March 30, 2012

News Links for March 30th

     

Controversial UN document may uphold 'reproductive rights' for children

Obamacare is constitutional, contraceptive mandate is not, bishop argues

Federal Court Hears About Pregnancy Center Signs

Vatican approves blessing for child in womb

Another abortion patient rushed to hospital

Ave Maria School of Law Hosts Meeting of National Pro-Life Leaders

"Cannibalistic" abortionist illegally dumps abortion records in attempt to go green

Mich. abortion clinic abuses go 'uninvestigated'

Oklahoma Judge Blocks Ultrasound Law

Arizona Employer Protections Bill to Get Second Vote

Assisted Suicide Arrest Illustrates Death-on-Demand Logic of Euthanasia

Abortionist in hot water ... again

Pro-life provisions in US bishops' grant ruled unconstitutional

China admits transplanting organs from condemned prisoners

Abortionists feel immune from legal requirements

ADF Argues Against Guaranteed Right to Assisted Suicide

Europe's 'culture of death' on upswing

Conscience concerns could prove decisive in health care ruling

    The current U.S. Supreme Court Justices. Courtesy of the U.S. Supreme Court.
     U.S. Supreme Court Justices
 
Inadequate conscience protections may lead the Supreme Court to reject the 2010 health care law, a Jesuit priest and legal scholar predicted after three days of arguments in the historic case.

"I think there are sufficient problems with the bill, as passed, that the justices could say: 'This is unconstitutional,'" Father Robert J. Araujo, S.J., told CNA on March 29.

"There are certainly those problems that have been in the news, and I think there are some other ones. For example – the question of conscience, and conscience protection."

"This is a very complicated law, and the more we examine it, we see more problems and concerns," noted Fr. Araujo, who holds the John Courtney Murray Professorship at the Loyola University Chicago School of Law.

"I tend to think that's on the minds of the lawyers and the justices: 'Are we going to see more litigation, if we don't resolve these conscience-protection and other issues?'"

"That's why I see an opportunity for the court to say: 'Look, there are some serious problems with this legislation. Congress has done a lot of work, (but) it's their responsibility to write a law that will pass constitutional muster and judicial review."

The court's March 26-28 period of questioning focused on the law's "individual mandate," which requires virtually all citizens to obtain health insurance.

Most observers believe the law's fate will hinge upon whether the requirement is judged to be a means of regulating interstate commerce – as the Obama administration maintains – or an unconstitutional overtaking of states' power by the federal government.

Fr. Araujo thinks the law is unlikely to be upheld either fully or in part.

"Having followed the arguments and the questions, I don't think the likelihood of a complete vindication is very strong," the Loyola University professor predicted on March 29.

He also has doubts about the law being upheld with some portions removed – because legislators did not include a "severability" provision that would allow some parts to stand if others, such as the individual mandate, were struck down.

Although the main issue before the court is the individual insurance mandate, the Jesuit professor thinks other aspects of the law will factor into the court's decision as well – including the widely-criticized contraception and sterilization mandate, a federal rule made as part of the health care law's implementation.

The Supreme Court justices, he said, realize that there are constitutional concerns surrounding "who exactly is going to be paying for what" under the law, and "how that might affect their own moral concerns, which are constitutionally protected."

If the law is upheld, the justices could reasonably expect challenges to continue on different constitutional grounds – including the free exercise of religion, a factor in eight states' current lawsuits  against the law's contraception mandate.

The result could be "a repetition of what we've seen so far," with various lawsuits advancing in federal court seeking "review of the legality of certain provisions" in the health care law.

"There are lots of concerns with this legislation," Fr. Araujo said. "Do we want to have another 'go-around' in the not-too-distant future, on other elements?"

Health care, the priest and professor noted, is a pressing issue that seriously affects millions of people.

But the Obama administration, he suggested, should not have attempted to solve it in a manner that was both constitutionally questionable and morally provocative.

Although the Church regards health care as a right that should be secured for all members of society, opinions differ as to how this should be achieved in practice. The Catholic notion of "subsidiarity" requires that problems be solved by the lowest level of competent authority.

Some Catholic critics of the health care law have invoked this concept as a criticism of the federal health care reform, which they say could have been better handled by the individual states.

"I think in its own way, the U.S. Constitution – under the Tenth Amendment – in part addresses this important concept of subsidiarity," Fr. Araujo said, citing the provision by which the powers not given to the federal government by the constitution "are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people."

"What might be proper for Florida may not work in California," the Loyola University professor noted. "The states do have a proper, lawful role in determining what is good and what is not for their citizenry. That's how I see the subsidiarity rule playing out in the U.S. Constitution."

"The program Massachusetts legislated a few years ago is not without its problems or faults," Fr. Araujo observed, recalling legislation signed by then-Governor Mitt Romney. "But the state was addressing the issue of health care for its citizens."

CNA also spoke on March 29 with Professor Michael Scaperlanda, who teaches at the University of Oklahoma and contributes to the Catholic law blog "Mirror of Justice."

Scaperlanda has criticized the federal government's individual insurance mandate as unconstitutional. On Thursday, however, he held off from making any predictions as to whether the health care law would be upheld in part or in full by the Supreme Court.

But he noted that there were good reasons for Catholics to prefer state-level solutions to the problem of securing health care for all.

