CNN  — 

Rep. Michele Bachmann continued to criticized Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s short-lived 2007 executive order requiring girls to get a vaccination for human papillomavirus, during Thursday night’s Republican presidential candidates’ debate in Orlando.

The statement: “Governor Perry mandated a health care decision on all 12-year-old little girls in the state of Texas. And by that mandate, those girls had to have a shot for a sexually transmitted disease.”

The facts:

Perry in February 2007 signed an executive order directing the state Health and Human Services commissioner to mandate human papillomavirus vaccination for all girls before admission to the sixth grade. Perry at the time released a statement saying that the vaccine “provides us with an incredible opportunity to effectively target and prevent cervical cancer,” which HPV can cause.

Texas’ rules were to take effect in September 2008. However, the Texas Legislature passed a bill overturning Perry’s order in April 2007. Perry declined to veto the bill, which went into effect in May 2007, killing his order.

The verdict:

Misleading. The executive order didn’t last long enough to produce a mandate.

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CNN’s Jason Hanna, Amy Roberts and Matt Smith contributed to this report.