Abortion
Policy
and
"Health Care Reform"
National Right to Life: "Any House member who votes for
the Senate health bill is casting a career-defining pro-abortion vote"

HOW IMPORTANT IS THE HOUSE VOTE ON THE HEALTH CARE BILL?
On abortion policy, the health care bill that Speaker Nancy Pelosi
brought to the House floor last November was extremely bad (before the
House fixed it by adopting the Stupak-Pitts Amendment) -- but the
Senate health bill (H.R. 3590) is worse.
The Senate health bill is a 2,407-page labyrinth strewn with the
legislative equivalents of improvised explosive devices --
disguised provisions that will result in federal pro-abortion mandates
and federal subsidies for abortion. The so-called abortion limits
that are in the Senate bill are all very narrow, riddled with
loopholes, or booby-trapped to expire. Some of them were drafted
more with the intent of misleading superficial analysts (which
unfortunately includes some media "factcheckers") than actually
effectuating a pro-life policy.
When all of the pro-abortion provisions are considered in total, the
Senate bill is the most pro-abortion single piece of legislation that
has ever come to the House floor for a vote, since Roe v. Wade.
Any House member who votes for the Senate health bill is casting a
career-defining pro-abortion vote. A House member who votes for
the Senate bill would forfeit a plausible claim to pro-life
credentials. No House member who votes for the Senate bill will
be regarded, in the future, as having a record against federal funding
of abortion.
All of those statements are true regardless of how many assurances or
denials are disseminated by President Obama or by Speaker Pelosi, both
of whom have sought throughout their political careers to undermine
limits on government funding of abortion. House members who vote
for the Senate bill will be accountable to their constituents for what
the Senate bill contains.
When he ran for president, Senator Barack Obama promised that abortion
coverage would be "at the heart" of his health care proposal.
(See the PolitiFact examination of Obama's promise here.)
Throughout this Congress, President Obama has tried to deliver on this
promise, even while hiding behind deceptive verbal formulations and
outright misrepresentations regarding the content of legislation.
During the latter half of 2009, the White House backed phony
"compromise" language that Speaker Pelosi put in the bill she brought
to the House floor -- language written by House Energy and Commerce
Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Ca.) (the so-called "Capps
Amendment"). This language explicitly authorized coverage of
elective abortions under two major new government programs. It
was this pro-abortion language that the House jettisoned on November 7
through adoption (240-194) of the Stupak-Pitts Amendment, which was
supported by one-fourth of all House Democrats (64 Democrats), joined
by all except one House Republican. The Stupak-Pitts Amendment
contained a bill-wide, permanent abortion fix (it begins, "No funds
authorized or appropriated by this Act . . ."), which was the approach
needed to prevent any provision of the vast bill from being used as a
basis for pro-abortion federal mandates or subsidies.
Although President Obama often has claimed he wants his health care
legislation to reflect bipartisan consensus, he lamented the bipartisan
adoption of the Stupak Amendment, and he contributed to keeping the
Stupak language out of the Senate bill. As a result, the
2,407-page Senate-passed bill contains at least six separate
abortion-related policy problems, any single one of which would dictate
a negative vote for any lawmaker who wishes to maintain a record
against federal abortion mandates and abortion subsidies. These
problems are summarized below, and discussed in detail in a January 14
letter sent by NRLC to members of the House and other materials posted
on the NRLC website.
BLOOD OATHS AND RABBIT HOLES
Speaker Nancy Pelosi in recent days has reverted to repetitious denials
that there is a problem -- for example, saying at a March 4 press
conference, "I will not have it turned into a debate on (abortion) . .
. There is no change in the access to abortion. No more or
no less: It is abortion neutral in terms of access or diminution
of access." This is the same deny-and-evade approach that
Pelosi employed throughout 2009. It will not suffice now any more
than it did then.
Indeed, some of the more recent utterances by Speaker Pelosi and other
top House Democrats suggest that they have stumbled down some sort of
rabbit hole into a fantasy world in which lawmakers can vote to enact
the Senate bill without being accountable for its contents. For
example, Congresswoman Louise Slaughter (D-NY) on March 3 suggested
that the House should pass the Senate bill after receiving a "blood
oath" from Democratic senators that they would later pass a specific
list of changes to the bill. Lawmakers who are considering voting
for the Senate bill based on a "blood oath" or any other promise should
first call to mind the once-popular comic strip "Peanuts," in which
Lucy frequently teed up a football and enticed Charlie Brown to take a
run at it, solemnly promising not to snatch the ball away at the last
instant. Charlie Brown inevitably ended up flat on his back
wondering how he could have been once again so foolish.
