Oldgamer
Diamond Member
This doesn't surprise me one bit. It looks like the females on the bench came out swinging with very pointed questions and the males on the bench showed sympathy and leaning toward Hobby Lobby. Looks like again we have a very divided court and Justice Kennedy may be the swing vote.
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News Link Here
Quote: But the government has two back-up questions they want the court to answer if it does decide in favor of Hobby Lobby. The Religious Freedom Restoration Act's protections could only apply if the mandate is a "substantial religious burden” on the company itself. Both companies are only challenging a subset of contraceptives: IUD's, and emergency contraceptive pills like Ella and Plan B. Their argument? In Hobby Lobby's words, the company wants the court to agree that its "religious beliefs prohibit them from providing health coverage for contraceptive drugs and devices that end human life after conception." But the issue of whether any of those contraceptives actually do that or not is disputed by most medical authorities. The government will argue that the mandate doesn't constitute a religious burden for the companies, in part because neither corporation has to actually do anything to directly provide those contraceptives to their employees.
Pew notes that the government has one more argument up its sleeve, even if both of the above do apply, according to the court:
Finally, the government argues, the mandate advances a compelling government interest because it is part of a comprehensive reform of the nation’s health care system, and granting the companies an exemption would deprive some Americans of important benefits provided by that reform. In this case, many women would not receive free contraceptive services, thwarting an important public health goal for the government – that all women have adequate access to effective birth control. As for RFRA’s requirement that the mandate be enforced in the least restrictive way possible, the government argues that any alternative to the insurance mandate would mean upending the ACA’s health care model (which revolves around employment-based health insurance) and replacing it with something different, a highly impractical option, according to the government.
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News Link Here
Quote: But the government has two back-up questions they want the court to answer if it does decide in favor of Hobby Lobby. The Religious Freedom Restoration Act's protections could only apply if the mandate is a "substantial religious burden” on the company itself. Both companies are only challenging a subset of contraceptives: IUD's, and emergency contraceptive pills like Ella and Plan B. Their argument? In Hobby Lobby's words, the company wants the court to agree that its "religious beliefs prohibit them from providing health coverage for contraceptive drugs and devices that end human life after conception." But the issue of whether any of those contraceptives actually do that or not is disputed by most medical authorities. The government will argue that the mandate doesn't constitute a religious burden for the companies, in part because neither corporation has to actually do anything to directly provide those contraceptives to their employees.
Pew notes that the government has one more argument up its sleeve, even if both of the above do apply, according to the court:
Finally, the government argues, the mandate advances a compelling government interest because it is part of a comprehensive reform of the nation’s health care system, and granting the companies an exemption would deprive some Americans of important benefits provided by that reform. In this case, many women would not receive free contraceptive services, thwarting an important public health goal for the government – that all women have adequate access to effective birth control. As for RFRA’s requirement that the mandate be enforced in the least restrictive way possible, the government argues that any alternative to the insurance mandate would mean upending the ACA’s health care model (which revolves around employment-based health insurance) and replacing it with something different, a highly impractical option, according to the government.
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