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U.S. Constitution Title: Ready for SCOTUS: Federal Appeals Court Rules Obamacare’s ‘Religious Accommodation’ Illegal Next month the Supreme Court is almost certain to announce that it will hear arguments in a new challenge to part of Obamacare, now that a federal appeals court has struck down another part of President Obamas namesake law. Although the Affordable Care Act (ACA) merely requires that employers offering insurance include preventive care in their healthcare plans, Obamas first secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Kathleen Sebelius, issued a regulation referred to as the HHS Contraceptive Mandate, which interpreted preventive care to include birth control and abortion-related services. This is the regulation that was ruled illegal as applied to religiously owned businesses in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby in 2014. Various companies wholly owned and operated by religious peoplesuch as Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., which is owned by the Green family, who are Evangelical Christianschallenged the HHS Contraceptive Mandate for violating the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), a law under which actions of the federal government that substantially burden a persons religious beliefs are illegal unless the government proves that the burden is the least restrictive means to achieve some compelling public interest. (The HHS Contraceptive Mandate would also violate the First Amendment, but one rule of judicial restraint is that a court should issue a constitutional ruling only if no lesser authority can resolve the case.) The Supreme Courts Hobby Lobby decision struck down the HHS Contraceptive Mandate for violating RFRA. Responding to strong objections from religious organizations and being advised by top national authorities that the HHS regulation would not survive a court challenge brought by a church or religious ministry, the Obama administration made two carve-outs. The first is an exemption, but that can only be claimed by an actual house of worship (like a church) on other purely religious entity that is similar to a church. The other is an accommodation for other faith-based groups, whereby they can fill out a certification form that will transfer their obligation to provide abortion-causing birth control to a third-party insurance provider. Many Christian colleges and similar entities brought suit, arguing that the accommodation still violates their conscience, knowing that signing the certification form meant that some other organization would now have a legal duty to participate in abortion-related matters. Several federal appeals courts have ruled either that the accommodation is not a substantial burden on anyones faith, or that access to birth control is a compelling national interest. (It should be noted that these three-judge appellate panels have had liberal majorities.) In this case, Sharpe Holdings, Inc. v. U.S. Dept of HHS, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit explained: Even if the ACA requires that insurance issuers and group health plans include contraceptive coverage regardless of whether CNS and HCC self-certify, it also compels CNS and HCC to act in a manner that they sincerely believe would make them complicit in a grave moral wrong as the price of avoiding a ruinous financial penalty
. Applying RFRAs strict scrutiny test, Judge Roger Leland Wollman wrote that If one sincerely believes that completing [the certification form] will result in conscience-violating consequences, what some might consider an otherwise neutral act is a burden too heavy to bear. The court also held that the ACA mandate is not the least restrictive means to accomplish HHSs objective of providing contraceptives. The St. Louis-based court further reasoned, Religious beliefs need not be acceptable, logical, consistent, or comprehensible to others to deserve protection. As a consequence, the appeals court held that the HHS Accommodation violates RFRA. The plaintiffs case was argued by Timothy Belz, a widely respected attorney in St. Louis who maintains a general practice but is also a committed Christian who regularly takes on religious-liberty cases. Sharpe Holdings now creates what is called a circuit split, which is the most common reason the Supreme Court decides to take up an issue to establish a national rule. There are currently several petitions for review (called a petition for a writ of certiorari) pending at the High Court, brought by the most accomplished Supreme Court litigator in America today, former U.S. Solicitor General Paul Clement, a partner at the law firm Bancroft. The most well known of those cases are the Little Sisters of the Poor v. Burwell, a case previously reported on by Breitbart News. The justices are expected to vote in October whether to take one or more of these cases. Now that there is a circuit split on the issue, it is almost certain that the Supreme Court will take the case for argument, likely in January or February 2016. Ken Klukowski is legal editor for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter @kenklukowski. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: cranky (#0)
(Edited)
The Supremes will take the case. The four Democrat appointees, joined by Kennedy and Roberts, will uphold the law and overrule the 8th Circuit.
The Supremes will take the case. The four Democrat appointees, joined by Kennedy and Roberts, will uphold the law and overrule the 8th Circuit. That is a reasonable bet save for Kennedy's reasoning on gay marriage (the dignity things and such). So it may only be a 5-4 decision to overrule. потому что Бог хочет это тот путь
I agree with both of you. The USSC shall favor medical socialisism as opposed to individual rights about religious freedoms. The court is sham any more.
A foregone conclusion. There are three kinds of people in the world: those that can add and those that can't
Yeah, but apparently I'm a mackerel-snapping kisser of the Devil's anus for pointing it out.
If you say so:) потому что Бог хочет это тот путь
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