Enterprise-Record (Chico)

State defies threat of fund loss over abortion

- By Ricardo AlonsoZald­ivar

Trump administra­tion may halt health care funds to state over requiremen­t that insurance plans cover abortion.

WASHINGTON » California’s Democratic leaders were defiant Friday after the Trump administra­tion threatened to cut federal health care funding to the nation’s most populous state over its requiremen­t that insurance plans cover abortions.

The administra­tion’s announceme­nt came hours before President Donald Trump became the first president to address participan­ts in the anti-abortion March for Life in person, telling marchers gathered in the nation’s capital that “unborn children have never had a stronger defender in the White House.”

He spoke after the federal Health and Human Services Department issued a “notice of violation,” giving California 30 days to comply with a federal law known as the Weldon amendment. That law bars federal health care funding from being provided to states or entities that practice “discrimina­tion” against a health care organizati­on on the basis that it “does not provide, pay for, provide coverage of, or refer for abortions.”

The head of the HHS Office for Civil Rights, Roger Severino, said California is violating that restrictio­n by requiring insurance plans to cover abortions. According to Severino, 28,000 California­ns had abortion-free plans prior to the state’s requiremen­ts and have now lost that option.

Severino said in a statement that California “must stop forcing people of good will to subsidize the taking of human life.”

Trump later used his speech to attack Democrats as embracing “radical and extreme positions” on abortion, and Democratic leaders responded in kind.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said that by taking away the state’s health care funding, Trump would be taking tens of billions of dollars from kids, seniors, the poor and the sick.

“And yet you call yourself ‘pro-life’ @realDonald­Trump?” Newsom tweeted. “You sicken me.”

However, Severino did not specify which of many streams of federal health care funds amounting to tens of billions of dollars might be in jeopardy for California. That could include money for community health centers, Medicaid health insurance for low-income people, and basic public health activities such as educating parents about vaccines.

“Our goal is to seek compliance, and we are going to give them 30 days, so we do not have to cross that bridge,” said Severino. Other states could also face federal actions.

Newsom said a federal opinion four years ago confirmed California’s compliance with the Weldon amendment. He pledged that California “won’t back down” as the Trump administra­tion tries to “rile up its base to score cheap political points.”

Religious conservati­ves are a core element of Trump’s political coalition, and his administra­tion has gone out of its way to deliver on their demands. He also has had a running feud with California’s Democratic leaders, accusing them of failing to do enough to combat the state’s homelessne­ss crisis and failing to properly manage forestland to ease the threat of catastroph­ic wildfires. California in turn has sued his administra­tion nearly 70 times, about half over environmen­tal issues.

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, a Democrat, also was defiant, declaring in a statement that “nothing changes.”

“Women’s health should never be dangled as bait for the sake of political grandstand­ing,” Becerra said, accusing Trump of “using the official levers of government to advance his political agenda.”

Becerra noted the state previously obtained a court injunction a year ago against a rule that would have ended the Affordable Care Act’s contracept­ion coverage requiremen­t. He also announced Friday that he had asked a federal court to rule on California’s ongoing challenge to a Title X rule that he said would undermine the nation’s only federal family planning program.

It’s the second time in a year that the Trump administra­tion cited California for violating the Weldon amendment. The federal government closed the previous complaint on the grounds that a U.S. Supreme Court ruling had already effectivel­y ended a California law intended to force anti-abortion crisis pregnancy centers to provide informatio­n about abortion.

The latest violation was based on complaints from an order of nuns — the Missionary Guadalupan­as of the Holy Spirit — and Skyline Wesleyan Church near San Diego.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump boards Air Force One for a trip to Miami to attend the Republican National Committee winter meetings, Thursday in Andrews Air Force Base, Md.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump boards Air Force One for a trip to Miami to attend the Republican National Committee winter meetings, Thursday in Andrews Air Force Base, Md.

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