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Federal agency funds abortions under new health bill

October 29th, 2009 No comments

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NATIONAL RIGHT TO LIFE: FEDERAL GOVERNMENT PLAN WOULD DIRECTLY FUND ABORTION UNDER PELOSI HEALTH CARE BILL

WASHINGTON (October 29, 2009) — Regarding the health care bill unveiled today by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Ca.), a spokesman for the nation’s largest pro-life organization said, “A vote for this bill is a vote to establish a federal government program that will directly fund abortion on demand, with federal funds.”

Douglas Johnson, legislative director for the National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), referred specifically to language on page 110 of the new bill (H.R. 3962) which explicitly authorizes the “public health insurance option” to pay for all elective abortions.
The “public health insurance option” or “public plan” would be a health insurance program operated directly by the federal government, through the Department of Health and Human Services.

“The public plan will be a federal agency program, and all funds spent by the agency are federal funds,” Johnson said. “The nonpartisan Congressional Research Service (CRS), in an October 9 memo obtained by NRLC, confirmed that all funds spent by the bill’s public plan will be federal funds.  Prominent Democrats who have claimed that the federal government could pay for abortion with ‘private’ funds have been engaged in a big snow job — and in swallowing such a contrived, implausible claim, many journalists have been all too gullible.”

Congressman Bart Stupak (D-Mi.) has proposed an amendment that would prohibit the federal government plan from paying for abortion (except to save the life of the mother, or in cases of rape or incest).  But Speaker Pelosi intends to try to force the House to pass the 1990-page bill under a “closed rule” (a procedure that allows no amendments to be considered), reportedly because she fears that the House would adopt the Stupak Amendment if a vote were allowed.

NRLC and other pro-life groups are urging House members to vote against imposition of the closed rule.  The showdown could occur on the House floor as soon as November 5 or 6.

“Anyone voting to forbid amendments to this bill is in effect voting to set up a federal government program that will directly fund abortion on demand, with federal funds,” Johnson said.

While running for President, Barack Obama promised Planned Parenthood that his health care legislation would create a public plan that would cover abortions. “Obama has never recanted his promise that the federal government plan will cover elective abortion — he just wants to pretend that a federal agency could spend ‘private’ funds, an untenable claim,” Johnson said. “The White House and top Democratic congressional leaders are trying to smuggle federal government funding of abortion into law, behind smokescreens of misleading, contrived language.”

The bill also has a second objectionable provision relating to abortion — it would allow federal subsidies to help pay for the cost of private health plans that cover elective abortion, a departure from longstanding federal policy.   Stupak’s amendment would correct this problem, as well.

A letter sent by NRLC on October 21 to members of the U.S. House regarding the health care bill (under its previous number, H.R. 3200) and the anticipated “closed rule” is posted here.  A summary of recent polls about how abortion should be handled in health care legislation is here.

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NRLC warns U.S. House on public plan and abortion

October 23rd, 2009 2 comments

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CRS memo confirms: The “public plan” will spend federal funds
National Right to Life warns U.S. House on coming vote to set up
federal abortion-funding program in “public pla
n”

WASHINGTON (October 23, 2009) –  The nation’s largest pro-life organization has put members of the U.S. House of Representatives on notice that it regards an upcoming procedural vote on the health care legislation as a vote on whether to establish a new federal government program that would directly pay for elective abortions with federal funds.

In a “scorecard advisory” letter sent this week to U.S. House members, the National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the federation of right-to-life organizations in all 50 states, focused on a key procedural resolution (called “the rule”) that the House must approve before it can take up the massive health care bill (H.R. 3200).   The “rule” will specify what amendments to the bill, if any, may be considered on the House floor.

In a story transmitted today (October 23), the Associated Press accurately reported that the House Democratic leadership currently does not intend to allow the House to vote on an amendment sponsored by Congressmen Bart Stupak (D-Mi.) and Joseph Pitts (R-Pa.), and supported by NRLC, which would, as the AP reported, “include the Hyde amendment restrictions in the health overhaul bill.”

The AP reported:  “Such an amendment would be almost certain to prevail . . . So Democratic leaders won’t let Stupak offer it.  Instead, it appears they may have to take the risk of letting Stupak try to block action on the underlying bill, which he intends to do by assembling ‘no’ votes on a procedural measure [the "rule"] that needs to pass before debate can begin.”

As approved by Democratic-controlled House committees, H.R. 3200 contains at least two major components that implicate abortion policy.  It creates a new program of premium subsidies for health insurance.  The AP story discusses pro-life objections to allowing those subsidies to go to private plans that cover elective abortions.  Oddly, however, the AP story does not mention the other major abortion-related controversy generated by the bill, which centers on the proposed “public plan.”

