Senate kills family-planning rule; Pence
breaks tie
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[March 31, 2017]
By Lisa Lambert
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Vice President Mike
Pence took the rare step of breaking a tie in the U.S. Senate on
Thursday, casting the deciding vote to roll back protections for
reproductive health funds.
Using the Congressional Review Act, which allows lawmakers to repeal
recently minted regulations, senators killed a rule intended to keep
federal grants flowing to clinics that provide contraception and other
services in states that want to block the funding.
The rule was enacted in the final weeks of former President Barack
Obama's administration, giving lawmakers the opening to nullify it under
the review law.
In recent years states such as Texas have kept some healthcare providers
from receiving the grants as part of the country's longstanding fight
over abortion.
It was the second time on Thursday that Pence used his role as the
chamber's president to end a deadlock. He was called to the capitol
earlier to carry the resolution through a procedural vote.
Saying the rule usurps states' rights, Republicans argued local
lawmakers should decide how healthcare money is distributed.
Their main concern is that federal money is being used to provide
abortions, although the grants are specifically barred from funding
those procedures. Republicans, including President Donald Trump,
generally oppose abortion.
"This regulation is an unnecessary restriction on states that know their
residents’ own needs best," said Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell.
Democrats said the resolution was an attack on women's health,
contending the rollback will make it harder for low-income and rural
women to obtain screenings for cancer and other diseases, as well as
contraception.
Most resolutions killing recent Obama-era regulations have sailed
through the Republican-controlled Congress. They need to win only simple
majorities in both chambers to go to the president for signing.
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Vice President Mike Pence speaks at the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee (AIPAC) policy conference in Washington, U.S.,
March 26, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
The congressional review law was used only once successfully until
this year. The family-planning resolution marked the 13th time it
has been deployed effectively since the beginning of February, as
well as the first time a resolution has come within a hair's breadth
of failing.
"Republicans didn't listen to us," said Senator Patty Murray of
Washington, the senior Democrat on the health committee. "They
didn't listen to women across the country who made it clear that
restricting women's access to the full range of reproductive care is
unacceptable."
The nonprofit Planned Parenthood, which provides abortions and many
other health and contraception services, receives some of the
federal funding.
Noting the recent collapse of the Republican healthcare bill in the
U.S. House of Representatives, Dawn Laguens, executive vice
president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said
Thursday's votes were close because "people are sick and tired of
politicians making it even harder for them to access healthcare."
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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