A majority of German MPs rejected a bill on Thursday that would have required all residents over the age of 60 to be vaccinated against COVID-19.
The bill, which had been pushed through by Chancellor Olaf Scholz and his health minister, Karl Lauterbach, was considered a compromise solution after lawmakers from the governing coalition and opposition parties had baulked at the idea of a vaccine mandate that would apply to all adults in the country.
However, the bill failed to receive the backing of a majority of parliament, with opposition parties arguing that a vaccine mandate was not necessary given that case numbers were going down across the country.
In total, 378 MPs voted against the mandate, while 296 supported it.
Germany has managed the pandemic reasonably well compared to some of its European neighbours, with fewer deaths per capita than Italy, France, Britain or Sweden. However, the country is still experiencing high daily rates of transmission.
Official figures show that confirmed coronavirus cases in Germany have declined in recent weeks, to a little over 200,000 new daily cases, down from about 300,000 in mid-May. There were also 328 new COVID-related deaths, according to Germany's disease control agency.
According to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, 90% of Germans over the age of 60 have been vaccinated.
In December, German MPs passed a law requiring everyone working in a hospital, as well as retirement and nursing homes staff, to get a COVID-19 vaccine. At the time, a poll showed that 68% of Germans were in favour of vaccination requirements for all adults. A more recent opinion poll showed that some 60% of Germans supported a vaccine mandate.
The government had hoped that the compromise
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