National Review Online
Tuesday, February 26, 2019
The Trump administration has finalized a new rule that
likely will result in the largest drop in federal funding for Planned
Parenthood since the group first began receiving government subsidies nearly
five decades ago.
The rule forbids the use of Title X family-planning funds
“to perform, promote, refer for, or support abortion as a method of family
planning.” The statute governing the program has always declared that “none of
the funds appropriated under this title shall be used in programs where
abortion is a method of family planning,” but for much of the program’s history
that language was effectively ignored. The Trump administration is insisting
that it will no longer be.
Planned Parenthood and its defenders have made the
defense of the subsidy into a high principle, insisting that the administration
is imposing a “gag rule.” They claim that the new policy will result in the
denial of necessary health care to millions of American women. In fact, Title X
funding won’t be reduced at all, merely redirected from groups that commit
abortions. Fewer than 500 of the approximately 4,000 Title X service sites in
the country are Planned Parenthood facilities.
The rule will cause only a small hit to the corporation’s
bottom line. Most of its government funding — it gets half a billion a year —
comes from Medicaid reimbursements. The loss of Title X grants will cost it about
$60 million. What outrages Planned Parenthood is that the federal government is
distinguishing between family planning and abortion, which is to say between
what it says it’s about and its actual core mission.
Planned Parenthood wants to be considered a benevolent
health-care provider rather than the nation’s largest abortion business, and it
wants the cachet of the federal government’s treating it as a valued and
non-controversial partner. Hence the frequent, though long-debunked,
claim that abortion makes up a mere 3 percent of the organization’s activities.
Planned Parenthood’s own annual report tells the real tale: Last fiscal year
alone, its facilities performed upwards of 332,000 abortion procedures, well
over one-third the estimated abortions in the entire country. Its new
president, Leana Wen, was more candid last month when she said that “protecting
and expanding access to abortion” is the group’s “core mission.”
So Planned Parenthood and its allies are fighting the new
rule for both philosophical and practical reasons. It disagrees with the
administration — and with longstanding American law — about whether abortion
should be considered a legitimate method of family planning deserving federal
funding. And the organization is unwilling to keep its Title X funding by
financially and physically separating its abortion business from its other
operations. Abortion is its bottom line, not a rounding error.
The new rule not only denies funding to groups that
profit from killing innocent human beings, but in the process exposes Planned
Parenthood’s real agenda.
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