
First things has this interesting reflecion on this issue. The above graph did not appear in FIRST THINGS.
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THE CATHOLIC VOTE AND CONTRACEPTION MANDATE
Thursday, November 8, 2012, 1:35 PM
Here’s an interesting piece of data from Tuesday’s exit polls,
which Joseph Knippenberg discusses below: President Obama won the
Catholic vote. The margin was narrow–50 percent to 48 percent, which
more or less mirrors the President’s popular-vote victory–but, still, he
won. Now, you might say, this isn’t surprising. Catholics have
traditionally leaned Democratic, and President Obama’s campaign stressed
social justice concerns that resonate with Catholic teaching. One
should remember, though, that the Obama Administration imposed the
contraception mandate, and that, as Katherine Infantine writes below, Catholic bishops made the mandate a salient issue.
Requiring Catholic institutions to provide contraceptives and
abortifacients to employees, the bishops said, seriously threatens
Catholics’ religious freedom.
Apparently, the majority of Catholic voters disagreed. Or thought that the threat to religious freedom, if it existed, was not as important as other issues, like increasing taxes on wealthy Americans and leaving entitlement programs untouched. Perhaps Latino Catholics voted “ethnicity” rather than “religion.” Who knows? The point is, the majority of Catholic voters apparently did not accept the bishops’ understanding of the importance of the issue.
Leaving aside whether voters who disregard their bishops’ views on the contraception mandate are erring as Catholics–a question on which I’m not qualified to state an opinion–I wonder what implications this vote has for the future of the mandate. Legally, the lawsuits under RFRA will go forward, and I think they have a fair shot at success. But the atmosphere may have changed. It won’t show up expressly in judicial opinions, of course, but I wonder whether judges who support the mandate won’t feel more emboldened to find that the mandate doesn’t “substantially burden” Catholic institutions. And I wonder whether the Obama Administration won’t feel more comfortable taking a hard line on whatever “accommodation” they are preparing for the final regulations, due before August 2013. The courts may or may not follow the election returns, but politicians surely do.
Mark Movsesian is Director of the Center for Law and Religion at St. John’s University.
Apparently, the majority of Catholic voters disagreed. Or thought that the threat to religious freedom, if it existed, was not as important as other issues, like increasing taxes on wealthy Americans and leaving entitlement programs untouched. Perhaps Latino Catholics voted “ethnicity” rather than “religion.” Who knows? The point is, the majority of Catholic voters apparently did not accept the bishops’ understanding of the importance of the issue.
Leaving aside whether voters who disregard their bishops’ views on the contraception mandate are erring as Catholics–a question on which I’m not qualified to state an opinion–I wonder what implications this vote has for the future of the mandate. Legally, the lawsuits under RFRA will go forward, and I think they have a fair shot at success. But the atmosphere may have changed. It won’t show up expressly in judicial opinions, of course, but I wonder whether judges who support the mandate won’t feel more emboldened to find that the mandate doesn’t “substantially burden” Catholic institutions. And I wonder whether the Obama Administration won’t feel more comfortable taking a hard line on whatever “accommodation” they are preparing for the final regulations, due before August 2013. The courts may or may not follow the election returns, but politicians surely do.
Mark Movsesian is Director of the Center for Law and Religion at St. John’s University.
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