To go to the Abortion in Health Care
index, click here.
To go to the NRLC Home page, click
here.
To go to the NRLC Legislative Action Center, click
here.
For immediate release:
Thursday, October 8, 2009, Noon
For further information:
Derrick Jones, 202-626-8825,
mediarelations@nrlc.org
Federal Legislation Department, 202-626-8820,
legfederal@aol.com
NRLC: White House Press
Secretary's Remarks Show White House Still Engaged in
Smuggling Operation for Government Funding of Abortion
WASHINGTON (October 8, 2009) -- A
spokesman for the nation's major pro-life organization
said that remarks by the White House press secretary on
October 7 "once again demonstrated that the White House
is a partner in an ongoing smuggling operation, which if
successful will result in funding of abortion on demand
by the federal government."
The following exchange occurred during
the October 7, 2009, daily press briefing by White House
Press Secretary Robert Gibbs:
QUESTION [by CNS News reporter Fred
Lucas]: It's a question on health care, actually; two
questions. First, in a letter to senators last week, the
U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops said that, quoting,
"So far the health reform bills considered in the
committee, including the new Senate Finance Committee
bill, have not met the President's challenge of barring
the use of federal dollars for abortion." Is that
statement wrong?
MR. GIBBS: Well, I don't want to
get me in trouble at church, but I would mention there's
a law that precludes the use of federal funds for
abortion that isn't going to be changed in these health
care bills.
Q: There have been, though, several
amendments that would explicitly bar abortions, that
would therefore reject it, some of those amendments by
Democrats --
MR. GIBBS: Again, there's a fairly
well documented federal law that prevents it.
In his answers, Gibbs in essence repeated
a discredited claim made by President Obama himself on
August 20,
when the President said:
"There are no plans under health reform to revoke the
existing prohibition on using federal taxpayer dollars
for abortions. Nobody is talking about changing that
existing provision, the Hyde Amendment. Let's be clear
about that. It's just not true."
More recently, Obama said in a September
9 speech to both houses of Congress that "under our
plan, no federal dollars will be used to fund
abortions." On September 13, George Stephanopoulos of
ABC News asked Secretary of Health and Human Services
Kathleen Sebelius, “So you're saying it will go beyond
what we have seen so far in the House and explicitly
rule out any public funding for abortion?," and received
from Sebelius
this answer: “Well
that’s exactly what the President said and I think
that’s what he intends that the bill he signs will do.”
Douglas Johnson, legislative director for
the National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the
national federation of right-to-life affiliates, said:
"Gibbs' statement is one more proof, if any more were
needed, that the White House is actively engaged in a
political smuggling operation -- an attempt to achieve
funding of elective abortion by the federal government,
cloaked in smokescreens of contrived language and
outright deception. There is no current federal law that
would prevent the new programs created by the pending
health care bills from paying for abortion on demand --
and the White House knows this full well. Only language
written directly into the bills would prevent government
funding of abortions -- but such language has been
blocked by the Democratic chairmen of five congressional
committees, with White House cooperation, and House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi is refusing to allow the House to
even vote on adding a true Hyde Amendment to the health
care bill."
"The motivation for the ongoing White
House deception is found in
three recent
national polls that show strong public opposition to
government-funded abortion," Johnson added.
The October 7 reporter's question, and
the quoted statement from the U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops, clearly pertained to the health care
bills currently under consideration in Congress. The
pending bills each contain one or both of the following
components: (1) a nationwide government-run insurance
program, "the public plan," and (2) programs that would
subsidize health insurance for tens of millions of
Americans.
None of the funds that would be spent by
the public plan, and none of the funds that would be
spent by the premium subsidy programs, would be
appropriated through the annual appropriations bills.
This has been confirmed in memoranda issued by the
nonpartisan Congressional Research Service. This means
that none of these funds will be covered by the Hyde
Amendment, because the Hyde Amendment applies only to
funds appropriated through the annual Health and Human
Services appropriations bill.
Under the House bill (H.R. 3200), as
amended by the Capps-Waxman Amendment, the public plan
would be explicitly authorized to cover elective
abortions. The public plan would be a program within the
Department of Health and Human Services. As a federal
agency, the public plan could not possibly pay for
abortions with anything other than federal funds, as
documented in
this memorandum.
In 2007, Barack Obama stood on stage
alongside the president of the nation's largest abortion
provider, the Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA),
and promised that his health reform legislation and his
public plan would cover abortion. (This assertion was
recently reviewed by PolitiFact.com and rated "true,"
here. You can watch a
short video clip of Obama making the promises
here.)
"When senior congressional Democrats
suggest that the public plan would pay for abortions
with 'private funds,' they are engaged in a deception, a
political hoax," Johnson said. "The public plan would be
a program operated by a federal agency, which by law can
spend only federal funds. The public plan would be
engaged in direct funding of elective abortion. The Hyde
Amendment would not apply to this program, and the Capps
Amendment explicitly authorizes the federal agency to
pay for the elective abortions, using funds drawn on a
U.S. Treasury account."
Aside from the public plan, under which
the government would directly fund elective abortion,
both the House bill (H.R. 3200) and the two Senate bills
(S. 1679 and the Senate Finance Committee bill crafted
by Senator Max Baucus) would use federal funds to pay
part of the cost of the premiums of private health plans
that cover elective abortions. This would be a sharp
departure from current federal policy. Current federal
laws prevent both direct funding of abortion, and
subsidies for health plans that cover abortions (except
to save the life of the mother, or in cases of rape or
incest). The Hyde Amendment, for example, prohibits the
use of state Medicaid matching funds for elective
abortion (even in states that choose to set up their own
separate abortion-funding programs). But the Hyde
Amendment and other current laws would not apply to the
new premium subsidy programs, because they would not be
funded through the appropriations bills to which the
current restrictions are attached.
NRLC has issued
a detailed memorandum that explains how the proposed
public plan and the proposed premium subsidy programs
would be funded, and why the Hyde Amendment would not
apply to the proposed new programs. Another
NRLC memorandum explains why all of the funds that
would be spent by the public plan, and all of the funds
that would be used to subsidize health plans under the
premium subsidy programs, are in reality and in law
"federal funds." To document key points, both memoranda
link to documents issued by the Congressional Research
Service, the Congressional Budget Office, and the
Government Accountability Office.
To go to the Abortion in Health Care
index, click here.
To go to the NRLC Home page, click
here.
To go to the NRLC Legislative Action Center, click
here.
|