Do The Birth Control Lawsuits Have Legal Standing? Hardly
Sahil Kapur
February 22, 2012, 6:17 AM
President Obama’s religious accommodation in his rule requiring insurance plans to cover birth control has failed to placate elements of the Catholic community, and, with strong GOP support, they remain determined to sue. But do the lawsuits, the latest of which was filed Tuesday, have much legal merit? Possibly, but if judicial precedent is any indication, probably not.
The tweaked regulation says religious non-profits like universities and hospitals do not need to pay for free birth control coverage in their employee health plans, and can pass the cost on to the insurance company. (Churches and houses of worship are entirely exempt.) But like other entities, Ave Maria University, a Catholic institution, argues in a new legal challenge that affiliating itself with any access to contraception would violate its religious beliefs.
But barring a departure from precedent, the lawsuits aren’t set to go very far.
“I don’t think they have much of a case under current precedent,” said Jessica Arons of the Center For American Progress. “Courts in New York and California have already upheld the exemption that was initially adopted by the Administration. And I think the further accommodation that the Administration has offered shows exceeding sensitivity to claims of religious liberty that are not required under the law.”
Adam Winkler, a constitutional law professor at UCLA, was more blunt. “This lawsuit is inspired by politics and nothing more,” he told TPM. “Even under the previously announced rule there was little chance of success.”
One avenue for a challenge is on First Amendment grounds. But the Supreme Court has emphatically said religious entities may not be exempted from generally applicable laws, with some exceptions that don’t apply to this issue. The second and more likely avenue to use is the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), which says federal laws may only constitute an “incidental” (as opposed to “substantial”) burden on religious practices, that those laws must by justified by a compelling government interest and be narrowly tailored to meet that interest.
Former Bush administration lawyers David Rivkin and Ed Whelan argued in the Wall Street Journal that the mandate violates RFRA.
“The refusal, for religious reasons, to provide birth-control coverage is clearly an exercise of religious freedom under the Constitution,” they wrote. “The ‘exercise of religion’ extends to performing, or refusing to perform, actions on religious grounds—and it is definitely not confined to religious institutions or acts of worship.”
Rivkin and Whelan said the mandate fails a key RFRA test in that there are ways for the government to expand cost-free access to contraception that are less burdensome to religious beliefs, such as through health centers, public clinics and groups like Planned Parenthood.
Winkler posited that the RFRA challenge may have succeeded under the original birth control rule, but is a fool’s errand under the new one.
“The crux of Ave Maria’s complaint is that they will have to pay more for health insurance because of this law,” he said. “Under that same logic, a church that believed racial mixing is bad could complain that the building contractors they hire are legally required not to discriminate. It’s nonsense.”
Sahil Kapur is a congressional reporter for TPM. He previously covered politics and public policy for numerous publications including The Guardian and The Huffington Post. He can be reached at sahil [at] talkingpointsmemo.com.
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sywht
54 pts
Rescind tax exemption for church. Every last one. Can’t imagine why people put up with their medieval crap to begin with.
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wrightwingnut
652 pts
Just another tentacle for the aryan uber-race argument. It’s all about the possibility/probability of being out numbered. Just like the “voter-fraud” non-issue, and a host of other non-issue-issues.
big_o_other
816 pts
It is nonsense, especially where they have standing at all, given that they are not going to be PAYING????
Topper01
43 pts
This is the term of your employment. I do not supply nor do I allow my insurance company to supply birth control. Now if you can not live by this agreement, you are free to go elsewhere for a job!
mj913
111 pts
Topper01 These are terms of your employment. You must be Catholic. You must be sexually straight. You must be male. You must not smoke. You must have blond hair. You must be 6 feet tall. You must not demand more than $4 per hour. You must not claim worker’s compensation if injured on the job. You must work 100 hours per week without overtime pay.
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paulgibson53
201 pts
mj913Topper01
… and, you must respect, admire, and obey me
Red XIV
179 pts
Topper01
And those “terms” are illegal.
WeatherServo9
272 pts
Franz Schubert also wrote a song about birth control called the Ave Mirena.
nitschke
165 pts
Maybe the Catholic Church should spend it’s time worrying why 98% of it’s flock don’t give a flying f*** about their “rules” regarding birth control. Seems to me if the church were doing it’s “job”, this wouldn’t be an issue, because that 98% wouldn’t be using (or have used) birth control.
Looks to me like this is more the church begging the government to do it’s “job” of keeping their parishioners in line with their antiquated and sexist beliefs. Once again, religon needing government to keep it propped up, apparently.
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Chesire
3160 pts
nitschke I actually agree with you, to a large extent. The American Hierarchy has abdicated its responsibility for faith formatin in the post Vatican II years. They have allowed the Catholic school system in this country to atrophy until it is an expensive ideal available only to academically elite students whose parents are able to afford it, rather than the birthright of every Catholic child. They have contented themselves with providing 1 hour of religious instruction n Sunday mronings after mass, delivered from glorified coloring books by parents who aren’t qualified to teach the subject at hand. Then they bemoan the fact that Catholics reject the Church’s teaching on contraception – newsflash for you, it’s not that they reject it, it’s that they have never even heard it!
neesyd767
63 pts
nitschke
Religion needing government to fill the pews. Pass the collection plate
hoconnor208
2557 pts
Wow, Mr. Pres is looking mighty handsome!!! Made my day. Now I want to hear him singing again
Topper01
43 pts
When was the last time that the Demos actually voted for a president that was not a SEX symbol?
nitschke
165 pts
You’re just jealous of how good looking AND intelligent the “Demos” are. Sorry, pal, all you can come up with are snake handling lunatics, serial adulterers, serial candidates who birth little Aqua Buddha worshippers and some clown made out of plastic who flips and flops with the wind.
