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Pro-Choice

Men Telling Women What Their Rights Are? The Stupak Amendent Roll Call Review

by: robert.harding

Mon Nov 09, 2009 at 00:15:41 AM EST

I will start with a personal story. After my father passed away last year, I was left as the only male remaining in my immediate family. My mother and six sisters keep me busy. Most of my sisters are Democrats but a few are Republicans. They might disagree on certain issues but if there is one thing they are united on, it is the belief that a woman has a choice and that all women should be entitled to that choice.

Remember that: A WOMAN's right to choose.

The Stupak amendment was all about a woman's right to choose or rather, taking away that right. It was a sorry amendment which, the more you read, appears to be a deal sweetener to get Blue Dogs on board with health care reform. We couldn't get a vote on single-payer but we can vote for the stripping of women's rights.

There is an interesting fact about the vote on the Stupak amendment that is worth noting. Of the 240 votes in support of the amendment put forth by Congressman Bart Stupak (a man), how many of those votes were women?

19. That's right, on a vote that will impact women AND only women, 19 women voted in the affirmative. And 17 of those women are from the Republican Party (all 176 Republicans supported the amendment).

Only two women from the Democratic side (of the women in Congress, there are 57 in the House Democratic conference) voted for this amendment: Kathleen Dahlkemper and Marcy Kaptur. Both Dahlkemper and Kaptur attached their names to the amendment and were paraded out to try and make this look legitimate, but with 62 male members of the Democratic Party voting against women, nothing about it is legitimate.

Stupak, in a statement about the passage of his amendment, said the following:

"Today all members of Congress were afforded the opportunity to vote their conscience and represent the wishes of their constituents on the issue of federal funding for abortion," Stupak said.  "Passage of the Stupak Amendment does not impose a new federal abortion policy; it simply continues what has been the law of the land since 1977 and I am pleased that with the addition of this amendment the House health care reform bill will continue that policy."

"I have long been an advocate of health care reform.  My goal has always been to ensure that the voices of the majority of Americans who oppose federal funding for abortion were heard in this important debate.  Now that those voices have been heard we must move forward and pass a bill that provides quality, affordable health care for all Americans.  I thank Speaker Pelosi for allowing this important vote to occur and I appreciate the hard work and perseverance of my pro-life colleagues in Congress who held strong and stood with me over the past several months as we worked to find a way to allow this vote against all odds."

NARAL Pro-Choice America had plenty to say about the amendment's passage, calling it a vote for "extreme anti-choice policies" and a "blow to women's freedom and privacy."

The Stupak-Pitts amendment makes it virtually impossible for private insurance companies that participate in the new system to offer abortion coverage to women. This would have the effect of denying women the right to use their own personal private funds to purchase an insurance plan with abortion coverage in the new health system - a radical departure from the status quo. Presently, more than 85 percent of private-insurance plans cover abortion services.

"This vote is a reminder to America's pro-choice majority that, despite our gains in the last two election cycles, anti-choice members of Congress still outnumber our pro-choice allies," Keenan said. "It is unconscionable that anti-choice lawmakers would use health reform to attack women's health and privacy, but that's exactly what happened on the House floor tonight. Even though the bill already included a ban on federal funding for abortion and a requirement that only women's personal  funds could pay for abortion care, Reps. Stupak and Pitts took their obsession with attacking a woman's right to choose to a whole new level. We will hold those lawmakers who sided with the extreme Stupak-Pitts amendment accountable for abandoning women and capitulating to the most extreme fringe of the anti-choice movement. In short, the fight is not over. That's why we will continue to mobilize our activists and work with our allies in Congress to remove this dangerous provision from the health-care bill and stop additional attacks as the process moves to the Senate."

NARAL also included a few facts that debunk attempts by supporters of the Stupak amendment to make the measure appear like an ordinary move that just reinforces current federal guidelines.

   * The Stupak-Pitts amendment forbids any plan offering abortion coverage in the new system from accepting even one subsidized customer.  Since more than 80 percent of the participants in the exchange will be subsidized, it seems certain that all health plans will seek and accept these individuals.  In other words, the Stupak-Pitts amendment forces plans in the exchange to make a difficult choice: either offer their product to 80 percent of consumers in the marketplace or offer abortion services in their benefits package.  It seems clear which choice they will make.
   * Stupak-Pitts supporters claim that women who require subsidies to help pay for their insurance plan will have abortion access through the option of purchasing a "rider," but this is a false promise. According to the respected National Women's Law Center,  the five states that require a separate rider for abortion coverage, there is no evidence that plans offer these riders.  In fact, in North Dakota, which has this policy, the private plan that holds the state's overwhelming share of the health-insurance market (91 percent) does not offer such a rider.  Furthermore, the state insurance department has no record of abortion riders from any of the five leading individual insurance plans from at least the past decade.  Nothing in this amendment would ensure that rider policies are available or affordable to the more than 80 percent of individuals who will receive federal subsidies in order to help purchase coverage in the new exchange.

