House Republican Leader to Speak at Right to Life Convention

May 27th, 2010 No comments

Today the National Right to Life Committee, the federation of 50 state right-to-life groups and more than 3,000 local chapters, announced that House Republican Leader John Boehner of Ohio will headline a Saturday morning general session at the annual National Right to Life Convention in June. In addition, Mr. Boehner will receive the National Right to Life Legislative Leadership Award.

“Congressman John Boehner has been an outspoken supporter of the most vulnerable members of our society,” said National Right to Life Co-Executive Director Darla St. Martin. “Throughout the battle over President Obama’s health care bill, Leader Boehner worked tirelessly to defend the rights of unborn children, the elderly, and the medically dependent and disabled.”

Mr. Boehner’s address and award presentation will take place at 10:30 a.m., Saturday, June 26, 2010 at the Hyatt Regency Pittsburgh International Airport. The session is part of the annual National Right to Life Convention which annually brings together more than 800 grassroots pro-life activists from across the country. The three-day convention features five general sessions, more than 60 workshops, annual Prayer Breakfast and closing banquet. The convention was last held in Pittsburgh in 2002.

“We are thrilled that Leader Boehner will join us for this year’s National Right to Life Convention,” added St. Martin. “His dedication to our great cause will be an inspiration to everyone in attendance.”

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West Virginia Ultrasound Bill Becomes Law

May 17th, 2010 No comments

Today West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin (D) signed the Ultrasound Option Bill (SB 597) into law in a signing ceremony in Charleston.  The bill passed both the West Virginia House of Delegates and Senate by overwhelming margins earlier this spring.  West Virginia becomes the 20th state to enact some form of provision giving women the opportunity to view an ultrasound before an abortion.
“Abortion is one of the most common, yet under regulated procedures performed in the United States,” said National Right to Life Director of State Legislation Mary Spaulding Balch, J.D. “Accurate information empowers us to make informed decisions. We would never expect a person to undergo any procedure without having all possible information at their disposal before consenting.  Abortion is no different.  Women deserve to have all of the facts at their disposal before making the life and death decision that will affect themselves and their unborn children.”
The state’s Women’s Right to Know Law provides women and girls seeking an abortion, 24 hours prior to the procedure, scientifically accurate information about fetal development, abortion alternatives and potential risks of the abortion procedure.  The Ultrasound Option Bill adds information to those materials provided informing women that if an ultrasound is conducted with the abortion, she may view or decline to view the real-time ultrasound image.

The full text of the Ultrasound Option Bill is available online here:

http://www.legis.state.wv.us/Bill_Text_HTML/2010_SESSIONS/RS/Bills/SB597%20SUB2%20enr.htm

“Common sense laws which further regulate the abortion industry, like West Virginia’s Ultrasound Option Bill, enjoy the support of a large number of Americans.  We will continue to work with other states to pass laws which protect mothers and their unborn children,”Balch added.

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National Right to Life Comments On The Nomination Of Elena Kagan To U.S. Supreme Court

May 10th, 2010 1 comment

WASHINGTON — The National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the federation of right-to-life organizations in all 50 states, issued the following statement regarding President Obama’s nomination of Elena Kagan to fill the seat on the U.S. Supreme Court that is being vacated by Justice John Paul Stevens. This statement may be attributed to NRLC Legislative Director Douglas Johnson.

On April 21, 2010, President Obama used thinly veiled code language to communicate his clear intent to choose a nominee who would be hostile to legislative attempts to protect unborn humans.  The President stated that he wanted someone “who is going to be interpreting our Constitution in a way that takes into account . . . women’s rights,” and that this was going to be “very important” to him as he viewed our “core Constitution” as protecting the “bodily integrity” of women.

In light of the President’s stated intent, senators have an obligation to probe whether Elena Kagan will tolerate limits on abortion, enacted through normal democratic channels, or will seek to impose extreme pro-abortion views by judicial decree.  Ms. Kagan herself argued forcefully in 1995, in a lengthy book review published in the University of Chicago Law Review, that such inquiries by senators are a legitimate and necessary part of the confirmation process.

In the most recent Supreme Court ruling dealing with abortion and the rights of unborn children, Gonzales v. Carhart, on April 18, 2007, a five-justice majority upheld the federal Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act.  Yet on that occasion, four justices in dissent — including Justice Stevens — argued for a constitutional doctrine that would have invalidated the ban on partial-birth abortions and also, by implication, condemned virtually any other law or government policy intended to discourage abortion.   If the dissenters’ position became the position of the majority of the Supreme Court, various types of laws that have been deemed permissible under Roe v. Wade could be invalidated by judicial decree, perhaps including the Hyde Amendment (restricting government funding of abortion) and parental notification laws.  It is appropriate and necessary for senators to inquire into whether Ms. Kagan would embrace the extreme, results-oriented doctrines enunciated by the dissenting justices in that case.

(Since the Gonzales case was decided, dissenting Justice David Souter has been replaced by Justice Sonia Sotomayor.  Most analysts believe that Sotomayor would be very likely to join the pro-abortion bloc when such issues are revisited in the future.)

There are troubling indications that Ms. Kagan generally favors an activist, results-oriented approach to constitutional law.  For example, in her 1995 law journal article, she wrote, “The bottom-line issue in the appointments process must concern the kinds of judicial decisions that will serve the country and, correlatively, the effect the nominee will have on the Court’s decisions . . . If that is too results oriented … so be it. . .”  She also wrote that “it should be no surprise by now that many of the votes a Supreme Court Justice casts have little to do with technical legal ability and much to do with conceptions of value.”

Regarding Ms. Kagan’s specific views on the Court’s past abortion-related rulings, there is little on the public record.  But Ms. Kagan may have betrayed a possible personal animus towards the pro-life movement in a 1980 essay lamenting Republican gains in the 1980 election, in which she referred disparagingly to “victories of these anonymous but Moral Majority-backed [candidates] . . . these avengers of ‘innocent life’ and the B-1 Bomber . . .”   Was Ms. Kagan so dismissive of the belief that unborn children are members of the human family that she felt it necessary to put the term “innocent life” in quote marks, or does she have another explanation?  Would she be able to set aside any animus she has towards those who fight to protect innocent human life, when reviewing laws duly enacted for that purpose?

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National right to Life PAC Endorses Carly Fiorina For Senate

May 10th, 2010 No comments


NATIONAL RIGHT TO LIFE PAC ENDORSES CARLY FIORINA FOR SENATE

WASHINGTON (5/6/2010) — Looking to defeat pro-abortion Senator Barbara Boxer in November, the political arm of the nation’s largest pro-life organization, the National Right to Life Political Action Committee (NRL PAC) endorsed Carly Fiorina for U.S. Senate in both the June 8 California Republican primary and November general elections.

“It is clear that Carly Fiorina is a strong advocate for life and is a candidate who can win,” said National Right to Life Political Director Karen Cross.  “She supports pro-life legislative efforts to protect innocent human life – unborn children and medically disabled or dependent persons whose lives are threatened by abortion or euthanasia.”

Recently Congressional Democrats voted to enact President Obama’s health care legislation which will provide federal funding for insurance plans that cover abortion on demand and contains other provisions which can lead to further expansion of abortion.  It also contains provisions that will result in large-scale rationing of lifesaving medical treatments.

“Carly Fiorina is serious and sincere in her respect for the sanctity of human life,” added Cross. “She is committed to take up the cause of life in the United States Senate and we look forward to working with her on those efforts.”

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Paid for by National Right to Life PAC.  www.nrlpac.org

Not authorized by any candidate or candidate’s committee.

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