House members who vote for the Senate bill will be accountable to their
constituents for what the Senate bill contains, including its
pro-abortion mandates and subsidies, without regard to blood oaths,
secret handshakes, solemn assurances that Congress will revisit
the issue in future legislation, or any other artifice or gimmick.
(Pelosi has also repeatedly implied that the longstanding "Hyde
Amendment" would somehow prevent the heath care bill from subsidizing
abortion. Such utterances are highly misleading. The Hyde
Amendment only applies to funds that flow through the annual Health and
Human Services appropriations bill, and would not affect funds directly
appropriated by the health care bill itself. As the Associated
Press accurately reported in a story dated March 5, 2010: "The
Democratic bills created a new stream of federal money to help working
households afford health insurance premiums. And those funds were not
subject to the Hyde restrictions." For further discussion of this
point, see the memorandum posted here. Moreover, the Hyde
Amendment is a patch that must be renewed annually -- not an acceptable
approach when Congress proposes any large new federal program that
implicates abortion policy.)
THE LIST
What follows is a thumbnail sketch of the major abortion policy
problems in the Senate-passed health care bill (H.R. 3590).
-- The Senate bill departs from longstanding federal policy by
authorizing tax subsidies to help tens of millions of Americans buy
private health plans that could cover abortion on demand. Sen.
Ben Nelson (D-Ne.) attached to this provision a badly flawed
requirement under which anyone enrolling in such plan would be required
to make separate payments into an abortion fund. In a recent
statement, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (which strongly
opposes the bill) said, "The bill requires each American purchasing
such a plan to make a separate payment to the insurer every month,
solely to pay for other people's abortions. This is an enormous
imposition on the consciences of the millions of Americans who oppose
abortion." In its first analysis of the Nelson language,
NRLC recognized it as a convoluted bookkeeping scheme inconsistent with
the principles of the Hyde Amendment. In January, Senator Barbara
Boxer (D-Ca.), a pro-abortion leader in the Senate, assured McClatchy
News Service that the abortion surcharge requirement is only an
"accounting procedure," and DHHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius also
assured pro-abortion listeners that the Nelson language was of no
consequence. Yet today, in an effort to entice pro-life Democrats
in the House to vote for the bill, the White House and Democratic
leaders are working on "convincing as many as a dozen antiabortion
Democrats in the House that abortion language in the Senate bill is
more stringent than initially portrayed," according to a report in the
March 5 Washington Post. The bottom line is that a vote for the
Senate bill is a vote to subsidize the purchase of health plans that
cover abortion on demand -- a sharp break from the principles of the
Hyde Amendment and the Stupak Amendment.
-- The Senate bill would establish a new program under which a federal
agency, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), would administer
private "multi-state" plans. It has been reported that the bill
guarantees that one plan will be available everywhere that does not
cover abortion. In fact, it guarantees no such thing, because
even this narrow requirement is rigged to depend on annual renewal
through a separate appropriations bill. Moreover, other plans in
the federally administered program would be allowed to cover all
abortions -- a break from the policy that has long governed the Federal
Employees Health Benefits program, which is also administered by
OPM. A vote for the Senate bill is a vote to put the federal
government in the business of administering health plans that cover
abortion on demand.
-- The Senate bill would empower federal political appointees to expand
access to abortion by federal administrative decrees. The bill
contains a bewildering array of provisions that grant authority to the
Secretary of Health and Human Services and other federal entities to
issue binding regulations on various matters. One analyst
recently wrote that the Senate bill “contains more than 2,500
references to powers and responsibilities of the secretary of health
and human services,” to say nothing of other federal authorities.
Some of these provisions could be employed in the future as authority
for pro-abortion mandates, requiring health plans to cover abortion
and/or provide expanded access to abortion, unless there is clear
language to prevent it. One clear example is the Mikulski
Amendment, under which any service listed as a "preventive" service by
the Department of Health and Human Services must be provided (without
copayments) in all types of private health plans. (Sec. 1001, pp.
