1. The
mandate does not exempt Catholic charities, schools, universities, or
hospitals. These institutions are vital to the mission of the Church,
but HHS does not deem them "religious employers" worthy of conscience
protection, because they do not "serve primarily persons who share the[ir]
religious tenets." HHS denies these organizations religious freedom
precisely because their purpose is to serve the common good of society—a
purpose that government should encourage, not punish.
2. The
mandate forces these institutions and others, against their conscience, to pay
for things they consider immoral. Under the mandate, the
government forces religious insurers to write policies that
violate their beliefs; forces religious employers and schools to
sponsor and subsidize coverage that violates their beliefs; and forces
religious employees and studentsto purchase coverage that violates their
beliefs.
3. The
mandate forces coverage of sterilization and abortion-inducing drugs and
devices as well as contraception. Though commonly called the
"contraceptive mandate," HHS's mandate also forces employers to
sponsor and subsidize coverage of sterilization. And, by including all
drugs approved by the FDA for use as contraceptives, the HHS mandate includes
drugs that can induce abortion, such as "Ella," a close cousin of the
abortion pill RU-486.
4. Catholics
of all political persuasions are unified in their opposition to the mandate. Catholics
who have long supported this Administration and its healthcare policies have
publicly criticized HHS's decision, including columnists E.J. Dionne, Mark Shields,
and Michael Sean
Winters; college presidents Father John
Jenkins and Arturo Chavez;
and Daughter of
Charity Sister Carol Keehan, president and chief executive
officer of the Catholic Health Association of the United States.
5. Many
other religious and secular people and groups have spoken out strongly against
the mandate. Many recognize this as an assault on the broader principle
of religious liberty, even if they disagree with the Church on the underlying
moral question. For example, Protestant
Christian, Orthodox Christian,
and Orthodox Jewish groups--none
of which oppose contraception--have issued statements against the
decision. TheWashington Post, USA Today, N.Y. Daily News, Detroit News, and
other secular outlets, columnists,
and bloggers have
editorialized against it.
6. The
federal mandate is much stricter than existing state mandates. HHS
chose the narrowest state-level religious exemption as the model for its
own. That exemption was drafted by the ACLU and exists in only 3 states
(New York, California, Oregon). Even without a religious exemption, religious
employers can already avoid the contraceptive mandates in 28 states by
self-insuring their prescription drug coverage, dropping that coverage
altogether, or opting for regulation under a federal law (ERISA) that pre-empts
state law. The HHS mandate closes off all these avenues of relief.
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