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  • The Impact of Roberts’ Decision and the Catholic Vote

    by Rev. Michael P. Orsi

    roberts

     The recent Supreme Court ruling on ObamaCare (Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act) which upheld the individual mandate as constitutional portends grave danger for those religious organizations now suing the federal government for infringing on their religious liberty.  These groups rightly contend that the government has no right to decide who is religious enough to be exempt from government mandates.  The department of Health and Human Services (HHS) requirement to provide free contraception and insurance coverage would force church related organizations to violate church doctrine.

    Although the recent Supreme Court decision National Federation of Independent Business et al. v. Sebelius Secretary of Health and Human Services, et al. does not settle the religious liberty exemption demanded by the Churches, it does however, open the door for the Supreme Court to redefine what constitutes a church organization.

    Here is why.

    When Chief Justice John A. Roberts wrote the opinion for the majority, he basically rewrote a piece of Congressional legislation in order to get the result he wanted by calling the mandate a tax instead of a penalty which is what Congress approved.

    Why did he do this?

    For the past seven years Roberts had been viewed as a conservative Justice.  However, a conservative read of the law requires an originalist interpretation of the Constitution and acts of Congress.  In other words, a judge reads what is written in the text and then adjudicates upon it. This philosophy is clearly evidenced in the Minority Dissent.  Roberts is a purposivist.  He believes that courts should read statutes in context in order to fulfill the legislative purpose.  By changing the stated penalty into a tax, which he rightly contends is the prerogative of Congress, he used judicial license to foster what he deemed to be the purpose of Congress in passing the bill.  It is important to emphasize that neither the President, the Congress, nor the lower Courts ever recognized this as a tax.

    This being the case, a red flag should go up for those organizations seeking a religious exemption from the HHS mandate.  Robert’s purposivist philosophy would permit a redefinition of a religious institution, as the HHS mandate demands, in order to provide the universal healthcare envisioned by the legislation.  The fact that Congress has for some time been acting as though the Supreme Court is the supreme branch of government, always having the last word and against whose judgments the elective branches have no appeal, portends grave danger for religious liberty and for democracy itself.  As Abraham Lincoln said in his First Inaugural Address:

    [I]f the policy of the Government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court…the people will have ceased to be their own rulers, having to that extent practically resigned their Government into the hands of that eminent tribunal.

    There are, of course, parallels in Roe v. Wade (1973) where the Court held that abortion was permitted as a private right in the penumbras and emanations of the Fourteenth Amendment.  Here, in this decision Justice Harry Blackman imagined something obviously not there. The Roberts decision is even worse because he brazenly rewrote the law to make it constitutional.

    Some may take succor in the Hosanna – Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (2011) decision where in an employment case the Court unanimously refused to interfere with the right of a Church to designate who it considers to be a minister. Yet, this ruling is very narrow.  It fits the parameters of the present HHS exemption offered for the inter-ecclesial operations only.  In no way does it deal with Church affiliated organizations or their rights which HHS claims deserve a lesser degree of protection.  It must also be recalled that in Employment Division Department of Human Services v. Smith (1990), the Court upheld Oregon’s prohibition of the use of peyote for religious services based on the belief that the First Amendment does not mandate that religious exemptions be made to generally applicable law.  This understanding is evidenced in a recent Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) survey which found that Catholics, like most Americans, believe that most employers should be required to provide employees with health care plans that cover contraception at no cost.

    The Robert’s decision leaves the door open for further judicial activism which may endanger our religious liberty.   Furthermore, the PRRI survey reports that 57% of Catholics do not believe that religious liberty is being threatened.  Recall, that 54% of Catholics voted for Obama in the 2008 election.  Church leaders have until this coming November to make their case with their congregants and the American people.  A failure to elect a new Congress and a new President, in order to overturn ObamaCare, will surely curtail Church activity to the sacristy.

    The views expressed by the authors and editorial staff are not necessarily the views of
    Sophia Institute, Holy Spirit College, or the Thomas More College of Liberal Arts.