20-21.) Sen. Mikulski refused to modify her amendment to exclude
abortion from the scope of this mandate authority. (The
Nelson-Hatch-Casey Amendment, similar to the Stupak-Pitts Amendment,
would have prevented abortion mandates or subsidies under any provision
of the bill -- but that amendment was tabled, 54-45, on December 8,
2009.) A vote for the Senate bill is a vote to empower federal
political appointees to mandate unlimited abortion coverage in most
private health plans.
-- The Senate bill would reauthorize all federal Indian health
programs, without including language to prohibit funding of elective
abortion, even though such an amendment (the Vitter Amendment, similar
to the Stupak Amendment) was approved by the Senate when it last
considered Indian health legislation on February 26, 2008. There
is a clause in the Senate health bill [Sec. 10221, pp. 2175-2176] that
has been misrepresented as an abortion restriction, but it actually
contains no policy standard on abortion funding -- it merely "punts"
the question to the annual appropriations process, an unacceptable
approach. A vote for the Senate bill is a vote to open the door
to future federal funding of abortion on demand through all Indian
health programs.
-- The Senate bill lacks language to protect health care providers from
being penalized for refusing to participate in providing abortions
(known as the "Weldon language"), even though such language was
approved by the House Energy and Commerce Committee and was included in
Speaker Pelosi's original bill even before adoption of the Stupak
Amendment. (See Section 259 of the House-passed H.R. 3962.)
Yet, because such language is offensive to the pro-abortion lobby, it
was excluded from the Senate bill. A vote for the Senate bill is
a vote to abandon the strong position that the House took in favor of
protecting the conscience rights of pro-life health care providers.
-- The Senate bill, due to a last-minute amendment, provides $7 billion
for the nation's 1,250 Community Health Centers (CHCs), without any
restriction whatever on the use of these federal funds to pay directly
for abortion on demand. (These funds are both authorized and
appropriated by the bill, and thus would be untouched by the "Hyde
Amendment" that currently covers Medicaid funds that flow through the
annual Health and Human Services appropriations bill.) Two
pro-abortion groups, the Reproductive Health Access Project and the
Abortion Access Project, are already actively campaigning for Community
Health Centers to perform elective abortions. In short, the
Senate bill would allow direct federal funding of abortion on demand
through Community Health Centers. A memorandum documenting this
issue in further detail is posted here: http://www.nrlc.org/AHC/NRLCmemoCommHealth.pdf
In a recent statement, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops noted
that this provision alone could lead to "hundreds of thousands of
abortions per year that taxpayers would be forced to pay for." In a
story published in the March 4 Washington Times, Congressman Diana
DeGette (D-Co.) called this concern "patently false," but White House
spokeswoman Linda Douglass took a different tact, admitting at least
the possibility of what she referred to as a "drafting issue that
requires a technical change . . ."
-- The Senate bill contains additional pools of directly appropriated
funds that are not covered by any limitations regarding abortion,
including $5 billion for a temporary high-risk health insurance pool
program (Sec. 1101 on pages 45-52) and $6 billion in grants for health
co-ops (Sec. 1322, pp. 169-180). Only bill-wide, permanent
language, such as the Stupak-Pitts Amendment, can ensure that none of
the vast amounts of federal money authorized and appropriated through
the Senate bill are tapped by pro-abortion political appointees and
bureaucrats to pay for abortion.
Contact: Douglas Johnson
Source:
NRLC
Publish
Date:
March
5,
2010
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The IFRL is the largest grassroots pro-life organization in
Illinois. A non-profit organization, that serves as the state
coordinating body for local pro-life chapters representing thousands of
Illinois citizens working to restore respect for all human life in our
society. The IFRL is composed of people of different political
persuasions, various faiths and diverse economic, social and ethnic
backgrounds. Since 1973 the Illinois Federation for Right to Life has
been working to end abortion and restore legal protection to those members of the
human family who are threatened by abortion, infanticide and euthanasia. Diverse though we are, we hold one common belief - that
every human being has an inalienable right to life that is precious and must be protected. IFRL is
dedicated to restoring the right to life to the unborn, and protection
for the disabled and the elderly. Click here to learn more about the IFRL.