Supreme Court Rules on Hobby Lobby vs.
Obamacare: 5-4 decision in landmark battle over religious freedom
The
U.S. Supreme Court in a 5-4 decision Monday ruled that a “closely held”
for-profit business can opt out of Obamacare’s controversial contraception
requirement based on religious objections.
The case brought by Hobby Lobby, an
Oklahoma-based arts and crafts chain with about 13,000 employees, and Conestoga
Wood Specialties, a Pennsylvania cabinet maker, challenged the Affordable
Health Care Act requirement that employees provide free contraception coverage,
including abortion-inducing drugs.
Hobby Lobby’s argument was based on the
Religious Freedom Restoration Act, or RFRA, which protects the individual
beliefs of citizens.
The
majority opinion by Justice Samuel Alito
dismissed the Department of Health and Human Services argument that the
companies cannot sue because they are for-profit corporations and that the
owners cannot sue because the regulations apply only to the companies. Alito
said that “would leave merchants with a difficult choice: give up the right to
seek judicial protection of their religious liberty or forgo the benefits of
operating as corporations.”
The opinion said the RFRA’s text “shows that
Congress designed the statute to provide very broad protection for religious
liberty and did not intend to put merchants to such a choice.”
Alito said “the purpose of extending rights to
corporations is to protect the rights of people associated with the
corporation, including shareholders, officers, and employees.”
“Protecting the free-exercise rights of closely
held corporations thus protects the religious liberty of humans who own and
control them.”
The opinion said while the dissent argues RFRA
does not cover Conestoga, Hobby Lobby and Mardel, an affiliate company of Hobby
Lobby, because they cannot “exercise religion,” the justices “offer no
persuasive explanation for this conclusion.”
“The corporate form alone cannot explain it
because RFRA indisputable protects nonprofit corporations. And the
profit-making objective of the corporations cannot explain it because the court
has entertained the free-exercise claims of individuals who were attempting to
make a profit as retail merchants.”
The court said that “business practices
compelled or limited by the tenets of a religious doctrine fall comfortably
within the understanding of the ‘exercise of religion.’”
While the court ruling was not a sweeping First
Amendment freedom of religion ruling, it concluded: “HHS’s contraceptive
mandate substantially burdens the exercise of religion.”
“It requires the Hahns and Greens to engage in
conduct that seriously violates their sincere religious belief that life begins
at conception.”
The opinion made clear the priority of
protecting religion.
“RFRA’s question is whether the mandate imposes a
substantial burden on the objecting parties’ ability to conduct business in
accordance with their religious beliefs. … It is not for the court to
say that the religious beliefs of the plaintiffs are mistaken or unreasonable.”
Joining Alito were Chief Justice John Roberts,
whose determination two years that Obamacare was a tax saved the law, Antonin
Scalia, Anthony Kennedy and Clarence Thomas.
The opinion concluded that if the government is
demanding free abortion-inducing drugs for women, it should pay for them.
The two justices appointed by Obama, Elena Kagan
and Sonia Sotomayor, joined in the minority opinion, which argued that
“accommodations to religious beliefs or observances, the court has clarified,
must not significantly impinge on the interests of third parties.”
It said the decision would deny “legions of
women who do not hold their employers’ beliefs access to contraceptive
coverage.”
The dissent said “logistical and administrative
obstacles” for employees deprived of abortifacients required them “to take
steps to learn about, and to sign up for, a new [government funded and
administered] health benefit.”
The
question presented in the case was whether
any law, such as a nationwide health-care management system imposed by the
government, can be so important that Washington can order people to violate
their religious faith, on contradiction to the freedom guaranteed by the First
Amendment.
The religious objections to the contraception
mandate raised by the Green family, owners of Hobby Lobby, and the Hahn family,
owners of Conestoga Wood, have been raised in nearly 90 other cases.
The Greens and Hahns said their Christian faith
prevents them – under any circumstances – from enabling the deaths of unborn
babies. Obamacare requires employers to cover abortion-inducing drugs in
health-care plans for their employees on request.
The demands align with Obama’s longstanding
support for abortion under any circumstances. He even argued, while a state
senator in Illinois, against requiring doctors to provide live-saving help to
babies who survive abortions.
Government attorneys have claimed they aren’t
asking the people as individuals to violate their faith. But the family owners
insist their businesses are inseparable from their personal faith.
The issue even drew a key Obamacare supporter
into the dispute on the side of the religious families.
Former
Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., provided the
deciding vote for Obamacare, even though he had objected to the plan to have
taxpayers fund abortions.
He gave up his opposition, drawing scorn from
pro-lifers as a traitor, when Obama promised to issue an executive order
separate from the law that would respect prohibitions on federal funding of
abortion and freedom of conscience and religion.
Stupak
wrote a commentary published by USA Today to support the Green and Hahn families.