At the state level, he noted, a requirement for individuals to purchase insurance could be squared with both the Constitution and Catholic social teaching.

If the federal health care law is overturned, Scaperlanda is hopeful that solutions for the uninsured, and those with preexisting conditions, can be found at a lower level of authority.

"One reason would be, that our state legislators are much more accessible to us than our federal legislators," he explained.

"I'm Facebook friends with several of my state legislators; I can have conversations with them. They're much more in tune to the values of people in the community than people in Washington."

Similarly, individual states would have greater freedom to experiment to see which policies best solve the complex problems of health care reform. Other states could adopt policies that are shown to work, and more local control would make it easier to change those that do not achieve results.

"Multiple heads are better than one," Scaperlanda said.

"Having different proposals and solutions, and watching to see what works, leads to a better solution than having a small group of policy experts tell us what's going to work and then hoping for the best."

Contact: Benjamin Mann
Source: Catholic News Agency/EWTN News

HB 4085, the Illinois Ultrasound Bill

     Illinois Representative Joe Lyons
     Representative Joe Lyons

Yesterday Rep. Joe Lyons with the support of pro-life legislators defeated all of the hostile amendments in the Ultrasound Bill (HB 4085) which is on the floor of the IL House.

Five of the pro-life legislators were not present so an extension of time was requested so that the bill can be called later. We are hoping that his request will be granted today since today is the deadline for getting this bill out of the IL House.


About HB 4085

This bill creates the Ultrasound Opportunity Act.

This bill provides that at any facility where abortions are performed the physician who is to perform the abortion, the referring physician, or another qualified person working in conjunction with either physician will offer any woman seeking an abortion after 7 weeks of gestation an opportunity to receive and view an active ultrasound of her unborn child by someone qualified to perform ultrasounds at the facility, or at a facility listed in a listing of local ultrasound providers provided by the facility, prior to the woman having any part of an abortion performed or induced, and prior to the administration of any anesthesia or medication in preparation for the abortion.

House Sponsors are Representatives Joseph M. Lyons, Patricia R. Bellock, Brandon W. Phelps, Jil Tracy, Dwight Kay, Jerry F. Costello, II, Richard Morthland, Paul Evans, William Cunningham, Roger L. Eddy, Randy Ramey, Jr., Joe Sosnowski, Thomas Morrison, Michael P. McAuliffe, Jim Sacia, Daniel V. Beiser, John E. Bradley, John D. Cavaletto, Norine Hammond, Chris Nybo, JoAnn D. Osmond, David Harris, Dave Winters, Darlene J. Senger, Michael G. Connelly, Mike Bost and David Reis.

Source: Illinois Federation for Right to Life

March 28, 2012

Tens of thousands rally for religious freedom in 143 US cities

    

After drawing 54,000 people to 143 nationwide protests, leaders of the Stand Up For Religious Freedom campaign are more determined than ever to end the federal contraception mandate.

"From coast to coast, the response of the crowds at these rallies was a tremendous optimism that we can change the HHS mandate," said Pro-Life Action League Executive Director Eric Scheidler, who planned the March 23 "Rally for Religious Freedom" with Citizens for a Pro-Life Society.

"People came out for the very first time in their lives, to any sort of grassroots protest activity," Scheidler said of Stand Up For Religious Freedom's first effort.

"That happened in Chicago. It happened in San Francisco, in Washington, D.C., in New York, Philadelphia, and other large cities."

Each of those cities drew between 900 and 2,500 people, united in their desire to restore religious freedom by ending the president's contraception coverage rule.

"Before the rally, there was a real sense almost of despair – and certainly discouragement – that the federal government would be trying to strong-arm the religious institutions of this country," Scheidler said, describing the mood he observed after the controversial rule was confirmed earlier this year.

Health and Human Services' rule, requiring many religious institutions to offer contraception, sterilization, and abortion-causing drugs through their health plans, is being challenged in court by eight states. Scheidler said the rallies allowed individuals and communities to take a stand as well.

"People were hearing about it on Facebook, on Twitter, in the 'blogosphere,' and on Christian radio," the event's co-organizer recalled.

"Finally, in the days before the rally, they were hearing about it through the secular media."

The result was a broad coalition, drawing citizens of all faiths and none. "Catholic, Protestant, Jewish – even atheists and pagans came out to protest the HHS mandate, in unity with each other."

Turnout at last week's rallies exceeded Scheidler's expectations, and confirmed his sense that March 23 was "a starting point" for the larger effort.

"I was hoping that we just might be able to reach 10,000 attendees across the country," Scheidler said. "In fact, we've confirmed over 54,000 people came out, and that number's climbing as I get reports."

"Every indication is that the rallies were not an end, but a beginning – because people are fired up now."

Participants at the events were urged to take action in the weeks and months to come, by raising awareness among their friends and neighbors and calling on members of Congress.

Public education is "critical" in fighting the mandate, Scheidler said.

"There's been so much misinformation. This controversy has been so falsely presented to, and by, the mainstream media. We really have to work very hard to educate our neighbors and fellow church-goers."

He said public officials should also be called upon to defend conscience rights, whether or not this goal can be secured in the short-term.

"We realize that with Barack Obama in the White House, our chances of a legislative victory on this issue are perishingly thin."

