Chicago Sun-Times

GOV‘ LETDOWN’ STATE ON ABORTION BILL, SAY GOP CONGRESSME­N

- BY TINASFONDE­LES Political Reporter Email: tsfondeles@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ TinaSfon

‘ Touting their support for a Republican bill to outlaw most late- term abortions, Illinois’ GOP congressio­nal delegation bashed Gov. Bruce Rauner on Tuesday for signing an abortion measure last week— saying he’s “let down taxpayers and the unborn.”

Although the U. S. House bill faces certain defeat in the U. S. Senate, the legislatio­n passed the House and is amajor priority for the GOP, conservati­ve groups and President Donald Trump.

The measure would make it a crime for anyone to perform most abortions on fetuses believed to be 20weeks into developmen­t. Violators could face five years in prison, but the mothers undergoing such procedures could not be prosecuted. Such late- term abortions would remain legal to save the mother’s life and for incest and rapes reported to government authoritie­s.

Illinois GOP Representa­tives Peter Roskam, John Shimkus, Randy Hultgren, Rodney Davis, Adam Kinzinger, Darin LaHood and Mike Bost released a statement Tuesday evening in support of the legislatio­n, saying it came “in thewake of legislatio­n signed by Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner that would allowfor the use of taxpayer money to cover an unlimited number of abortions anytime for any reason.”

“In a reversal of longstandi­ng Illinois policy, Gov. Rauner has let down Illinois taxpayers and the unborn by signing H. B. 40,” the statement said, referring to the Illinois bill. “Today, the Illinois delegation stands together in our support of H. R. 36 to protect human life.”

Rauner spokesman Hud Englehart defended those claims.

“We vehemently disagree with [ the] characteri­zation of abortions ‘ anytime for any reason,’ ” Englehart said. “HB40 provides that abortion services otherwise legal in Illinois will be covered by the medical assistance program under HB40.”

Rauner lastweek shocked many by signing into law a measure to expand taxpayer funding of abortions and ensure the procedure remains legal in Illinois. The signing seemed unlikely in April, when Rauner said he wouldn’t support the bill because of “sharp divisions of opinion of taxpayer funding of abortion.”

But the governor last week said he’s pro- choice: “I always have been. And I made no qualms about that when I was elected governor.” He touted the bill’s efforts to give low- income women access to abortions, arguing, “no woman should be forced to make a different decision than another woman makes purely based on her income.”

The signing prompted immediate backlash frommany Republican legislator­s.

It also led John Tillman, a close Rauner ally and head of the conservati­ve think tank the Illinois Policy Institute, to dub him “Benedict Rauner.”

The U. S. House approved the bill outlawing late- term abortions by a near partyline 237- 189 vote. The Supreme Court legalized abortion in 1973 but opened the door to some state restrictio­ns. Forty- three states bar some abortions at certain points during pregnancie­s, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that favors abortion rights.

 ?? SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Gov. Bruce Rauner
SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Gov. Bruce Rauner

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