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Damage Control in Obama’s D.C.
BY Tom McFeely
January 25-31, 2009 Issue |
Posted 1/16/09 at 8:06 AM
The new Democrat-dominated Congress
was sworn in Jan. 9 in Washington. And, to assess what’s in store regarding
human life issues in Washington’s new and more pro-abortion political
landscape, the Register’s Tom McFeely spoke with Douglas Johnson, legislative
director of the National Right to Life Committee.
Johnson’s overall assessment:
Pro-lifers will be in a damage-control mode as they resist implementation of
the pro-abortion agenda being pushed by Obama and the Democratic leadership of
the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives.
What is happening with respect
to the Freedom of Choice Act in the new Congress?
Nothing is happening yet.
It’s really speculation as to what
the different key lawmakers will decide to focus on first. But I’d say that the
likelihood is high that the first big challenges will be on other fronts like
the Hyde Amendment (which limits abortion), health-care reform and some of the
things that are going to be attached to that — and some other things.
I don’t see any indications there is
likely to be early action on the Freedom of Choice Act.
With respect to things like the
Hyde Amendment and the Mexico City Policy, what do you expect on those fronts?
The Mexico City Policy is an
executive order. There is no action by Congress required, and so we would
expect, regrettably, that President Obama would issue a new executive order
that would nullify that policy very quickly after he takes office.
So that’s going to happen. There’s some
other things he can do unilaterally, like open the doors to federal funding of
research that requires killing human embryos, and he’s likely to do that fairly
quickly, as well.
But the things that we’re focusing
our attention on are those where the Congress would have to take some action in
order to accomplish the goals that he has enunciated in the past.
For example, on the Hyde Amendment,
here we have a law that has reduced abortions. Both sides admit that it has
greatly reduced the number of abortions; there are conservatively more than a
million Americans alive today, probably two million, because of the Hyde
Amendment. And yet it’s on the hit list for the new administration.
So that’s a big, big issue. And
that’s one that basically they have to decide what they are going to do in the
next couple of months, because it’s tied to the annual appropriations process.
The Hyde Amendment is a provision of the annual appropriations bill. The burden
is on our side every year, if you will, to renew it every year.
The last time it’s been under
serious attack was way back [in 1993] when Clinton came in. But it does come up
as part of the appropriations process, and so I think we’re going to be in a
fight on that in fairly short order. I mean, this spring at the latest.
What should Catholics and other
pro-lifers do to assist the pro-life effort in Congress?
They need to convey to their
individual representatives, to their House member and their two senators, that
we don’t want this Obama abortion agenda. We don’t want federal funding of
abortion on demand with our tax dollars. We don’t want to be forced to pay for
abortions with our health-care premiums.
We don’t want pro-life doctors and
pro-life nurses and pro-life hospitals put at risk of lawsuits if they refuse
to provide abortions. The Bush administration has put teeth into the federal
conscience statutes with this new regulation that Obama’s administration has
given signs that they’re going to attack as soon as they get into office.
That’s another important issue, this whole issue of protection of pro-life
health-care providers.
FOCA wraps all these things
together, but I think we’re going to see in the immediate future a piecemeal
attack. And we need members of Congress to be hearing from their constituents
that they don’t agree with this abortion agenda, that these things should be
left alone — the Hyde Amendment should be left alone, pro-life heath-care
workers should be left alone, and so on.
That’s the message we’re encouraging
people to convey, because Obama does need Congress’ agreement on most of these
things. If they just say they are going to let sleeping dogs lie, the status
quo at least is preserved.
Do you think the interventions
of the U.S. bishops on these issues are having an influence on members of
Congress?
I think they are. Anything on that
scale will have an impact. You know, not on the real hard-core abortion
element, but on the people who really decide these issues.
There aren’t enough hard-core
pro-lifers for us to win on most of these things we are talking about right
now. Right now in the U.S. Senate there are at least 58 or 59 votes in support
of Roe v. Wade, but that includes a
substantial number who also will vote against federal funding of abortion, who
would vote in favor of conscience rights, who would vote for the Unborn Child
rule and stuff like that.
So it’s very helpful with that
middle group when they see that type of activity out there. It makes them less
likely to just go along with the activist pro-abortion agenda that the pressure
groups are going to be pushing with support, to some degree at least, of the
administration.
They’re getting a lot of mail, a lot
of phone calls on the issue. When they get back home, they’re having their town
hall meetings and people actually should stand up and say, “I’m hoping you’re
not going to support this thing I read about in the Catholic
Standard.”
That has an impact. They go back to
Washington; they have their meetings behind close doors, and they say, “Why are
we doing this again? Let’s not do this. People are stirred up, let’s do
something else.”
Now that’s not a formula for us
moving the ball in the pro-life direction, but it’s probably what we’ve got
right now. We’re in a defensive posture for sure with this new gang in town.
Tom McFeely is the
Register’s contributing editor and resident blogger. Read More at
NCRegister.com.
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