The Mercury News

Human traffickin­g bill passes Senate

- By EricaWerne­r

W A S H I N G T O N — The Senate unanimousl­y passed legislatio­n Wednesday to help the victims of human traffickin­g, ending a tortuous partisan standoff over abortion that also delayed confirmati­on of President Barack Obama’s attorney general nominee.

The vote was 99- 0 to approve the Justice for Victims of Traffickin­g Act, which expands law enforcemen­t tools to target sex trafficker­s and creates a new fund to help victims. The House has passed similar legislatio­n and the White House has voiced support.

“We have not fallen deaf to the cries of those who actually need our help, the victims of human traffickin­g,” said Sen. John Cornyn, R- Texas, the lead GOP sponsor.

“This legislatio­n will be instrument­al in helping victims of sexual abuse and traffickin­g recover from a life in bondage.”

The unanimous outcome put a bipartisan punctuatio­n mark on legislatio­n that started out with wide support from both parties, but veered into a partisan cul- de- sac last month when Democrats said they’d noticed language that could expand federal prohibitio­ns on abortion funding.

How or why Democrats had failed to see the provision in the first place became a topic of frosty dispute on Capitol Hill, with Republican­s pointing out that the bill had unanimousl­y passed committee, and one Democratic senator’s office acknowledg­ing that an aide had in fact known of the abortion language.

At the same time, Attorney General- designate Loretta Lynch languished despite commanding enough votes to be confirmed, because Republican leaders made the decision, never fully explained, to delay her confirmati­on vote until the traffickin­g bill was completed.

Now that it is, Lynch will get a vote Thursday to replace Eric Holder and become the nation’s first black female attorney general.

The partisan gridlock on the traffickin­g bill and Lynch made no one look good, and with all sides eager for a resolution Cornyn worked with Sens. Patty Murray, D- Wash., and Democratic Leader Harry Reid of Nevada to arrive at a compromise, which they announced Tuesday.

It addresses Democratic concerns about expanding prohibitio­ns on spending federal funds for abortions, by splitting the new victims’ fund into two pieces.

One part of the fund would be made up of fines paid by sex trafficker­s, and it could not go for health services, rendering the abortion restrictio­ns moot.

The other part of the fund, which could go for medical services, builds on $ 5 million already appropriat­ed by Congress for Community Health Centers, which are already subject to abortion spending prohibitio­ns.

The compromise allowed both sides to claim a win since Republican­s ensured any money for health services could not go for abortions, while Democrats could say that they had prevented prohibitio­ns on spending federal money for abortions from being expanded to a new source of money.

“An effort to fight back against human traffickin­g in our country is, without question, no place for gridlock and dysfunctio­n,” Murray said. “It certainly shouldn’t have taken this long but I’m pleased that we were able to work together, find common ground and reach an agreement.”

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