Attorneys at the Women’s Law Project filed an amicus brief in support of the Pennsylvania Attorney General in Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Trump, a federal court challenge to the Trump contraceptive coverage rules that permit employers to refuse to cover birth control based on their personal religious, ethical or moral beliefs.

WLP filed the brief on behalf of itself, Center for Reproductive Rights, Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, and other equal rights groups.

Read or download the brief here.

The rules in question, known as the Religious Exemption Rule and the Moral Exemption Rule, provide virtually limitless exemptions from a mandatory obligation for health plans to provide women with coverage for contraceptive services without imposing cost-sharing requirements.

“Why is the Trump Administration focused on undermining a universally-agreed upon public health goal like equitable contraceptive access?” asked WLP Senior Staff Attorney Susan J. Frietsche. “The Trump Administration is trying to bend the law to undermine women’s health amid a maternal mortality crisis.”

The Rules, issued in November 2018, were scheduled to go into effect on January 14, 2019. However, they were blocked by a preliminary injunction issued by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, the same court in which we filed this brief today.

As Attorney General Shapiro notes, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania has twice held that plaintiffs are likely to succeed on their claims that the Rules violate the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), and has blocked defendants from enforcing them.

By singling out women for disadvantageous treatment, Trump’s rules violate the constitutional principle of equal protection as well as statutory protection against sex discrimination through Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. In addition, they violate the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment by imposing the religious beliefs of employers on their employees. And they violate multiple provisions of the Affordable Care Act.

In our brief, we urge the Court to consider how the rules challenged in this case violate core constitutional guarantees and thereby further entrench the systemic and structural barriers to individual self-determination and equal participation in social, political, and economic life experienced by women—especially women of color, who are disproportionately low-income, and others who face multiple, intersecting forms of discrimination.

The Women’s Law Project is a public interest law center devoted to defending and expanding the rights of women, girls, and LGBTQ people in Pennsylvania and beyond.

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