"Yet every time we can raise this issue, every time there's a vote against the mandate – even when we lose a vote … that gives us yet another opportunity to publicly educate on this issue, and apply greater political pressure to have it overturned."

More than 60 organizations have joined the Pro-Life Action League and Citizens for a Pro-Life Society, in the Stand Up For Religious Freedom movement's "Coalition to Stop the HHS Mandate."

As that coalition grows, Scheidler encouraged supporters to turn to God in prayer – for their cause, and for those who oppose it.

"Pray for those forces in our culture that have been fighting for this mandate," the Pro-Life Action League's executive director said, citing Planned Parenthood, NARAL, and the Feminist Majority Foundation.

"Pray for our president – that he will have a conversion of heart, that he will relinquish this drive to push religious institutions out of the public square."

Day 3 of ObamaCare hearings

      

If the U.S. Supreme Court finds ObamaCare constitutional, a California attorney says conservative states will be put "under the thumb of the federal government."

Today is the third and last day the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments on the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The decision reached in the landmark hearing will determine whether the federal government can require all citizens to purchase health insurance. The court has also heard arguments from a handful of states and will decide if the rest of the act can be implemented without the individual mandate portion of the law, if it is found to be unconstitutional (see earlier story).

 Matt McReynolds, an attorney with the Pacific Justice Institute (PJI), explains what this decision will mean for conservative states.

 "If the court upholds the ability of Congress and the president to adopt this type of major takeover of an industry, then there is virtually nothing left for the states to exclusively govern," he warns. "This means that more conservative states especially will bear the brunt and be under the thumb of the federal government to tell them what to do with virtually no restraint."

 PJI notes that the law covers thousands of regulations, including the contraceptive mandate that has drawn criticism from a number of religious groups.

 Create it so you can regulate it

Day two of arguments at the high court was anything but subdued, and attorney Robert Muise expects the final decision to be close (Listen to audio report).

 Several justices, including Anthony Kennedy, reportedly asked pointed questions about the law in yesterday's hearing. The focus was whether Congress had exceeded its constitutional authority in requiring Americans to purchase insurance or pay a penalty. Robert Muise of the American Freedom Law Center (AFLC) says most analysts expect Justice Kennedy to be the swing vote.

"Kennedy only minutes into the arguments asked the solicitor general -- quote -- 'Can you create commerce in order to regulate it?' -- unquote -- and that's exactly the point," Muise offers. "Here the government is not regulating commerce; they're regulating inactivity. In fact, they're compelling, forcing people as a matter of federal law under penalty to engage in commerce. And then, once they're engaged in commerce, Congress is then seeking to regulate them under the Commerce Clause. So it flips the Commerce Clause on its head and it … really does give the federal government unbridled power to regulate all aspects of human existence."

 The AFLC founder argues that that is contrary "to the basic construct of our Constitution, where the federal government has limited enumerated powers."

 By all indications, Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen G. Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan support the law. Based on questioning from several justices, Muise cautiously predicts a 5-4 vote against ObamaCare. The verdict will be reached by June.

Contact: Becky Yeh and Charlie Butts
Source: OneNewsNow

March 27, 2012

HB 5501 adoption bill voted down in the House

    

HB 5501 (the adoption bill) that the IFRL opposed was voted down in the House late Monday afternoon.
 
HB 5501 would have allowed an adopted person [over 21 years old] to be issued upon written request and without show of cause a certified copy of an adoption order under certain conditions.
Court records of adoption can have a large amount of confidential information that the birth parents expected to be under seal by the courts. This includes not only the names of the birth parents, but the addresses, other related and non-related siblings, fitness of parents, and more!
 
These birth parents, and generally the birth mothers expected privacy and confidentiality of their identities and family background when the adoption was taking place. HB 5501 eliminates much of that confidentiality. These women deserve this confidentiality since the decision whether to give up for adoption or have an aborton was often based on a factor of confidentiality. What trust can women have who struggle with this when the Illinois General Assembly continues with legislation to breakdown confidentiality?
 
Proponents of the law two years ago changing the adoption law, which exposed the birth parents by allowing adopted children to obtain a copy of the original certificate with the birth parents names, stated that the law allowed for preserving the birth parents privacy. The idea was to do a media campaign to alert birth parents to the section in that new law in which they could have their names redacted from the original birth certificate. This has proved to be a failure, as opponents of the law two years ago have warned. After a local and nation media effort, ONLY 500 birth parents out of over ONE MILLION came forward to ask for a redaction of their names. This doesn't show a good media effort, but just the opposite – very few birth parents learned of the new law! We in pro-life had said that the birth parents would not know the new law and requirements existed and the evidence bares this out.

Source: Illinois Federation for Right to Life

Illinois Federation for Right to Life Letter to Illinois House Memebers regarding HR 744

    

To: All Illinois House Members

PLEASE OPPOSE HOUSE RESOLUTION 744 (BERRIOS)

THE SO-CALLED "REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS AWARENESS WEEK" RESOLUTION TO SUPPORT UNLIMITED ABORTION

It is no coincidence that this resolution makes the week of January 22-28, 2012 [already now passed?] a so-called "Reproductive Rights Awareness Week" since January 22 is the date in 1973 that the U.S. Supreme Court made its decisions of Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton that legalized abortion throughout the full nine months of pregnancy.   

