Monthly Archives: August 2016

Where Do The Presidential Candidates Stand on Abortion?

Where do the Presidential Candidates Stand on Abortion?

By Karen Cross, National Right to Life Political Director Every presidential election year, National Right to Life publishes a downloadable comparison flyer about the presidential candidates. This year’s flyer is entitled “Where Do the Candidates Stand on Abortion?” The downloadable version of “Where Do the Candidates Stand on Abortion?” is available at: www.nrlc.org/uploads/2016POTUScomparison.pdf

Not surprisingly, the candidates have very different views on abortion. Here is an overview of their positions on abortion-related issues.

Abortion on Demand

Donald Trump said, “Let me be clear – I am pro-life,” adding, “I did not always hold this position, but I had a significant personal experience that brought the precious gift of life into perspective for me.”

In contrast, in the U.S. Senate Hillary Clinton voted to endorse Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court decision which allows abortion for any reason. She says, “The unborn person doesn’t have constitutional rights,” later adding she believed this to be true even on the unborn child’s due date.

Partial-Birth Abortion

The partial-birth abortion procedure – used from the fifth month on – involves pulling a living baby feet-first out of the womb, except for the head, puncturing the skull and suctioning out the brain. The Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2007, in a 5-4 decision.

In 2000, in his book The America We Deserve, Donald Trump wrote that after consulting with doctors about the partial-birth abortion procedure he concluded that he would support a ban on that method.

In 2003, Hillary Clinton voted against the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act (voted to allow partial-birth abortions to continue) every chance she got.

Nominations to the U.S. Supreme Court

The next president may have the opportunity to appoint three or four justices to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In May 2016, Donald Trump released a list of eleven conservative judges whom he would consider for a Supreme Court vacancy, saying, “By the way, these judges are all pro-life.”

Hillary Clinton has said that she would only nominate Supreme Court justices who would uphold the decision that legalized abortion on demand, saying, “I would not appoint someone who didn’t think Roe v. Wade is settled law.”

Vice Presidential Candidates

The contrasting positions of the vice presidential candidates are listed.

Donald Trump chose Indiana Governor Mike Pence to be his running mate. Mike Pence had a solid pro-life voting record on abortion during 12 years in the U.S. House, including votes for passage of the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act. As governor of Indiana, Mike Pence champions pro-life measures.

Hillary Clinton chose U.S. Senator Tim Kaine as her running mate. Tim Kaine voted against the pro-life position in the U.S. Senate every chance he got, even voting against the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act. Tim Kaine co-sponsored a bill (S.217) that would nullify virtually all state limits on abortion, including late abortions.

Party Platforms

The party platforms reveal a great contrast on abortion.

The Republican Party Platform affirms “that the unborn child has a fundamental right to life,” opposes using government funds to perform or promote abortion or to fund abortion providers, and supports legislation to assist babies who survive abortion.

The Democratic Party Platform supports abortion on demand, and calls for repeal of the Hyde Amendment (which restricts the use of federal funds for abortion). The platform also supports government funding of abortion providers, including Planned Parenthood, the nation’s largest abortion provider.

Feel free to download and share the flyer. A downloadable version of the flyer, “Where do the Candidates stand on Abortion?” may be found here: www.nrlc.org/uploads/2016POTUScomparison.pdf

Look for updates in future National Right to Life News Today.

2016 POTUS comparison

 

Adult Stem Cells Saved Her Life

I’m very pleased to share with you the latest video from the Charlotte Lozier Institute: Today, we present a video celebrating one account of a life-saving ethical adult stem cell treatment.

As you know, the Charlotte Lozier Institute (CLI) is the research arm of Susan B.  Anthony List. Our short video recounts the poignant story of Cindy Schroeder, a mother from Kansas who thought she was given a death sentence when diagnosed with multiple myeloma, a blood cancer with a median survival rate of just over five years that had migrated from her bone marrow to her vital organs.

However her doctor had unexpected good news. He told her: “We have a cure. It’s adult stem cells. You are a good candidate and the success rate is excellent if we can get good cells from your body.”

I hope you will take a moment now to watch our brand new video and hear from Cindy herself about how her own adult stem cells saved her life:

Cindy Schroeder's Remarkable Story of Healing

Many others like Cindy are currently being treated with non-controversial adult stem cell transplants, which do not require the destruction of a human life for the healing of another, while many more could benefit if only they knew of this hope.

We plan to continue creating and sharing more inspiring videos like this one to raise awareness about this life-saving, science-based, and ethical option of treatment.

I hope you will share this new video with your family and friends!

