House Healthcare Bill's Abortion Provisions Anger All Sides

November 9, 2009 RSS Feed Print

By Dan Gilgoff, God & Country

An abortion provision in the just-passed House healthcare bill that was designed to bring crucial antiabortion Democrats on board has not only outraged major abortion rights groups but has also incensed abortion foes. "This was a very cynical move on the part of the Democrats," says Marjorie Dannensfelser, president of the antiabortion Susan B. Anthony List, who doubts the House's strict restrictions on abortion coverage in government-subsidized health insurance will survive.

Many antiabortion groups expect the so-called Stupak-Pitts amendment, which prohibits a public health insurance option or private plans participating in a government-sponsored insurance exchange from offering abortion as part of basic coverage, to be stripped during negotiations between the House and the Senate, should the healthcare bill make it that far.

But abortion rights groups sound less confident of that outcome.

Democratic-allied faith groups, meanwhile, fear the House bill's sweeping abortion limits set up a showdown between abortion rights supporters and opponents that could torpedo healthcare reform.

Antiabortion groups winced as they released weekend statements applauding the inclusion of an amendment offered by Democratic Michigan Rep. Bart Stupak and Republican Pennsylvania Rep. Joe Pitts in the House bill. In addition to doubting the inclusion of Stupak-Pitts language in the final healthcare bill, most antiabortion groups oppose that bill on other grounds, like cost and concerns about end-of-life care.

"This has accomplished one goal," Dannensfelser said of the Stupak-Pitts amendment's inclusion in the House bill. "To worry the conservative base and to sort of confuse them."

Under the Stupak-Pitts provision, women would have to buy a separate insurance rider with their own money to cover abortions, a prospect that abortion rights groups call unlikely. Most women, they point out, don't count on unplanned pregnancies.

As abortion opponents voiced skepticism over the amendment's ultimate survival, abortion rights groups launched broadsides against its inclusion in the House bill. "It is extremely unfortunate that the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and antichoice opponents were able to hijack the healthcare reform bill in their dedicated attempt to ban all legal abortion in the United States," Cecile Richards, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement Saturday night. "We will work with [pro-abortion rights] members to rectify this travesty."

In a weekend Twitter post, Jehmu Greene, president of the Women's Media Center, wrote: "Hate that Dems are selling us out by basically banning access 2 abortions. They better wk this out in conference."

Left-leaning religious groups, for their part, are privately fuming at the Democratic House leadership for forgoing a compromise on abortion provisions that would have brought some antiabortion Democrats on board but would have been more palatable to abortion rights groups and Democrats.

The Stupak-Pitts amendment won support from 64 House Democrats, about a quarter of the party's caucus, and from most Republicans. The final healthcare bill, by contrast, had backing from a single GOP member.

 

Tags:
House of Representatives,
healthcare,
religion,
healthcare reform

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If you don't agree with abortion in any circumstance then you should sign up to adopt some of the thousands of children without families here in the U.S. and you should also agree with paying for welfare to assist those young mothers who keep their babies, many of whom end up abused and who we pay for when they go to jail.

susan of CA 12:51AM March 22, 2010

I think you still missing the point. Health care not about abortion, it’s about control of choices. Before I come here, I think America have free choice, good thing right? I think America no longer free choice for anybody. I think Poland have more free choice than America now.

You think maybe I’m crazy. In Poland “took” my guns away from me, but in America you make vote and “give” yours to government. Now they want you to make vote again on health care so you can “give” your choice to government. Now tell me who’s crazy one?

You don’t know you are fool until it happens to you and you have no more “free” choice. One day you will be forced to kill someone baby with your money. Then you will know, and you will feel pain and cry. I know, I took many to gas chamber. I loose sleep and feel pain many years just like you will. “Comrade” they say, “you are free to choose.” What can I choose I ask. “here is your choice they say.” I don’t like the choices I say. “government knows best choices for you” they say, “Now you choose or we choose for you.”

I've been there and wept many tears.... and now I laugh at foolish American who thinks you have “free choice” See we not so different. Welcome Comrade American.

micalosha of CA 5:46AM March 21, 2010

Abortion is in no way in the same category, not even the same galaxy as a motorcycle accident or an obese person. How many motorcyclists do you know that go out trying to kill people? And overweight people? Do they wake up in the morning wiht the intention of harming themselves or OTHERS? No, neither of those are correct. Abortion is the INTENTIONAL MURDER of an innocent helpless child, that has a beating heart within 21 days of conception. I will rot in jail if i have to. i refuse to pay taxes supporting this ridiculous KILLING of children. 1/3 of our kids generation is dead because of abortion. Thats ridiculous! No one should have the right to kill. NO ONE. In this free country every person has the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, correct? Thought so. The children that lie in the palm of God's hand never got to have the right to life because we are taking it from them. And I, among others refuse to sit back and watch it happen.

Megan of TN 8:53AM January 21, 2010

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Dan Gilgoff covers religion for U.S. News & World Report. He is the author of The Jesus Machine: How James Dobson, Focus on the Family, and Evangelical America are Winning the Culture War, and is a former politics editor at beliefnet. E-mail Dan at godandcountry@usnews.com.

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