Supporting HR 744 is clearly SUPPORTING  abortions for any reason including:  

late-term partial-birth abortions

sex-selection abortions

abortions for birth control

taxpayer funding of all of these reasons and more.

And OPPOSING laws that include:  

parental notice/consent laws

informed consent for women regarding abortions

The vast majority of your constituents take an opposite view of what HR 744 stands for as listed above.

However, we would encourage House members to ask for a roll call vote if this bill were to come before the Illinois House for adoption.   

Again, Please OPPOSE and vote NO on HR 744.

Source: Illinois Federation for Right to Life

March 23, 2012

ACTION ALERT on HB4117

    

Your help is needed.  If you live in Illinois House District 54, 93 or 111 we need you to call your representative and let them know that they have your support on voting on HB4117.

These representatives have been receiving negative calls and need to hear that they still have our and your support to vote YES on HB4117.


District 54

Tom Morrison

(217) 782-8026
 or
(224) 210-6959


District 93

Norine Hammond

(217) 782-0416
 or
(309) 836-2707


District 111

Dan Beiser

(217) 782-5996
 or
(618) 465-5900

More on HB4117

This bill amends the Ambulatory Surgical Treatment Center Act and provides that an ambulatory surgical treatment center where abortions are performed, and any other facility where 50 or more abortions are performed in any calendar year, must comply with all of the statutes, rules, and regulations applicable to ambulatory surgical treatment centers generally.

For more please visit:
 http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/billstatus.asp?DocNum=4117&GAID=11&GA=97&DocTypeID=HB&LegID=63399&SessionID=84

News Links for March 23rd

AUL files brief to protect IL pharmacists' conscience rights

    

Americans United for Life filed an amicus brief in an Illinois appellate court today, in the case of Morr-Fitz, Inc. v. Pat Quinn, defending the fundamental First Amendment right of conscience. At issue in the case is an Administrative Rule, originally issued in 2005 by then-Governor Rod Blagojevich, which requires pharmacists - regardless of religious or conscience beliefs - to dispense life-ending 'emergency contraception.'

AUL's brief demonstrates that the Rule unconstitutionally forces pharmacists and pharmacies to violate their religious beliefs. This case is brought in the midst of the current controversy over the Obama Administration's healthcare law that refuses to protect the conscience rights of Americans who do not want to pay for abortions or drugs that induce abortions.

Dr. Charmaine Yoest, CEO and President of Americans United for Life, stated, "This Rule forces Illinois citizens to violate their consciences and religious convictions as they attempt to earn a living and support their families. It forces pro-life pharmacists and pharmacies to advance an abortion-driven agenda in violation of their First Amendment conscience freedoms."

In the brief, AUL is representing national medical organizations including the American Association of Pro Life Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Christian Medical & Dental Associations, Catholic Medical Association, Physicians for Life, and National Association of Prolife Nurses.

Source: Americans United for Life

Public Has 90 Days to Comment on Mandate for Abortion-Causing Drugs

    

The Obama administration on Friday released an advance notice of the public rule requiring all employers to provide insurance that covers drugs that could cause early abortions, inviting public comment for the next 90 days.
 
But according to experts who've analyzed the fine print, the administration only seems to be asking for help in balancing its priority — free contraceptives, sterilizations and abortifacient drugs for all women — with the religious freedoms of employers.
 
The 32-page notice asks the public for input on which, if any, organizations should be exempt from the mandate. "What entities should be eligible for the new accommodation (that is, what is a 'religious organization')?" it asks.
 
Moreover, should religious employers be allowed to object to providing some forms of "contraception," but not others?
 
"This is an administration that pushed through ObamaCare despite the fact that there was overwhelming disapproval of the bill, said Sabrina Schaeffer, executive director of the Independent Women's Forum. "This appears in some ways to be some backpedaling. It's unclear whether it's their way of appeasing people or demonstrating they're listening, when they have no intention of making any changes — which is my perception of the way this administration actually works."
 
Friday's notice refers several times to free "contraceptives" — some of which cost as little as $9 a month — but that's not all employers or insurance companies will be forced to provide for "free" once the mandate takes effect. Sterilization surgeries also would be provided — and according to Planned Parenthood, those can run anywhere from $1,500 to $6,000 apiece.
 
"Benefits like this cost a tremendous amount," Schaeffer said. "They will cost women and their families. And then there are all the moral objections people have. It's frustrating because (the administration keeps) coming back to this 'many women use birth control' argument. But the contraception mandate is as much about birth control as the American Revolution was about tea. This is about the basic separation of church and state, and that's sadly being overlooked in all this."
 
What the notice really indicates, said Grace-Marie Turner, president of the Galen Institute, is that by suggesting alternative ways to pay for the mandate, the administration is quietly admitting its idea has failed.
 
"But the religious organizations would still be required to make sure all of their employees have access to the offending coverage," she wrote in National Review Online on Saturday. "So nothing has changed."

Contact: Karla Dial
Source: CitizenLink


Pro-Life Caucus Discusses Abortion in ObamaCare

    

The Congressional Pro-Life Caucus, joined by members of several family advocacy organizations, on Wednesday held a press conference exposing the mechanisms by which the federal health insurance exchanges set up in the new federal health care law force all taxpayers to subsidize  abortions.
 
While Congress was out of session last week, the Obama administration issued a final rule saying that all insurance companies wishing to take part in the exchanges will include surcharges of "no less than $1 a month" in every plan consumers buy. They also aren't allowed to tell consumers about it up front.
 
