Bishops, GOP candidates push back against Obama's contraception compromise

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News outlets reported on the buzz generated by President Barack Obama's announcement yesterday of a compromise on the administration's requirement that most health plans provide birth control access for free.

Politico: Bishops Call Obama's Contraception Compromise 'Unacceptable'
Hours after calling the Obama administration's contraceptives compromise a "first step," the Catholic bishops said Friday night they have "two serious objections" to the new policy and will fight its enactment. First, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops said the administration's plan still includes a "nationwide mandate of insurance coverage of sterilization and contraception, including some abortifacients."  ... while Obama's new plan allows religious-affiliated employers to refrain from paying for contraceptive coverage -; insurers would be obligated to provide the coverage for free -; the bishops said the change doesn't go far enough (Haberkorn, 2/11). 

The Washington Post: Obama Shifts Course On Birth Control Rule To Calm Catholic Leaders' Outrage
The announcement caps a frenetic month in which the administration often sent mixed signals and appeared caught off guard by the political fallout as even allies questioned its handling of the issue. ... This amends a rule announced in August and set to take effect this summer that will require employers to provide contraceptive coverage with no out-of-pocket costs as part of their health plans for workers. Churches have always been exempt from the mandate. However, Catholic and other religious leaders had complained that the rule would force church-affiliated institutions, such as schools, charities, hospitals and universities, to pay for health services that violated their beliefs (Aizenman, Wallsten and Tumulty, 2/10). 

NPR: New Contraceptive Plan: A Successful Balancing Act?
Obama says the new policy will preserve women's access to affordable birth control, no matter where they work. It's also designed to address the complaints of Catholic hospitals, universities and similar organizations. "These employers will not have to pay for or provide contraceptive services," he said, "but women who work at these institutions will have access to free contraceptive services, just like other women." The administration hopes to achieve this balancing act by having insurance companies provide the coverage directly to employees, effectively taking the Catholic charity out of the loop (Horsley, 2/11).

The New York Times: Rule Shift on Birth Control Is Concession to Obama Allies 
For the White House, the decision announced Friday ... was never really driven by a desire to mollify Roman Catholic bishops, who were strongly opposed to the plan. Rather, the fight was for Sister Carol Keehan -; head of an influential Catholic hospital group, who had supported President Obama's health care law -; and Catholic allies of the White House seen as the religious left. Sister Keehan had told the White House that the new rule, part of the health care law, went too far (Cooper and Goodstein, 2/10).

Kaiser Health News: FAQ: The Obama Administration's Compromise On Contraception Benefits
Some 28 states have mandated coverage of birth control, and 20 of those have some sort of exemption for religious employers. ... "The Catholic Health Association is very pleased with the White House announcement that a resolution has been reached that protects the religious liberty and conscience rights of Catholic institutions," the group's president, Sister Carol Keehan, said in a statement. The Catholic Health Association broke with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops two years ago to support the health law, but had opposed the Jan. 20 rule (Carey, 2/11).

Christian Science Monitor: Can Birth-Control Flap Rekindle 'Repeal ObamaCare' Crusade?
As public pressure mounted, both Catholic leaders and GOP congressional leaders called on the White House not just to revise the rules for church-affiliated groups, but to extend conscience protections to all employers. It's a move that the White House fears would open a vast escape clause in the employer mandate, gutting health-care reform. In a conference call with reporters on Friday, senior administration officials specified that this accommodation applies only to nonprofit religious organizations, like hospitals, charities, and schools – not to private employers. "The core principle [is] that women who work at these institutions – again, nurses, teachers, doctors, janitors –... be provided the same access to contraceptive services as other employees," said one official (Chaddock, 2/11). 

The Associated Press: Analysis: Obama's Course Correction Shifts Dynamic
The once formidable coalition against the president had splintered. Factions that had stood with the GOP cautiously backed Obama's midcourse correction. It was a necessary policy change that reversed the political dynamic. ... The initial policy had drawn opposition from Democrats such as Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Bob Casey of Pennsylvania and Rep. John Larson of Connecticut, all Catholic and all facing re-election this year. ... Larson praised the president for finding a "path forward to provide coverage to everyone while addressing the conscience concerns of religiously affiliated organizations." Manchin and Casey held off on a final assessment, saying they were looking at the details (Cassata, 2/11).

The Hill: CPAC Buzzes About Contraception Clash
Social issues ruled the day at the Conservative Political Action Conference, as President Obama's fight with the Catholic Church over contraception dominated the day's discussion. ... Despite his retreat on the issue, all the presidential contenders criticized him ... "We've seen the president of the United States not only tell you what insurance coverage you should have, how much you're going to pay, how much you're going to be fined if you don't, but now he's telling the Catholic Church that they are forced to pay for things that are against their basic tenets and teachings, against their First Amendment right," [Rick Santorum] said (Joseph, 2/10).


http://www.kaiserhealthnews.orgThis article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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