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    • Pingback: The Impact of Roberts’ Decision and the Catholic Vote | Catholic Canada

    • http://www.facebook.com/people/Carol-Leeda-Crawford/631144224 Carol Leeda Crawford

      Remember Obama pretended to be a Christian before the 2008 election.  Now, he is focusing on the far left vote for the 2012 election.  Sadly, many Christians will choose not to vote then oppose a man who clearly goes against God’s moral law.  Christians who vote for Obama in 2012 are going against God’s moral law.  This is not what Jesus meant when he said give to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s and to God the things that are God’s.  We owe  ALL our  moral allegiance to God first.

    • Slats Grobnik

      Yes, lawlessness in those with responsibilities is a terrible thing.  For instance, if a religious official were to help someone cover up a crime like viewing child pornography on their computer with the  purpose  of furthering the work of the church, we’d all agree this would be wrong.  Or if a Catholic educational institution were to treat its employees unjustly, lying, bullying, making up allegations against them – in order to further the purpose of the donor to the institution, we’d all condemn them.   Thank you for calling our attention to the evils of those who believe the ends justify the means in such manner. 

    • JP

      Sadly, 95% of the voters do not follow, nor do they understand the Supreme Court or Constitutional Law. Suprisingly few writers realize another problem with the Roberts decision. And that has to do with due process as it pertained to the Anti-Injunction Act.

      Simply put, if the IM was a tax, it was up to the Court early on to rule as such. The Anti-Injunction Act forbides litigation over tax bills until the taxes are in fact collected. Alito asked the Solicitor General explicitly if the IM was a tax for this very reason. If the IM was a tax then the High Court would be forced to dismiss the case. Instead, everyone (including Roberts) acted on the assumption that the IM was a penalty to be collected under Congress’s Interstate Commerce powers. For Robert’s to say later that the IM is in fact a tax destroys the idea of Due Process. Judges cannot change the rules mid-way in order to get the verdict they wish. Robert’s opinion illustrates one of the more famous quotes from Alice in Wonderland – Verdict first, trial later.

      • Brian English

        Roberts explains in the opinion why the Obamacare tax was not a tax for purposes of the Anti-Injunction Act. 

        I also don’t understand how this could be a due process violation.  Whose due process rights were violated?

        • JP

          I think you totally miss the point of the case. Niether trial judges nor Supreme Court justices are allowed, or were allowed  to change the rules and processes of a case in order to concoct a desirable outcome. For doing so runs against the idea of Due Process of Law. Robert’s opinion not caused a bitter dissent, but caught almost all law legals off-guard. Roberts, in effect, threw due process out. The states bringing the suit (not to mention everyone in the US) were the victims. Roberts’ reasoning essientially said Congress didn’t know what it was doing.  Roberts explicitly changed not only the meaning of the law, but also the wording, inserting his own word (tax) for Congress’s word “penalty”.

          Roberts rewrote a law, which he has no constitutional authority to do so. It matters not what reasoning Roberts used, for he lacked the powers to re-write laws (BTW, his opinion was so poorly written that the concurring justices opinions read like dissents). He set a precedent of judicial misconduct that Earl Warren would be proud of.

          • Brian English

            The judicial restraint approach Roberts used is not something he just made up.  It goes back over 100 years to Justice Harlan (and in theory well before that).  It basically states that if there is any way to read a statute to uphold its constitutionality, the Court should adopt such a reading.  I think Roberts overreached to uphold the constitutionality, but the attempt by some to present him as a rogue justice is completely unfair.

            • JP

              Rewriting is not re-reading. Roberts effectively changed the law in order to find it constitutional. And we’re not talking about a law or amendment passed 150 years ago, but 2 years ago. Every single lawmaker who wrote or voted for the law was available for deposition; the minutes to their deliberations are available. As a matter of fact, one of the Justices (Kagan) was counsel for the President when the law was being debated. How does Roberts opinion take precedence over those in Congress? Go back and re-read the Articles of the Constitution. Niether Roberts nor any Justice has the power or authority to change the wording of any law passed by Congress. That is not judicial restraint.