That, said the congressmen, violates the Hyde Amendment — a longstanding federal law stating that no taxpayer dollars can be used to pay for abortions, or insurance plans that cover them.
 
"There is nothing benign or compassionate about brutally taking the life of an unborn child through dismemberment or chemical poisoning," said Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., the caucus co-chairman. "The president would like the American public to believe that his health care overhaul does not subsidize and facilitate the preventable tragedy of abortion, but his actions paint quite another picture."

Contact: Karla Dial
Source: CitizenLink

2011 not Planned Parenthood's best year

   
Though Planned Parenthood's annual report for 2011 shows an increase in the number of abortions it performed, pro-lifers see the decrease in abortion facilities as a victory.

Jim Sedlak of the American Life League (ALL) tells OneNewsNow that Planned Parenthood closed more facilities than it opened in 2011, marking the sixth straight year of facility decline.

 "They opened 11 new facilities, and they closed 47 of their existing facilities," he reports. "So at the end of 2011, Planned Parenthood now has 749 clinics across the country."

That is the lowest count since 1984, according to Sedlak, and is due in part to states eliminating or reducing funding for the clinics. Facilities that were not making a profit were also closed. But the Obama administration insists on continuing to grant $350 million in taxpayer contributions annually to the abortion-provider.

 "Barack Obama is so in love with Planned Parenthood that he will sacrifice anything for that organization," Sedlak offers. "He is so beholden to them for helping get him elected that earlier this year, he threatened to shut down the entire government rather than take one penny away from Planned Parenthood." That has become a campaign issue, notes the pro-lifer.

 While the number of clinics dropped, the number of medical and surgical abortions performed by the agency increased 41 percent. However, ALL's senior research analyst, Robert Gasper, concludes in his report that 2011 was a "remarkable year in the fight against Planned Parenthood," with the U.S. House of Representatives voting to deny federal funding to the abortion giant, and nine states passing legislation to defund the organization.

Contact: Charlie Butts
Source: OneNewsNow

Students' tuition funding contraception

      

College students are calling for passage of a federal law to block the contraception mandate on their insurance exchanges under the new healthcare law.

Kristan Hawkins of Students for Life tells OneNewsNow students' premiums will be paying for contraception, sterilization surgery, and the "morning-after" pill, even if it violates their religious beliefs.

 "It's the same mandate that we've been talking about since February nationally, but now it's being applied directly to university and college healthcare plans," she says. "So … we've been talking a lot to students about this and how this relates to them and why it's so important. Well, this just hammers it home because now they're going to be funding this in their tuition."

Hawkins accounts that once students are made aware of what the government is forcing them to do, they are enraged. But the passage of a measure currently before Congress would help them fight this mandate.

 "There's a bill in Congress, [the] Respect for Rights of Conscience Act, sponsored by Congressman Jeff Fortenberry (R-Nebraska)," she reports. "We've got to get this bill passed in Congress and make President Obama account for this mandate."

 Students for Life is making an action kit available for pro-life students to help energize their peers to take action against the ObamaCare requirement.

 This coverage will also be available to college-age women who are not in school.

Contact: Charlie Butts
Source: OneNewsNow

Teen-abortion bill would give parents a say

     

Members of Congress again are seeking to restrict interstate transportation for minors' abortions after years of failures to enact the legislation.

The Child Interstate Abortion Notification Act (CIANA), H.R. 2299 in this Congress, was first introduced in 1998 but has never reached the president's desk for signature. A House of Representatives subcommittee heard testimony from supporters and opponents of the measure in a March 8 hearing.
 
Under the bill, a person knowingly transporting a minor who lives in a state requiring parental involvement for an abortion would need parental permission or a bypass granted by a judge in order for the procedure to occur in another state. The bill would also require abortion providers to notify parents before performing an abortion on an out-of-state minor. Violators would face not more than one year in prison or a fine.

In the 28 states that have passed parental involvement laws, "the research shows that there is a statistically significant reduction in the in-state minor abortion rate from anywhere from 13 percent to 42 percent," said Michael New, assistant professor of political science at the University of Michigan-Dearborn.

Passing a parental notification law has helped the overall health of girls, according to New's research. It has reduced pregnancy in 15 to 19 year olds and lowered incidents of gonorrhea and suicide in the same age bracket, he said.

Testifying on behalf of the Episcopal Church, Katherine Ragsdale, president of Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Mass., told the subcommittee her church has adopted a resolution against parental permission laws in hopes of helping young women in difficult situations.

"Our position encourages the very things this bill would outlaw," Ragsdale said at the hearing. "Certainly, we want young people to be able to turn to their parents. But when they can't or won't, we want to make it easier, not harder, for them to turn to other responsible adults and, most certainly, we don't want to make it harder for their doctors to be their allies and advocates."

Rep. Jerrold Nadler of New York, the lead Democrat on the House constitution subcommittee and a bill foe, pointed to an example of a child who could not speak to her parent about her situation. The 13-year-old from Iowa was "shot to death by her father after he found out that she terminated her pregnancy, Nadler said. The pregnancy was the result of incest, Nadler said, with the father causing the pregnancy.

But bill supporter Teresa Collett, professor of law at the University of St. Thomas in Minneapolis, said parental permission laws have bypasses.

