
Despite the resolution succeeding in the Senate, it is unlikely to move in the Democratic-led House and would likely be opposed by President Joe Biden. The White House had issued a veto threat against the proposal earlier Tuesday.
The final vote was 57-40, with eight Democrats joining Republicans in favor of the resolution. One GOP senator voted against the measure: Mitt Romney of Utah.
The Democrats who voted to rid of the mask mandate are: the senators from Nevada, Jacky Rosen and Catherine Cortez Masto; the senators from Arizona, Mark Kelly and Kyrsten Sinema; Michael Bennet of Colorado, Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire and Jon Tester of Montana.
Kelly, Bennet, Cortez Masto and Hassan are all up for reelection this year.
Ahead of the vote, Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia urged his colleagues not to back Paul’s resolution, arguing the federal travel mask mandate is set to expire next month and Congress should allow the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention time to come up with new guidance.
“Instead, let’s work with the CDC and see what guidance they come up with for this April 18 deadline. That would be much better for public health and much better for our economy,” Kaine said in remarks on the Senate floor.
Paul, who sits on the Senate Health Committee, has been one of the loudest and strongest GOP opponents of mask-wearing and has not often been seen by CNN wearing a mask throughout the pandemic.
“Since March 2020, unelected bureaucrats have incessantly declared that we should ‘follow the science.’ But the same bureaucrats continue to defy science by imposing an ineffective and restrictive mask mandate for individuals traveling on public transit and airplanes,” said Paul, who is also an ophthalmologist, in a recent statement on his plans to force a vote on the resolution. “As the entire world is learning to live with COVID, the federal government still uses fear mongering to stubbornly perpetuate its mandates, rather than giving clear-eyed, rational advice on how to best protect yourself from illness.”
Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi, the ranking GOP member of the Senate Commerce Committee, added on Tuesday that Republicans are making this “common-sense request of the administration on behalf of the American people.”
“When the rules of government do not comply with common sense, it offends free Americans to have to abide by some silly rule and you can expect the objections we’re hearing from the public,” he said at a news conference.
This is not the first Congressional Review Act resolution the Senate has taken up this Congress. Last year, the Senate approved a resolution to block Biden’s vaccine mandate on private employers.
CNN’s Gregory Wallace contributed to this report.