by
Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
December 19,
2009
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Washington,
DC (LifeNews.com) -- Senate Republicans have analyzed the so-called
new abortion funding compromise struck by Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid and Nebraska Sen. Ben Nelson. They say the language, which doesn't
ban abortion funding under the bill, leaves open paying for abortions
on Indian reservations.
Senate Republican aides examining the new language say Reid's amendment, which would add the compromise to the government-run health care bill, doesn't apply to Indian health care provisions.
The amendment includes by reference legislation the Indian Affairs Committee approved last year covering health care for the many tribal reservations. According to a Roll Call article, that version of the legislation is deemed passed by the whole Senate by including a reference to it in the health care bill.
However, the Indian health care legislation the committee approved does not include a ban on abortion funding that has traditionally been included in such bills. Sen. David Vitter, a Louisiana Republican, tried to get an abortion funding ban included on the Senate floor, but the bill died in a conference committee.
Meanwhile, the Reid-Nelson language does not apply to the Indian health care funding bill.
One republican aide told Roll Call that is a "huge mistake" and predicted it could cause problems for Reid because it undermines the supposed deal he has with Nelson to exclude abortion funding.
When you drop major pieces of legislation into a 2,000-page bill simply by reference, you're going to make mistakes. For advocates of life, this mistake is a huge one, the aide said.
However, an aide to a Democratic senator claimed the Hyde amendment would cover the Indiana health care funding, even though it typically only applies to the bill covering Medicare and HHS.
The
legislation maintains the long-standing practice of applying
the same standard for [Indian Health Services] as [Health and Human
Services], which is Hyde, the aide claimed, according to Roll
Call.
The Indian Health Services bill has never carried the Hyde amendment
and the bill funded abortions well after the Hyde amendment was first
enacted in 1976.
Last year, the Senate voted for the Vitter amendment on a 52 to 42 vote with all of the Senate Republicans other than Maine Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe voting for the amendment.
They were joined by Democrats Evan Bayh of Indiana, Robert Byrd of West Virginia, Robert Casey of Pennsylvania, Tim Johnson of South Dakota, Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, Ben Nelson of Nebraska, Mark Pryor of Arkansas, Harry Reid of Nevada, and Ken Salazar of Colorado.
The
Reagan Administration curbed the practice of funding abortions through
the IHS bill administratively in 1982, as a temporary fix.
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