The Truth About Health-Care
Reform and Abortion
Part One of
Two
Editor's note. The following,
written by NRLC Legislative Director Douglas
Johnson, appeared on "The Corner," found at
National Review Online. It is reprinted with
permission.
Part Two is an
amusing but hugely important look at the work of
researchers who are able to convert human fat
cells into induced pluripotent stem cells, which
are virtually indistinguishable from embryonic
stem cells.
One of the biggest whoppers of
the summer is the argument that the Capps
Amendment to the Obama-backed health-care bill
(an amendment that was actually written by
pro-abortion champion Rep. Henry Waxman and his
veteran staff) represents a "compromise." A
meeting of the minds between Planned Parenthood
(which loves the Capps Amendment) and the
congressman from West Hollywood is not likely to
be much of a compromise, and this one is as
phony as they come.
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Pro-abortion
President Barack Obama, delivering
his health-care speech last night to
a joint session of Congress,
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The Capps Amendment, if
enacted, would insert the federal government
into the abortion-funding business in two very
big ways, both of which would mark sharp breaks
from longstanding federal policy.
In her Washington Post column
today (aptly titled "The Next Health Reform
Myth"), Ruth Marcus never comes right out and
explains that the Capps Amendment explicitly
authorizes the government-run insurance program
-- the "public plan" -- to fund elective
abortions. The Obama Administration would
certainly exercise this option -- not only
because of the strong pro-abortion views of
Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen
Sebelius, but also because Barack Obama himself
directly promised Planned Parenthood in 2007
that his public plan would "provide all
essential services, including reproductive
services," and that such services would be "at
the center, and at the heart of the plan that I
propose." (His campaign confirmed, and no one
disputes, that "reproductive services" include
elective abortion.)
Obama has never repudiated this promise.
(You can watch videos of him making the
promise at
http://stoptheabortionagenda.com
and
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cqww8jmizug.)
Ruth Marcus adopts the abortion-lobby line
that "if" the public option covers elective
abortion, the abortions "can be financed
only from a separate pool of purely private
contributions." This argument is beyond
misleading -- it is truly absurd.
The "public option" would be a
program within the Department of Health and
Human Services (DHHS) and would be headed by the
HHS secretary. Under the Capps Amendment,
abortion providers would send their bills to the
DHHS. They would receive payment in the form of
checks drawn on a federal Treasury account --
that is, checks drawn on federal-government
funds, public funds. This would amount to direct
federal-government funding of elective abortion.
With few exceptions, funds
under the control of and expended by an agency
of the federal government cannot accurately be
described as "private funds." For example, the
funds in a citizen's bank account are private,
but once he or she writes a check to the IRS to
pay income taxes, the funds become
federal-government funds, public funds,
deposited in a U.S. Treasury account. The same
is true here. Once a public-plan enrollee makes
a "premium" payment to the DHHS, the funds are
no longer "private" -- they are
federal-government funds, as truly and
completely as the funds that the government
gathers from income taxes, user fees, fines, and
other sources.
(The National Right to Life
Committee (NRLC) has issued a memorandum proving
that all of the funds that would be expended by
the "public option," and all of the funds that
would flow to the premium-subsidy program, would
in fact be "federal funds," both as a matter of
law and in the usage of those terms by federal
agencies. The memorandum is posted at
http://www.nrlc.org/AHC/NRLCmemoFederalFundsnotPrivateFunds.html.
It contains links to primary documents from the
Congressional Budget Office, the
GovernmentAccountability Office, and the
Congressional Research Service.)
Ruth Marcus and the others who
are attempting to label government-agency funds
as "private" are doing so for a transparently
political purpose: to conceal the reality that
H.R. 3200 would establish direct
federal-government funding of elective abortion
by a government insurance plan, and would also
result in large-scale federal subsidies for
private health plans that pay for elective
abortions. Both of these changes would be sharp
departures from longstanding federal policy.
Marcus's comparison between
the proposed federal insurance plan paying for
abortions under the bill, and some states
currently paying for abortions under Medicaid,
really makes no sense at all. Each of us lives
under two sovereigns -- the federal government
and a state government (unless one lives in a
federal enclave). Under the Hyde Amendment, no
federal funds may flow to any trust fund that
covers any abortions (except abortions in cases
of rape, incest, or when the mother's life is
endangered).
But of course this does not
prevent a state from setting up its own program
to pay for abortions for people who are
Medicaid-eligible, or for anybody else. Nor
would the NRLC-backed Stupak Amendment to the
Obama health bill, which would prevent federal
subsidies for abortion, prevent states from
setting up their own programs to pay for
abortions or abortion insurance. This really has
nothing to do with the subject of the current
debate, which is whether elective abortion
should be part of the proposed federal public
insurance plan and whether private insurance
plans that cover elective abortion should
receive federal subsidies.
By the way, none of the funds
that would be used to create and operate the
proposed public-option and premium-subsidy
programs would flow through the annual DHHS
appropriations bill, which is why the two
programs would not be covered by the Hyde
Amendment in the first place. The NRLC has
documented this point in a separate memorandum [http://www.nrlc.org/AHC/NRLCmemoHydeAmendmentWillNotApply.html]
and the same conclusion is supported by
memoranda recently issued by the Congressional
Research Service. It is an important point,
especially since Senate majority leader Harry
Reid, many other congressional Democrats, and
President Obama recently have claimed that the
Hyde Amendment would prevent the proposed new
federal programs from paying for abortions.
Moreover, the Capps Amendment
is boobytrapped in a manner that ensures that if
renewal of the Hyde Amendment is blocked for a
future fiscal year -- a definite possibility,
since President Obama opposes the Hyde Amendment
-- this would automatically extend an abortion
mandate to the public plan. A lapse in the Hyde
Amendment would also effectively remove the
Capps requirement -- which Marcus makes out to
be a great concession -- "that the exchanges
include at least one plan without abortion
coverage." And, of course, a lapse in the Hyde
Amendment would result in a resumption of
federal funding of abortion on demand in
Medicaid, a program in which the federal
government was paying for 300,000 elective
abortions annually when the Hyde Amendment was
first passed in 1976.
Mainstream media journalists
who adopt the untenable claim that a federal
agency would spend "private" funds on abortion
are allowing themselves to be manipulated in a
way that misleads the public regarding the
important public-policy issues at stake. The
NRLC had a lot more to say about that in a media
advisory released yesterday (which can be found
at
http://www.nrlc.org/AHC/Advisory090809.html).
Part Two |