What appears below is a press release issued by
the National Right to Life Committee (NRLC) in Washington, D.C., on
Thursday, May 7, 2009, at 1:30 PM EDT. For further information,
contact the NRLC Federal Legislation Department,
Legfederal@aol.com
National Right to Life Slams Obama White
House for Urging Repeal of
Ban on Tax-Funded Abortion-on-Demand in Nation's Capital
The following statement was released by the nation's
largest pro-life organization, the National Right to Life Committee
(NRLC), soon after today's release by the White House of President
Obama's first detailed budget recommendations to Congress. The White
House document is intended to guide lawmakers as they craft spending
bills for the new federal fiscal year that begins on October 1. NRLC
is the federation of the right-to-life organizations in all 50
states.
"Some wide-eyed journalists and various political
shills for the Obama Administration continue to write fairy tales
about how President Obama wants to pursue policies that would reduce
abortions," said Douglas Johnson, legislative director for the
National Right to Life Committee (NRLC). "That is a political scam.
In reality, President Obama is pursuing a step-by-step strategy to
expand access to abortion, and today's step is to urge Congress to
authorize the funding of abortion on demand in the nation's capital,
with funds appropriated by Congress."
Today's White House budget submission explicitly
urges the House and Senate -- which the President's party currently
controls with nearly three-fifths majorities -- to repeal a law
(sometimes called the Dornan Amendment) that has prevented
tax-funded abortion in the District of Columbia for many years.
Article I of the U.S. Constitution says that
Congress holds complete legislative authority over the District of
Columbia ("exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever"). That is
why the entire budget for the District of Columbia (including
revenues generated by local sources) must be appropriated by
Congress through an annual appropriations bill.
For many years, the annual D.C. appropriations
bill has contained a provision to prevent the use of any
congressionally appropriated funds for abortions (except to save the
life of the mother, or in cases of rape or incest). The White House
budget document released today (on Appendix page 1209) asks Congress
to repeal the ban on the use of congressionally appropriated funds,
and replace it with a meaningless bookkeeping requirement that would
apply only to funds specifically contributed for federal program
purposes.
"If Congress goes along with the Obama proposal,
the predictable result will be tax funding of several thousand
elective abortions annually, including roughly 1,000 abortions
annually that would not otherwise occur," Johnson said. "Any member of Congress who votes for
a bill that contains the White House proposal is, in reality, voting
for tax-funded abortion on demand with congressionally appropriated
funds."
From 1988 until 1993, Congress annually included
the ban on the use of any appropriated funds to pay for abortions
(with narrow exceptions). The ban was temporarily lost early in the
Clinton Administration, but it was restored in 1996 (although the
city government illegally continued to pay for abortions for two
subsequent years, according to press reports), and has been in
continuous effect ever since.
During the period prior to enactment of the Dornan
Amendment, and during the time it was suspended in the Clinton
Administration, the city government paid for elective abortion on
demand with congressionally appropriated public funds. During the
congressional debates of that era, evidence was cited that indicated
that the city's abortion-funding policy was among the most
permissive in the nation, and was not even limited to
Medicaid-eligible clients. Elizabeth Reveal, D.C. budget director at
the time, "confirmed that the District's government has a policy of
funding abortion on demand and does not attempt to determine the
circumstances of the pregnancy." (Philadelphia Inquirer,
August 1, 1985.) In 1994, then-Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly authorized
the use of $1,000,000 from the Medical Charities fund, which was
originally set up to help indigent AIDS patients, to pay for
abortions.
Pro-abortion groups periodically publish academic
studies that demonstrate that policies that bar tax-funded abortions
actually prevent one-third or more of the abortions that would
otherwise occur among the covered populations.
"The abortion industry's own studies suggest that
many thousands of residents of the nation's capital are alive today
because of the abortion funding ban that President Obama now
proposes to repeal," said NRLC's Johnson.
"Today's White House action is one more evidence
that President Obama is trying to pull off a massive policy scam --
he generates a smokescreen of soothing rhetoric about seeking
'common ground' and 'abortion reduction,' while step by step
advancing concrete policies that will substantially increase the
number of abortions -- and pay for abortion on demand with
everyone's taxes," Johnson concluded.
The next step, Johnson suggested, would be "an
attempt to smuggle vast expansions of abortion into law through
health care reform legislation."
Barack Obama met with Planned Parenthood in 2007
and promised that mandatory abortion coverage would be "at the
center, the heart of" his health care reform legislation. In an
April 30, 2009, National Public Radio report, Cecile Richards,
president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, confirmed
that "health care reform is going to provide a platform" for
ensuring that "all women . . . regardless of their income, can get
access to the full range of health care options . . ."
The National Right to Life Committee (NRLC) is a
national federation of nonsectarian right-to-life organizations,
governed by a board elected by the state right-to-life organizations
and by members at large.
To return to the Obama Abortion Agenda Index Page, click
here.
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