Loyal to Life, Not to Party
Rep. Dan Lipinski is a rarity in the House of Representatives these days: He’s a pro-life Democrat. He addressed the March for Life
Friday, speaking by video to the tens of thousands who braved bitter
cold in Washington, D.C., to take a stand for the sanctity of human
life. Lipinski, who represents a Chicago area district, said he joined
the marchers in mourning “the 40th anniversary of the taking away of the
most basic of human rights—the right to life.” He then pointed out,
“Life should not be a partisan issue.”
Of course, he’s right. Both parties should defend the right to
life. It cannot be a healthy sign for America when one party is
committed to the destruction of innocent unborn children while the
other—in too many cases—offers only a weak or timorous defense.
We used to have nearly a hundred genuinely pro-life Democrats in
the House. The original Hyde Amendment, which barred federal funding of
nearly all abortions, was passed in 1977 with strong bipartisan
majorities. We should remember, especially, Rep. William Natcher, D-Ky.,
a very senior Democrat who stood up to liberal pressures for years to
defend the unborn.
The greatest crisis for pro-life Democrats came in 2010 when
Obamacare was being rammed through Congress. In the crunch, many
long-term pro-life Democrats became, tragically, faux-life
Democrats. Some, like Minnesota’s Jim Oberstar, who carried the banner
of the Democratic Farmer-Labor Party, Hubert Humphrey’s coalition, had
been in the House for half a lifetime and had loyally voted pro-life
from 1975 to 2010. But then, unconscionably, he and a score of others
voted for the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act that Speaker
Nancy Pelosi had promised to pass by hook or by crook.
These pro-life Democrats had originally backed the Stupak-Pitts
Amendment of 2009, which would have given the president what he said he
wanted: full healthcare coverage for all Americans, but it would have
prevented the funding of abortion. The amendment garnered 240 votes in
the House and had the backing, according to a Quinnipiac University poll
taken at the time, of 72 percent of Americans. Those 240 votes
represented the highest bipartisan support for almost any measure in
that bitterly divided legislative chamber.
At that time, President Obama said, “We have a tradition of not
funding abortion.” But he had been elected, he told us repeatedly, to
“fundamentally transform America,” not to respect traditions. And so he
didn’t. The final version of Obamacare doesn’t force anyone to pay for
abortions; it just forces us all to pay for insurance that covers
abortion.
We need more politicians on both sides of the aisle willing to put God's law above the government’s dictates. Thank you Representative Lipinski for taking a stand!
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