Last week, President Obama unveiled a compromise on contraception coverage at least in part because he’d been pushed into making a change. The White House wasn’t especially concerned about criticisms from the right, but it was Democratic discomfort with the administration’s policy that led Obama to look for an alternative.
In the wake of Friday’s announcement that accommodates religiously-affiliated employers, Dems are on the same page — and now it’s Republicans who are divided.
The problem is with the GOP’s proposed response to Obama’s policy. Congressional Republicans, led by Sens. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), have decided the best way to reject the White House compromise is to go after access to contraception itself.
Indeed, the new GOP policy aims to allow all private-sector employers to deny any health services that businesses might find morally objectionable. Do you work for a grocery store owner who opposes contraception? You’re out of luck. How about an accounting firm that doesn’t like HIV tests? Too bad. Are you an employee at a factory that finds cervical cancer screenings offensive? Good luck to you.
As Igor Volsky reported, and as was discussed on the show last night, this is a bridge too far for some Republicans: Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins of Maine have endorsed the White House policy, not their party’s extreme response.









