This Pro-Hamas Student at Princeton Shows How Weak and Soft the Left Is
A Democratic Party Megadonor Just Issued a Major Warning for Biden
Try a Little Honesty About Israel
Biden in a Pretzel Over Antisemitism and Bigotry
The Making of a Banana Republic
Americans Are Rejecting Climate Alarmism
CNN Deploys a 'Fact-Checker' for Trump, Not Biden
Joe Biden Is Selling Out Israel to the Antisemitic Mob
Moving Away From the Template of 'Oppressor vs. Oppressed'
Joe Biden Is Selling Out Israel to the Antisemitic Mob
Bowing to Hamas and Biden Demands Would Be Suicidal
Iron Clod
Believe Biden’s Actions, Not His Words on Israel
Biden's Impeachable Moment
Joe Biden's Latest Political Move Is Losing Him Democrat Votes
Tipsheet

Federal Court Rules Against Obamacare's Birth Control Mandate

Now more than ever it looks likely that the Supreme Court will take up Obamacare’s birth control mandate after a federal appeals court on Thursday ruled against it, directly contradicting an earlier federal court ruling on the issue.

Advertisement

The Hill reports:

The 8th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that four Christian nonprofits should not have to comply with the ObamaCare rule that all employer healthcare plans include contraception options or face a fee. While employers can seek exemptions to the law, the court argued that doing so poses a “substantial burden” on that organization’s religious rights. […]

The ruling includes 30 references to Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, the 2014 Supreme Court case that allowed certain for-profit companies to opt out of the mandate. Since that decision, multiple nonprofits, including universities, have taken legal action demanding to be granted the same permissions.

Under ObamaCare, employer healthcare plans are required to cover all federally approved forms of birth control. That includes, as the court notes, emergency contraception that some religious organizations believe is “functionally equivalent to abortion on demand.”

Groups can receive an exemption by writing a letter to the Health and Human Services Department or filling out a two-page form to document their objections. Houses of worships are automatically exempt from the law.

A White House spokeswoman on Thursday said the administration is "disappointed" in the decision, but believes the mandate will ultimately be upheld.

Advertisement

“With [Thursday’s] decisions, the [Supreme] Court will have great reason to decide this issue in the next term,” the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty said in a statement. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement