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Tuesday, February 14, 2012
2008 file photo from an, er, unrelated campaign. (Associated Press)

For a very brief moment on Friday it looked as if the administration’s “accommodation” for the mandate for contraception coverage had taken the heat off the President during this election year.

Obama managed to preserve mandated coverage for contraception (without a co-pay), even for employees at religiously affiliated organizations, by having insurance companies directly contact female employees and provide the coverage free of charge. The outcome has pleased both women’s groups pushing for the coverage and liberal Catholic groups who had initially opposed it. Obama’s critics on the left, who attacked the President for past compromises, believed this one “satisfied all direct parties to the controversy.” Even the U.S. Conference on Bishops initially offered a lukewarm appraisal of the President’s new plan, calling it a “first step in the right direction.”

But that so-called “right direction” was quickly reconsidered as the U.S Conference of Bishops then rejected the President’s accommodation. In Sunday’s Inquirer, Charles J. Chaput, the Archbishop of Philadelphia, called the President’s plan “dangerous and insulting,” adding “no similarly aggressive attack on religious freedom in our country has occurred in recent memory.”

So too have many in the President’s political opposition re-staked their claim against any sort of birth control mandate. House Speaker John Boehner (R., Ohio) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.) both voiced immediate opposition to the accommodation, with McConnell supporting legislation introduced by Senator Roy Blount (R., Mo.) that would allow any employer to deny contraception coverage.

My sense is that the Obama administration, emboldened by the positive economic news of late that is bolstering its reelection prospects, welcomes this fight. I wonder if this whole thing wasn’t just a set-up from the very beginning?

By drawing the Republicans and the religious right into a fight, the President’s “accommodation” has accomplished three things:

First, by keeping in place a long-promised priority of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the President continues to consolidate and energize his left-leaning and liberal critics in this election year.

Second, for moderate and independent voters who supported the President in 2008, this issue is also likely a big winner. Recent polling suggests that a majority of Americans generally and Catholics specifically support the mandate.

Third, the President’s accommodation may create a wedge issue inside the GOP. In 2001, for example, Republican moderates Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins (both from Maine), co-sponsored a Federal contraception mandate. Do Republicans really believe that a culture war that women, especially, perceive as an attack on their reproductive choices will play well in an election year?

Catholicism’s opposition to contraception, abortion, and women’s control over their reproductive choices is Church teaching and no surprise here. But what I do not understand is why the Church is using inflammatory language painting the President as an anti-religious bigot. Do Catholics really believe, as Archbishop Chaput put it, that President Obama has a “deep distrust of the formative role religious faith has on personal and social conduct, and a deep distaste for religion's moral influence on public affairs”? Is the mandate, in the words of the Catholic Bishop’s Conference, really “an unprecedented threat to religious freedom”?

The Church certainly doesn’t use this kind of inflammatory language when describing Republicans, whose immigration, poverty, and social justice positions are antithetical to the tenets of Catholicism.

In 2006, on the matter of immigration reform, it was then Denver Archbishop Chaput who described the role of the Church in the very impassioned and often-volatile immigration debate:

I think that, right now, the most important thing for us to do as a church is educate our people about the principles underlying public policy and encourage them to be active in talking to their own legislators about doing something to make sure that we handle this problem in a way that respects the dignity of individuals and the common good of our country.

We would all do well to heed those words, no matter the political and moral fight we find ourselves in.


