The following letter was sent by
National Right to Life to members of the U.S.
House of Representatives on May 3, 2011. To
view or download the PDF version of the letter,
click here.
May 3, 2011
RE: No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion
Act (H.R. 3)
Dear Member of Congress:
The National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the
nationwide federation of right-to-life
organizations, urges you to support the No
Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act (H.R. 3) when
it comes before the House of Representatives on
May 4.
For many years, federal funding of
abortion has been restricted by a patchwork of
overlapping laws – many of which expire
annually, because they are incorporated into
annual appropriations bills. The best known of
these is the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits
both direct federal funding of abortion and
federal payments into any health plan which
covers abortion (with narrow exceptions). These
same principles have been applied, through
separate laws, to the Federal Employees Health
Benefits program, SCHIP, military health
programs, and other federal health programs.
These principles have broad public support – as
recently as April, a CNN poll found that 61% of
respondents opposed public funding for abortion.
Regrettably, however, the 111th Congress
enacted the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act (PPACA). During consideration of that
legislation, language was proposed (the
Stupak-Pitts Amendment) to apply the principles
of the Hyde Amendment to the multitude of
programs created by the bill, and the House
initially approved that language – but no such
provision was part of the enacted law, due to
opposition from President Obama and the Senate
majority. Consequently, the enacted PPACA
contains multiple provisions authorizing funding
of abortion and funding of health plans that
cover abortion. For documentation, please see
NRLC's February 9, 2011 testimony before the
Health Subcommittee of the House Energy and
Commerce Committee, at
http://www.nrlc.org/AHC/ProtectLifeActDouglasJohnsonTestimony.pdf,
and
http://www.nrlc.org/AHC/DvSBA/GenericAffidavitOfDouglasJohnsonNRLC.pdf.
H.R. 3 would codify the principles of the Hyde
Amendment on a permanent, government-wide basis,
applicable to both longstanding federal health
programs and to the new programs created by the
PPACA. A Member’s vote on H.R. 3 will
essentially define his or her position, for or
against federal funding of abortion, for the
foreseeable future. NRLC will include the vote
on final passage of H.R. 3 in our scorecard of
key right-to-life votes of the 112th Congress.
Moreover, we reserve the right to also score the
roll call on the Motion to Recommit, which we
anticipate will be an attempt to make the bill
far narrower than the traditional Hyde Amendment
– an attempt consistent with the Obama
Administration’s ongoing attempts to “reinvent”
the Hyde Amendment and to preserve legal
authorizations for federal funding of abortion.
Certainly, the veto threat on H.R. 3 issued by
the White House yesterday provides additional
graphic evidence that President Obama is opposed
to meaningful statutory limitations on federal
funding of abortion – notwithstanding his past
attempts to obfuscate this issue.
We would like to comment on two
additional components of H.R. 3. The bill would
codify the principles of the Hyde-Weldon
Amendment, which has been appended to the
original Hyde Amendment on every Health and
Human Services appropriations bill since 2004.
This provision would solidify important
protections for health care providers who do not
wish to participate in providing abortions –
which is especially important in light of the
Obama Administration’s February 23, 2011 action
rescinding the conscience protection regulation
issued by the Bush Administration.
H.R. 3 would also codify the “D.C. Hyde
Amendment,” which is the prohibition on the use
of government funds to pay for abortion in the
Federal District (except to save the life of the
mother, or in cases of rape or incest), recently
restored by enactment of the FY 2011 omnibus
appropriations bill (Public Law 112-10). Most
of the objections to this section misconstrue or
misrepresent the constitutional status of the
District of Columbia. Under the Constitution,
the District is exclusively a federal
jurisdiction. Article I says that Congress
alone exercises “exclusive legislation in all
cases whatsoever” over the Federal District.
The local administrative government is a
component of the federal government. It is
constitutional nonsense to speak of “non-federal
funds,” because all government funds in the
Federal District are federally controlled,
federally appropriated funds – and that is why
H.R. 3 applies the Hyde Amendment principles to
these funds.
Over one million Americans are alive
today because of the Hyde Amendment. In order
to preserve and extend this lifesaving policy,
NRLC respectfully urges you to reject the
anticipated Motion to Recommit, and to vote to
pass the No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act.
Thank you for your consideration of NRLC’s
positions on these critical issues.
Sincerely,
David N. O'Steen, Ph.D.
Executive Director
Douglas Johnson
Legislative Director
Susan T. Muskett, J.D.
Senior Legislative Counsel
National Right to Life Committee
Washington, D.C.