[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 22 (Thursday, February 9, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S489-S490]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RELIGIOUS LIBERTY
Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, there is an old political axiom that is
attributed to Thomas Jefferson, more recently to Gerald Ford, that
says: A government that is big enough to give you everything you want
is also big enough to take it all away.
Those words took on a whole new meaning this last week when we found
out the Secretary of the Health and Human Services Department, Kathleen
Sebelius, was issuing new regulations with regard to the health care
act that passed last year that would apply to religious-affiliated
universities, charities, and hospitals.
I think we have to remember exactly why it was that many of our
forefathers came to this country in the first place. They came, in many
cases, because they were trying to get away from religious persecution
in their homelands. So they came to the United States with the desire
to start anew and to assert that in this new government they formed
that they would protect freedoms, basic freedoms, such as religious
liberty.
So in the Declaration of Independence they said:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are
created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with
certain unalienable Rights, that among these are [the rights
to] Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.--[In order]
to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men,
deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.
So that was a foundational principle of our democracy, and it was
enshrined, when they wrote the Constitution, in the first amendment of
the Bill of Rights, when they said:
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. . . .
It was the very first right they enshrined in the Bill of Rights in
the Constitution of the United States. That was the weight they
attached to the important issue of religious liberty, and it was
consistent with the statement in the Declaration of Independence, where
it says that those rights are endowed by our Creator. They are not
given to us by a State. They are not given to us by government. They
are something that is endowed by our Creator. The government is here to
protect those rights.
So when this issue popped up on many people's radar screen--and, of
course, it has been percolating out there for quite a while, but there
had been an opportunity to weigh in and to provide comments, with the
hope that the Department of Health and Human Services would come to the
right conclusion and exempt religious-affiliated schools, hospitals,
and charities--when that was not going to be the case and they were
going to require these very organizations to do something that violated
their consciences and violated the teachings and the practices of their
faith, many people across this country--we have all heard from them--
got very engaged on this issue.
It seems to me, at least, there is a very simple answer to this; that
is, the administration could go back and revisit this issue and more
broadly make this exemption not just for churches--which is where it is
today--but also for church schools, church hospitals, church
universities.
It was interesting, Tuesday morning the minority leader in the
Senate, Senator McConnell, was out here talking about this issue, and
he mentioned:
One out of six patients in America is treated at a Catholic
hospital. Catholic Charities is the largest private provider
of social services to poor children, families, and
individuals in America. The Catholic Church runs the largest
network of private schools in the country.
He goes on to say:
These institutions have thrived because they have been
allowed to freely pursue their religious convictions in a
country that, until now, respected their constitutional right
to do so.
He went on to say in that statement:
If the rights of some are not protected, the rights of all
are in danger.
I think what has many of the churches across this country and many of
the
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universities and many of the hospitals concerned about is that this is
going to become a finalized regulation.
The proponents of the regulation are saying there is a year to comply
with it. I would submit to you that asking people in this country to
check their principles at the door not now but a year from now is not
making any kind of an accommodation.
This needs to be reversed. This is clearly a violation of religious
liberty, the protection and right we have in the first amendment of our
Constitution in our Bill of Rights, and I hope the administration will
do the right thing and acknowledge that they have made a mistake, that
they have gone too far, that they have overreached, that they have
treaded in an area they should not tread and make this right. The way
to make this right is to reverse this decision.
Some have argued: What is that going to mean? Does that mean people
in this country are not going to have access to contraceptive services?
The answer to that is absolutely not. Contraception would be widely
available. It is just that religious-affiliated employers would not be
forced to fund this coverage which violates the tenants of their faith.
It does not have anything to do with contraception. It does not have
anything to do with that issue at all. What it has to do with is the
issue of religious liberty and whether we are going to respect that or
are we going to allow that to be eroded, and who knows where this goes
next.
The other point I would make is, this is also, I think, an example of
what happens when you get a government that is so big it can give you
everything you want but also big enough to take it all away. There are
a lot of people who, when this was debated, when the affordable care
act was debated, argued--myself included--this would lead to government
running more of our lives, making more decisions, intruding more,
having more control, and making decisions with regard to people's
health care.
I would submit this is an example--and perhaps example No. 1--of that
very fact. What we are seeing now is, the affordable care act--as it
gets implemented, we are giving more and more power to the Federal
Government, and when we do that, when big government gets bigger and
bigger, it has more latitude when it comes to running over the rights
of ordinary Americans. This is a perfect example of that.
I could go down the list of other regulations. I have come down to
the floor many times to talk about regulatory overreach, excessive
regulations that go way beyond common sense, that do not deal with
issues of public health and safety but are simply regulations for
regulation's sake.
People have heard me come down and talk about the Department of
Labor's efforts now to regulate the young people who work on family
farms and ranches and the overly proscriptive way in which they are
trying to keep young people from performing duties they learned growing
up that they are trained to do, that contribute to the overall success
and prosperity of family farms and ranches.
The Department of Labor's proposal right now would restrict young
people from working at elevations that are more than 6 feet, from
working with farm animals that are more than 6 months old, from working
around grain elevators or stockyards or operating certain kinds of
equipment, many pieces of equipment, types of equipment that are fairly
standard on a farming operation. It strikes at the very heart of what
makes a family farm and ranch operation tick. It is an assault on the
heartland of this country and the culture and values that have helped
shape it and make it great.
So this issue of regulatory overreach and big government is an issue
that I think is symbolized by this current debate. What we are having
is a debate about the reach of government to where they can start
coming up with regulations under the new health care law that clearly
violate the religious liberty protections that are afforded for people
in this country under the first amendment and which I think our
Founders, if they were around today, would find incredibly offensive.
This is an affront, an assault on these very liberties. It is an
assault on our Bill of Rights, our Constitution. It is something the
administration should walk back from and make right. They can do that
very simply by reversing this or widening or broadening this exemption
to cover religious-affiliated schools, universities and charities. And
they could do that right now.
I would hope that would be the case. If it is not, there is
legislation that has been proposed here. A number of my colleagues have
already filed bills. In fact, Senator Blunt was down here earlier today
and asked to call up an amendment that would address this issue. It was
objected to on the grounds that it is not related to the underlying
bill, the highway bill. Well, if it is not related to the highway bill,
then let's provide an opportunity for Congress to weigh in on this. I
can tell you one thing, the American people are weighing in on this.
This Congress of the United States, as their representatives, needs to
stand for the American people and, more importantly, needs to defend
the Constitution of the United States. If the administration is going
to take this step, and if the administration is not going to walk back
from this, this Congress of the United States needs to be heard.
There will be numerous attempts until that opportunity is presented
by my colleagues and me to make sure this wrong is fixed, is corrected,
and that the religious liberties for which our Founders came to this
country and for which so many have fought and died over the years to
defend are protected, and those rights that are enshrined in our
Declaration of Independence and our Constitution and our Bill of Rights
are protected for the American people.
I yield the floor.
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