
by Emmitt Barry, with reporting from Washington D.C. Bureau Staff
(Worthy News) – A federal judge appointed by President Obama has struck a blow to religious liberty, overturning protections that allowed faith-based employers to decline covering abortion and contraceptives in their health insurance plans.
On August 13, U.S. District Judge Wendy Beetlestone vacated two 2018 Affordable Care Act exemptions–enacted during President Donald Trump’s first term–that gave employers with religious or moral objections the right to opt out of the mandate. These conscience protections had been hailed by conservatives as a critical defense against government overreach into matters of faith and morality.
Beetlestone, siding with the attorneys general of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, claimed the Trump-era rules were “arbitrary and capricious” and not in compliance with federal law. She dismissed the government’s reliance on the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), asserting there was no “rational connection” between protecting religious liberty and exempting employers from mandates that violated their beliefs.
Critics say the ruling disregards the First Amendment rights of religious organizations and could force faith-based employers to participate in practices they consider morally objectionable.
“The district court blessed an out-of-control effort by Pennsylvania and New Jersey to attack the Little Sisters and religious liberty,” said Mark Rienzi, president of Becket, the legal group representing the Little Sisters of the Poor, a Catholic order that has fought for over a decade to avoid being compelled to fund contraception and abortion services. “It is absurd to think the Little Sisters might need yet another trip to the Supreme Court to end what has now been more than a dozen years of litigation over the same issue. We will fight as far as we need to fight.”
The case has a long history before the nation’s highest court. In 2020, Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for the majority, affirmed that the Affordable Care Act granted federal agencies the authority to create both religious and moral exemptions. Justice Samuel Alito, in a concurring opinion, also rejected the idea that the Trump administration’s rules were arbitrary or capricious.
However, lower court challenges continued, delayed for years while the Biden administration attempted to craft narrower rules that would have gutted the exemptions. Those proposed restrictions were quietly withdrawn in late 2024–just before President Trump’s return to the White House.
Despite the withdrawal, Judge Beetlestone moved forward, issuing a nationwide order that effectively nullifies the conscience protections. Her decision sets up the likelihood of yet another Supreme Court showdown over whether the government can force religious employers to provide coverage for services that violate their beliefs.
For religious liberty advocates, the stakes could not be higher. The ruling signals that without clear, permanent protections in law, faith-based organizations may once again face the choice between violating their conscience or paying crushing fines.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
Israel expanded its military campaign against Hezbollah on Monday, striking more than 70 targets across Lebanon as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to increase pressure on the Iranian-backed terror group following a sharp rise in drone and rocket attacks on northern Israel.
A federal appeals court is weighing whether Kansas City can use its public accommodation ordinance to require Christian counselors to counsel gay married couples despite the counselors’ biblical convictions on marriage and sexuality.
Tens of thousands of evangelical Christians gathered in the Netherlands for one of Europe’s largest multi-day Christian events, with organizers and participants expressing hopes for spiritual revival in the nation and across Europe.
President Donald Trump pushed back Monday against sharp criticism from Republicans and former administration officials over a potential U.S.-Iran agreement, insisting that any final accord must prevent Tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon or it will not be signed.
President Donald Trump said Monday that countries involved in negotiations over Iran should be required to join the Abraham Accords, signaling that the White House is seeking to turn a possible Iran agreement into a wider regional realignment that includes normalization with Israel.
Tensions remained high in Serbia’s capital Belgrade on Sunday after at least tens of thousands of people demanded elections and rallied against what they view as the increasingly authoritarian rule of President Aleksandar Vučić, with violence erupting after the protest and more than 20 people arrested.
Investigations were ongoing Sunday into the killing of three senior Kuki-Thadou Christian church leaders by unidentified gunmen in India’s northeastern Manipur State, Christian investigators told Worthy News.