BOSTON – Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown
says he won't cow to pressure from former Rep. Patrick Kennedy, whose
father, the late Sen. Edward Kennedy, is being featured in a radio ad
rejecting the mandate requiring religious employers to provide birth
control coverage.
Kennedy asked the Republican senator to pull
the ad claiming his father supported religious exemptions for employers
and health insurers, but only on certain medical procedures, and not as
a blanket exemption to deny birth control to employees.
"Providing health care to every American was
the work of my father's life. The Blunt amendment you are supporting is
an attack on that cause," the former congressman wrote, referring to
the "conscience" exemption offered by Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., in
legislation facing the Senate.
"My father would never have supported this extreme legislation," reads the letter obtained by The Wall Street Journal.
Kennedy said he appreciates Brown's previous
expressions of respect for his dad, who was known as the "Lion of the
Senate," but "do not confuse my father's positions with your own ....
misstating his positions is no way to honor his life's work."
Brown, who's in a tough reelection battle
against Democratic challenger Elizabeth Warren, told reporters on Monday
that he wouldn't take down the ad.
He added that he was "confused" by Kennedy's
letter because the Rhode Island Democrat appeared to share the same
position as his father on the issue and co-sponsored a similar
conscience exemption bill when he was in Congress.
In a letter to Kennedy, Brown wrote that he
believed his father "did not mean to put himself on the opposite side of
the church or to suggest that he would force them to accept a situation
with which they could not abide."
But the WSJ reports, Brown wrote that's exactly what the mandate forces religious groups to do.
"I'd like to think your dad would have been
working with me to find an accommodation that all sides found
satisfactory," reads the letter.







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