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Will Congress Finally Defund Planned Parenthood? – John McCormack

Ending federal funding for Planned Parenthood, the largest provider of abortions in the United States, has long been a goal of pro-life groups and their allies in Congress. Back in 2007, a Republican congressman from Indiana named Mike Pence introduced a bill to redirect funding for Planned Parenthood to other organizations that didn’t perform elective abortions. The measure failed in a Democratic Congress, but Pence told me at the time that his amendment had been a “successful failure for the pro-life movement” that laid “the foundation for building an argument for defunding Planned Parenthood in the future.” 

Pence argued that his bill was an extension of the principle that taxpayer dollars shouldn’t be used to fund elective abortions—or subsidize the organizations that perform them. In Pence’s view, he was following in the footsteps of President Ronald Reagan: While foreign aid to directly fund elective abortions had been banned by Congress since 1973, it wasn’t until Reagan first implemented the “Mexico City Policy” in 1985 that subsidies were cut off to overseas organizations that perform or promote abortion. While Congress has consistently banned the direct federal funding under Medicaid of almost all abortions with the Hyde Amendment since 1976, Pence said that “we need a domestic Mexico City Policy.”

Nearly two decades later, congressional Republicans are still trying to enact the policy that Pence called for back in 2007. “In the weeks ahead, the House is going to be working on the one big, beautiful bill,” Speaker of the House Mike Johnson told attendees at an event sponsored by Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America on April 29. “We’re absolutely making it clear to everybody that this bill is going to redirect funds away from big abortion and to federally qualified health centers.” 

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