              If Roberts wishes to write laws he is in the wrong branch of government. What he did goes beyond the pale. And now, for the first time in the history of the courts, we have the precedent of the SCOTUS re-writing laws. This is even worse than Griswold (in which the Court invented new rights out of thin air). In this case, Roberts actually changed the text and wording of the law. This is judicial abuse of the 1st degree.

              • Brian English

                You do not depose lawmakers about the meaning of a law.  You can look at legislative history, and the legislative history here would have lead me to join the dissent if I was on the Court, but there can be reasonable disagreement on that.

                And saying this was worse than Griswold is just silly.  In fact, Roberts simply labeled as a tax what everyone knows was in fact intended to be a tax.  Obama, Pelosi and Company were afraid to call it that because the law would never have been passed.

                • Micha_Elyi

                  I disagree. If “everyone knows” what was named a “penalty” was really a “tax” then count me out  (and the US Solicitor General) as part of “everyone.”

                  Plus, what happened to the principle that legislators are professional lawmakers who know what they are doing?  If they did not write “tax” then they did not mean “tax.”  (Duh.)

                  The judicial principle of interpretation mentioned in the article is not a principle of “the justices know what the legislators really meant.”  But if Justice Roberts wants to claim taxes are penalties (i.e., punishments) then a whole lot of the Constitution must be re-written (more work for judges and the Supremos, eh?).

                  And finally, what kind of tax is this?  It’s not a tax on incomes for the lack of something isn’t income.  Nor is it an excise tax or duty, such taxes are applied to things not the lack of something.  So, even if Roberts can construe this penalty as a tax, how is this a tax the Congress has a power under the Constitution to levy?

    • Clement_W

      Dear Fr. Orsi:

      Chief Justice Roberts has done is to expose the LIE that the ObamaCare Law is NOT a TAX. And, by his including in his opinion that it is not the place of the Supreme Court to nullify a Law passed by majorities of OUR ELECTED REPRESENTATIVES who, by our own free will, WE Elected. He has very rightly pointed out that ONLY WE have the means to right the wrong that has been perpetrated on our right to free exercise our right to pratcise our religious beliefs. The U.S. constitution gives each of us, individual citizens, to elect our representatives who will nullify the law that is so objectionable to us.

      I am sure you are aware of what The LORD himself warned us about in 1 Samuel Chapter 8. It applies equally to the Kings of Israel, the Kings throughout history and NOW to the Presidents of TODAY!

      • Columbiad

        Spoken ike a true moron!

      • Brian English

        Exactly.  Roberts demonstrated judicial restraint, not judicial activism, in his opinion.  It is our job to get rid of the President and Congress that gave us Obamacare.

        • http://intensedebate.com/people/The_John_Galt John Galt

          And get rid of Judas Roberts!  That is what tar & feathers are for!

    • Immaculatavictory

      JP. What can be done? If your correct can any action be taken?

      • Brian English

        Get everyone you know to vote against Obama in November.

    • Litong2001

      Thanks, Fr Orsi, for this enlightening post.  What do we do next?

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=522875025 Margaret Schaut

      Unfortunately the only alternative offered by the parties, Romney, implemented Romney care in MA, and while that one was not subject to the Supreme Court or the Constitution, the path is already laid out before us, and we have no other options beside throwing out the entire party system and the power-brokers behind it, for the purpose of restoring the Constitution, Bill of Rights and our Independence.  I can’t see any other way out, because nothing was SOLVED in the Supreme Court ‘decision’ and nothing was solved of this issue under Romney. 

    • http://twitter.com/Zebedee222 Steven Paul

      The GOP nominated someone who implemented the exact same healthcare law in Massachusetts. And under his watch tried to force Catholic Charities to place orphans with gay parents, effectively putting them out of business. And he single handedly implemented gay marriage without any court order to do so. He will be worse rather than better than Obama because all the legislation Catholics would hope for will be suppressed by a GOP president who doesn’t want them.

      read http://massresistance.org/romney/

      • Brian English

        “The GOP nominated someone who implemented the exact same healthcare law in Massachusetts.”

