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Associated Press – May 4, 2007
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/04/AR2007050401530_pf.html
Bush Promises to Veto Abortion Measures
By JIM ABRAMS
The Associated Press
Friday, May 4, 2007; 4:58 PM
WASHINGTON --
President Bush is warning Democratic leaders that any attempt to
weaken federal policies that restrict abortion will be met with a
veto.
White House deputy
press secretary Tony Fratto said Friday that the warning, issued in
letters to House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid, was intended to stop abortion amendments from being
added to spending bills and other legislation that Congress will be
considering in the coming weeks.
"There's nothing
specific pending right now," Fratto said.
The Republicans who
held power in past sessions of Congress ensured that spending bills
included language prohibiting federal funding for abortion except to
save the life of the mother or in cases of rape or incest, and
restricting funding for international family planning groups that
might give advice on or provide abortions.
Now in the minority,
House and Senate Republicans recently wrote the president urging him
to make clear that any weakening of those restrictions would be
unacceptable.
"The standing pattern
is that appropriate conscience protections must be in place for
health care entities, and that taxpayer dollars may not be used in
coercive or involuntary family planning programs," Bush said in
letters dated Thursday.
"I will veto any
legislation that weakens current federal policies and laws on
abortion, or that encourages the destruction of human life at any
stage," he wrote.
Bush has already
threatened to veto legislation, passed by the House and Senate in
different forms this year, that would ease restrictions on federally
funded embryonic stem cell research. He killed a similar stem cell
bill last year in the first veto of his presidency.
Reid's spokesman, Jim
Manley, said that "if the president is serious about finding common
ground on this divisive issue, he should support Sen. Reid's efforts
to reduce the number of unintended pregnancies in this country."
Reid and others are sponsoring legislation that would improve family
planning services, require insurance companies to pay for birth
control and provide effective sex education for young people.
The letter was hailed
by anti-abortion leaders such as Douglas Johnson of the National
Right to Life Committee, who said his group appreciates "that the
president is drawing a bright line."
"President Bush is not
the first man to occupy the Oval Office who talked about valuing
preborn life, but no administration has backed up those words with
as much consistent policy support as his has," said Dr. James
Dobson, founder and chairman of Focus on the Family Action.
On the other side,
Nancy Keenan, president of NARAL Pro-Choice America, said Bush had
essentially told the new Congress "that he wants to continue denying
millions of women access to essential medical services, including
family planning and safe, legal abortion, even if it means
jeopardizing their health." |