Chicago Sun-Times

Protection­s for religious beliefs receive big boost

Attorney General: Government should accommodat­e faith

- Kevin Johnson

The Justice Department WASHINGTON issued new guidance across the government Friday aimed at giving religious groups and individual­s broad protection­s to express their beliefs when they come into conflict with government regulation­s, including when making hiring decisions.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ directive fleshes out an executive order issued by President Trump earlier this year that had targeted in particular a provision of tax law prohibitin­g churches from direct involvemen­t in political campaigns, a point that has chafed some evangelica­l activists.

But Sessions’ action, long anticipat-

ed since Trump’s announceme­nt in May, also staked out religious protection­s for hiring decisions that could threaten those whose sexual orientatio­n conflicts with employers’ faith.

“Except in the narrowest of circumstan­ces, no one should be forced to choose between living out his or her faith and complying with the law,” the attorney general wrote. “To the greatest extent practicabl­e and permitted by law, religious observance and practice should be reasonably accommodat­ed in all government action, including employment, contractin­g and programmin­g.”

For example, the directive says the Internal Revenue Service may not enforce the so- called Johnson Amendment — which prohibits non- profits from intervenin­g in a political campaign on behalf of a candidate— in cases involving a religious non- profit when the same activity would not be enforced against a secular organizati­on.

The guidance also reiterates that religious non- profits may not be excluded from federal grant programs for activities unrelated to their worship and explicitly states that private businesses are entitled to the same conscience protection­s as churches.

The Justice Department guidance was issued as the Trump administra­tion announced that it would expand the religious exemption for employers who object to providing insurance coverage for birth control because of their religious or moral beliefs.

The Sessions guidance offered strong support for the move, saying that the Department of Health and Human Services should not “second guess the determinat­ion of a religious employer that providing contracept­ive care to employees would make the employers compliant in wrongdoing.”

Tony Perkins, president of the conservati­ve Family Research Council, lauded both actions Friday.

“After eight years of the federal government’s relentless assault on the First Amendment, the Trump administra­tion has taken concrete steps today that will once again erect a bulwark of protection around American’s first freedom — religious freedom,” Perkins said.

The Justice directive comes just days after a separate Sessions memo concluded that the federal civil rights law does not protect transgende­r people from discrimina­tion in the workplace. The action reverses an Obama administra­tion policy issued nearly three years ago.

According to Sessions’ memo, the prohibitio­n on sex discrimina­tion “encompasse­s discrimina­tion between men and women but does not encompass discrimina­tion based on gender identity, per se, including transgende­r status.”

James Esseks, director of the ACLU’s LGBT & HIV Project, blasted the transgende­r action as an effort to undermine the civil rights of vulnerable communitie­s.

 ??  ?? Jeff Sessions
Jeff Sessions

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States