For further information:
Jessica Rodgers, 202-626-8825,
mediarelations@nrlc.org
SESTAK VOTED AGAINST AMENDMENT TO
PREVENT FEDERAL FUNDING OF ABORTION – BUT NOW HE
BRAZENLY MISREPRESENTS HIS RECORD
WASHINGTON (October 22, 2010) –
The clearest, most important vote to occur in years
in the U.S. House of Representatives on the issue of
federal funding of abortion was conducted on
November 7, 2009, when the House voted on the
Stupak-Pitts Amendment to the pending health care
restructuring bill (H.R. 3962). The amendment passed
the House 240 to 194. No Republican opposed it, and
it was also supported by 64 Democrats – fully
one-quarter of all of the Democrats in the House. Of
the 19 House members from Pennsylvania, 14 voted for
the Stupak-Pitts Amendment – including seven of the
12 Democrats.
But Congressman Joe Sestak was not
among them. Sestak voted against the Stupak-Pitts
Amendment. [House roll call no. 884, Nov. 7, 2009.]
He thereby voted to leave untouched multiple
pro-abortion provisions in the bill, including
language that would have explicitly authorized a
proposed new insurance program, operated directly by
the federal government (the so-called "public
option") to pay for all elective abortions.
Now, Sestak is trying to rewrite
history. In a debate on October 20, 2010, Sestak
asserted "I voted against taxpayers funding it
[abortion]." When his opponent challenged this
statement, Sestak insisted, "Congressman Toomey, I
voted against it."
Douglas Johnson, legislative
director for the National Right to Life Committee
(NRLC), commented, "Sestak has voted pro-abortion
100 percent throughout his time in Congress, so his
vote for government funding of abortion on demand
last November was not surprising – what is
remarkable is the brazenness of his attempt to
mislead voters. Under the legislation Sestak
supported, the Secretary of Health and Human
Services would have been sending checks to
abortionists from the U.S. Treasury to pay for
elective abortions."
Pro-abortion groups have long
recognized Sestak as a lock-step ally for their
legislative agenda. Ted Miller, director of
communications for NARAL was quoted in Womensenews
as saying, "voters can count on Joe Sestak to be
consistently pro-choice." [5/18/10]
Although the Stupak-Pitts
Amendment passed the House (despite Sestak's
opposition), no similar provision was contained in
the different health care bill (H.R. 3590) that
passed the Senate in December. A group of House
Democrats led by Rep. Bart Stupak refused to support
H.R. 3590 for months because of its pro-abortion
provisions, as they insisted that the Stupak-Pitts
language must be restored – but on March 21, 2010,
some of them flip-flopped and voted for the bill
anyway, including Rep. Kathy Dahlkemper (D-Pa.). Of
course, Sestak also voted to pass the bill, but he
was not part of the group that for months withheld
support because of the lack of an effective
prohibition on federal subsidies for abortion -- the
very type of prohibition that he had voted against
on November 7, 2009.
NRLC is the federation of state
right-to-life organizations, including the
Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation. The political arm
of NRLC, the National Right to Life PAC, is the
nation's largest pro-life political action
committee. NRLC Legislative Director Douglas Johnson
and other experts on congressional legislation
pertaining to abortion are available for interviews
and broadcast debates on federal funding of abortion
and related issues. In addition, NRLC has available
a wealth of documentation regarding the pro-abortion
components of the health care law, including a sworn
affidavit and supporting documents (www.nrlc.org/AHC/DvSBA/Release101210.html)
recently submitted to the Ohio Elections Commission.
To arrange an interview with or
appearance by an NRLC spokesperson, call
202-626-8825 or send email to
mediarelations@nrlc.org.
The National Right to Life
Committee (NRLC), the federation of 50 state
right-to-life groups and more than 3,000 local
chapters nationwide, is the nation's largest
pro-life group. National Right to Life works through
legislation and education to protect those
threatened by abortion, infanticide, euthanasia and
assisted suicide.