
Bishops
Encourage Vigilance that Health Care Legislation
Protects Conscience, does not Fund Abortion
Applaud efforts to expand
health care to all
Emphasize need to guarantee federal money does
not go to abortion
Need to address flaws in health reform plan just passed
WASHINGTON—The U.S. bishops called on
Congress and people in the Catholic community to make
sure promises are kept that new health care legislation
will not expand abortions in the United States.
Cardinal Francis George of Chicago,
president of the United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops, made the call March 23, moments after president
Barack Obama signed the Senate version of health care
reform legislation approved by the House of
Representatives by a slim margin, March 21. The
statement was approved unanimously by the 32-member
Administrative Committee of the USCCB.
“We applaud the effort to expand
health care to all,” Cardinal George said.
He noted concerns about the
legislation, including that “the statute forces all
those who choose federally subsidized plans that cover
abortion to pay for other people’s abortions with their
own funds.”
Cardinal George pointed to President
Obama’s executive order that said “it is necessary to
establish an adequate enforcement mechanism to ensure
that Federal funds are not used for abortion services.”
The need for such an order underscores
deficiencies in the bill, Cardinal George said.
“We do not understand how an Executive
order, no matter how well intentioned, can substitute
for statutory provisions,” he said also.
President Obama and others claimed the
bill does not expand abortion, Cardinal George noted.
“We and many others will accompany the
government’s implementation of the health care reform
and will work to ensure that Congress and the
Administration live up to the claims that have
contributed to its passage. We believe, finally, that
new legislation to address its deficiencies will almost
certainly be required,” he said.
The statement follows.
For nearly a century, the Catholic
bishops of the United States have called for reform of
our health care system so that all may have access to
the care that recognizes and affirms their human
dignity. Christian discipleship means, “working to
ensure that all people have access to what makes them
fully human and fosters their human dignity” (United
States Catechism for Adults, page 454). Included among
those elements is the provision of necessary and
appropriate health care.
For too long, this question has gone
unaddressed in our country. Often, while many had access
to excellent medical treatment, millions of others
including expectant mothers, struggling families or
those with serious medical or physical problems were
left unable to afford the care they needed. As Catholic
bishops, we have expressed our support for efforts to
address this national and societal shortcoming. We have
spoken for the poorest and most defenseless among us.
Many elements of the health care reform measure signed
into law by the President address these concerns and so
help to fulfill the duty that we have to each other for
the common good. We are bishops, and therefore pastors
and teachers. In that role, we applaud the effort to
expand health care to all.
Nevertheless, for whatever good this
law achieves or intends, we as Catholic bishops have
opposed its passage because there is compelling evidence
that it would expand the role of the federal government
in funding and facilitating abortion and plans that
cover abortion. The statute appropriates billions of
dollars in new funding without explicitly prohibiting
the use of these funds for abortion, and it provides
federal subsidies for health plans covering elective
abortions. Its failure to preserve the legal status quo
that has regulated the government’s relation to
abortion, as did the original bill adopted by the House
of Representatives last November, could undermine what
has been the law of our land for decades and threatens
the consensus of the majority of Americans: that federal
funds not be used for abortions or plans that cover
abortions. Stranger still, the statute forces all those
who choose federally subsidized plans that cover
abortion to pay for other peoples’ abortions with their
own funds. If this new law is intended to prevent people
from being complicit in the abortions of others, it is
at war with itself.
We share fully the admirable intention
of President Obama expressed in his pending Executive
Order, where he states, “it is necessary to establish an
adequate enforcement mechanism to ensure that Federal
funds are not used for abortion services.” However, the
fact that an Executive Order is necessary to clarify the
legislation points to deficiencies in the statute
itself. We do not understand how an Executive Order, no
matter how well intentioned, can substitute for
statutory provisions.
The statute is also profoundly flawed
because it has failed to include necessary language to
provide essential conscience protections (both within
and beyond the abortion context). As well, many
immigrant workers and their families could be left worse
off since they will not be allowed to purchase health
coverage in the new exchanges to be created, even if
they use their own money.
Many in Congress and the
Administration, as well as individuals and groups in the
Catholic community, have repeatedly insisted that there
is no federal funding for abortion in this statute and
that strong conscience protection has been assured.
Analyses that are being published separately show this
not to be the case, which is why we oppose it in its
current form. We and many others will follow the
government’s implementation of health care reform and
will work to ensure that Congress and the Administration
live up to the claims that have contributed to its
passage. We believe, finally, that new legislation to
address its deficiencies will almost certainly be
required.
As bishops, we wish to recognize the
principled actions of the pro-life Members of Congress
from both parties, in the House and the Senate, who have
worked courageously to create legislation that respects
the principles outlined above. They have often been
vilified and have worked against great odds.
As bishops of the Catholic Church, we
speak in the name of the Church and for the Catholic
faith itself. The Catholic faith is not a partisan
agenda, and we take this opportunity to recommit
ourselves to working for health care which truly and
fully safeguards the life, dignity, conscience and
health of all, from the child in the womb to those in
their last days on earth.