The U.S. bishops criticized Vice President Joe Biden for an “inaccurate
statement of fact” about the HHS mandate’s impact on religious
institutions during last Thursday night’s vice presidential debate.
"With regard to the assault on the Catholic Church, let me make it
absolutely clear,” said Biden during the Oct. 11 debate in Danville, Ky.
“No religious institution—Catholic or otherwise, including Catholic
social services, Georgetown hospital, Mercy hospital, any hospital—none
has to either refer contraception, none has to pay for contraception,
none has to be a vehicle to get contraception in any insurance policy
they provide,” he argued. “That is a fact.”
“This is not a fact,” responded the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in an Oct. 12 statement.
The bishops’ conference criticized Biden’s remarks on the federal contraception mandate, calling them “inaccurate.”
Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan responded by saying,
“Now I have to take issue with the Catholic Church and religious
liberty. If they agree with you, then why would they (dioceses and other
Catholic institutions) keep suing you? It’s a distinction without a
difference.”
Issued under the authority of the Affordable Care Act, the
controversial mandate requires employers to offer health insurance that
covers contraception, sterilization and abortion-inducing drugs.
In recent months, more than 100 plaintiffs – including both Catholic
and non-Catholic universities, charitable organizations and private
businesses – have filed lawsuits challenging the mandate, arguing that
it infringes upon their constitutional right to free exercise of
religion.
Ryan raised the issue of the mandate during the debate while answering a
question about the Catholic faith shared by both contenders. Ryan said
that the mandate “troubles” him because it threatens religious freedom.
In responding to Biden’s claims, the bishops’ conference emphasized
that the mandate includes only a narrow exemption for religious
employers. The exemption applies only to non-profit organizations that
exist primarily for the inculcation of religious values and both employ
and serve primarily members of their own faith.
Therefore, the conference said, any religious charities, hospitals and
social agencies that serve all people of any faith – including
Georgetown Hospital and the other organizations named by Biden – are not
covered by the exemption, which was finalized in February 2012.
The bishops’ conference also underscored that while the administration
has proposed an additional “accommodation” for these non-exempt
religious organizations, the proposal “does not even potentially relieve
these organizations.”
The accommodation, which is still in its preliminary stages, offers a
series of suggestions to relieve non-religious organizations from
funding the controversial coverage if they object to it, while still
including the coverage as part of the plans.
However, critics say the suggestions all amount to an accounting
gimmick, because they would still require the objecting organizations to
pay for the coverage indirectly, through necessarily increased
premiums.
The bishops’ conference argued that under the proposed schemes
religious organizations “will have to serve as a vehicle, because they
will still be forced to provide their employees with health coverage,
and that coverage will still have to include sterilization,
contraception, and abortifacients.”
“They will have to pay for these things, because the premiums that the
organizations (and their employees) are required to pay will still be
applied, along with other funds, to cover the cost of these drugs and
surgeries,” it added.
The bishops’ conference said that it continues to ask the Obama
administration “in the strongest possible terms” to take action that
truly removes “the various infringements on religious freedom imposed by
the mandate.”