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Mitch McConnell Wants Vote On Birth Control Mandate

Mitch Mcconnell Birth Control

ANNE FLAHERTY   02/12/12 11:36 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON — Conservatives said Sunday the flap surrounding President Barack Obama's birth control mandate was far from over, with Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell saying he'll push to overturn the requirement because it was another example of government meddling.

While a senior White House official shrugged off such remarks, declaring the issue resolved and new legislation unlikely, the heated rhetoric from Republicans suggested the GOP would try to keep the debate alive in an election year to rally conservatives and seize upon voter frustration with big government.

"It's riddled with constitutional problems," McConnell said of Obama's broader health-care plan. "And this is what happens when the government tries to take over health care and tries to interfere with your religious beliefs."

Last week, Obama backed down on a mandate that religious-affiliated employers such as Catholic hospitals and colleges cover birth control in their health insurance plans. In a tweak of the rule, those employees would be offered free coverage directly from their health insurer. But employers would not provide or pay for it.

The White House says the plan won't drive up costs because birth control, similar to other preventative care measures, is less expensive than pregnancy. But opponents say that unless drug makers stop charging for contraception, the cost is likely to get passed on to employers regardless.

While some Catholic groups applauded the move, including the Catholic Health Association, the nation's Catholic bishops said it continued the attack religious freedoms – a theme quickly picked up by Republicans trying to wrest control of the White House this November.

"There's no compromise here," said GOP presidential hopeful Rick Santorum, a Catholic and favorite among religious conservatives. "They are forcing religious organizations, either directly or indirectly, to pay for something that they find is a deeply, morally, you know, wrong thing. And this is not what the government should be doing."

In several televised interviews, White House chief of staff Jacob Lew defended the latest plan as the best possible compromise to provide women access to contraceptives and respect the religious freedoms of employers. Churches had always been exempt under Obama's original plan, although religious-affiliated organizations were not.

"We didn't expect to get universal support of the bishops or all Catholics," he said. "I think that what we have here is a policy that reflects bringing together two very important principles in a way that's true to the American tradition."

Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., has called Obama's revised plan an "accounting gimmick." He introduced legislation last week that would exempt any organization with moral objections from providing birth control. McConnell said he expects such a bill would be vetoed by the president but that he still wanted a vote "as soon as possible."

House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan said there were enough votes in the Republican-controlled House to pass similar legislation.

"If this is what the president's willing to do in a tough election year, imagine what he will do in implementing the rest of his health care law after an election," Ryan, R-Wis., told ABC News "This Week."

Lew shrugged off questions about Senate legislation, predicting that they would not "come to pass" and that the president planned to move ahead with implementing the current plan.

"We're going to go ahead and implement it," Lew said. "And women are going to have access (to contraception) and institutions like Catholic universities and Catholic hospitals will not be in the position that they had feared. I think that's a good resolution."

Santorum and Lew spoke on NBC's "Meet the Press." McConnell and Lew spoke on CBS "Face the Nation." Lew also spoke on Fox News Sunday, CNN's "State of the Union" and ABC News "This Week."

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WASHINGTON — Conservatives said Sunday the flap surrounding President Barack Obama's birth control mandate was far from over, with Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell saying he'll push to o...
WASHINGTON — Conservatives said Sunday the flap surrounding President Barack Obama's birth control mandate was far from over, with Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell saying he'll push to o...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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squeezed 02:01 PM on 02/13/2012
Justice Antonin Scalia, writing the majority decision in Employment Division v. Smith:
We have never held that an individual's religious beliefs excuse him from compliance with an otherwise valid law prohibiting conduct that the State is free to regulate.  Read More...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
littleblackcat
12:11 AM on 03/15/2012
To He!! with birth control!

Castrate MEN!

Keep ONLY the BEST for breeding purposes! (That will eliminate about 95% of them)