Buck up, lil’ wingnut, President Obama will be around for four more years to soothe your bruised, tender little psyche.
sullivanst
2922 pts
If the crux of Ave Maria’s complaint is that they’ll pay more, their case rapidly falls apart. They won’t pay more. Plans which cover contraception cost less than those that do not.
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Eustace Tilley 2.0
4307 pts
sullivanst Heh. Crux. No pun intended, right?
Chesire
3160 pts
@Eustace Tilley 2.0 sullivanst Very nice!
Chesire
3160 pts
sullivanst Ave Maria is oftentimes mroe republican than it is Catholic.
Flying Squid
23670 pts
It’s really sad when a small minority of religious people wield this much power over a huge nation.
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ossiningaling
302 pts
Flying Squid Small minority of any people – say, billionaires?
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Marioth
185 pts
Flying Squid It cannot last. These people keep making blunder after epic blunder, still mired in the Age of Paper, and acting out of habit thinking no one is watching.
Ah, but we are!
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Barry Ragin
91 pts
“Rivkin and Whelan said the mandate fails a key RFRA test in that there are ways for the government to expand cost-free access to contraception that are less burdensome to religious beliefs, such as through health centers, public clinics and groups like Planned Parenthood.”
Ha ha. Good one.
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not2guilty
761 pts
The Catholic church has a lot of influence in the Philippines. The Philippines passed strict contraceptive laws this past decade. From a TImes magazine article yesterday:
“The country’s high unmet need for contraception means that almost half of pregnancies are unwanted and about 500,000 per year result in abortion. All too often, these procedures are unsafe. Every year, an estimated 60,000 Filipinas are injured trying to terminate a pregnancy. About 1,000 die from abortion-related complications.”
“An estimated half of all pregnancies in the U.S. are unintended according to an analysis by researchers at the Guttmacher Institute and published in the journal Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, and of those unplanned pregnancies, a further half end in abortion.
( links in the article)
http://globalspin.blogs.time.com/2012/02/21/when-a…
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litho1
37 pts
It seems the right here is making a federalist argument, in the sense that regulations they accept at the state level become particularly onerous when enforced at the federal level. Because the fact of the matter is that the ACA birth control mandates clearly resemble state level regulations church-affiliated institutions have accepted for years. However, it seems that argument can be turned around in that if the states really are the laboratory for democracy, then the acceptance of these regulations in the majority of states without ill-effect on religious institutions shows that the regulations are legitimate.
Even that, though, is probably granting too much credit to the right. Occam’s razor suggests this is a naked, hypocritical ploy to smear the president. McConnell famously said he wants the president to fail, and from the looks of it he and his co-religionists are willing to sacrifice intellectual honesty towards that end.
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DQKennard
1547 pts
litho1 Plus, now that they’ve “noticed” it, State Legislatures are attempting to roll back applicable laws at that level, to carve out broad religious and moral exemptions for employers and providers.
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HuskersLoveBo
77 pts
This is a pure and simple case of employment law. If a business entity which hires persons of different denominations can refuse to include birth control, what prevents a religious organization which sanctions racial discrimination from refusing to hire persons of all races, religions or creeds?
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brad.morrison
73 pts
HuskersLoveBo Very, very interesting. Where are the anti-union GOP operatives when you need ‘em? … and in how many cases are these “offenses” happening in “right to work” states?It’s convenient to be anti-union only when none of your issues involve how workers are treated by their employers — I mean, “job creators.”
Chesire
3160 pts
HuskersLoveBo The problem with the argument that all employers should be exempt from the HHS mandate, rather than simply churches and religious organization is taht, even if the owner of a business is a devout Catholic, his business is an essentially economic entity engaged in economic activity. Requiring it to provide contraception coverage does not, therefore, interfere with an religious mission and the business owner has no religious requirement to engage in that activity.
cognachas4paws
4329 pts
Lost in all of this is the fact that many (if not all) of these religious “institutions” already cover birth control in their health insurance plans. Why are they making all this noise then? Hmmm….
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kunda311
941 pts
cognachas4paws Because wingnuts are scared, which in itself is nothing new at all.
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mark
397 pts
republicans file lawsuits that have no chance of succeeding, back candidates they don’t really want to win, and hold “symbolic” votes in Congress that will have no effect on legislation. Do they ever do anything genuine, real, and productive?
I didn’t think so.
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Ole Scout
24 pts
@mark
Only if it leaves the knife in the back of the poor and carries legal nullification for their action.
Red Valhalla
305 pts
mark The effects of their various efforts are all too real.
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kunda311
941 pts
Red Valhallamark Yeah, like the effect where they tanked the economy, popular opinion started to turn against them for it, their approval index tanked in turn and they freaked out because people weren’t worshiping them as the Saviors of America that they think they are.
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Bwakfat
2317 pts
I’d think they would have to pay less under the law. BC is cheaper than pregnancy, or do they get out of covering pregnancy as well?
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Flying Squid
23670 pts
Bwakfat They would if they could.
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Chesire
3160 pts
@Flying Squid @Bwakfat Wrong.
nowarino
440 pts
Nino is not amused
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