        But implementing such a law at the state level is fundamentally different than imposing such a law at the national level.  Romney has stated he would repeal Obamacare on day one, so if the GOP controls Congress and Romney fails to follow through, he will be a one-term President.

        “And under his watch tried to force Catholic Charities to place orphans with gay parents, effectively putting them out of business.”

        That is not true.  Romney was willing to sign an exemption for Catholic Charities, but the Massachusetts Legislature refused to pass one.

        “And he single handedly implemented gay marriage without any court order to do so.”

        Also not true.  Gay marriage was instituted by the Massachusetts Supreme Court.

      • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_VX3CE2QFVJFGBGPGZSEAYLUQRI justyntoo

        he says he has learned his lesson , we now hold him to it  . obama is unrepentant , we hold him to that .

    • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_EC5JLQOS73ZQ3L4FUNBYKW455A Juan Oskar

      What does it say for the leadership of the American Church that 54% of Catholics would vote for such an anti-christ president?

      • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_VX3CE2QFVJFGBGPGZSEAYLUQRI justyntoo

        fool me once shame on you , fool me twice , shame on me

      • Micha_Elyi

        What does it say?  Nothing good.

        But all those 1960s, ’70s and ’80s shenanigans – remember the nuclear freeze? – were so much more fun than preaching truths such as thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s goods, nor engage in adultery, etc.  Who had time to guard the seminaries in their diocese against becoming homosexual playgrounds?  All that orthodoxy stuff is soooo tiring!  Were it up to the USCCB staff, the atheist Soviet Empire would still be in existence.

    • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_VX3CE2QFVJFGBGPGZSEAYLUQRI justyntoo

      what seems to me to be the obvious is that , roberts called a tax a tax . if congrss passed this law under a lie then is it not neccesary for congress to re-pas a law as it is truely ? if this law is based on a tax statuet then is it not supposed to be equal for all  ? which asks the question – why do whole states get exemplt , thereby taxing other citizens doubly solely on their geographic location – arbritrary and divisive ? also , are  not religious recognised by the irs , exempt from tax ? many questions , no answers . i think we can set the tone for this , and i think roberts did us a service .

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/The_John_Galt John Galt

        NO!  Roberts could have struck down the law AND declared it a tax at the same time!  What about the taxpaying citizen?  WE needed the protection too just as much as the Church!  I say again, NO!  Roberts did not do us a service and he is nothing more then a Judas!

    • Keithf

      I don’t agree with your analysis.  The approach is too narrow though it is true to a point.  I believe it is a tax – the IRS was commissioned to enforce the collection – that is what they do.  He denied the use of the commerce clause setting a precedent which will benefit all of us in the future.  I believe that put the responsibility right back on the citizen to vote the authors right out of office.  He didn’t re-write the act.  From his opinion:  “Members of this Court are vested with the authority to interpret the
      law; we possess neither the expertise nor the prerogative to make policy
      judgments. Those decisions are entrusted to our Nation’s elected
      leaders, who can be thrown out of office if the people disagree with
      them. It is not our job to protect the people from the consequences of their political choices.”      

      • Juergensen

        “He denied the use of the commerce clause setting a precedent which will benefit all of us in the future”

        ============

        Actually, what Roberts did expanded government powers more so than had he ruled the mandate was allowed under the commerce clause – which is more restrictive than the power to tax.

        In ruling that the government, through its taxing power, can mandate behavior where there was no behavior, Roberts and his majority gave the government the power to mandate any and all behavior: the purchase of green cars or pay a $1,000 annual tax; the purchase of contraceptives for the home or pay a $500 annual tax; the purchase of broccoli for lunch or pay a $50 tax; etc.

        Logically and legally, if the government can mandate individuals to purchase health insurance under the guise of its taxing powers, there is no behavior the government cannot mandate (or proscribe) under its taxing powers.

        • Brian English

          Actually, the government has always had broad taxing powers.  However, since taxes are as popular as the plague, they are very difficult to get enacted.  Why do you think supporters of Obamacare avoided calling the mandate a tax while the legislation was in Congress?  It never would have passed if it had been called a tax from the outset.

