An Illinois-based Bible publisher has secured temporary relief from
the federal contraception mandate after the Obama administration asked
an appellate court to dismiss its challenge to a preliminary injunction.
Matthew Bowman, senior legal counsel at Alliance Defending Freedom,
which is defending the publisher, told CNA that the move indicates “that
the government knows it is taking an extremist view against religious
freedom, and it is afraid to defend that in court.”
As a result of the court order, the Bible publisher will remain
protected by a temporary injunction, and will therefore be able to
conduct its business free from the demands of the federal contraception
mandate while its lawsuit against the mandate makes its way through the
court.
Alliance Defending Freedom describes its client, Tyndale House
Publishers, as “the world’s largest privately held Christian publisher
of books, Bibles, and digital media,” which directs more than 90 percent
of its profits “to religious non-profit causes worldwide.”
The company is contesting a controversial federal mandate by the
Department of Health and Human Services, which requires employers to
offer health insurance covering contraceptives, sterilizations and
abortion-inducing drugs, even if doing so violates the employer’s
deeply-held religious beliefs.
While the mandate includes a narrow exemption for some religious
organizations and an “accommodation” for certain non-profit religious
employers, it does not offer any protection for the consciences of
for-profit ventures by persons of faith, such as Tyndale.
The Bible publisher, run by Christians, does not object to normal
contraceptives but has serious moral objections to paying or providing
for any drugs that may end the life of a new human embryo, thereby
causing an early abortion.
The company is one of nearly 200 plaintiffs across the country that have
filed lawsuits challenging the mandate on the grounds of religious
freedom.
If Tyndale were to fail to comply with the regulation, it could face huge penalties.
The May 3 order from the D.C. Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals means
that a decision six months ago granting the publisher a preliminary
injunction will stand while the court case, Tyndale House Publishers v.
Sebelius, continues.
The company will be protected from complying with
the mandate in violation of its religious principles until the lawsuit
is settled.
The administration’s decision to drop the appeal is the first victory
for a preliminary injunction against the mandate on the appellate level.
Bowman stated that altogether, at all levels of the legal system, the
Obama administration has lost 19 cases challenging injunctions in court,
and has won six.
He told CNA that it seems “fairly obvious” that the administration
decided to drop the case “because they’re afraid that their
anti-religious argument will be shown to be completely absurd because
their position is that not even a Bible publisher can exercise
religion.”
“The government does not want to have to defend that position in court,
and they’re going to try to delay or hide from that position in court,”
he said in an explanation of why the Obama administration may have
dropped the appeal.
Bowman also contended that the administration’s decision to end the
appeal “undermines the government’s interest in imposing the mandate”
universally and demonstrates “that the mandate is not really about
women’s health, it’s about politics.”