(CNSNews.com) – The Obama administration “strongly objects” to
provisions in a House defense authorization bill that would prohibit the
use of military property for same-sex “marriage or marriage-like”
ceremonies, and protect military chaplains from negative repercussions
for refusing to act against their consciences, as, for example, in being
ordered to perform a same-sex marriage ceremony.
In a policy statement released Wednesday, the White House Office of
Management and Budget outlined numerous objections to aspects of the
fiscal year 2013 National Defense Authorization Bill (H.R. 4310). The
bill was reported out of the House Armed Services Committee last week
and is set to be debated in the House, beginning Wednesday. (See related story)
Overall, it recommends that President Obama veto H.R. 4310 if its
cumulative effects “impede the ability of the Administration to execute
the new defense strategy and to properly direct scarce resources.”
The veto warning is not specifically linked to the two provisions
dealing with marriage, but they are listed among parts of the bill which
the administration finds objectionable.
The memo said the two provisions “adopt unnecessary and ill-advised
policies that would inhibit the ability of same-sex couples to marry or
enter a recognized relationship under State law.”
Section 536 of H.R. 4310 states in part that no member of the armed
forces may “direct, order, or require a chaplain to perform any duty,
rite, ritual, ceremony, service, or function that is contrary to the
conscience, moral principles, or religious beliefs of the chaplain, or
contrary to the moral principles and religious beliefs of the endorsing
faith group of the chaplain.”
Further, no member of the armed forces may “discriminate or take any
adverse personnel action against a chaplain, including denial of
promotion, schooling, training, or assignment, on the basis of the
refusal by the chaplain to comply with a direction, order, or
requirement” that is prohibited by the previous clause.
The OMB complained that, “in its overbroad terms,” section 536 “is potentially harmful to good order and discipline.”
Section 537 of H.R. 4310 states that “[a] military installation or
other property owned or rented by, or otherwise under the jurisdiction
or control of, the Department of Defense may not be used to officiate,
solemnize, or perform a marriage or marriage-like ceremony involving
anything other than the union of one man with one woman.”
That provision, the OMB said in the memo, would make it obligatory
for the department “to deny Service members, retirees, and their family
members access to facilities for religious ceremonies on the basis of
sexual orientation, a troublesome and potentially unconstitutional
limitation on religious liberty.”
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