employment mandate on his own; if not, lawmakers need to find a way to intervene
Elizabeth Hovde
Washington Policy Center
A new study published Thursday in The Lancet finds that the immunity generated from a COVID-19 infection was found to be “at least as high, if not higher” than that provided by two doses of an mRNA vaccine, study authors write.

The finding should be giving Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee and the state’s Legislature a headache. The governor-imposed vaccine mandate on state employees has been outdated and misguided since it began terminating workers in October of 2021. It smells worse every day.
NBC News highlighted the study, writing that immunity acquired from a COVID-19 infection “provides strong, lasting protection against the most severe outcomes of the illness, according to research — protection, experts say, that’s on par with what’s provided through two doses of an mRNA vaccine.” It quotes senior study author, Dr. Christopher Murray, the director of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington, saying, “This is really good news, in the sense that protection against severe disease and death after infection is really quite sustained at 10 months.”
The governor’s vaccine mandate for state workers does not recognize the value of natural immunity. It has never been patient-centric policy.
It’s time for the state to stop punishing the unvaccinated. A vaccinated state worker who is still employed by the state can contract and spread and get sick from COVID-19, while an unvaccinated worker might not. Instead of following the science, a permanent vaccine mandate now exists for some state employees and potential new hires, and the governor continues to reiterate his commitment to the harmful policy — harmful to individuals, the state workforce and taxpayer-funded and -expected services.
Bills to end the problematic mandate or rehire employees who lost their careers because of it are being ignored by legislative leaders. Today was the last day for bills to be heard in committees and move on.
Let’s hope the governor removes his employment mandate on his own. If not, lawmakers need to find a way to intervene. Labor unions that negotiated booster bribes with the governor should also step up and represent their former employees and potential new workers.
Elizabeth Hovde is a policy analyst and the director of the Centers for Health Care and Worker Rights at the Washington Policy Center. She is a Clark County resident.
Also read:
- Letter: ‘Immigration’ resolution scheduled for this Wednesday at Clark County Council MeetingRob Anderson urges residents to closely watch an upcoming Clark County Council meeting where an immigration-related resolution and proposed rule changes are expected to be discussed.
- Opinion: The 1700-square-foot solution to Washington’s housing crisisAn opinion column arguing that Washington’s energy code has driven up housing costs and outlining how HB 2486 aims to limit those impacts for smaller, more affordable homes.
- Rep. John Ley’s new bill calls for an independent audit of Interstate 5 Bridge Replacement ProjectRep. John Ley introduced legislation requiring an independent audit of the Interstate 5 Bridge Replacement Project to review costs, management, and oversight.
- Letter: Public school visionClark County resident Larry Roe urges a deeper community discussion about public school priorities, levy funding, and the long-term affordability of education for local families.
- County Charter Review Commission sets meeting schedule, selects officersThe Clark County Charter Review Commission set a weekly meeting schedule beginning Feb. 4 and selected officers as it begins its review of the county charter.
- WA Secretary of State certifies parental rights initiativeThe Washington Secretary of State certified a parental rights initiative after verifying enough valid signatures, sending the measure to the Legislature and likely placing it on the November 2026 ballot.
- WA leaders prepare for possibility of immigration crackdownWashington’s governor and attorney general outlined preparations for a potential immigration crackdown, including possible conflicts between federal agents and state or local authorities