NRLC Legislative Director Douglas Johnson commented:  ”The bill explicitly authorizes the public plan, a federal agency program, to pay for elective abortions.  Democratic leaders, including President Obama, have claimed that no federal funds would be used to pay for abortions, but this is a deception, because the public plan will be a federal agency program that can spend only federal funds.  The federal government would pay abortion providers for performing elective abortions – a sharp break from decades of federal policy.”

“The public plan problem and the premium-subsidy problem are really separate and distinct — the bill would need to be amended to get abortion out of the federal government plan, even if the premium subsidy program did not exist,” Johnson said.  ”Recent polls show strong public opposition to government funding of abortion and abortion coverage.”
NRLC has obtained and today makes publicly available a memorandum prepared for a Member of Congress by the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service (CRS), which confirms all of the monies spent by the public plan would be federal funds (just as NRLC has previously documented) – implicitly refuting the claim by Democratic leaders and President Obama that no “federal funds” would be used to pay for abortions.

“The claim by Congressional Democratic leaders that the public plan, a federal agency program, could pay for abortions with ‘private’ funds, is a brazen deception — a political hoax,” Johnson said. ”The claim is implausible on its face, and it collapses if subjected to anything more than the most superficial scrutiny.  But for months, unfortunately, many journalists have allowed the Democratic leadership, Obama Administration officials, and President Obama himself, to get away with many demonstrably false statements regarding the abortion-related components of the pending bills.”

For example, in recent weeks White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs has said several times that existing law (the Hyde Amendment) would prevent the programs created by the health bills from funding abortions.  Although this claim, too, is demonstrably false, no mainstream news operation or fact-checking operation has rebuked the White House for these deceptive statements.  Today’s AP story does, however, correctly observe that “the Democrats’ health overhaul bill would create a new stream of federal funding not covered by the [current abortion] restrictions.”

While campaigning for the presidency, Barack Obama committed to Planned Parenthood that he would cover abortion in his health care reform legislation and in its public plan.  “The pending legislation would establish a federal government program that would directly fund elective abortions, just as Obama promised Planned Parenthood,” Johnson said.  “President Obama is trying to smuggle into law a federal abortion-funding program behind smokescreens of misleading rhetoric and calculated efforts at misdirection.”

NRLC has made available detailed documentation on the abortion-related components of the pending health-care bills, including bills approved by two U.S. Senate committees, on its website at http://www.nrlc.org/ahc.


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White House Press Secretary’s Remarks Show White House Still Engaged in Smuggling Operation for Government Funding of Abortion

October 8th, 2009 1 comment

A spokesman for National Right to Life said that remarks by the White House press secretary on October 7, “once again demonstrated that the White House is a partner in an ongoing smuggling operation, which if successful will result in funding of abortion on demand by the federal government.”

The following exchange occurred during the October 7, 2009, daily press briefing by White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs:

QUESTION [by CNS News reporter Fred Lucas]: It’s a question on health care, actually; two questions. First, in a letter to senators last week, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops said that, quoting, “So far the health reform bills considered in the committee, including the new Senate Finance Committee bill, have not met the President’s challenge of barring the use of federal dollars for abortion.” Is that statement wrong?

MR. GIBBS: Well, I don’t want to get me in trouble at church, but I would mention there’s a law that precludes the use of federal funds for abortion that isn’t going to be changed in these health care bills.

Q: There have been, though, several amendments that would explicitly bar abortions, that would therefore reject it, some of those amendments by Democrats –

MR. GIBBS: Again, there’s a fairly well documented federal law that prevents it.

In his answers, Gibbs in essence repeated a discredited claim made by President Obama himself on August 20, when the President said: “There are no plans under health reform to revoke the existing prohibition on using federal taxpayer dollars for abortions. Nobody is talking about changing that existing provision, the Hyde Amendment. Let’s be clear about that. It’s just not true.”

More recently, Obama said in a September 9 speech to both houses of Congress that “under our plan, no federal dollars will be used to fund abortions.” On September 13, George Stephanopoulos of ABC News asked Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius, “So you’re saying it will go beyond what we have seen so far in the House and explicitly rule out any public funding for abortion?,” and received from Sebelius this answer: “Well that’s exactly what the President said and I think that’s what he intends that the bill he signs will do.”

Douglas Johnson, legislative director for the National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the national federation of right-to-life affiliates, said:

“Gibbs’ statement is one more proof, if any more were needed, that the White House is actively engaged in a political smuggling operation — an attempt to achieve funding of elective abortion by the federal government, cloaked in smokescreens of contrived language and outright deception. There is no current federal law that would prevent the new programs created by the pending health care bills from paying for abortion on demand — and the White House knows this full well. Only language written directly into the bills would prevent government funding of abortions — but such language has been blocked by the Democratic chairmen of five congressional committees, with White House cooperation, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is refusing to allow the House to even vote on adding a true Hyde Amendment to the health care bill.”

“The motivation for the ongoing White House deception is found in three recent national polls that show strong public opposition to government-funded abortion,” Johnson added.

