by
Deal Hudson
August 8, 2008
LifeNews.com Note: Deal W. Hudson is the director of the Morley Institute for Church & Culture and InsideCatholic.com, and is the former publisher and editor of CRISIS Magazine, a Catholic monthly. He is the author of six books and his articles and comments have been published in many newspapers and magazines.
Objections
continue to be raised to the charge that Senator Barack Obama supports
infanticide, most recently in a Huffington Post column by Seth Colter
Walls. I have made this claim myself, as have Sen. Rick Santorum,
Terry Jeffreys, Jill Stanek, Bill Donohue, Gary Bauer, and Nat Hentoff.
It's a dramatic charge, but here are the facts.
No one disputes that for three years running, while an Illinois state
senator (from 2001 to 2003), Barack Obama was faced with a decision
about a bill mandating medical care for children born alive during
induced abortions. (The Illinois bill was called the Induced Infant
Liability Act.)
No one disputes that in 2001 he voted against medical care for these
children in committee and voted "present" on the floor;
in 2002, against the bill both in committee and on the floor; and
in 2003, as chairman of the committee, kept the bill from going to
the floor at all.
And yet in spite of the facts, Obama's backers continue to insist
that he should not be considered a supporter of infanticide.
But why shouldn't his opposition to the Illinois bill earn him that
label? After all, in opposing the state legislation, Obama signaled
his willingness to allow newborns to die without receiving medical
attention after surviving a failed abortion.
Jill Stanek is the nurse who -- after witnessing babies being left
to die in a Chicago hospital -- testified several times before Obama's
committee. She reports
that her testimony, including the pictures she displayed, "did
not faze [Obama] at all."
Nonetheless, Obama's supporters deny the charge. Here are their claims,
and the facts:
They argue that each year the bill was "bundled" with
other measures, and Obama had objections against other parts of the
bundle.
The fact is that the three bills were not bundled -- each had its
own number and was considered separately (in 2001, no. 1095; 2002,
no. 1662; and 2003, no. 1082).
The Medical Society of Illinois opposed the bill on the basis of
an already existing law dating from 1975.
Yes, such a law existed, but babies were being allowed to die in hospitals
anyway, as witnessed by Stanek. The bill was introduced to end that
practice. It's like refusing to pass laws against speeding because
AAA objects to them. The intention was to force doctors to end a barbaric
practice.
Obama claims he would have voted for the 2002 federal bill if he
had been presented with it.
That's a strange assertion, given the fact that the 2003 state bill
was identical to the 2002 federal bill.
It's true that the 2005 Illinois bill passed by the state legislature
had two sentences not contained in the 2002 federal bill or the 2003
state bill. But Obama has already claimed that he would have signed
the 2002 federal version of the bill, which did not contain the two
sentences of the 2005 Illinois bill.
Also, the additional two sentences of the Illinois bill merely reiterate
the crucial sentence of the 2002 federal bill that allowed pro-abortion
senators like Ted Kennedy to sign it.
Here's the sentence: "(c) Nothing in this section shall be construed
to affirm, deny, expand, or contract any legal status or legal right
applicable to any member of the species homo sapiens at any point
prior to being 'born alive' as defined in this section."
Even NARAL did not oppose the 2002 federal bill.
When Obama spoke on the floor of the Illinois senate against the protection
act -- in fact, he was the only senator to do so -- he made it clear
that his reason for rejecting it was his fear of its overturning Roe
v. Wade:
Whenever we define a pre-viable fetus as a person that is protected
by the Equal Protection Clause or the other elements in the Constitution,
what we're really saying is, in fact, that they are persons that are
entitled to the kinds of protections that would be provided to a --
a child, a 9-month old -- child that was delivered to term. That
determination then, essentially, if it was accepted by a court, would
forbid abortions to take place. I mean, it -- it would essentially
bar abortions, because the Equal Protection Clause does not allow
somebody to kill a child, and if this is a child, then this would
be an anti-abortion statute (emphasis added).
The 2002 version of the federal bill contained the sentence quoted
above, which directly addressed Obama's concern. Every pro-abortion
senator in the U.S. Congress voted for the bill -- it passed unanimously.
Yet when Obama was presented with an identical bill in committee in
2003, he wouldn't allow it to pass committee and go to the floor.
Why did Obama block the 2003 bill when it satisfied his concern about
overturning Roe v. Wade?
As Gary Bauer put it, "If abortion stalwarts such as Boxer and
Kennedy were satisfied with the federal born alive bill, why wasn't
Obama satisfied with an identical state bill?"
Obama's record makes it very difficult to believe anything other than
he has been a supporter of infanticide. If he has changed his mind,
all he has to do is say so.
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