Houston Chronicle

Trump camp finalizes birth control opt-out

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WASHINGTON — A day after Republican­s expanded their Senate majority, the Trump administra­tion on Wednesday finalized a policy change that allows some employers with religious or moral objections to opt out of providing no-cost birth control for female workers.

The new regulation­s from several federal agencies apply mainly to religious organizati­ons, nonprofits and small businesses. Women’s rights groups already suing the administra­tion over an earlier version of the optout vowed to continue their court battle.

Starting next year, the new Democratic majority in the House is expected to scrutinize the administra­tion policies on women’s health.

Under former President Barack Obama’s health care law, most employers must cover birth control at no charge as a preventive service for women. Accommodat­ing religious objections has been a sticking point for years.

President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has broadened narrower exemptions and workaround­s that Obama permitted, moves favored by social conservati­ves who are staunch supporters of the president.

Also on Wednesday, the administra­tion proposed tighter rules on “Obamacare” plans that cover abortion. The administra­tion said those changes are intended to ensure that taxpayer-provided subsidies for health insurance are not used to pay for abortions.

The vast majority of employers offer birth control benefits through their health plans. Large companies whose stock is sold to investors won’t be eligible for the opt-out, and neither will government­al employers.

AP VoteCast, a national election survey, found contrastin­g views on abortion.

In the midterm elections, more voters said abortion should be legal in all or most cases than said it should be illegal in all or most cases, 60 percent to 39 percent.

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