The October 7 reporter’s question, and the quoted statement from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, clearly pertained to the health care bills currently under consideration in Congress. The pending bills each contain one or both of the following components: (1) a nationwide government-run insurance program, “the public plan,” and (2) programs that would subsidize health insurance for tens of millions of Americans.

None of the funds that would be spent by the public plan, and none of the funds that would be spent by the premium subsidy programs, would be appropriated through the annual appropriations bills. This has been confirmed in memoranda issued by the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service. This means that none of these funds will be covered by the Hyde Amendment, because the Hyde Amendment applies only to funds appropriated through the annual Health and Human Services appropriations bill.

Under the House bill (H.R. 3200), as amended by the Capps-Waxman Amendment, the public plan would be explicitly authorized to cover elective abortions. The public plan would be a program within the Department of Health and Human Services. As a federal agency, the public plan could not possibly pay for abortions with anything other than federal funds, as documented in this memorandum.

In 2007, Barack Obama stood on stage alongside the president of the nation’s largest abortion provider, the Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA), and promised that his health reform legislation and his public plan would cover abortion. (This assertion was recently reviewed by PolitiFact.com and rated “true,” here. You can watch a short video clip of Obama making the promises here.)

“When senior congressional Democrats suggest that the public plan would pay for abortions with ‘private funds,’ they are engaged in a deception, a political hoax,” Johnson said. “The public plan would be a program operated by a federal agency, which by law can spend only federal funds. The public plan would be engaged in direct funding of elective abortion. The Hyde Amendment would not apply to this program, and the Capps Amendment explicitly authorizes the federal agency to pay for the elective abortions, using funds drawn on a U.S. Treasury account.”

Aside from the public plan, under which the government would directly fund elective abortion, both the House bill (H.R. 3200) and the two Senate bills (S. 1679 and the Senate Finance Committee bill crafted by Senator Max Baucus) would use federal funds to pay part of the cost of the premiums of private health plans that cover elective abortions. This would be a sharp departure from current federal policy. Current federal laws prevent both direct funding of abortion, and subsidies for health plans that cover abortions (except to save the life of the mother, or in cases of rape or incest). The Hyde Amendment, for example, prohibits the use of state Medicaid matching funds for elective abortion (even in states that choose to set up their own separate abortion-funding programs). But the Hyde Amendment and other current laws would not apply to the new premium subsidy programs, because they would not be funded through the appropriations bills to which the current restrictions are attached.

NRLC has issued a detailed memorandum that explains how the proposed public plan and the proposed premium subsidy programs would be funded, and why the Hyde Amendment would not apply to the proposed new programs. Another NRLC memorandum explains why all of the funds that would be spent by the public plan, and all of the funds that would be used to subsidize health plans under the premium subsidy programs, are in reality and in law “federal funds.” To document key points, both memoranda link to documents issued by the Congressional Research Service, the Congressional Budget Office, and the Government Accountability Office.

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Abortion In Health Care Legislation – The Coming Phony Compromise (Version 2)

October 3rd, 2009 1 comment

Here are a few comments from NRLC Legislative Director Douglas Johnson on the October 2 Denver Post article that we have reposted at the end of this post:

1.) It is unfortunate that the Denver Post article does not mention the “public plan” problem, which is very important, and separate and distinct from the premium-subsidy problem Nevertheless, there is some good reporting work reflected in the Denver Post story. Take special note of this sentence: “Democratic leaders, including Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, are trying to work out a compromise with a small group of anti-abortion Democrats that would strengthen the Capp amendment language but fall short of the wholesale restrictions Stupak and allies want.” Translation: Speaker Pelosi and Waxman are working on cosmetic changes to the Capps Amendment, which they will then try to peddle as an even-more-generous “compromise” by the pro-abortion side (but which in reality will put the federal government into the elective abortion business in both the public plan and the premium subsidy program). In any such new twist on the Waxman-Capps scam, we can expect that a prominent role will be assigned to Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio), who impersonates a pro-life congressman, but who actually does the bidding of Planned Parenthood, Third Way, and Nancy Pelosi.

2.) In the rebuttal to a pro-Capps piece by Jessica Arons of the Center for American Progress, I wrote, “In recent days, more than 30 House Democrats have written to Speaker Pelosi to point out that the Capps Amendment just won’t do. The House Democratic leadership now has some people working on gluing on some additional trim and accessories so that they can try to peddle Capps II as a new model. But under the hood, it will still be the same old clunker.”

3.) If this is a subject that interests you, you might also want to check out the September 30 NRLC release, “National Right to Life says new events in Congress further uncover pro-abortion agenda in health care bills,” here; and “The Truth About ‘The Truth About the Capps Amendment’,” on The Hill blog, here.

Douglas Johnson
Legislative Director
National Right to Life Committee
Washington, D.C.
202-626-8820
http://www.nrlc.org/
http://stoptheabortionagenda.com/

[Denver Post story follows] Read more…

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