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Obama’s
Epic Screw-Up
by Michael
Gerson
Feb 14,
2012
WASHINGTON
-- Before Barack Obama can defeat his opponents he must first be
rescued from
his friends.
Some of
them are now suggesting that his contraceptive mandate on religious
institutions was a skilled political stratagem. “I’ve found by
observing this
president closely for years,” argues Andrew Sullivan, “that what often
seem
like short-term tactical blunders turn out in the long run to be
strategically
shrewd. And if this was a trap, the religious right walked right into
it.”
Religious conservatives are now identified, he says, with “opposition
to
contraception.” Republicans have achieved “fusion with the Vatican.”
Obama is
evidently playing the very deep game.
Consider
the implications of this praise. It means that Obama assaulted the core
beliefs
of some of his fellow citizens in order to lure them into politically
self-destructive behavior. The president is willing to trifle with the
constitutional rights of religious people in order to get a rise out of
them.
In this scenario, Obama is a Machiavellian monster, undeserving of high
office.
But I don’t
think Sullivan’s indictment is accurate. These events have all the
hallmarks of
an epic White House screw-up. The policy resulted from an internal
debate in
which the vice president and the chief of staff took the other side.
Liberal
true believers won out. The announcement was fumbled. The White House
was
shocked by the breadth and intensity of opposition.
It is difficult
to imagine that Obama desired criticism from Democratic officeholders
and
candidates, including a former head of the Democratic National
Committee. Or a
bridge burning with Catholic bishops shortly before an election. Or a
promise
of civil disobedience from the most prominent evangelical pastor in
America,
Rick Warren.
The initial
policy was a disaster. The partial retreat was more skilled. Obama’s
goal was
not resolution but obfuscation. The contraceptive mandate was shifted
from
Catholic employers to insurance companies. Instead of being forced to
buy an
insurance product that violates their beliefs, religious institutions
will be
forced to buy an insurance product that contributes to the profits and
viability of a company that is federally mandated to violate their
beliefs.
Creative accounting, it seems, can cover a multitude of sins.
But an
indirect requirement is less aggressive and humiliating than a direct
one. This
has become just another in a series of business mandates under
Obamacare -- motivating
eventual repeal instead of civil disobedience. And religious people
could
easily respond to overreach with overreach. Some conservatives argue
that any
business -- not just religious hospitals and charities -- should be
able to
withhold contraceptive coverage because of the beliefs of its owner.
This is
probably a bridge too far in our current cultural and political
context. The
defense of religious freedom unites. Opposition to contraception
divides.
Obama has
partially defused a crisis of his own creation. But some effects of his
blunder
will linger.
First,
Obama has made clear who is part of his ideological coalition and who
is not.
Discussions on the structure and restructuring of the contraceptive
policy were
conducted between the administration and pro-choice and feminist
groups. The
people most directly affected by the mandate -- particularly the United
States
Conference of Catholic Bishops -- were not in the room. The
administration
engaged in no substantive consultation with Catholic bishops, who were
only
called to receive pronouncements. Interest group liberalism is alive
and well
in the Obama White House.
Second, the
administration has consistently adopted and applied a view of religious
liberty
so narrow it imposes almost no limits on federal action. In the
Hosanna-Tabor
Supreme Court case, the Justice Department argued that there should be
no
“ministerial exception” at all -- a contention the court dismissed as
“amazing.” The modified contraceptive mandate still presupposes that
religious
liberty only applies to institutions whose primary purpose is worship,
leaving
every other religious institution vulnerable to future regulation.
Third,
Obama has surrendered his main political appeal to religious voters
from the
last election -- his embrace of faith-based social service providers.
Any
attempt to repeat this outreach will seem absurdly disconnected from
reality.
Fourth,
with a single miscalculation, Obama has managed to unite economic and
social
conservatives in outrage against government activism and energize
religious
conservatives in a way Mitt Romney could never manage. Culture war
debates in
America are evenly divided. But the objects of culture war aggression
do not
easily forget.
If Obama is
playing a political chess game, he has just sacrificed his queen, a
rook and
all his bishops. It would have to be a deep game indeed.
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