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California Sues Trump Over Rollback of Birth Control Rules

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California Attorney General Xavier Becerra. (Brendan Hoffman/Getty Images)

California's attorney general sued the Trump administration Friday over new rules allowing more employers to opt out of providing no-cost birth control to women by claiming moral or religious objections, joining a flurry of lawsuits by other states and birth control advocacy groups.

Democratic Attorney General Xavier Becerra sued in federal court in San Francisco the same day the Republican administration announced it is giving employers more discretion as part of a broader rollback of the Affordable Care Act.

The lawsuit contends that the new rules violate the U.S. Constitution by allowing employers to use their religious beliefs to justify discrimination and to deny women equal protection under the law.. It says the administration also violated federal law by acting without allowing public comment and without providing a proper legal or factual basis for the change.

Becerra said the rollback could affect 13 million California women and their families, but he later said those women would still be protected by state law. California Department of Managed Health Care Director Shelley Rouillard said in a statement that California-regulated health plans must cover contraceptives for women without cost, with very narrow exceptions for religious employers.

"We're not interested in going backwards," Becerra said during a conference call with other contraception advocates, many of whom promised their own legal challenges. "We're prepared in California to take all action, including legal action, to defend a woman's rights against these unacceptable attacks."

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Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey, a fellow Democrat, also sued Friday, citing similar legal grounds.

Becerra said other attorneys general, whom he would not name, are preparing to file their own lawsuits or join existing suits.

He was one of 18 state attorneys general who signed a letter warning the Trump administration that it should expect legal action. The others are in Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and Washington.

The American Civil Liberties Union also sued Friday in federal court in San Francisco on behalf of its members and members of Service Employee International Union-United Health Care Workers West whom it said were at risk of losing their contraception coverage.

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