The Arizona Republic

Is it just banal buzzwords or will GOP back women, kids?

- EJ Montini Columnist Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK

The speakers at last week’s antiaborti­on “March for Life” rally at the Arizona Capitol proclaimed their undying support for pregnant women and their unborn children.

Or was it just talk? Banal buzzwords. Boiler plate platitudes. Because support, real support, has to be backed up by more than words.

Last year, for example, the Republican­s who control the Arizona Legislatur­e, along with former Gov. Doug Ducey, ignored the will of Arizona citizens, who had voted down such a proposal before, and passed a law along party lines that would allow all of Arizona’s 1.1 million K-12 students to receive roughly $7,000 in taxpayer dollars to pay for private school.

The plan was sold as a way of providing a leg up for the disadvanta­ged when, in fact, it is a handout for the rich. But Republican­s had the votes and Ducey’s support, and they backed up their belief with money.

Our money, unfortunat­ely.

If the March for Life people believed what they say, they would try to follow that example. As it is, Arizona’s antiaborti­on zealots are proposing something Republican hardliners supposedly hate — an unfunded mandate.

You know that term, right? It’s when the government imposes some requiremen­t on the rest of us without appropriat­ing any money to cover the costs.

The speakers at the March for Life rally want an abortion ban. It’s their goal and the goal of their supporters.

As Cathi Herrod, president of the Center for Arizona Policy, put it at the rally, “Now that the U.S. Supreme Court has given lawmakers the authority to make abortion law, we’re even more committed to ensuring Arizona laws protect unborn children and the lives of their mothers. The top priority for pro-life policy in Arizona is seeing the state’s pre-Roe law go into effect.”

That law would outlaw abortion except to save the mother’s life.

The speaker of the Arizona House, Republican Rep. Ben Toma, echoed those sentiments, saying, “Since the Dobbs decision (which overturned Roe v. Wade) we have all seen the mobilizati­on of pro-abortion forces, and their radicalism, guised under the banner of so-called ‘woman’s health.’

“I have my wife and daughters here; I’m all about woman’s health. Aborting a human being is not equivalent to a woman’s health. We must reject this lie from the depths of hell.”

If Toma believes this – actually believes it – where is the legislativ­e proposal that would back it up? Because if abortion is banned they’d be putting pregnant women in a hell of a bind.

According to the Peterson-Kaiser Family Foundation Health System Tracker the average cost of pregnancy, childbirth, and postpartum care in America is $18,865.

And that’s for individual­s with insurance. Many pregnant women have none. Even that estimate doesn’t take into account potential health conditions or multiple births or any number of other issues. And the cost bumps up to more than $26,000 when the birth requires a C-section.

If Arizona’s Republican majority was willing to provide taxpayer money for the education of children whose wealthy parents didn’t need the cash, why aren’t they willing to propose legislatio­n to take care of the medical bills of women they would force to carry a pregnancy to term?

Why not try to get such a law through the Legislatur­e?

If they’re worried that Gov. Katie Hobbs would veto such a bill (because she would), the Republican majority could refer the issue directly to voters. They could put a pay-for-pregnancy plan on the ballot.

Any politician who genuinely believes in taking away a woman’s reproducti­ve choices by outlawing abortions should be in favor of taxpayers footing the bill, right?

Or are anti-abortion lawmakers afraid of the answer they’d get from Arizona voters?

(Yes, it’s a rhetorical question.) Of course, the expenses for women who would be forced to give birth if antiaborti­on supporters got their way wouldn’t end in the maternity ward. The Brookings Institutio­n estimates that the average yearly cost to raise a child is about $18,000.

No one is suggesting that taxpayers foot that bill. Although, it would also be an unfunded mandate.

First things first.

Show us a legislativ­e proposal or referendum that would pay for pregnancy and childbirth expenses for women forced by law to give birth.

Or are those March for Life speeches about loving pregnant women and their unborn children just talk?

Banal buzzwords. Boiler plate platitudes.

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