Townhall
Federal
Judge Calls Obamacare "Totally Ineffective" While Striking
Down Contraception Mandate
Conn
Carroll
Dec
17, 2013
Yesterday,
Judge Brian Cogan of the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of New York, not only struck down Obamacare's contraception
mandate as applied to religious non-profit organizations, but also
sent a strong signal that federal courts were losing patience with
President Obama's many stitches of executive power.
Previous
courts had ruled against President Obama's contraception mandate as
applied to for-profit entities (see Sebelius v Hobby Lobby), but this
was the first court to hold that participating in Obama's scheme to
provide free birth control is a substantial burden on the free
practice of religion (specifically the Catholic Archdiocese of New
York and its affiliate organizations).
The
contraception mandate "directly compels plaintiffs, through the
threat of onerous penalties, to undertake actions that their religion
forbids," Cogan wrote. "There is no way that a court can,
or should, determine that a coerced violation of conscience is of
insufficient quantum to merit constitutional protection."
Cogan
forcefully rejected three key Obama defenses of the mandate. First,
on the government's claim that there was a compelling interest in
uniform enforcement of the contraception mandate, Cogan wrote:
Tens
of millions of people are exempt from the Mandate, under exemptions
for grandfathered health plans, small businesses, and “religious
employers” like the Diocesan plaintiffs here. Millions of women
thus will not receive contraceptive coverage without cost-sharing
through the Mandate. Having granted so many exemptions already, the
Government cannot show a compelling interest in denying one to these
plaintiffs.
Second,
the court also rejected Obama's last minute claim that Obamacare's
contraception mandate, as implemented for religious organizations,
did not, in fact, mandate contraception:
Here,
the Government implicitly acknowledges that applying the Mandate to
plaintiffs may in fact do nothing at all to expand contraceptive
coverage, because plaintiffs’ TPAs aren’t actually required to do
anything after receiving the self-certification. In other words, the
Mandate forces plaintiffs to fill out a form which, though it
violates their religious beliefs, may ultimately serve no purpose
whatsoever. A law that is totally ineffective cannot serve a
compelling interest.
Finally,
the court also rejected the government's argument that Obama's
failure to convince Congress to "fix" Obamacare authorized
him to enforce his contraception mandate in the manner he did...
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