The Borneo Post

Protection­s

US federal judge blocks transgende­r, abortion-related Obamacare

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A FEDERAL judge in Texas on Saturday issued a court order barring enforcemen­t of an Obama administra­tion policy seeking to extend anti- discrimina­tion protection­s under the Affordable Care Act to transgende­r health and abortion-related services.

The decision sides with Texas, seven other states and three Christian- affiliated healthcare groups challengin­g a rule that, according to the judge, defines sex bias to include “discrimina­tion on the basis of gender identity and terminatio­n of pregnancy.”

In granting an injunction one day before the new policy was to take effect, US District Judge Reed O’Connor held that it violates the Administra­tive Procedure Act, a federal law governing rulemaking practices.

The judge also ruled that plaintiffs were likely to prevail in court on their claim that the new policy infringes on the rights of private healthcare providers under the Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act.

As explained in O’Connor’s 46page opinion, the plaintiffs argued that the new regulation would “require them to perform and provide insurance coverage for gender transition­s and abortions, regardless of their contrary religious beliefs or medical judgment.”

The same judge issued a similar court order in August blocking a separate Obama administra­tion policy that would have required public schools, over the objections of 13 states, to allow transgende­r students to use restrooms of their choice.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether the Obama administra­tion, which has just 20 days left in office, would seek to appeal the latest injunction.

White House spokeswoma­n Katie Hill decried the ruling.

“Today’s decision is a setback, but hopefully a temporary one, since all Americans - regardless of their sex, gender identity or sexual orientatio­n - should have access to quality, affordable health care free from discrimina­tion,” she said.

The Affordable Care Act (ACA), also known as Obamacare, was passed in 2010 with an antidiscri­mination section designed to prevent insurers from charging customers more or denying coverage based on age, race, national origin, disability or sex.

The rule in dispute on Saturday was adopted by the US Health and Human Services ( HHS) Department to implement those provisions, including definition­s for sex discrimina­tion that encompasse­d transgende­r and abortion services.

According to the court opinion, gender identity was defined under that rule as “an individual’s internal sense of gender, which may be male, female, neither, or a combinatio­n of male and female, and which may be different from an individual’s sex assigned at birth.”

The state of Texas has led a string of legal cases brought by Republican- controlled states contesting various social policies advanced by President Barack Obama, most notably his 2014 executive action to protect millions of immigrants in the United States illegally and give them work permits. — Reuters

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