Updated November 15, 2009
Axelrod Signals Obama Will Try to Strip Abortion Language From Health Care Bill
FOXNews.com
The amendment, authored by Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., went beyond preventing the proposed government-run plan from covering abortion to restrict federal subsidies from going toward private plans that offer abortion coverage. David Axelrod says the amendment changes the 'status quo,' something the president cannot abide.
0
David Axelrod reaches for his glasses as he speaks at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, in Omaha, Neb., Oct. 9. (AP Photo)
White House Senior Adviser David Axelrod suggested Sunday that President Obama will intervene to make sure a controversial amendment restricting federal funding for abortion coverage is stripped from final health care reform legislation.
In doing so, the president would be heeding the call of abortion rights supporters like Planned Parenthood that have called the White House their "strongest weapon" in keeping such restrictions out of the bill.
The abortion amendment was tacked on to the House health care bill and was a key factor in securing the votes of moderate Democrats before the bill was approved by a narrow margin last weekend. The amendment, authored by Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., went beyond preventing the proposed government-run plan from covering abortion to restrict federal subsidies from going toward private plans that offer abortion coverage.
Axelrod said in an interview Sunday that the amendment changes the "status quo," something the president cannot abide.
"The president has said repeatedly, and he said in his speech to Congress, that he doesn't believe that this bill should change the status quo as it relates to the issue of abortion," Axelrod said. "This shouldn't be a debate about abortion. And he's going to work with Senate and the House to try and ensure that at the end of the day, the status quo is not changed ... I believe that there are discussions ongoing to how to adjust it accordingly."
Axelrod said the president believes that issue, as well as the ongoing dispute over what kind of government-run insurance plan, if any, should be included in the overhaul, "can and will be worked through before it reaches his desk."
Axelrod spoke on CNN's "State of the Union."
The president already said last week that he did not support the amendment.
"I laid out a very simple principle, which is this is a health care bill, not an abortion bill. And we're not looking to change what is the principle that has been in place for a very long time, which is federal dollars are not used to subsidize abortions," Obama told ABC News on Monday. "And I want to make sure that the provision that emerges meets that test -- that we are not in some way sneaking in funding for abortions, but on the other hand that we're not restricting women's insurance choices."
Meanwhile, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told "Fox News Sunday" that the American people do not want any taxpayer money going toward abortion, as he gloated over how long the Senate could potentially hold up the health care bill.
"I think it would be very difficult to pass a bill that, in effect, either directly or indirectly provided tax money to pay for abortions," McConnell said.
The timetable for Senate action on health care has been thrown into question, though Axelrod said the White House still wants to "get it done" this year. McConnell said "delay" will be a hallmark of the Senate process going forward. He complained that the current bill would raise taxes and cut Medicare, an allegation that was backed up by a Washington Post article Sunday that showed the agency administering Medicare and Medicaid found that a proposed $500 billion in Medicare cuts would in turn cut benefits for seniors.
"There will be a lot of amendments over a lot of weeks," McConnell said. "I mean, the Senate is not the House. You saw in the House three votes and it was over in one day. Look, we spent four weeks on a farm bill in the last Congress, eight weeks on an energy bill earlier this decade. This will be on the floor for quite a long time. I think it ought to be on the floor at least as long as it's been in Harry Reid's office."
Latest Politics Videos
-
-
Busted Operation?
-
Nov 24, 2009
Plot to smuggle missiles to Middle East?
-
-
-
'Climategate' Probe
-
Nov 24, 2009
Deceitful data about global warming?
-
-
-
Obama's Afghan Plan
-
Nov 24, 2009
President vows to 'finish the job'
-
-
-
Presidential Preparations
-
Nov 24, 2009
Organizing a White House state dinner
-
-
-
Q&A
-
Nov 24, 2009
Obama, Singh answer reporters' questions
-
-
-
'Defining Partnerships'
-
Nov 24, 2009
Obama holds presser with India's PM
-
Real Clear Politics Poll
| Job Approval | Approve | Disapprove | Spread |
| Obama | 50.3% | 43.8% | +6.5% |
| Congress | 27.0% | 64.3% | -37.3% |
| Direction of Country | Right Direction | Wrong Track | Spread |
| RCP Average | 37.7% | 57.2% | -19.5% |
Most Active In Politics
Most Read
Most Commented
-
House Passes Health Care Bill
November 08, 2009 1,132 comments
-
Health Care Bill Moves Toward Senate Debate
November 22, 2009 978 comments
-
Comment Box: Send Us Your Findings on Health Care Reform
November 19, 2009 962 comments
-
AP Turns Heads for Devoting 11 Reporters to Palin Book 'Fact Check'
November 18, 2009 857 comments
-
Lawmakers Propose 'War Surtax' to Pay for Troop Increase in Afghanistan
November 23, 2009 812 comments
-
Dobbs Reaches Out to Latinos
November 24, 2009
-
U.S. Mulls New Panel to Tackle Deficit
November 24, 2009
-
Obama, Singh Pledge Cooperation
November 24, 2009
-
Bachus Seeks Data on Bank Loans
November 24, 2009
-
Surge Targets Taliban Bastion
November 24, 2009
-
Help! My uncle is addicted to Black Luxury
November 24, 2009
-
Bankers think it’s all over. Time to think again
November 24, 2009
-
Don’t take away the modern copper’s toolkit
November 24, 2009
-
To save the planet, strike a deal with Big Oil
November 24, 2009
-
How to stop the Queen picking the next PM
November 24, 2009



recommend

Subscribe to Comments






