Hillary Clinton on Todays Roe v Wade anniversary

On today's anniversary of the landmark women's reproductive health Roe v Wade, Hillary Clinton affirmed her commitment to women's reproductive rights and to making abortion safe, legal, and rare:

On Anniversary Of Roe, Clinton Announces Agenda For Reproductive Health Care

The Clinton campaign today reinforced its commitment to protect a woman's right to make the most fundamental decisions about her life and health and announced a comprehensive agenda for women's reducing unintended pregnancy and enhancing access to reproductive health care. The announcement comes on the 35th anniversary of the landmark Supreme Court decision Roe v. Wade and follows the news of the endorsement of WCLA - Choice Matters, one of the oldest pro-choice advocacy organizations in the nation.

"When I'm President, I will appoint judges to our courts who understand that Roe v. Wade isn't just binding legal precedent, it is the touchstone of our reproductive freedom, the embodiment of our most fundamental rights, and no one - no judge, no governor, no Senator, no President - has the right to take it away."

The agenda includes preventing unintended pregnancies by increasing access to honest, accurate sex education, contraception and family planning services, ensuring that private health plans offer the same level of coverage for contraception as they do for other prescription drugs and services, ensuring that women who survive sexual assault have access to emergency contraception upon request. Clinton also calls for providing greater access to reproductive health care services overseas.

"On the 35th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, I am reaffirming my commitment to safe, legal, and rare abortion, and unveiling an agenda for decreasing the number of unintended pregnancies in the U.S. through honest and complete sex education and expanded access to contraception and family planning," said Clinton.

WCLA joins other prominent pro-choice organizations endorsing Hillary Clinton for President, including the National Organization for Women PAC, EMILY's List, Women's Campaign Forum, National Women's Political Caucus, Women's Political Committee.

Since not one single question about women's issues has been asked at any of dozens of Presidential debates this year, it might make sense to cover some of Clinton's specific policy commitments:

http://www.hillaryclinton.com/news/relea se/view/?id=5404

Maintaining Roe as the Law of the Land

Appointing Justices that will uphold the right to privacy - Senator Clinton opposed the nominations of Justices Alito and Roberts to the Supreme Court because she believed they represented the greatest threat to Roe since it was decided. Her prediction has been born out through Gonzales v. Carhart, the first time the Supreme Court upheld a law outlawing a specific abortion procedure. As President, Hillary will nominate justices who share her view that the Constitution protects a woman's right to make the most fundamental decisions about her life and health, and that the right to privacy is a fundamental right.

Enacting the Freedom of Choice Act - Hillary will sign into law the Freedom of Choice Act, which would codify Roe v. Wade and send a renewed signal to the courts that the will of Congress and the President is to keep abortion legal.

Preventing Unintended Pregnancies

Hillary has long believed that abortion should be safe, legal, and rare. Unfortunately, we are far from realizing that vision. One half of pregnancies in the U.S. are unintended and one half of unintended pregnancies end in abortion, and the U.S. has one of the highest rates of teen pregnancy in the industrialized world. Hillary's agenda will help reduce the number of unintended pregnancies by:

Increasing access to family planning services. Hillary will expand the national family planning program (Title X) and extend Medicaid coverage for family planning services to women who are eligible for pregnancy-related care. Each year, Title X provides 4.8 million people, mostly poor and uninsured, with family planning services that help them plan their pregnancies and improve their health. Clinics that use Title X funds are present in close to three-quarters of counties in the U.S. Over the last two decades, Title X services are estimated to have prevented 20 million unintended pregnancies and nine million abortions, and helped to prevent 5.5 million adolescent pregnancies [Planned Parenthood]. President Bush has proposed no increases in Title X since taking office. As a result, health care providers that rely on Title X funds have significantly lost purchasing power and are struggling to afford the latest technology in diagnostic and contraceptive services. According to the Guttmacher Institute, the $286 million allotted to Title X for FY 2005 was worth 59 percent less than the $162 million appropriated in FY 1980. Hillary will restore the funding for Title X that has been lost under the Bush Administration. She will also ensure that states make family planning services as widely available as pregnancy-related services in Medicaid.