"In those few cases where it is not in the girl's best interest to disclose her pregnancy to her parents, state laws generally provide the pregnant minor the option of seeking a court determination ... of the girl's best interests," Collett said.

Of the 28 states that enforce parental involvement laws, 22 require only one parent to grant permission for the abortion.

Abortion is a serious procedure and holds consequences for a person's health, such as "increased risk of breast cancer; extremely premature birth in subsequent pregnancies, at 28 weeks of gestation or less, and suicide," said Rep. Trent Franks, R.–Ariz., the subcommittee's chairman.

Since 1998, the bill -- in various forms -- has received approval from the House but has gained passage in the Senate only once. The House and Senate approved different versions of the legislation in 2006, but Democrats blocked a negotiated bill from receiving a vote on final passage.

At the hearing, Nadler predicted a similar fate for this session's measure, saying, "This bill we have considered in the 106th, 107th, 108th, 109th Congresses, and I presume that we will have no more success in this Congress."

Contact: Mark Norton
Source: Baptist Press

$1 abortion surcharge decried by pro-lifers

    
     Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., criticizes at
     a March 21 news conference the latest
     Obama administration rule endorsing
     abortion funding health care. Photo
     provided by Rep. Smith's office


In a Wednesday (March 21) news conference on Capitol Hill, members of Congress and leaders of pro-life organizations decried the latest rule regarding the 2010 health care law, dubbed by critics as Obamacare. Since the rule's March 12 release, pro-lifers have pointed to two particularly objectionable aspects in a document that is more than 640 pages in length:

-- Health insurance plans in state exchanges are prohibited from specifically publicizing the fact they provide abortion coverage. They can disclose such coverage "only as part of the summary of benefits and coverage explanation, at the time of enrollment."

-- Every person enrolled in an insurance plan that covers abortion must pay a separate, monthly fee of at least $1 as an "abortion surcharge."

"So there will be millions, and perhaps tens of millions, of pro-life Americans who won't have a clue that abortion coverage is in their package until the day they sign on the bottom line," Rep. Chris Smith, R.-N.J., said at the March 21 news conference.

The "surcharge" and secrecy clause in the new rule are only the latest to be confirmed in a series of provisions protested by pro-life advocates and objectors to government funding of abortion.

Pro-lifers have decried the fact the law will permit federally subsidized abortions. Religious liberty advocates have joined pro-lifers in also objecting to a January rule -- like the latest one, also from the Department of Health and Human Services -- that requires all health plans to cover contraceptives and sterilizations as preventive services without cost to employees. The contraceptives, as designated by the federal government, include some drugs that can cause abortions of tiny embryos. That rule has a religious exemption critics find woefully insufficient.

The "surcharge" and secrecy clause are "really a sideshow," said Douglas Johnson, legislative director of the National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), at the news conference.

"It is a diversion from what's going on in the main tent, which is the federal subsidies," he told reporters. "We're talking about a massive new program, so-called tax credits. This is money coming straight out of the federal treasury which is going to subsidize the purchase of these plans for tens of millions of Americans."

The cost to the federal government could be $80 billion a year, Johnson said.

Smith said, "Now, under Obamacare, taxpayer subsidies in the form of what's called refundable, advanceable credits paid directly to the insurance company -- that is to say, taxpayer funds -- will subsidize insurance plans offered on the exchange that include abortion on demand -- even late-term abortion."

There are no restrictions on the reasons for abortions or how late they may be performed under the regulation, according to NRLC.

Charmaine Yoest, president of Americans United for Life, told reporters, "[A]s we predicted at the time that Obamacare was passed, the state exchanges do cover abortion and will force many Americans to pay for abortion regardless of their own personal, deeply held beliefs. That's not American. That's not the country that we live in. Many Americans will be compelled by law into an insurance plan that covers abortion."

Fifteen states have enacted laws barring abortion coverage in health plans that are part of the exchanges, but those "opt-out" measures fall short of fully protecting pro-life citizens, according to NRLC.

"A state legislature may forbid coverage of abortion in the exchange-participating health plans in that state -- but under ObamaCare, the taxpayers who live in that state may not 'opt out' of subsidizing the abortion coverage for other Americans, perhaps numbering tens of millions, who live in other states that do not enact opt-out laws," NRLC reported in a March 16 analysis.

In addition, the health-care law also empowers the Office of Personnel Management to offer "multi-state" health plans that could permit federal health plans that cover abortion, according to NRLC.

In the last 15 months, the House of Representatives has passed three bills that would repeal the health-care law or bar funding for abortion under the law. In each case, Obama has threatened a veto, and the Senate has either defeated or refused to vote on the proposals.

It appears repeal of the health-care law or reversal of its abortion-funding provisions will require the election of a Senate and a president supportive of such changes -- or action by the U.S. Supreme Court. The court will hear oral arguments March 26-28 on the constitutionality of the health-care law.

Contact: Tom Strode
Source: Baptist Press

RALLY in defense of religious freedom

 
     

All 181 Bishops have signed the letter opposing the recent HHS (Health and Human Services) mandate regarding religious freedom. This mandate attacks the core of our Constitutional rights!
This is a reminder of the rallies planned across the country to defend our religious freedom!