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Posted by Michael Yudell @ 5:39 PM  Permalink | File Under: Ethics | | Funding | | Health Insurance | | Michael Yudell | 12 comments
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  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:38 PM, 02/14/2012
    When did the Republicans mandate that the Church violate its own teachings? This provision was not included in the Obamacare law that was rammed through Congress when Speaker Pelosi wouldn't let anybody read it until it passed. This anti-Catholic provision would never have made it to a vote.
    Mr. Smith
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:03 PM, 02/14/2012
    First, as detailed in the article, the accommodation avoids the very problem you describe. Second, here's an actual example of the Republicans both mandating and limiting the actions of the Church in regards to Alabama's immigration law. The Archbishop of Mobile Alabama, Thomas J. Rodi, writes: "This new Alabama law makes it illegal for a Catholic priest to baptize, hear the confession of, celebrate the anointing of the sick with, or preach the word of God to, an undocumented immigrant. Nor can we encourage them to attend Mass or give them a ride to Mass. It is illegal to allow them to attend adult scripture study groups, or attend CCD or Sunday school classes. It is illegal for the clergy to counsel them in times of difficulty or in preparation for marriage. It is illegal for them to come to Alcoholic Anonymous meetings or other recovery groups at our churches." http://www.mobilearchdiocese.org/templates/readtjrarticles.cfm?Article=RodiArticle74.htm
    thepublicshealth
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:05 AM, 02/15/2012
    The Affordable Care Act, President Obama's health-care overhaul passed by Congress last year, was designed to make it easier for Americans in situations like Verone's to get health insurance BTW check "Penny ~Medical" for more information
    LeoBCrutcher
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:19 AM, 02/15/2012
    Why aren't condoms free under this mandate? Pills prevent pregnancy - which is not an illness. Condoms prevent STDs - a real health issue and illness.
    Answer: Because not even the White House and Sebelius could defend this ridiculousness if the issue was made that transparent. The "pill" sounds like medicine, "ultra-sensitive, ribbed for her pleasure 20-pack of condoms" does not.
    If this were anything but a crass political ploy, there'd be a condition that the pill be free if and only if a doctor prescribed it for true medical preventative purposes (endometriosis, etc) - not just for free birth control.
    dailydose
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:48 PM, 02/15/2012
    @thepublicshealth Your example of Republicans limiting actions of the Catholic Church was a good response to Mr. Smith, but the example also disproved your claim that “The Church certainly doesn’t use this kind of inflammatory language when describing Republicans.” Catholic leaders responded to the Alabama law saying it, “attacks our very understanding of what it means to be a Christian.” Responses also included, “The idea of punishing the clergy for doing what they are called to do… is morally reprehensible and constitutionally offensive,” and referred to HB56 as “the nation's most merciless anti-immigration legislation.” I am sure we would see Republicans painted in very unflattering terms if they supported an abortion mandate since abortion seems to create the biggest knee-jerk emotional reaction from Catholics.
    km123
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:10 PM, 02/15/2012
    @km123 Sort of. Yes, the Church has attacked the law as un-Christain and morally reprehensible. Passionate language, to be sure. But the Church and other religious opponents of the Alabama law have not attacked, as far as I can tell, the Governor with same type of personal attacks, particularly against his idea of faith, that Obama has received.
    http://ethicsdaily.com/alabama-clergy-urge-governor-to-repeal-anti-immigration-law-cms-19001
    publicshealth
  • Comment removed.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:47 AM, 02/17/2012
    @km123 - care to comment on the one-gender-sided nature of the mandate and, as a medical professional, why the mandate includes the pill but not condoms as "preventative" medicine?
    dailydose
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:34 AM, 02/17/2012
    @dailydose - Because condoms are not prohibitively expensive.
    thepublicshealth
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:54 AM, 02/17/2012
    That's it? Really? C'mon! What sort of medical justification is that for discriminating on "preventative" medicine by gender?
    dailydose
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:03 AM, 02/17/2012
    @dailydose - I think we have fundamentally different definitions of discrimination.
    thepublicshealth
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:04 PM, 02/17/2012
    Okay, but I'm not talking civil rights here. I'm talking the federal government has decided the pill is preventative medicine that should be provided to all women of child-bearing age at no cost, but at the same time is not saying that condoms are preventative medicine which should be provided to all adult men at no cost. I asked what the medical justification for the disparate treatment is, and your response was a non-sequitur that the pill is "prohibitively expensive." That is not a medical consideration, it is an economic one which, I am sorry to say, does not hold water. According to Planned Parenthood's website, the birth-control pill costs about $15 per month - and that's aside from Medicaid benefit recipients, who recieve the pill for nothing already (as you know, Medicaid copays are not enforced by DPW or enforceable by plan participants).
    dailydose


12 comments
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