Just think about it for a minute. It will all but eliminate war. It will all but eliminate rape. It will all but eliminate pedophilia. It will cut mindless aggression by a minimum of 98%. It will cut down the number of republicans.
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annie4439
Global Warming is REAL
10:18 PM on 02/28/2012
What do you bet, almost all of these men who are soooo upset about birth control most likely have gone into a drug store and bought condoms at one time or another. Check their wallets for that little telltale circle.......... Maybe these guys should practice abstinence in their own sexual activities.
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annie4439
Global Warming is REAL
10:12 PM on 02/28/2012
The rest of the civilized world has got to be laughing uncontrollably at the idiotic, stupid and irrelevant rhetoric being used by our Republican candidates for president. Not to mention what they think of us for paying credence to it. They must think that we are so obsessed with the repression of sex that we don't care about jobs, the economy, housing etc. Maybe it's true- look at us----we spend more time worrying about Gay Marriage, keeping the words "Under
God" in our pledge of allegiance and a Woman's right to choose than we do our children's education or putting food on the table. We have to smarten up.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jimcracky
01:45 PM on 02/19/2012
Does this mean that Catholic male employees also won't be able to have vasectomies covered by their insurers? It would seem the logical next step. What about 7th Day Adventist employers? What if their employees have heart disease due to smoking and eating cheeseburgers. Will they be able to say they don't want to cover that because those behaviors violate their religious beliefs. Just where does this policy lead? Someone needs to be asking the those moronic Republicans these questions.
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ciotog17
Deploring neoconservatism since 1968
04:33 AM on 02/18/2012
OK Mitch, don't forget to bring your uterus when you come to cast your vote.
What, no uterus? Uh-oh, I guess you're gonna be that other kind of f@cked then.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Michaela19801
Dante's Inferno aka GOP
11:19 PM on 02/17/2012
Wishes and Dreams Mitch.

I wish you'd disappear.

I want a new genie in this bottle .. my wish did not come true.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jackie730
12:50 PM on 02/17/2012
Do Americans pay for McConnell's healthcare? If so, we should refuse to provide healthcare coverage to hypocrites like him who concoct schemes to deny others coverage.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patrick Garin
I am one with the walleye
08:41 PM on 02/14/2012
Hey Mitch, get with the 21st century where old white guys like you are all going to die off, and then everyone will be happy.
04:25 PM on 02/14/2012
So it's not enough that a large powerful all male group of unrepentant pedophiles is allowed to site their superstition as a justification to interfere with the healthcare of 750,00 American women who are unlucky enough to have to work for them. No. They want more! Vote these republican theocrats out of office please.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Seablue2u
I'm an idealist without illusions. JFK
10:51 AM on 02/14/2012
He should be made to physically carry and birth a baby, several times over. Shame on these 'men', and I use the term lightly, who think they can legislate our bodies.
09:58 AM on 02/14/2012
Only if women are the only ones voting.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jane Su
Proud Pro-Choice Feminist Mother
04:15 AM on 02/14/2012
ANY public OR private organization that receives taxpayer funding HAS to serve EVERYBODY. If they don't, then they shouldn't exist or receive public funding and they should lose their tax exemption. You can have your faith, but if you let your faith interfere with your job, then you're NOT fit for job positions that serve the larger society. Non religious-affiliated organizations serve EVERYBODY, EVEN religious folks. Non-religious employers PAY for religious AND non-religious pregnant employees' pre-natal care, so why shouldn't religious employers pay for their employees' birth control? Both the usage of birth control and having children ARE reproductive decisions. If I had a company, can I refuse to pay for my pregnant employees' pre-natal care? If birth control isn't covered, then WHY should any other treatment/medication used to preserve health or to prevent diseases be covered? Birth control is used to prevent unwanted pregnancies. Pregnancy can and does come with all sorts of unpleasant/uncomfortable/inconvenient/painful physically conditions as well as risks to a woman's body, health, and life. A pregnancy can also jeopardize a woman's career/school/life goals/finances. Also, some women need birth control not to prevent pregnancies alone, but also for other health reasons. There's No difference between birth control and other methods/techniques/medications used to treat or prevent any undesired physical condition/disease. Why should my employer cover diabetes medication/treatment and make the premium go up for those of us who don't have diabetes?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
l78lancer
Wisdom is the principal thing
09:01 PM on 02/13/2012
Dear GOP:

Please know that the decision of the administration indicates that women are not property or livestock. If you seriously thought this was an issue of religious freedom you would understand that it is as much or more about a woman's freedom to not have your religious beliefs imposed on them as it is your belief that the Catholic Church can run amok concerning individual rights. This should clarify that it is 2012, not 1812.

Signed,

Women,
Husbands,
Democrats,
Many Independents,
Many, Many Republicans
Hormone Replacment Therapy Patients
And their Doctors
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patrick Garin
I am one with the walleye
08:42 PM on 02/14/2012
Right on!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
l78lancer
Wisdom is the principal thing
08:49 PM on 02/13/2012
Okay bishops and GOP. Where is your moral outrage over vasectomies and the use of condoms?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
l78lancer
Wisdom is the principal thing
08:39 PM on 02/13/2012
McConnell, Ryan, Boehner and the others misogynist in the congressional GOP leadership haven't noticed that they have already lost this issue. It's finished. The majority of the country disagrees with them. And other political and governing issues have already started to drown out the echo of that discussion.

They can introduce legislation if they want, but it will not pass the senate. If they introduce legislation they will alienate republicans who favor the decision and most independent who want congress to move on to other issues.

So go ahead, shoot your best shot.