Posted on 10/11/2017 8:05:52 AM PDT by markomalley
The Trump administration published sweeping new guidelines Friday to protect religious freedom. The 26-page memo interpret[s] religious liberty protections in federal law.
Much of the memo incorporates the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. That act was passed in 1993 with almost unanimous support from both Republicans and Democrats. It was signed into law by President Bill Clinton. At the signing, he called religious freedom perhaps the most precious of all American liberties.
He Democratic successor, President Barack Obama, did not agree. His administrations most famous assault on religious freedom was the contraception mandate. Bureaucratic rules tried to force religious bodies to fund contraception through their insurance plans. But that was not the Obama administrations only assault.
The memo lists 20 principles of religious freedom. They cover several areas where government action has endangered religious freedom in recent years.
One is that religious freedom includes the right to abstain from action. This responds to Christian business owners who object to servicing same-sex weddings because doing that violates their religious beliefs. Lower courts have ruled against them. The Supreme Court has scheduled one of these cases to be decided this term. Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission involves a baker who objected to baking a cake for a same-sex wedding.
Another principle is people do not give up their religious freedom in the public sphere. They dont give it up in the marketplace or dealing with government. This likely was a response to a recent trend to confine the religion that must be protected to churches and homes.
One principle cites the SCOTUS case Trinity Lutheran Church v. Comer. It states that government may not target people or entities for special treatment based on their religion.
In Trinity, the court held that a church could not be denied a state grant because it was a church. The grant was not related to religion. It was for resurfacing preschool playground surfaces.
The twelfth principle states that RFRA does not permit the federal government to second-guess the reasonableness of a religious belief. It states that the Department of Health and Human Services may not second-guess a religious employer which refuses to provide contraception.
HHS announced the new policy on Friday. This dealt a huge blow to Obamacares contraception mandate. It built upon a previous order Trump issued in May. That order stated that organizations that object on religious grounds to Obamacare coverage for certain health services may be exempt.
The guidelines also expand upon a previous order by Trump which curtailed the Johnson Amendment. In May, Trump signed an executive order that directed the executive branch to limit its enforcement of that Act. The Johnson Amendment bars churches and tax-exempt groups from endorsing political candidates. The memo says the IRS must treat religious and secular nonprofits equally.
Most of the last few principles lay out existing legal aspects of religious freedom. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits covered employers from discriminating on the basis of religion. However, another principle notes that there is an exception for religious employers. They may choose to employ only those whose beliefs and practice are consistent with their religion.
The second half of the memo contains guidelines for agencies on how to follow the principles. The memo suggests that rulemaking agencies name an officer to review proposed rules with religious accommodation in mind. RFRA is mentioned often as a reference.
The memo ends with an appendix of legal analyses. It includes congressional acts, the Constitution and SCOTUS decisions. They back up the principles. Theyre likely there in order to preempt legal challenges.
Though the executive order falls well within the presidents power, it will not go unchallenged. Predictably, LGBT advocates claimed on Friday that the guidelines remove their federal protections. Within a few hours after the HHS guidelines on birth control came out, the ACLU filed a lawsuit.
A great step, but they should be codified into law.
The DOJ has been doing some good things lately.
(from England):
Christian Students Kept Away from Incoming Freshmen So They Would Feel Welcome
Never mind the university was founded on Christian principles and whose motto is: The Lord is my Light.
Good idea. Is Congressional approval needed to codify something into law? My impression is to codify will make a policy more permanent even after this administration.
He Democratic successor, President Barack Obama, did not agree
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(does anyone have editors anymore)
Barry Soetoro/Barack Hussein Obama is not a natural born citizen and should never have been allowed to take the oath of office.
He has complete contempt for the Constitution because it says he can’t be President.
He has contempt for us because we failed to uphold it and keep him from usurping the office.
We, the people, have an important job to do on coming election days. That is, vote out any nay sayers, and vote into Congress those who believe as do we, and are willing to act upon those beliefs.
The RFRA is already law, didn’t it say that at the start of the article? Like first year of Clinton’s term?
What President Trump is doing here is giving guidelines from which to base agency statutes and interpret existing laws.
Statues are quasi laws and the ability to create statues is assigned to specific agencies with the trinity for oversight, Executive, Congressional and finely Judicial
Protection for further Islamic intrusion and imposition of sharia law ?
Topsail
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