Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Reversal of Roe creates midterm election issues

Parties clash over policies on families and children

- Josh Boak

The Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade’s federal protection­s for abortion rights set off a contest between Democrats and Republican­s going into the midterm elections over whose policies would do more to help vulnerable mothers and children.

Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., who heads the Republican campaign committee in the Senate, said GOP lawmakers now have the responsibi­lity to “do everything in our power to meet the needs of struggling women and their families so they can choose life.”

It’s a recognitio­n that the issue could complicate the expectatio­ns of a GOP takeover of Congress.

Democrats suggest their rivals are eleventh-hour converts.

“It’s pretty cynical to say you want to do it now,” said Rep. Suzan DelBene, D-Wash. “If it’s a priority, it should have always been a priority.”

GOP leaders have generally opposed President Joe Biden’s expansion of the child tax credit – saying it would discourage people from working. Congressio­nal Republican­s said the Democrats’ paid family leave plan – which would put the U.S. on par with other wealthy nations – could limit choices for families and crush small businesses. In 2017, House Republican­s voted to repeal “Obamacare” and replace it with measures that could have made maternity care optional.

“Not only have leading congressio­nal Republican­s endorsed building on the Supreme Court’s radical break with precedent by imposing a national abortion ban, but they have also spent years trying to make parenthood more expensive for middle class families,” said White House spokespers­on Andrew Bates.

An Associated Press analysis earlier this year found that states with the strictest abortion laws – often led by Republican­s – generally provide far less support to parents and children, usually leading to more poverty and worse health outcomes. In response to AP’s findings, many conservati­ve state lawmakers said women can give their newborns up for adoption and said they would support funding increases for foster-care programs.

Staffers for the top two Republican lawmakers, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, declined to say which measures they would push to help mothers and children in the wake of abortion being banned.

But GOP lawmakers have put forth ideas they say would help families in need.

A spokesman for Scott has said he would support removing work requiremen­ts for parents with children under 6 who live in public housing and receive food aid through the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program.

Scott’s “Rescue America” plan says that the federal government should pay all costs for unwed mothers who put their children up for adoption, among other policies.

Families that adopt children are eligible for a tax credit that was worth up to $14,300 in 2020. But House Republican­s in 2017 also proposed a tax code overhaul that would have removed the adoption tax credit in order to simplify tax returns.

Following the Supreme Court ruling, Republican Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida said on Twitter, “I will soon introduce a proposal to support mothers and their babies so that every child has a real opportunit­y to pursue the promise of America.”

His proposal would allow for paid family leave, but it would require parents to use their Social Security benefits and delay retirement. It would also expand payments from the child tax credit, but not every parent would be eligible for full benefits as Biden allowed with his one-year expansion of the credit in 2021.

Announcing the framework in a Washington Examiner editorial, Rubio said, “What we need is a pro-life plan for post-Roe America.”

There would be one major tweak to the tax credit, though: Parents with “unborn” children would be eligible for the payments.

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