Please make every effort to join, Friday March 23, at Noon in a RALLY in defense of religious freedom and STAND UP against the Obama administration's HHS Mandate at federal buildings in cities across the country. I have listed only those in Illinois; however St. Louis and other cities close to Illinois will be holding them as well. Please goto: http://standupforreligiousfreedom.com/ and check for the city nearest you!
 
If at all possible, please attend the rally closest to you. If time or location prevents you from joining us personally, Please join us in prayer between Noon and 1:00pm. Faithful Citizenship is everyone's responsibility!

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Illinois
Chicago:
Federal Plaza
50 W. Adams Street (Map)
FacebookRSVP the Chicago rally on Facebook
E-mail the Rally Captain

Freeport:
Lincoln-Douglas Debate Square
114 E. Douglas Street (Parking Locations)
E-mail the Rally Leader

Peoria:
Peoria Courthouse
324 Main Street (Map)
E-mail the Rally Leader

Rockford:
Holy Family Parish
4401 Highcrest Road (Map)
Mass preceding Rally at 11 a.m.
E-mail the Rally Captain

Sterling:
Grandon Civic Center
310 E. Park Avenue (Map)
Mass at 11 a.m. Prior to Rally

March 21, 2012

Voters out to beat Obama hand Romney big IL edge

     

Voters hunting for a candidate who can defeat President Barack Obama and with the proper experience helped vault Mitt Romney to victory Tuesday in Illinois' presidential primary, according to results of an exit poll of voters.

 Illinois-Latest results
      10,421 of 10,448 precincts - 99 percent
     
      x-Mitt Romney, 430,535 - 47 percent
      Rick Santorum, 322,831 - 35 percent
      Ron Paul, 85,872 - 9 percent
      Newt Gingrich, 73,362 - 8 percent


Illinois delegate count:

     10,421 of 10,448 precincts - 99 percent
      51 of 54 Delegates allocated
     
      Mitt Romney 41 - 75 percent
      Rick Santorum 10 - 18 percent
      Newt Gingrich 0 - 0 percent
      Ron Paul 0 - 0 percent

Romney's win was also powered by robust margins from people worried about the economy and federal deficits.

Main challenger Rick Santorum ran strongly among people who want their contender to be a true conservative and to exhibit strong moral character, and with the most religiously driven voters. But Illinois only has modest proportions of such voters, narrowing the former Pennsylvania senator's appeal.
 
"Romney is a little too liberal for the Republican base. But that's the only way you can win. You've got to get the independents," said Norm Jay, 78, of Wheaton, Ill., who backed the former Massachusetts governor.

Underscoring how the Illinois contest occurred on terrain that was not the friendliest for Santorum, 34 percent on Tuesday called him too conservative. That was the highest proportion of voters expressing that view in any of the half-dozen states so far where that question was asked.

Romney won 74 percent of those seeking a candidate who can defeat Obama. Among 17 states where voters have been polled so far, that proportion has only been surpassed in Romney's home state of Massachusetts and in Virginia, where he and Texas Rep. Ron Paul were the only competitors.

Romney also got 64 percent of people seeking the right experience. Combined with those seeking a candidate who can best handle Obama, that gave Romney a forbidding lead among over half of those who showed up to cast ballots, the survey showed.

Romney, who has used his business background to cast himself as the candidate best equipped to create jobs and eliminate federal waste, bested Santorum by more than 20 percentage points among voters riveted on the economy and the federal deficit as top issues. People with those concerns accounted for over 8 in 10 voters, making Romney's strong edge with this group impossible for Santorum to overcome.

Voters from families earning at least $100,000 a year and college graduates also tilted strongly toward Romney. That proved decisive, since those earning less than that amount and those without degrees split about evenly between him and Santorum.

Santorum, outspoken on the campaign trail about the importance of faith, had a 20 percentage point margin over Romney among voters saying that sharing religious beliefs with a candidate mattered greatly. Such voters, though, accounted for shy of 1 in 4 voters, a slightly smaller share than average among states whose voters have been surveyed so far.

Around two-thirds of the votes of those seeking a real conservative and a contender with strong character were backing Santorum. But such voters comprised less than half the overall vote.

"I don't know if he (Romney) is willing to deal with the hard issues or if he would back down from them," said Don Gramer, a Santorum voter who works for the Catholic diocese in Rockford, Ill.

Though Santorum won comfortably among those considering themselves very conservative, Romney did strongly with somewhat conservative voters and moderates.
 
Santorum, a devout Catholic, lost to Romney by 23 percentage points with Catholic voters, a problem he has encountered consistently this year. While the two men ran roughly evenly among Catholics who attend church weekly, Romney, who is a Mormon, had more than a 2-1 lead with Catholics who go to services less frequently than that.

Analysts have said that for Catholics, religious identity is a weaker factor in determining political views than it is for some other faiths.

Further showing how the makeup of Illinois voters worked against Santorum, he defeated Romney modestly among white born-again and evangelical voters, a group with whom he has generally prospered since the Super Tuesday primaries earlier this month.

But they only accounted for around 4 in 10 voters in Illinois, a bit lower than average in voting so far. Among the nearly 6 in 10 Illinois voters not in that group, Romney had a commanding 2-1 advantage.

Asked which candidate they would back if only Romney and Santorum were in the race, the difference in support between the two men narrowed a bit. That suggests that it might be somewhat to Santorum's advantage if former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Texas Rep. Ron Paul dropped out of the race, which neither has suggested they are about to do.

