Congress Passes Spending Bill Containing Pro-life Provision
Both the House and the Senate passed a $388 billlion spending bill that contains a provision allowing doctors and hospitals to refuse to provide abortion services but the House must clear one line in the bill before it gets signed by Bush.
As expected, Congress passed on Saturday a $388 billion spending bill that contains a pro-life provision making it easier for hospitals to refuse to provide abortion services.
The House approved the measure with a 344-51 vote and the Senate passed the bill, 65-30.
But the House will meet next week to revise a single line in the bill that would give two committee chairmen and their assistants access to people's income tax returns before sending the bill to the White House to get President Bushs signature. Congress, which had hoped to end their post-election session on Saturday, passed a measure to keep the government open until the spending bill and a bill backed by Bush of an overhaul of the nation's intelligence agencies were resolved.
Called the Hyde-Weldon anti-discrimination amendment by pro-lifers and the Federal Refusal Clause by pro-choice groups such as NARAL Pro-Choice, the provision, according to National Right to Life, provides that state and local governments that receive federal health and human services funds may not discriminate against health care providers because they do not provide abortions, pay for abortions, provide coverage of abortions, or refer for abortions. Health care providers covered under this amendment includes doctors, health care professionals, hospitals, HMOs, and health insurance plans, among others. The provision is similar to the one offered to Catholic hospitals.
Pro-lifers praised the amendments passing while nine female senators opposed it, arguing it limited a womans right to abortion.
Some lawmakers say the pro-life amendment is a payback for religious conservatives and values voters for their help in re-electing Bush to a second term.