    • Juergensen

      “Recall, that 54% of Catholics voted for Obama in the 2008 election”

      And further recall that EWTN News Chief Raymond Arroyo stated after the 2008 election: “The bishops I spoke to say that maybe half of their brother bishops, if not more, voted for Obama.”

      Which is why it is so hard to believe that the bishops are really, really so upset with Obama. After all, if Mr. Arroyo is right, the bishops essentially put Obama in office.

      • Humble_Genius

         How in the world would one Bishop know how another Bishop voted?  Do you think they all get together and say how they voted?  Do they post their votes online somewhere?  This is just pure speculation. 

        • Juergensen

          First, why would bishops not talk to each other about who they support? This is not a matter covered by the seal of the confessional.

          Second, it is a mater of record that 52% of “Catholics” voted for Obama. If 95% of the shepherds had been against Obama, 52% of the sheep would not have been for him. It’s like Humanae Vitae: the bishops have not taught it, so the sheep do not adhere to it.

        • JP

          You don’t think the Bishops write, email, call eachother, go out to dinner with each other, meet at conferences, etc…?

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/The_John_Galt John Galt

        They (the Bishops) sure did put him in office!  The Bishops, both individually and as a group, have supported the Democrat and Socialist in the United States for over 80 years!  This is MORE of a scandal then the homosexual scandal!

        We need Bishops that will publicly fight against the Democrat and Socialist!  You must pick good or evil, there is no in between!

    • Alecto

      If we rely on earthly courts for justice we shall surely be disappointed.  If we expect them to protect our liberty, we wait in vain.  Unless we are willing to defend our rights, who will?  I read too many Catholic essays, articles and blogs essentially conceding to some notion of defeat.  “Oh, oh, poor us!  We’re being persecuted!  Who will save us?”  Forgive me for writing that I never realized Catholics are cowards. 

      We ought to be scaring the doo doo out of our opponents.  I remember a couple of famous posters from the the 80s;  one was Ronald Reagan’s comically serious “…the U.S. Congress has outlawed Communism.  We begin bombing in 5 minutes.”   Hilarious, and yet the Soviets thought Reagan was dead serious!  Or, for the fan of the obscure, Ernie’s Pook Comeek famed “Poodle with a Mohawk”.  Last line, “They’ll never call him Fifi again!”  Guess what?  Catholics  are poodles!  Big, fluffy poodles!  They need a proverbial spike collar and a mohawk.

      Why does no one fear opposing and taking on the Catholic church?  Could it be the USCCB has emasculated itself to the point no one, not even Catholics take it seriously any more?  When was the last time the USCCB fought for any important Catholic doctrine?  And no, the idiots who sent Rep. Ryan a nasty letter about budget cuts doesn’t count!  You only get one chance to slay your enemy in the war of rhetoric.  We lost.  St. Michael is ashamed.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/The_John_Galt John Galt

        Good post, I agree.  Catholics in general and the USCCB more specifically have been dancing with the devil; i.e. supporting Democrats, Socialists, Communists and Progressives, for over 80 years!  And now we wake up (just a little) and wonder what has happened?  You are correct, we will have to defend our Church and our selves, even with the use of arms.

      • bobbylang

        Alecto:
               I am in agreement!
               “WE” the laity must move forward and challenge these assaults, but it’s doubly difficult when the “USCCB”, is such a bunch of dithering idiots!
               They can’t even get together on a religious message, let alone one, that at least will free the laity to aggression!
               I’m NOT too settled on the “MEEK” message, I more agree with the “In your Damned face” message you seem to subscribe to!   

    • deeme

      I seriously do not know how anyone can be a Catholic and say that is one issue , about things as serious as abortion, they have looked the other way so long that now it is coming back to bite us all..If you don’t know when life begins you don’t know anything..Obama was the ONLY senator to vote against saving a baby born alive, from a botched abortion , if that didn’t tell you what he was about then you should not even be voting. Lukewarm souls will be spit out in the book of revelations..Wake Up America before it is too late!!