This is a damaging amendment. As stated earlier, it is hard to ignore the possibility that this was a deal sweetener for the Blue Dogs and other anti-choice Democrats to vote for health care reform. It is never good to sacrifice women's rights in the name of "reform." That's exactly what this amendment does.

Discuss :: (6 Comments)

Bill Owens Evolution On Health Care, Reproductive Rights

by: robert.harding

Sun Nov 08, 2009 at 20:43:39 PM EST

During the 23rd congressional district race, Bill Owens was questioned about his views on two issues important to progressives: Health care reform and reproductive rights. His stance on health care was questioned because of his position on the public option. He went from saying he did not support a public option to saying that if a bill met his standards and it included a public option, he would vote for it. But that also meant if the bill met his standards and did not have a public option, he would still vote for it. The public option, for Owens, was not a must-have.

Then came the vote for the Affordable Health Care for America Act last night. Owens was one of the 220 votes that passed the bill - a bill with a public option.

Owens had stated his support of a public option shortly before the election in a debate, but voting for it in Congress is a different story.

Owens' support of health care reform has not gone unnoticed either. President Barack Obama used Owens as an example of a candidate who campaigned on a platform of reform and won. That's not a bad backer to have during your first week on the job.

The other big vote for Owens came on the Stupak amendment. The Stupak amendment bans funds in the exchange set up by the health care reform bill being used to pay for abortion. Owens, who admitted that he was anti-choice prior to the campaign but has evolved since and believes that protecting Roe versus Wade is a must because it is the law. Owens voted against the Stupak amendment, joining all 27 Democratic representatives from New York in doing so.

Obama's point is a good one. Obama proved that you can win on a change (or reform) platform. Obama singling out Owens and saying Owens won on a change platform is a great point to make. Voters want a leader. Owens showed that NY-23 made a great choice.

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

NY-Sen: NARAL Pro-Choice New York To Endorse Gillibrand

by: robert.harding

Fri May 15, 2009 at 08:14:39 AM EDT

It will officially be announced later today, but NARAL Pro-Choice New York is making its decision on who they will back for the U.S. Senate.

Last night, the New York Daily News reported that the group would endorse New York's junior senator, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand for the 2010 elections.

Gillibrand, who was appointed by Gov. David Paterson in January to fill Hillary Clinton's old U.S. Senate seat, doesn't have to run for re-election until next year.

But a number of Democrats - among them Reps. Carolyn Maloney, Steve Israel, and Carolyn McCarthy and Manhattan Borough president Scott Stringer - have all signaled they are mulling a primary against the upstate Gillibrand, whose congressional record has often leaned to the right (although not, it should be noted, when it comes to abortion rights).

Enter NARAL, who, like Sen. Chuck Schumer, is hoping that an early announcement of support Gillibrand - coupled with her prodigious fundraising - will scare the other Democrats away.

"Is this somewhat motivated by our desire to not see a bloodbath of a primary in advance of a general election?" Conlin said. "Absolutely. But it is backed up by solid record."

Conlin said this endorsement is the earliest NARAL has ever chosen sides in a race.

"Quite frankly, although there will be other friends who will look at this seat, Kirsten is the person who we think is best suited to walk in Hillary Clinton's footsteps and be that champion on reproductive health and rights," Conlin said.

Although Gillibrand has faced criticism for her conservative voting record on issues like guns and immigration while a congresswoman from the GOP-dominated 20th CD - positions she is now rushing to moderate as senator - Conlin said Gillibrand has been a model of consistency on abortion rights.

Avoiding a primary would be ideal. I know that some like primaries, but I only like primaries when they are necessary. If a candidate deserves a primary challenge, they should be challenged. Especially as progressives, we know that there are elected officials out there who deserve primaries. I don't see Gillibrand as one of them, but this race was surely going to draw at least one or two primary challengers for a prized seat in the U.S. Senate.

There will be more on this endorsement later after NARAL Pro-Choice New York makes their official announcement.

Discuss :: (3 Comments)
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