NRL Says Events in Congress
Further Uncover
Pro-Abortion Agenda in Healthcare
Bills
Events during the week of September 27 in
Congress provide fresh proof that top Democratic leaders in Congress are
pushing forward with plans to establish massive new programs that would pay for
elective abortions and subsidize insurance coverage of abortions -- which, if
achieved, would break from decades of federal policy.
“Bills currently advancing in Congress would
establish direct federal funding of elective abortion, and tax subsidies for
private
insurance
that covers elective abortions -- both drastic breaks from longstanding federal
policy,” commented Douglas Johnson, legislative director for the National
Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the federation of right-to-life organizations
in all 50 states. “Ongoing events on Capitol Hill demonstrate the hollowness
of President Obama’s public assurances that he does
not seek government funding of abortion.”
The Senate Finance Committee continued a
series of meetings to amend the America’s
Healthy Future Act, a healthcare restructuring bill proposed by Chairman
Max Baucus (D-MT.). The bill has a number of major abortion-related problems.
Most of the abortion-related debate in the committee focused on a proposed new
program that would use tax money to help purchase private health insurance for
about 19 million Americans. The bill specifically authorizes the use of these
federal funds to pay premiums on private plans that cover elective abortions --
a departure from longstanding federal policy.
Pro-life Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT.) pointed
out that federal subsidies for coverage of elective abortions are not currently
allowed under Medicaid, the Federal Employees Health Benefits program, or other
federal health programs. Hatch offered an amendment, backed by NRLC, that would have prohibited federal funds from
subsidizing plans that cover elective abortions, but would have allowed
insurers to sell abortion coverage through separate supplemental policies not
subsidized by federal funds. The Hatch
Amendment failed, 10-13. Baucus and all other
Democrats on the committee opposed the Hatch
Amendment, except for Senator Kent Conrad (D-ND.), who supported it. All of
the Republicans on the committee supported the Hatch Amendment, except for Senator Olympia Snowe
(R-MN.), who opposed it.
By an identical roll call, the committee
also rejected another Hatch Amendment
that would have codified the Hyde-Weldon
Amendment, which is a temporary law prohibiting any level of government
from discriminating against healthcare providers that do not wish to
participate in providing abortions.
On July 15, the Senate Health, Education,
Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee approved a different healthcare bill (S.
1679), which also contains provisions that would result in sweeping
pro-abortion mandates and government subsidies for elective abortion. NRLC’s Johnson commented, “Today’s Finance Committee votes
mean that the combined bill that will reach the Senate floor in a few weeks
surely will contain provisions that would result in both pro-abortion federal
mandates and huge federal abortion subsidies. However, the full Senate must
vote on the pro-abortion subsidies, and other
pro-abortion components as well.”
Meanwhile, in the House, Reps. Bart Stupak
(D-MI.), Joseph Pitts (R-PA.), and 181 other members of the U.S. House on
September 28 sent a letter to Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA.), pointing out that
the healthcare bill approved in the House Energy and Commerce Committee (H.R.
3200), including an amendment offered by Rep. Lois Capps (D-CA.), “radically
departs from the current federal government policy of not paying for elective
abortion or subsidizing plans that cover abortion.” The letter noted, among
other things, that the Capps language “explicitly authorizes the federal
government (the Department of Health and Human Services) to directly fund
elective abortions, with federal (public) funds drawn on a federal Treasury
account,” through the proposed “public plan.”
The signers -- 25 Democrats and 158 Republicans
-- urged Pelosi to allow a vote on the Stupak-Pitts
Amendment to prohibit coverage of elective abortions by the public plan and
subsidies for private plans that cover elective abortions. Seven other House
Democrats have sent Pelosi similar letters in recent days, for a total of 32
Democrats.
In response, on September 29 Rep. Capps sent
Pelosi a letter in which she argued that the proposed public plan really would
not be paying for abortions because “money is transmitted to a private
contractor who then reimburses physicians.” Johnson called Capps’ argument “truly
laughable -- it is like arguing that it is not the government paying for the
abortions if the government sends the payment via the Internet.”
In reality, Johnson said, “The proposed
public plan will be entirely a branch of the federal government, all of its
funds will be federal funds, and when it pays for abortions, that will be
direct government funding of abortion.”
Johnson also noted that the nearly united opposition
to the Hatch Amendment by Senate
Finance Committee Democrats, and the continued resistance by the House Democratic
leadership to allowing a vote on the Stupak-Pitts Amendment, “support our theory that President Obama is misleading the public when he says he does not want
federal dollars used for abortion. In an attempt to keep his 2007 promises
to Planned Parenthood, the President is trying to smuggle sweeping pro-abortion
policies into law behind smokescreens of contrived language, verbal misdirection,
and outright misrepresentation.”