Over 50 Republican lawmakers signed a letter supporting President Trump’s efforts to protect religious and moral freedom.

“The recent revelations of the [Internal Revenue Service’s] targeting of conservative groups, along with regularly issued demand letters sent to churches by outside entities, has created a chilling effect on pastors from merely mentioning political events,” the April 5 letter says.

The previous administration ignored this fact and refused to enforce the law.

The conservative members of the House of Representatives signed the letter reiterating the need for Trump to sign an executive order — reported by numerous outlets as in the draft phase. It would undo a Health and Human Services (HHS) contraception mandate put in place under Obamacare during Barack Obama’s administration.

“Although the U.S. Supreme Court blocked enforcement of the contraceptive mandate against the Little Sisters of the Poor, absent a full Obamacare repeal, there remains a need for your administration to protect organizations and individuals from being coerced into providing or purchasing health coverage in violation of their faith and conscience,” the letter (obtained by USA Today) says.

“There is also a critical need to adopt executive and legislative protections that prohibit government discrimination against health care providers that decline to participate in or perform abortion,” it also says.

Related: Little Sisters, Other Groups Still in Limbo Under Obamacare Contraceptive Mandate

Over a dozen Senate Republicans wrote a similar letter to President Trump this month.

“Fundamentally, to Christians, you can’t say, ‘We’re going to protect your First Amendment rights and be the way they’ve always been,'” Rep. Warren Davidson (R-Ohio), told USA Today. “But now, to the Catholic Church: ‘If you want to place a baby for adoption you have to also place them with same-sex couples,’ and the church says, ‘That’s an affront to our doctrine.’ You can’t have it both ways.”

Davidson led the efforts on the House conservatives’ letter to Trump.

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Other signatories include Reps. Vicky Hartzler of Missouri, Andy Harris of Maryland, and Doug LaMalfa of California. All three of these lawmakers met Thursday with Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price (along with House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, Tennessee Rep. Diane Black and others on the House Values Action team). The lawmakers discussed with Price a mandate in California that forces even religious groups to provide abortion coverage — against their consciences.

“The Weldon Amendment protects health care entities — from hospitals to insurance providers — from being discriminated against by the government if they don’t provide or cover abortions, especially if doing so violates their consciences. The last administration ignored this fact and refused to enforce the law, including in California, where health insurance providers are being forced to offer abortion coverage,” McCarthy, Black, and the other representatives said in a statement Thursday.

Related: Trump’s Pro-Life Victories in His First 100 Days

“We are fully confident that the Trump administration is willing to take a fresh look at the California abortion-mandate controversy and other conscience violations,” the House Values group stated after meeting with Price.