The Republican Party’s culture wars are alive and well. And they’ve got the State of the Union guests to prove it.
According to the conservative group Liberty Counsel, their client Kentucky clerk Kim Davis will attend Tuesday’s address as “a visible reminder of the [Obama] Administration’s attack on religious liberty and an encouragement for people of faith to stand.” Davis became a hero for so-called “religious freedom” advocates last year when she spent five nights behind bars for refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples — an act, she maintains, that would have violated her Christian beliefs.
Davis is a guest of Ohio Republican Rep. Jim Jordan, who chairs the conservative House Freedom Caucus. “Kim Davis used our ticket. Our staff heard from the Family Research Council that Ms. Davis and her family hoped to attend the State of the Union address and so we offered a ticket,” Jordan said in a statement to NBC News.
Meet my #SOTU guests Sr. Veit & Sr. Marguire. Seeking relief from the health care law. pic.twitter.com/eXEomXmcVz
— Paul Ryan (@SpeakerRyan) January 13, 2016
Also in attendance at Tuesday’s State of the Union will be two members of the Colorado-based Little Sisters of the Poor Home for the Aged, a Catholic nonprofit challenging the Affordable Care Act’s requirement that group insurance plans offer contraceptive coverage to employees at no additional cost. Specifically, Little Sisters of the Poor is challenging a federal accommodation that requires religious nonprofits to submit a formal objection to including contraceptive coverage in their employee health plans, so that their health insurance issuers or a third-party administrator can provide the coverage directly.
The group is the best-known plaintiff in a yet another consolidated challenge to the healthcare law that the Supreme Court will hear later this year. House Speaker Paul Ryan invited its members to attend the State of the Union.
What both Davis and the Little Sisters demonstrate is an unwillingness among Republicans to abandon the culture wars that many have warned will hurt the party’s chances of appealing to an increasingly diverse and tolerant general electorate. Fifty-eight percent of millennials — who will soon replace baby boomers as the nation’s largest voting bloc — believe that privately owned corporations should be required to provide their employees with health care plans that cover contraception, according to a 2015 survey by the Public Religion Research Institute. Seventy-nine percent of millennials, meanwhile, said in a recent poll by the Pew Research Center that they favor marriage for same-sex couples.
So maybe Republicans can’t champion their opposition to same-sex nuptials and reproductive rights with quite the same fervor as they once did. But they can repackage it. And that’s what “religious freedom” is all about.