Ensuring that private health plans offer the same level of coverage for contraception as they do for other prescription drugs and services. Massive shifts have occurred in the number of women with access to contraception through their health insurance over the past 15 years. In 1993, according to testimony by the Executive Director of the Women's Research and Education Institute, women typically spent 68% more in out-of-pocket health care costs than men, a difference that was largely accounted for through reproductive health services. Today, nearly nine in ten employer-provided health insurance plans cover the full range of prescription contraceptives [AGI, 2004]. Still only half of all women of live in states that require contraceptive coverage of employers, and millions of women who don't receive health insurance through their employers aren't reached by these state laws [AGI, 2004]. As president, Hillary would work to enact the Equity in Prescription Insurance and Contraceptive Coverage Act, which would require health insurance plans to cover contraception to the same degree that they cover other forms of prescription drugs.

Ensuring that women who survive sexual assault have access to emergency contraception (EC) upon request. Emergency contraception is a safe and effective way to help women who may be at risk for an unintended pregnancy. Yet, according to seven years of data from the Centers for Disease Control, fewer than half of all women who visited an emergency room after a sexual assault received emergency contraception becoming pregnant [Annals of Emergency Medicine, 2002]. Fourteen states already require hospital emergency rooms to provide emergency contraception-related services to sexual assault victims. Hillary would enact legislation to require hospitals to inform women who are victims of rape and sexual assault that EC is an option for them, and make it available or provide a referral upon their request, or risk losing federal funding.

Implementing important public education initiatives about EC. Emergency contraception is a safe, effective back-up birth control method that reduces the risk of pregnancy by 75% [Boonstra, AGI, 2002]. Despite the widely acknowledged safety, efficacy, and acceptability of EC, many women do not know EC is an option for them and only 6% of women have ever used it [Kaiser Family Foundation, 2005]. Hillary would support efforts to increase awareness so that women can have full information about this proven option.

Restoring the discount for birth control on college campuses and community health centers. The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 eliminated the ability of college health clinics and about 400 community health centers to receive deep discounts on contraception and pass those savings onto students. As a result, college students and low-income women across the country have seen the price of contraception rise by 300 or 400%. Many are choosing to take a risk on unprotected sex rather than pay the increase. Others are cutting down their budget for food or other necessities. Hillary will make restoring this discount a top priority.

Supporting sex education programs that provide honest, accurate, complete information about abstinence, contraception, and disease prevention. Senator Clinton supports a more comprehensive approach to sex education that teaches young people to delay sexual activity, but also teaches them the basics of human sex and how to protect themselves from unintended pregnancy, HIV/AIDs and other sexually transmitted diseases. Fourteen states have rejected President Bush's strict abstinence-only approach [Washington Post, December 16, 2007]. Hillary would provide funding for medically accurate, age appropriate, comprehensive sex education programs.

Funding teen pregnancy prevention programs. The U.S. has one of the highest rates of teen pregnancy in the industrialized world, and teen pregnancy is associated with a host of poor outcomes for the parents and children of teen parents - lower employment rates, higher rates of welfare dependence, higher school dropout rates, and poorer health and academic outcomes. Hillary would set a national goal of reducing teen pregnancy by one third and invest in initiatives with a proven record of reducing teen pregnancy. In December, the CDC National Center for Health Statistics announced that the teen birth rate rose for the first time since 1991. Over the fourteen years preceding, the teen birth rate fell by 34 percent. Hillary will bring a concerted focus to breaking the cycle of teen pregnancy, and in doing so tackle the root cause of many social problems and help to improve prospects for young people, strengthen families and our nation.

Conducting research into preventing unintended pregnancy. Hillary will invest in research efforts identify the most promising strategies for reducing the rate of unintended pregnancy. She will fund a pilot program to do rigorous analysis of the programs and strategies currently being undertaken, and will use the results of the research to determine the most effective strategies and practices going forward. Hillary will ensure that investments we make in reducing the number of unintended pregnancies are evidence-based, not ideologically driven.

Providing Greater Access to Reproductive Health Care Services Overseas

Overturning the Global Gag Rule and Reinstating the United Nations Population Fund. Hillary has said that on day one of her Administration she will overturn the global gag rule, which prohibits Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) from even talking about abortion in the event of an unplanned pregnancy. This rule has had devastating consequences on access to reproductive health care for women by forcing NGOs, which are sometimes the only health care provider for women's health in a poor community, to choose between foregoing the funding they need to be sustainable and providing honest and accurate information to women about their options. In countries like Nepal, which are grappling with high rates of maternal death as a result of unsafe abortion and growing rates of HIV/AIDS, the global gag rule has devastated the limited reproductive health care infrastructure. Hillary will also reinstate for the United Nations Population Fund, which provides vital funding for family planning abroad. President Bush has eliminated this funding every year of his administration.

