Daily Southtown

Tell the truth about the pro-life Hyde Amendment

- By Melanie Israel

Even if you don’t follow politics closely, you’ve likely heard about the Hyde Amendment, which restricts taxpayer dollars from paying for elective abortions in federal programs such as Medicaid. It comes up often because Congress routinely incorporat­es it into its annual spending bills — and now it’s back in the news as lawmakers again wrestle over money.

This policy is long-standing: It has been included in funding bills since 1976, regardless of which party controls Congress and the White House. It is lifesaving: 2.4 million lives and counting. And it is broadly supported across the political spectrum: A 2021 Knights of Columbus/Marist poll found that 58 percent of Americans oppose using taxpayer dollars to pay for abortions, including 65 percent of independen­ts and 31 percent of Democrats.

That hasn’t stopped the media from portraying the Hyde Amendment as “controvers­ial,” nor has it stopped politician­s from trying to reverse the lifesaving policy. Why the distorted characteri­zations? Democrats in Congress, as well as President Joe Biden (who supported the Hyde Amendment for more than 30 years until the 2020 presidenti­al primary), have called to remove the Hyde Amendment from annual appropriat­ions measures. That’s exactly what the president’s budget proposed, and what multiple Housepasse­d appropriat­ions bills have done.

Congress has until Dec. 3 to appropriat­e funding for fiscal year 2022, and whether Hyde will remain is an open question. Meanwhile, a massive $3.5 trillion reconcilia­tion bill proposes to enact new health-related spending, including a Medicaid lookalike program, without applying Hyde protection­s. Biden has indicated that he would sign a reconcilia­tion bill with or without Hyde protection­s.

Such a position is a significan­t departure from the decades of consensus surroundin­g the Hyde Amendment: While Americans may vehemently disagree on the issue of abortion, a majority agrees that tax dollars shouldn’t pay for them.

Unfortunat­ely, the media haven’t accurately informed public discourse about this consequent­ial policy debate. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., has reiterated on multiple occasions that the Hyde Amendment is a “red line” and the reconcilia­tion bill is “dead on arrival” if it fails to incorporat­e Hyde.

In reporting this significan­t developmen­t, The Hill chose a headline that cast the Hyde Amendment as “controvers­ial.” A better characteri­zation of Hyde would have been “popular” or “well-liked.”

Responding to Manchin’s comments, Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., who heads the House Progressiv­e Caucus, said that she would not support the reconcilia­tion bill if it included Hyde and obfuscated the issue in multiple ways on CNN’s “State of the Union” show.

First, she said falsely stated that “the Hyde Amendment is something that the majority of the country does not support.” Then, when asked specifical­ly whether she wanted reconcilia­tion bill spending to go toward abortions, she bizarrely said “none of the dollars here are going for that.” But of course that’s precisely what would be allowed in a Medicaid lookalike program, for example, without explicit Hyde protection­s. Jayapal doubled down on the “Pod Save America” podcast, saying that Hyde doesn’t need to be included in a reconcilia­tion bill because it’s already the law. But Jayapal should be well-aware that the Hyde Amendment applies to annual appropriat­ions bills, which are entirely separate from the new spending in the reconcilia­tion bill at hand.

Americans on both sides of the debate surroundin­g abortion and pro-life protection­s care deeply about the issue, but thoughtful debate requires truthful discourse.

The Hyde Amendment is long-standing, broadly supported, lifesaving policy. Policymake­rs should respect Americans’ consensus on this issue and not use federal spending measures to bypass Hyde protection­s, and media outlets should accurately report the enduring support for the Hyde Amendment as these debates unfold.

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