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Pro-Lifers Brace for New Congress
111th Congress Promises Abortion-Funding Battles On Top of Economic Crisis
BY CHARLIE SPIERING REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
January 18-24, 2009 Issue |
Posted 1/12/09 at 8:05 AM
WASHINGTON â The 111th Congress
convened on Jan. 6 with strengthened Democratic majorities and increased
political clout once Barack Obama becomes president.
The new Congress also has a
significant number of Catholics, but whether that will make a difference in
favor of the Churchâs teaching on hot-button issues remains to be seen.
Catholic pro-lifers familiar with congressional politics are not optimistic.
A recent Pew Forum study showed that
30% of members in the new Congress identify themselves as Catholics. Two years
ago, when the 110th Congress was seated, there were 155 Catholics in the Senate
and House of Representatives. This year, there are 162.
Two Catholic members of Congress
speaking to the Register noted that the most important issue now is the ongoing
economic crisis. Congressional leaders are preparing a government-spending bill
to stimulate the economy.
âAs
a Catholic, I look at this issue like everybody else, that this is a huge
problem, and we need to do everything we can do to solve it without creating
more problems or long-term problems,â said Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan. âWe need
to do things that are stimulative in the short run but that donât create
further problems in the long run.â
U.S. Rep. Thaddeus McCotter,
R-Mich., agreed, âAs a Catholic, clearly I think it will be an uphill battle,
and I think thatâs stating the obvious,â he said.
Nevertheless, both Brownback and
McCotter admitted concern for the unborn, as hard-fought abortion restrictions
are now threatened by new leadership.
âI am very concerned with Obamaâs
stated support for the Freedom of Choice Act, very concerned about what heâs
going to do on the Mexico City Policy, and itâs almost a foregone conclusion
that he will support using taxpayer dollars to implement these policies,â
Brownback warned.
The
increase in Catholic membership does not necessarily mean much for issues of
concern to Catholics, particularly on pro-life issues, says Bill Donohue,
president of the Catholic League.
âWe
could have 90% of Catholics in the Congress and it really wouldnât mean
anything if they disagree with the official teachings of the Catholic Church on
public policy matters,â he said.
Nonetheless,
one new U.S. representative says he is on board with the teachings of the
Church: Ahn âJosephâ Cao, a former Jesuit seminarian and refugee from Vietnam.
âMy faith has been the center of my life all these years,â Cao told the Knights
of Columbus website FathersForGood.org. âI go to church almost every day to
discern what God is calling me to do with my life.â
Funding Abortion
The
Freedom of Choice Act remains a top concern for pro-life activists, but they
warn that the immediate battles lie in the federal budget process. As
appropriations are considered, pro-abortion organizations are likely to receive
federal funding.
âYouâre
going to watch a lot of bills move in a very quick period of time, given the
nature of one party running Congress and the executive branch,â Congressman
McCotter warned. âWe have to be careful that when these bills are leaving that
we make sure that there is no funding for abortions.â
A
recent report entitled âAdvancing Reproductive Rights and Health in a New
Administration,â drawn up by a coalition of pro-abortion organizations, was
recently posted on Obamaâs transition website, Change.gov. The report calls for
major policy reversals regarding abortion and requests up to $1.5 billion in
federal taxpayer funds for the abortion industry.
The
report prompted a fierce reaction from pro-life groups who are working to raise
awareness about the ambitious requests from the abortion industry.
âYou
name the program and the abortion community will find an abortion that should
be there,â said Susan B. Anthony List President Marjorie Dannenfelser, listing
budget requests for taxpayer-funded abortions in the Peace Corps, on military
bases, in prisons, and for recipients of Medicare. âEverywhere the vulnerable
exist, they want more abortions, it seems,â she added.
The
Susan B. Anthony List, an organization supporting pro-life women in politics,
immediately started a grassroots campaign urging activists to stop what they
labeled as the âabortion bailout.â The group has already generated up to 40,000
letters of protest to the Senate.
Brian
Burch, president of Fidelis, a Catholic advocacy group, agreed. âAs far as this
year is concerned, I think that the major issues are going to be lifting
funding restrictions or allocating further funds to these groups using taxpayer
dollars for abortion-related services,â said Burch, noting that even the
long-standing Hyde Amendment preventing taxpayer dollars to fund abortions is
threatened.
âIn
the context of the economic crisis that we are in, itâs outrageous that
Congress is prepared to spend as much as a billion dollars on one of the most
divisive issues,â said Burch.
Other
issues of concern to Catholics include additional federal funding for research
on embryonic stem cells. That is also likely to be a legislative priority for
congressional Democrats now that Obama is likely to remove Bush-imposed policy
restrictions.
Burch
also noted that as government gets further involved in funding heath insurance,
it may follow with government-imposed mandates for every hospital and every
doctor to provide abortions or contraception.
In
spite of the looming battles ahead, however, pro-life advocates insist that
itâs now more important than ever to remain vigilant, and they are redoubling
their efforts.
âWe
do what we always do, said McCotter. âIt doesnât change whether we are in the
minority or the majority. As a member, you have to be ever vigilant and do your
moral duty to defend the unborn, in spite of your circumstances.â
âItâs
getting back to pure, organic grassroots politics, which is the upside of
losing miserably,â noted Dannenfelser.
âBefore
there was this lulling sense that things were being taken care of. Thatâs gone
now. Itâs getting back to why we do these things in the first place; itâs over
every individual child that is loved and willed and necessary for this world
that is not going to make it.â
Charlie Spiering is based
in
Washington, D.C.
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