Thursday, June 24, 2021

JOE BIDEN - WE ARE THE PARTY OF CHEAP BABY BUTCHERIES AND MUCHO WELFARE FOR OUR INVADING ANCHOR BABY BREEDERS

 

House Democrats Block Consideration of Bill to Ban Taxpayer Funding of Abortion

A mother holds the foot of her newborn baby on July 7, 2018 at the hospital in Nantes, western France. (Photo by LOIC VENANCE / AFP) (Photo credit should read LOIC VENANCE/AFP/Getty Images)
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House Democrats blocked consideration of a bill Wednesday that would have codified the Hyde Amendment into federal law, banning taxpayer funding of abortion.

“Over 2.4 million girls and boys, who would have been aborted, instead survived because taxpayer funding was unavailable to effectuate their violent demise,” said Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ) on the floor of the House as he spoke in support of his legislation, the No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act (H.R. 18).

House Republicans are engaged in a campaign called “18 Days for H.R. 18,” an effort to assert their pro-life agenda and give Democrats an opportunity to join with them in retaining the longstanding bipartisan Hyde Amendment.

Smith noted that “166 Members of Congress have cosponsored my bill H.R. 18—No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act – to make the Hyde Amendment and other current abortion funding prohibitions permanent.”

“According to public opinion polls most Americans—by a decisive margin of 58% to 38% in a recent Marist poll—agree that taxpayers should not—I say again should not—be compelled against their conscience to fund abortion,” he added.

National pro-life leaders assert the Biden-Harris administration is the most pro-abortion in history. Under the guise of “equity,” and declaring abortion is the equivalent of “women’s health care,” Biden and his supporters vowed to eliminate the Hyde Amendment, a move forcing Americans to fund abortion, even those with faith beliefs and moral standards that forbid it.

At the end of May, Biden, a self-described Catholic, released his Fiscal Year 2022 budget, one that would eliminate the Hyde Amendment, a provision he once wholeheartedly supported.

In April 1994, then-Sen. Biden wrote to a constituent, “Those of us who are opposed to abortion should not be compelled to pay for them.”

Recently, a coalition of 22 state attorneys general urged Congress to restore the Hyde Amendment.

22 State AGs Urge Congress to Ban Taxpayer Funding of Abortions

In this Friday, June 8, 2018, file photo, Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall tells the House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution and Civil Justice that his state will wrongly suffer a loss of representation if the 2020 census counts immigrants who are in the country illegally, on Capitol Hill in …
AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite
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Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall is leading a coalition of 22 state attorneys general in a call upon Congress to restore the Hyde Amendment to federal spending bills and prohibit taxpayer funding of abortions.

National pro-life leaders assert the Biden-Harris administration is the most pro-abortion in history. Under the guise of “equity,” and declaring abortion is the equivalent of “women’s health care,” Biden and his supporters have vowed to eliminate the longstanding Hyde Amendment, a move that is forcing Americans to fund abortion, even those with faith beliefs and moral standards that forbid it.

“The Hyde Amendment was first enacted in 1976 following the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Roe v. Wade, and has been reenacted every year since with broad bipartisan support,” Marshall wrote, adding:

The key to the Hyde Amendment’s four-and-a-half-decades longevity is that its purpose is clear and commonsensical: it prohibits the use of federal funds for abortions (with exceptions), on the basis that a great many taxpayers object to abortion on moral or religious grounds and, therefore, it is unconscionable to force them to pay for abortions by using their tax dollars for that purpose. Congress should resist following President Biden down this path and should instead maintain the Hyde Amendment language in the budget it ultimately passes.

A Knights of Columbus/Marist Poll released in January found 58 percent of those surveyed oppose taxpayer funding of abortion, including 31 percent of Democrats, 83 percent of Republicans, and 65 percent of independents.

The poll also found more than three-fourths of Americans (76 percent) back significant restrictions on abortion, including a majority who identify as “pro-choice.”

At the end of May, Biden, a self-described Catholic, released his Fiscal Year 2022 budget, one that would eliminate the Hyde Amendment, a provision he once wholeheartedly supported.

In April 1994, then-Sen. Biden wrote to a constituent, “Those of us who are opposed to abortion should not be compelled to pay for them.”

“Seeking the Democratic nomination for president, candidate Biden again affirmed his support for the Hyde Amendment,” Marshall wrote. “But then—forty-eight hours later—he reversed himself and denounced the Hyde Amendment after facing criticism from a small but extreme minority of the American populace: pro-abortion activists.”

“Unborn life might be nothing more than a matter of politics for the administration, but it is something quite different for us: the policy in question is one of life or death,” the attorney general asserted. “Studies of the Hyde Amendment have found that it has saved the lives of millions of unborn children—saving 2.13 million lives in its first forty years alone, and saving over 60,000 lives per year today.”

Marshall was joined in the letter to Congress by the attorneys general of Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and West Virginia.


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