    • Jsaff

      I wonder though if construing the “penalty” as a “tax” Roberts did not erect a firewall of sorts around religious institutions? If the new legislation passes muster as a tax and religous institutions are corporate tax exempt (501c3 typically), wouldn’t it seem to follow that the “tax” is not applicable to religious organizations? The mandate for religious institutions and other non-profit outfits becomes a moot point, does it not? This would seem to explain Obama’s rancor over the ruling despite his apparent victory. The distinction is of monumental importance.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/The_John_Galt John Galt

        NO!  Roberts could have struck down the law AND declared it a tax at the same time!  What about the taxpaying citizen?  WE needed the protection too just as much as the Church!  I say again, NO!  Roberts is nothing more then a Judas!

    • TtT Engine

      A wise man told me 40 years ago, the Catholic Church will rue the day they put their collective hands out and accepted the 30 pieces of silver from government. Your collective skeletons and chickens are all coming home to roost as we suffer and lament the evil at our Catholic doorsteps. 54% of Catholics voted for Ob, the PPP [planned parenthood president]. This is a moral disgrace beyond comprehension. You pathetic, spineless Judases voted for skin color over principle. MLK, jr. stated, if you did not know this already, “judge a person by the content of their character and not the color of their skin”. In addition to being the PPP, Ob was completely unvetted and cannot even pass a low grade security clearance. You affirmative active Catholics betrayed our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. How many of the CCB not only voted for the PPP, but sat down and believed the PPP’s lie that Catholics would receive religious exemption from the HHS Mandate. You Judas Catholics [including the scribes and pharises, most of the CCB] have spent the last 40 years voting “left” for the likes of Ted Ken Eddie [the father of abortion], John Kerry, Joe Biden and Nancy Pelosi et. als., drinking the leftist Kool-Aid that the sanctity of marriage, family and life was “only one issue among many”. Now on the eve of Catholics walking the plank into the “Red Sea” of blood, you call out for a drop of water on your burning tongues and ask US to take action ? God helps those that help themselves. Christ tried to the very end to save Judas, but Judas was determined to choose evil. Pray the Rosary like it is food and drink. Perform MASSIVE acts of reparation and beg for God’s Mercy. Knock down your golden calf named 501(c)(3). Beg for God’s Mercy ! We are going to need it, BIG TIME ! Christi Fidelis !! Post/Print the Truth. Do Not censor !

      • Micha_Elyi

        I so relieved to learn from you TtT Engine, that not one Protestant Christian, pagan, atheist, agnostic, nor Muslim voted for Obama.  It’s all the fault of those insidious Roman Catholics whose political allegiance is to a foreign potentate, not to America.

        Thanks for settig me straight. (Heh.)

    • bobbylang

      Father Orsi has written a very incisive review of the “Robert’s” decision!
             As I read it, it is NOT a good one for Catholics!
      The fact that Catholics voted more in favor of Obama is a scary statistic, but the “jist” of Father Orsi’s piece, is that recent Supreme Court decisions seem to be removing steadily the sanctity of a true religion as they have been known, at least Constitutionally!
            This is going to be a desperately critical election for president this year, and if Catholics are still not cognizant of the secular threat of “Obama” and his assault on Constitutional America, than I fear for American Catholicism in general!
            Obama’s re-election will devastate the Supreme Court!
             Father Orsi seems to feel that there should be a more convincing and compelling message from local pulpits, BUT this I fear will not be forthcoming with the current attitudes of the “USCCB”! 
             I see a very “Dark” future for the church, for quite a while, if people do not return immediately to moral thinking both politically and religiously!

    • Michalskijan43

      prophetic.When will the Cardinals, Bishops and Pastors wake up??
      Any so called Catholic who votes democrat this November is not a true Roman Catholic.
      John

    • Alecto

      Given the history of blundering and wrong, idiotic decisions from the Supreme Court, why do Catholics expect any wisdom to come out of it? Think about blatantly anti-Catholic bigots like Hugo Black. I suspect Roberts, although Catholic is more loyal to his ambition than his faith.