Womens Interests

Obama Fuels Battle Over Funds for Abortion

Both sides of the abortion debate are riled up over the funding of abortion services under Obama"s proposed public health plan. But as the battle heats up, a senator"s effort at compromise casts doubt on the public option altogether. Page 2 of 2Under the 1976 Hyde Amendment, Medicaid (the government"s health plan for low-income Americans) does not pay for elective abortions, but does pay for them in the cases of rape, incest and medical concerns that threaten the mother"s life. Changing the Hyde Amendment "We would love it if all poor women were able to get abortions, which would require repealing or changing the Hyde Amendment," said Dr. Suzanne Poppema, chair of the board for Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health. "That"s one of pro-choice advocates" longer-term goals. But right now, we"re fighting to ensure that the reform bill provides access for women"s health care and that it does not roll back coverage for the reproductive health services that many women already have." In his speech, Obama noted that private insurance is three times as expensive as employer-sponsored insurance; that premiums have gone up three times faster than wages; and that 14,000 Americans lose the coverage they need every day due to unemployment and rising health care costs. To address these problems, Obama recommends creating a public insurance plan that would coexist and compete with private insurers, in the same way that public colleges and universities share their market with private schools. Americans who could not afford his plan would get need-based tax credits so they could buy coverage. Obama"s proposal is outlined in H.R. 3200 (America"s Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009)--one of a dozen health-reform proposals now before Congress, and the one with the most support. Legislators may vote on the bill this month. Though Obama appeared in his speech to soften a long-held pro-choice position, reproductive rights activists are encouraged by the August amendment proposed by Rep. Lois Capps (D-Calif.). This legislation, absorbed into the official text of H.R. 3200, protects public-option abortion services by cordoning them off from federal funding. Instead of coming from tax dollars, the money would come from the premiums that individuals pay to join the public plan. Striking Common Ground In another pro-choice feature, the amendment says that elective abortion in the public plan could be funded at the discretion of the secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Current Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius has a long-standing pro-choice record. But the amendment strikes common ground by requiring every state to offer two types of public plans: one that provides abortion coverage and one that does not. Since Capps introduced her amendment, anti-choice groups have ramped up their media activism. The Family Research Council, a conservative Christian group based in Washington, D.C., ran ads in five states. The ad showed a couple sitting at a kitchen table and grimly commiserating over the man"s inability to get needed surgery through his public Medicare plan while "Planned Parenthood is included in the government-run health plan and spending tax dollars on abortions." The Susan B. Anthony List, which supports anti-choice female candidates and is headquartered in Arlington, Va., launched ads in Nevada, home of Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, attacking him for "pushing a massive government-run health care system requiring taxpayer funding for abortions." Students for Life of America, also in Arlington, asked high school students to wear white T-shirts with the slogan "Abortion is not health care," while Priests for Life, based in New York, asked people to "pray that the current health care reform bills being debated in Congress do not result in an expansion of abortion." Taking effect in 2013 and costing $900 billion over 10 years, H.R. 3200 would necessitate that every citizen carry health insurance and would require companies to cover their employees. The bill would prevent insurance companies from denying coverage because of preexisting conditions and prohibit them from dropping policyholders when they became ill. The bill would also create an insurance exchange in which individuals and businesses can shop for coverage at competitive prices. "The exchange would work much like Orbitz or other travel Web sites," said Tait Sye, a spokesperson for the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, which is the largest provider of abortion services in the United States. "People shopping for insurance would be able to review the listings in the exchange and then approach representatives from private insurers or the public plan to get details about signing up." Molly M. Ginty is a freelance writer based in New York City. * First * Previous *1 *2


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