Sebelius: No Public Abortion Funding in Health Care Bill
Sunday 13 September 2009
by: David Lightman | McClatchy Newspapers

According to HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius (pictured), the health bill will
not include any public funding for abortion services. (Photo: ProgressOhio /
flickr)
Washington - Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius pledged Sunday that President Barack Obama will support barring public funding for abortion in any health care overhaul legislation.
"That's exactly what the president said and I think that's what he intends, that the bill he signs will do," she said on ABC's "This Week."
Abortion policy has been an ongoing concern throughout the health care debate. In July, the House Energy and Commerce Committee attempted to compromise on abortion funding as it wrote its version of the health care bill.
Also see below:
Rights Group Calls Obama's Comments on Abortion in Health Reform "Lamentable" •
The bill would permit the proposed public health care plan to fund abortions, though not with federal money.
The provision was approved by only a 30-28 vote by the committee, as six Democrats joined 22 Republicans to vote against it. Anti-abortion groups labeled the measure a "sham," but abortion rights backers said that without such protection, women who use the "public option" could be barred from obtaining abortions.
Currently, federal money can only be used for abortions that deal with pregnancies resulting from rape, incest or that endanger the mother's life.
"There's no intent to change the language that's in the current Medicaid statute, which has been there for years and provides insurance to millions of Americans," Sebelius said Sunday.
Anti-abortion groups remained wary. Douglas Johnson, National Right to Life legislative director, noted that "for months the president, his staff, and his congressional allies have misrepresented actual language in their bills that would result in government funding of elective abortions."
"The latest statements by Mr. Obama and Ms. Sebelius are most likely a continuation of their strategy of denial, evasion and distortion," Johnson said in a statement Sunday. "We say, watch what they do, not what they say."
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Rights Group Calls Obama's Comments on Abortion in Health Reform "Lamentable"
Friday 11 September 2009
by: Jodi Jacobson | Visit article original @ RH Reality Check
For women's rights groups who saw health reform as a chance to advance reproductive justice--including equity of access for poor women to all legal reproductive and sexual health services including abortion care--the past few months have been a serious disappointment.
Disorganization and lack of clear leadership from the White House and Congress has left the Democrats once again ceding the conversation and the political territory to the far right. Now, even in a compromise in which no federal funding for legal abortion services for women will be allowed, the President has been persistently reinforcing, if only rhetorically, the barriers poor women face to care, and to exercising their basic human rights to whether, when and with whom to have children.
The Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR) is one group that has openly expressed disappointment in the process and in the President's comments on abortion funding in his speech Wednesday to both Houses of Congress.
Nancy Northrup, the president of the Center, called for "more forthright dialogue and vocal leadership on women's health needs in the healthcare reform debate, particularly on the issue of access to abortion.
"It is lamentable that during a major speech on healthcare reform, the President chose to reinforce a longstanding barrier to women's ability to obtain abortion. For years, the federal government has prohibited federal funds from being used to pay for abortion except under extremely narrow circumstances—even when a woman's health is jeopardized by her pregnancy.The effect has been millions of women, including those living below the poverty line, military personnel and their dependents, women served by the Indian Health Service, Peace Corps volunteers, and federal employees and their dependents who rely solely on these programs for their medical care are deprived of their right to safe, legal abortion."
But, as Northrup underscored, "Reproductive health, including decisions about whether or not to have children, cut to the core of a woman's daily reality as well as her well-being. The fact that the President can set out to have a comprehensive discussion of healthcare needs, but end up relegating an essential medical service, only used by women, to an outlier status, is disappointing to say the least. This was a missed opportunity to re-examine the meaning of access to a full range of choices in healthcare for women."
CRR's statement on the speech underscores that abortion is the most common surgical procedure in the United States and one in three women will have one in their lifetimes.
"Private insurers appreciate that protecting women's health means providing women access to the full range of reproductive health services and a majority offer abortion coverage. The Capps Amendment--which means that no federal monies will be used for abortion, but does secure access to the service--is a defensive move primarily intended to ward off hostile Congressional amendments to women's abortion coverage. The amendment still segregates abortion from the larger field of healthcare, and should not be mistaken as sound policy. After healthcare reform is enacted, we look forward to a forthright dialogue that puts women's healthcare needs above politics."
There is as yet no guarantee that the Capps Amendment--which protects the rights of women to access to abortion care under private insurance even where federal funding subsidies exist for some enrollees--will survive the legislative process and far right groups and legislators continue to mislead on the issue of abortion care in health reform.



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Can you spell
Mon, 09/14/2009 - 18:27 — Bubbiesue (not verified)The forces arrayed against
Mon, 09/14/2009 - 18:31 — Regina (not verified)Obama takes still another
Mon, 09/14/2009 - 19:55 — Lice-Christ (not verified)All well and good, but the
Mon, 09/14/2009 - 21:04 — Anonymous (not verified)the whole dabte on
Mon, 09/14/2009 - 21:13 — Bearzerker (not verified)We will not get ANY reform
Tue, 09/15/2009 - 14:57 — Anonymous (not verified)Nothing wrong with family
Wed, 09/16/2009 - 10:40 — Anonymous (not verified)I am an Canadian. I had two
Wed, 09/16/2009 - 18:58 — Anonymous (not verified)