A key theme of the Obama administration’s 37-page response to
the Little Sisters of the Poor’s request for an injunction against the
HHS abortion-pill Mandate, boils down to this: It’s just a form. The
case
isn’t about liberty; it’s about paperwork.
Here’s
their argument in a nutshell: The law merely requires the Little
Sisters of the Poor to certify their religious objection to the
third-party administrator of their self-insurance plan. Ordinarily, this
certification would then require the third-party administrator to
provide “free” abortifacients to the Little Sisters’ employees, but
since the third-party administrator is exempt from this requirement
(because they’re administering a “church plan”) and says it won’t
provide the abortion pills, then this case is about nothing at all —
nothing but a requirement that the Little Sisters fill out a
piece of paper to get their government benefit.
Here’s the government’s brief:
Applicants cannot establish that it is indisputably clear that such a RFRA claim would succeed. Indeed, that reading of RFRA, if accepted, would seemingly invalidate any scheme in which an individual or entity with religious objections is required to complete a certification of entitlement to an opt-out in order to secure the opt-out. That cannot be correct.
But
here’s the problem: The certification is not an “opt out,” it’s a
document that actually empowers a third party to provide free abortion
pills. In that way, it’s more like a voucher than an opt-out. Imagine if
the government said to a religious employer, “We’re not going to
require you to pay for
abortions, but we will require you to provide employees with a document
that entitles them to a free abortion at the Planned Parenthood clinic
down the street.” Would anyone think for a moment that respected
religious liberty? Yet that’s the essence of the government
“accommodation” here.
The
Little Sisters object to providing an abortion/contraception voucher — a
voucher that could be redeemed for free abortifacients at the
discretion of a third-party administrator.
So,
no, this is not an argument about a form. After all, religious entities
(including the Little Sisters of the Poor) fill out forms without
objection all the time. It’s about power — whether the Obama
administration can force a Catholic charity to empower a third-party to
provide free medical services that indisputably and gravely violate the
deeply-held religious principles of nuns who are doing good works for
the “least of these.”
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