?:reviewBody
|
-
We mean no blasphemy. But what do you call a male, Methodist, Republican lawmaker who supports a measure -- backed by many Catholics -- to allow employers and schools to opt out health-care law mandates on moral or religious grounds? Is he a supporter of religious rights? Or is he a politician with radical, ideological views toward women? The issue here, as may be obvious, is whether employers should be able to omit contraception coverage in their health insurance plans because they believe the use of certain birth control methods or medications is a sin, or they have other moral objections. The issue arose after President Barack Obama’s administration ruled that contraception should be covered, with no co-payment, as an essential health and prevention benefit under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010. The requirement takes effect in August. Churches were exempted from the requirement but in February, after fierce debate with groups supporting reproductive or religious rights, the administration also exempted religion-affiliated schools and charities. Women whose church-employers opt out can still get contraception coverage but must do so through the insurer, without paying another premium, rather than through the workplace. Critics of the health law, including U.S. Sen. Rob Portman, an Ohio Republican, said the exemption was too narrow. Portman supported an amendment by Sen. Roy Blunt , a Missouri Republican, to let any employer opt out of coverage if they objected on religious or moral grounds. The amendment, attached to a highway bill, had broad Republican support. Democrats said the amendment was just another attempt to weaken the Affordable Care Act and would open the act to all manner of other carve-outs. On March 1, the Senate voted 51-48 to table the Blunt amendment. With that vote, this episode seemed to be over. But now that Portman is said to be on Mitt Romney’s short list for vice presidential candidate, the Ohio Democratic Party is using it to question Portman’s intent or sincerity. According to a news release the Ohio Democrats issued on June 3 (with multiple claims, one of which we have addressed already ), Portman’s vote on the Blunt amendment showed that he shares Romney’s and Mandel’s radical, ideological view toward women. That would be Josh Mandel, the Republican Ohio treasurer running for U.S. Senate against incumbent Democrat Sherrod Brown. PolitiFact Ohio is not about to go over every statement made by Romney or Mandel to determine whether either holds radical, ideological views toward women. That’s a political, and arguably presumptuous, judgment. But the Ohio Democrats make it easy to explore the basis of their claim when it comes to Portman because they listed two points of evidence. First, they cited comments that Portman made March 5 to host Chris Matthews on MSNBC’s Hardball program . Specifically, the Democrats noted, Portman said, The issue was about religious freedom, as you know. And it`s a legitimate issue. Portman was discussing the Blunt amendment when he made the cited remark. PolitiFact Ohio listened to the rest of Portman’s comments about the amendment to see if they supported the claim that he holds radical, ideological views toward women. Here’s the rest of what he said: I’m up here in Cleveland tonight and there are a lot of folks who are concerned about it. Twenty-five percent of the people up here get their health care through religious organizations and so that religious freedom issue is very important to them. Next, the Ohio Democratic Party noted Portman’s vote. Rob Portman was the lone Ohio senator to support the Blunt amendment, the Democrats said. Well yes, he was. But each state only has two senators (Ohio currently has Brown and Portman). So if one voted no, the other would be the lone yes. It’s not as ominous when you have that bit of context, is it? Who else voted for the Blunt amendment? Before answering, it’s important to know that while some critics considered the Blunt amendment to be an assault on women’s reproductive rights, this issue was important to a number of Catholics. According to the National Catholic Register, the U.S. Senate has 24 Catholic members, and 11 of them supported the Blunt amendment, as did the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. Thirteen Catholics in the Senate voted to table the measure. But here’s the number that matters most: 48. That’s the number of senators who supported the Blunt measure, and it was just shy of half the chamber. That number included three Democrats: Robert Casey of Pennsylvania, Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Ben Nelson of Nebraska. Could every one of those 48 senators hold radical, ideological views toward women? We do not doubt the sincerity of either side on this issue. But for the Ohio Democratic Party to accuse Portman of holding radical, ideological views on the basis of comments in an interview that were anything but inflammatory and a vote that clearly split the Senate is itself an extreme characterization. And to criticize him as the sole Ohio senator voting no, when this nation has exactly two U.S. senators representing every single state, is laughable. Civics lessons, anyone? The flimsy evidence simply does not support the Ohio Democratic Party’s claim about radical, ideological views. The statement is not accurate. On the Truth-O-Meter, the claim rates False.
(en)
|