House Speaker John Boehner announced during a floor speech today that he would take legislative action against a federal decision requiring insurance companies to cover contraception as a preventive service if the Obama administration does not reverse course.
Boehner, R-Ohio, sided with a group of religious leaders who say the federal birth control requirement is an affront to religious freedom. Talking Points Memo reports:
âIf the president does not reverse the Departmentâs attack on religious freedom, then the Congress, acting on behalf of the American people and the Constitution we are sworn to uphold and defend, must,â Boehner said. âThis attack by the federal government on religious freedom in our country cannot stand, and will not stand.â
The Speaker said the House would take matters into its own hands with committee hearings and legislative action to push back if the administration declines to act.
âIn the days ahead, the House will approach this matter fairly and deliberately, through regular order and the appropriate legislative channels,â Boehner said. He called on the Energy & Commerce Committee, which has jurisdiction over the issue, to take steps against the rule and âconsider all possible options.â
Following his announcement today Democratic Reps. Rosa DeLauro, Jan Schakowsky, Lois Capps and Gwen Moore held a conference call to publicly denounce Boehnerâs threat.
DeLauro said during the call that the federal decision is âgoing to reduce unintended pregnanciesâ and âgender discrimination in insurance policies.â She said the White House made a âprofoundly moral decisionâ in requiring contraception coverage for health insurers.
Schakowsky said that religious groups providing health care that are opposed to the decision should not be fighting the requirement. âIf they want to be part of the business world,â she said, âthey need to follow the same rules.â
âHealth care should not depend on who the boss is,â Schakowsky said.
Moore said she found it striking that âmost of the opinions we hear against this ruling are from men.â She also said that religious leaders are using their âbully pulpitâ to create a âdistortionâ on the issue of the separation of church and state.
Capps said the issue of birth control issue is not as âdivisive as some would make it out to be.â All the representatives defending the requirement noted that even in the religious community, women and men support access to birth control.