“As a private citizen,” he wrote, “I’m proud to
stand with the Green and Hahn families and their corporations, Hobby Lobby and
Conestoga Wood, in seeking to uphold our most cherished beliefs that we, as
American citizens, should not be required to relinquish our conscience and
moral convictions in order to implement the Affordable Care Act.”
He said his objection is to the Obamacare
mandate that forces businesses and their owners to cover “methods of
contraception that may cause the abortion of new embryos: new human beings.”
Stupak said that in the “battle over the ACA’s
passage, pro-life Democratic members of Congress negotiated with the president
to ensure that the act would not be employed to promote abortion.”
He “received an ironclad commitment that our
conscience would remain free and our principles would be honored,” he said.
But the authors of the Obamacare law and
subsequent regulations have fought back against the faith-based objections. The
administration has granted hundreds of exemptions to various rules and
regulations under Obamacare but steadfastly has refused to make an allowance
for faith issues.
One of the most pointed cases against the
contraception mandate was brought by the Little Sisters of the Poor, a group of
Catholic nuns who run homes for the elderly.
The nuns have argued in court documents their
faith prohibits them “from participating in the government’s program to
distribute, subsidize, and promote the use of contraceptives, sterilization, or
abortion-inducing drugs and devices.”
The government has persistently demanded that
the Little Sisters “give up” their position on abortion, a brief filed with the
10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in their case charges.
“The government has fought all the way to the
Supreme Court, and continues to fight in this court, to force the Little
Sisters to execute and deliver its mandatory contraceptive coverage form. … If
the Little Sisters refuse, the government promises to impose severe financial
penalties,” the brief notes.
The district court that ordered the Little
Sisters to sign a form authorizing a third-party promotion of abortifacients
“essentially re-writes the Little Sisters’ religious beliefs for them.”
“Standard moral reasoning underpins the Little
Sisters’ refusal to designate, authorize, incentivize, and obligate a third
party to do that which the Little Sisters may not do directly,” the brief
stated.
“And regardless of what the trial court and the
government think the Little Sisters should believe, the undisputed fact
is that they do believe their religion forbids them from signing EBSA
Form 700. It was not for the district court to disagree with the line drawn by
the Little Sisters.”
The Becket Fund has been representing Hobby
Lobby, Little Sisters of the Poor, GuideStone, Wheaton College, East Texas
Baptist University, Houston Baptist University, Colorado Christian University,
the Eternal Word Television Network, Ave Maria University and Belmont Abbey
College.
The Alliance Defending Freedom is representing a
long list of other plaintiffs.
Hobby
Lobby could face $1.3 million in daily fines for refusing to pay for abortion-inducing drugs as Obama demands.
A number of other cases challenge Obamacare on additional allegations
of unconstitutionality.
In one, attorneys for Matt Sissel – a
small-business owner who wants to pay medical expenses on his own and has
financial, philosophical and constitutional objections to being ordered to
purchase a health plan he does not need or want – charge the Obamacare bill was
unconstitutionally launched in the U.S. Senate and is therefore invalid.
They noted that the Constitution requires all tax bills in
Congress to begin in the House of Representatives. Senate Majority Leader Sen. Harry Reid,
D-Nev., they said, manipulated the legislation by taking the bill number for an
innocuous veterans housing program that had been approved by the House, pasting
it on the front of thousands of Obamacare pages and voting on it.
That means, they argued, that the entire law was
adopted unconstitutionally and should be canceled, including its $800 billion
in taxes.
The argument essentially makes the Constitution
a silver bullet to kill Obamacare. The case, brought by the Pacific Legal Foundation, is based on the Constitution’s Origination
Clause. The eventual decision by the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the D.C.
Circuit likely will be advanced to the U.S. Supreme Court.
PLF principal attorney Paul J. Beard II told WND
after a recent court hearing that government attorneys claimed the U.S. House
did not voice objections at the time of the votes to the fact the Senate had
gutted a bill, inserted Obamacare and then approved it.
But Beard said the vote took place was at a time
when no one was considering Obamacare as a tax-raising measure, because the
Obama administration was arguing that the fees, payments and penalties weren’t
taxes. In fact, it was the U.S. Supreme Court that labeled them as taxes, when
the issue was before the court the first time.
Also, the attorneys argued, the Constitution
allows the Senate to “amend” House bills, even though it requires tax measures
to “originate” in the House. So exactly what do “amend” and “originate” mean?
Beard explained that the authors of the
Constitution had different intents when they used different words, so it is
unlikely the founders’ intent was the same when they allowed “amending” but not
“originating.”
Whatever decision is reached, he told WND, it
likely will be submitted to the court again, in a request for a hearing before
the full court, and later, to the U.S. Supreme Court.
“It is our goal to get this before the Supreme
Court again,” he confirmed. The first trip to the court was a challenge to
Obama under the Commerce Clause. The Supreme Court ruled in 2012 Obamacare is a
tax – likely the biggest tax increase ever in America – also was
constitutional.
Source:http://www.wnd.com/2014/06/supreme-court-rules-in-hobby-lobby-vs-obamacare/
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