For Life,
Chuck Donovan
President, Charlotte Lozier Institute

Donate Now

Donations can also be mailed to Charlotte Lozier Institute,
1200 New Hampshire Ave. NW, Suite 750, Washington, D.C. 20036

 

Dispatch Editorial on Forced Abortion

Last week, Ohio Right to Life issued a press release on a forced abortion in Dayton, announcing complaints filed by our friends at Dayton Right to Life with the State Medical Board of Ohio. According to a citation report by the Ohio Department of Health, the Kettering abortion facility, Women’s Med Center, violated Ohio Administrative Code 3701-83-07 (A)(2), which states, “Each patient shall be allowed to refuse or withdraw consent for treatment.” 
This morning, the Columbus Dispatch is running an editorial (copied below) that reflects on the “troubling” nature of the abortionist’s actions. As the editorial board writes, “It is very troubling that a doctor subjected a patient to a nonemergency, elective medical procedure when the patient was not competent to make judgments about that treatment.”

This editorial is undeniably significant. As the largest and most influential paper in the state, the Dispatch is shining neutral, bipartisan light on why this should be taken seriously.

The thrust of the Dispatch’s opinion is to highlight the political nature of this case in a pro-life state with pro-life lawmakers and laws. But the politicization of this case is not owned by pro-life leadership. The politicization of this tragic case belongs to Ohio’s abortion lobby, NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio, which has avoided condemning the facility’s violation of a woman’s “right to choose” for the last week, a contradiction of the “pro-choice” mantra.
The Dispatch wisely underscores the importance of informed consent in any medical procedure, demonstrating how this case transcends the abortion debate as a much larger violation of the medical code of ethics:
“The doctor’s decision to proceed is likely unethical and might be illegal, according to Dr. Ryan R. Nash, director of the Center for Bioethics and Medical Humanities at Ohio State University. ‘The basis for informed consent by patients is the right of refusal,” he told The Dispatch. ‘The patient has the right to say no right up until the time of the procedure. It’s ethically obligatory.'”
As this story continues to grab the attention of our state’s opinion leaders, we remain insistent that a violation of a woman’s right to refuse an abortion is taken seriously. The dismemberment of a human child cannot be undone. As a state, we need to ensure that a woman’s right to informed consent is protected. To do otherwise would have grave implications not only for the life of the unborn child, for the very dignity of abortion-vulnerable women.

My best,

Katie Franklin

Katherine Franklin

Director of Communications

Ohio Right to Life

88 East Broad Street, Suite 620

Columbus, Ohio 43215

614/547-0099, ext. 304

www.ohiolife.org

Editorial: Abortion fight politicizes case

Wednesday August 10, 2016 5:41 AM
A case in which a doctor performed an abortion on a woman who was known to be high on drugs raises an important question about medical ethics. But any disciplinary action that might be taken could be muddied by abortion politics.

In the spring of 2015, an abortion was performed at Women’s Med Center in Dayton on a patient who was so high on drugs that, after the abortion, she had to be hospitalized and treated for a suspected overdose.

The friend who drove the woman to the clinic told staffers that the patient had taken the muscle relaxant Soma and painkillers Percocet and Suboxone and “perhaps some heroin.” According to the Ohio Health Department, which investigated the case, the patient was so intoxicated that she could not walk, converse or hold up her head.

Despite this, a doctor performed the abortion because the patient already was dilated by pre-surgery treatment, and might have delivered the baby prematurely or had a miscarriage.

Though the patient had consented to the abortion the day before in the presurgery phase of the procedure, on the day of the surgery, by performing the abortion on a woman who was not in a responsible state of mind, the physician essentially broke Ohio law by denying her the opportunity to reconsider her decision, said Paul Coudron, executive director of anti-abortion group Dayton Right to Life

Complaints against the clinic have been filed with the Ohio Medical Board by Dayton Right to Life and the Ohio Department of Health. The status of the case remains confidential until presented to the board by board staff.

It is very troubling that a doctor subjected a patient to a nonemergency, elective medical procedure when the patient was not competent to make judgments about that treatment.

The doctor’s decision to proceed is likely unethical and might be illegal, according to Dr. Ryan R. Nash, director of the Center for Bioethics and Medical Humanities at Ohio State University. “The basis for informed consent by patients is the right of refusal,” he told The Dispatch. “The patient has the right to say no right up until the time of the procedure. It’s ethically obligatory.”

But any decision that might be made by the state medical board will be colored by abortion politics, because the chairman of the board is Michael Gonidakis, president of Ohio Right to Life. And Ohio lawmakers have been imposing conditions on Ohio abortion clinics to the point where half have closed. Those conditions are enforced by the same Ohio Department of Health that has joined in the complaint against the Dayton clinic.

Already, the clinic and NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio have raised the issue of whether a state medical board headed by an abortion foe can be trusted to make an objective decision about this case.

Gonidakis argues that he has no control over the decisions of the other 11 members of the board who would debate and vote on any sanctions to be imposed in this case. He also said he will recuse himself from the case if board attorneys advise it. A recusal is advisable whether or not board attorneys suggest it. If sanctions are imposed, it is important that they be seen as objective enforcement of medical ethics and not as a further attempt to undermine another of Ohio’s shrinking number of abortion providers.