The Palm Beach Post

Trump’s anti-abortion HHS getting into your bedroom

- Gail Collins She writes for the New York Times.

It’s not every day we start our discussion of current events with the president’s sex life.

Well, actually, it’s gotten to be pretty frequent. But today we’re going to talk less about what Donald Trump does in bed and more about his efforts to interfere with other people’s intimate affairs.

“When I ran for office, I pledged to stand for life. And as president, that’s exactly what I’ve done,” he told a cheering anti-abortion crowd Tuesday night. Abortion opponents like to call themselves “pro-life,” but the Trump administra­tion has gone further than simply making it more difficult for women to terminate a pregnancy.

Trump’s had a virtual war on birth control, beginning with an attempt to eliminate the rule that employer health insurance cover contracept­ives. Now he’s built a Department of Health and Human Services that wants to promote family planning methods that involve ... not having sex.

Ever since he came into office, Trump has been letting right-wing activists run federal family planning programs. They’re at war with Planned Parenthood, which doesn’t get any government money for abortions. But it does provide reproducti­ve health services to an enormous number of low-income women under the federal Title X program. Under a new rule, the doctors and nurses would have to refuse to even answer patient questions about how to terminate a pregnancy. That’s not going to happen and we’ll see this one in court.

Meanwhile, clinics with very conservati­ve views can edit down their informatio­n and eliminate any discussion of, say, IUDs. Or just restrict the conversati­on to abstinence. Yes, a Donald Trump presidency is pushing a no-sex agenda. Cue the irony.

“But if Democrats gained power? They will try to reverse these incredible gains. These are historic gains,” Trump warned his audience Tuesday.

You have to ask yourself if Trump has ever examined his own true feelings about abortion. It certainly didn’t seem to be uppermost in his mind at Tuesday’s speech, when he kept veering off onto other subjects.

If he thinks about reproducti­ve rights at all, it has less to do with biology or ethics than with his beloved Base, which currently needs to be roused for the fall elections.

“Your vote in 2018 is every bit as important as your vote in 2016,” he read from his prepared text. Then added, “Although I’m not sure I really believe that.” No, nothing is as important as Donald Trump winning the presidency. The signing of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, two world wars, the invention of the printing press ... details, details.

Back in the day, Trump liked to point out that he hated “the concept of abortion,” before adding, “I just believe in choice.” That, of course, was totally reasonable. The goal of groups like Planned Parenthood is to help women have children when they want them and avoid getting pregnant when they don’t.

And when a woman seeks abortion, to make it safe and readily available in order to avoid those lateterm procedures Trump has now discovered he hates so much.

Hardly likely he’s given all that much thought.

This is the guy, after all, who had two meetings with Bill Gates and asked at both whether there was a difference between HIV and HPV.

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