The Daily Signal
Today
the Supreme Court
Protected Religious Freedom
Sarah Torre and Elizabeth
Slattery
You don’t have to agree
with Hobby Lobby or share its owners’ opposition to abortion to
recognize that the government should not be able to force Americans
to set aside their deeply held beliefs simply because they go into
business.
Thankfully, the Supreme
Court agreed and upheld the right of Americans to live and work
according to their convictions in a 5- 4 decision today.
In Burwell v. Hobby Lobby,
the justices ruled the government will not be able to force Hobby
Lobby and Conestoga Wood Specialties to provide coverage of four
drugs and devices that can end the life of a human embryo.
As Justice Samuel Alito
noted in the majority opinion today, there were plenty of other ways
for the government to provide the drugs and devices in question to
women who wanted them without forcing private family businesses to
violate their convictions.
Applying the federal
Religious Freedom Restoration Act to closely held family businesses,
the Court found that the government cannot coerce the Greens’ and
Hahns’ businesses to violate their beliefs.
As the Court noted today:
“Protecting the free-exercise rights of closely held corporations
thus protects the religious liberty of the humans who own and control
them.”
Passed by Congress in 1993
by broad, bipartisan majorities, RFRA protects Americans from
substantial burdens on religious freedom unless the government can
show it has a compelling government interest and does so in the least
restrictive way possible. That’s a high bar and one the Obama
administration failed to meet under this mandate.
Today’s decision rejects
the administration’s argument that Americans’ religious freedom
ends when they open a family business.
Having essentially exempted
the health plans of nearly 100 million individuals from this mandate
and provided a religious exemption (albeit narrow) to houses of
worship, the Obama administration was unable to show a compelling
reason for burdening the religious freedom of the Greens’ and
Hahns’ businesses.
To be clear, the decision
today applies only to the Obamacare rule that was threatening the
religious freedom of the Greens’ and Hahns’ family businesses.
Other claims for religious exemptions by closely held family
businesses from other laws will have to be litigated on a
case-by-case basis. RFRA doesn’t provide a blank check for
religious believers to do whatever they want in the name of religion
and neither does today’s decision.
With today’s ruling, the
Greens’ and Hahns’ family businesses will be able to continue
offering their employees generous healthcare plans (which cover most
forms of contraception) without fear of government penalties. And the
women who work for Hobby Lobby and Conestoga Wood remain free –
like all women – to make their own decisions about these four drugs
and devices (as well as other birth control) and to purchase or find
insurance coverage for them. But the government cannot coerce these
family businesses to participate in those decisions in violation of
their beliefs.
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