Even as the third month of the GOP nominating battle nears a close with no end imminent, only around 3 in 10 Illinois voters said they want the race to end as fast as possible, even if their own candidate loses. Some Republicans have expressed worries that the length of the campaign has hurt the party's chances of defeating Obama because of the intense, repeated criticism the GOP contenders have fired at each other.

The survey of 1,621 Illinois voters was conducted for The Associated Press and the television networks by Edison Research. Interviews were conducted as voters left their polling places Tuesday at 35 randomly selected sites.

The survey has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

Contact: Alan Fram and Jennifer Agiesta  
Source: Associated Press via OneNewsNow

March 16, 2012

News Links for March 16th

    

Most Americans oppose forced contraceptive coverage

Catholic layman, business owner files suit against HHS mandate

Planned Parenthood closings motivating president

Abstinence ed's positive effects

Suit: TX Planned Parenthood guilty of $6M fraud

What Roe has wrought: 'after-birth' abortion

HHS mandate: USCCB decries unequal treatment of Amish, Catholics

Catholic woman would rather risk life than follow HHS mandate

Great Lakes State cleaning up abortuaries

Finally - justice for pro-lifers

Born-Alive Infant Protection Bill Makes Headway

Wrongful Birth Lawsuit Wrong

Five more TX abortionists scheduled for hearings on abortion abuses

WA's abortion coverage bill advances

Daily Telegraph: Sex-Selection Abortions May Be Widespread in the U.K.

Abortions reportedly done at Spanish Catholic hospitals

Abortion cover-ups getting 'urgent' attention

Morning-after pill leads to increased abortions in Spain

Women's support for Obama drops in wake of HHS mandate

   
 
A recent poll shows that President Barack Obama's approval ratings dropped 12 percentage points among women voters, despite claims that a federal contraception mandate would help his bid for re-election.

"It's definitely something that young women are concerned about," said Kristan Hawkins, executive director of Students for Life of America.

Hawkins told CNA on March 13 that beyond just contraception or abortion, the mandate touches on the issue of religious freedom, which is clear to any woman in the U.S. "whether she's religious or not."

"It goes too far," she said, adding that women are beginning to ask fundamental questions about what the government would be able to regulate next if this mandate were to succeed.

In recent weeks, political analysts have suggested that Obama's re-election campaign will receive a significant boost in women's votes due to its support for a controversial federal contraception mandate.

But a New York Times/CBS News poll shows that Obama's approval rating among women has plummeted at three times the rate as men within the last few weeks.

The poll, conducted March 7-11, revealed that the president's approval rating among Americans has fallen from 50 percent last month to an all-time low of 41 percent.

While Obama's approval rating dipped just four percentage points among men, it dropped by 12 percentage points among women.

The decrease in women's support comes amid debate over a Jan. 20 mandate issued by the Obama administration under the new health care law. Introduced by the Department of Health and Human Services, the mandate will soon require employers to offer health care plans that include full coverage of contraception, sterilization and abortion-inducing drugs, even if doing so violates their consciences.

Faced with a storm of protest from those who argued that the mandate violated First Amendment guarantees of religious freedom, President Obama promised an "accommodation" for religious freedom on Feb. 10.

Under the "accommodation," which was never incorporated into the original mandate, religious employers would not directly buy the controversial coverage but would instead purchase health care plans from insurance companies that would be required to provide it free of charge.

Critics of the promised "accommodation" note that under such an arrangement, insurance companies would likely raise employers' premiums in order to account for the "free" coverage, effectively passing the cost of the coverage back to the employers who object to it.

The U.S. bishops and numerous other groups have called for legislation to either overturn the mandate or implement an effective religious exemption.

Majorities of both men and women in the New York Times / CBS News poll also voiced support for religious and moral exemptions to the mandate.

Those polled believe by a 57 percent to 36 percent margin that religiously-affiliated employers should able to "opt out" of covering the full cost of birth control and related drugs if they have object to doing so. 

Fifty-one percent say they support an exemption for all employers who have religious or moral objections to the mandate.

The poll findings come as the Obama administration launched increased efforts within the last week to bolster support among women voters by appealing to the healthcare law. On March 12, more than 1 million mailings were sent to women nationwide in separate versions for mothers, older women and young women, reported the New York Times. 

Hawkins said that her organization is "comprised of mostly young women" who see the religious freedom concerns being raised by the mandate and do not accept the administration's claims that it is looking out for women's health.

She pointed out the irony in the fact that she, as the employer of a pro-life organization that seeks to end abortion, would be required under the mandate to offer an insurance plan that covers abortion-causing drugs.

"There's no freedom at that point," she said.

Hawkins said she has "pro-choice" friends as well who oppose the mandate for forcing people to violate their consciences. They realize that the mandate is "not about contraception" and "not about women's health," she said.

She also decried the efforts of those who have been "using women's health" to promote the mandate, stressing "they're not doing it for me."

Hawkins encouraged women to take an active role in the political battle by contacting their Congressmen and making their voices heard.

When people are talking about the upcoming elections, they should be talking about this issue, she said, adding that men and men should work together to show the Obama administration that "this is not the will of the American people."

Contact: Michelle Bauman
Source: Catholic News Agency