Reproductive Health Services for Women Stationed at Military Bases Overseas. Nearly 3,000 military women reported being victims of sexual assault last year. Yet, women living on military bases overseas often have a hard time accessing emergency contraception and are prohibited from using their own money to pay for an abortion at a military medical health care provider. Hillary introduced the Compassionate Care for Servicewomen Act, which requires full access to emergency contraception for servicewomen at all U.S. military health care facilities around the world. As President, she will enact this legislation. President Clinton issued an executive order in 1993 to lift the ban on paying for abortion with private funds, but it was overturned by Congress in 1995, and has been in place every since. Hillary believes women stationed on U.S. military bases overseas should have the same access to the full range of reproductive health care as women living in the U.S., and as president she will work towards that day.

Tags: Election 2008, Hillary Clinton, president, Women (all tags)

Comments

15 Comments

I will say this for Hillary

If she were elected, I have no doubt that she would be solidly pro-choice, and her directives, proposed legislation, and judicial appointments would reflect that.

Then again, so would our other candidates. So I don't see this as an advantage for her.

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-22 05:07PM | 0 recs
Re: I will say this for Hillary

All the candidates are pro-choice but I think Hillary has always spoken of women's issues and issues of particular concern for women in a manner all her own and in such a way as to inspire a confidence the other two just cannot.

by americanincanada 2008-01-22 05:17PM | 0 recs
I respect your opinion

but Kate Michelman, former head of NARAL, is just one of many women who feel that Edwards speaks powerfully on choice and other issues affecting women:

http://www.johnedwards.com/women/headlin es/20070515-women-for-edwards/index.html

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-22 05:30PM | 0 recs
Re: I will say this for Hillary

Yeah, you're probably right. I'm sure the two guys in the race are as attuned to women's reproductive health issues as the mother/daughter/sister in the race.

by hwc 2008-01-22 05:41PM | 0 recs
Re: I will say this for Hillary

Similarly, I'm sure you're just as attuned to women's issues as desmoinesdem.

by Steve M 2008-01-22 05:50PM | 0 recs
Re: I will say this for Hillary

I'm attuned enough to know that not one single question at one single Democratic Party debate has been asked about women's issues and that is a DISGRACE and an INSULT to the majority of Democratic Party voters.

by hwc 2008-01-22 05:53PM | 0 recs
Re: I will say this for Hillary

It is a disgrace and let me tell you, as a woman and a lesbian, I am ashamed of the MSM and moderators for it.

With all the attention on race I am shocked they have not made a bigger deal about women's issues.

by americanincanada 2008-01-22 06:31PM | 0 recs
Re: Hillary Clinton on Todays Roe v Wade anniversa

You know the clinton campaign has almost turned the iraq war vote into a liability for Obama.

Has anyone noticed that ?

You would think that Obama would have the upper hand   voicing his opposition to the war but somehow they seemed to have neutralized it and somewhat turned it on its head as a point of attack.

by lori 2008-01-22 05:15PM | 0 recs
Re: Hillary Clinton on Todays Roe v Wade anniversa

The issue they are going after is consistency.  

If Obama was Kucinich, he would have a major leg up on this issue.  Kucinich opposed the war from the start, voted against funding it every time, never spoke favorably about it.   Obama, in contrast, upon entering the Senate, voted for war funding consistently, without reservation, he spoke out strongly against an amendment to setting a date certain in 2006, bringing a passionate plea about his opposition to setting any type of date for withdrawal to the Senate floor twice. He also commented in 2004 that he would have probably voted for the resolution as well (which some claim he said to protect Kerry/Edwards, but it leaves a lot of questions, nonetheless) and he did have his anti-war comments removed from his website.    All of that has led to this becoming largely a neutral issue between the two.  

by georgep 2008-01-22 05:25PM | 0 recs
Re: Hillary Clinton on Todays Roe v Wade anniversa

excellent diary --

Lets not forget her statement when kennedy sold out to his religion in the Carhart case.

by sepulvedaj3 2008-01-22 05:20PM | 0 recs
Re: Hillary Clinton on Todays Roe v Wade

Did the other two candidates make a statement today? I would be shocked and surprised to find out they didn't, especially if they want the powerful and huge women's vote. The anniversary of Roe v. Wade was all over the cable stations today.

by americanincanada 2008-01-22 05:29PM | 0 recs
Edwards statement

http://www.johnedwards.com/news/press-re leases/20080122-roe-v-wade/

Edwards Statement On The 35th Anniversary Of Roe v. Wade
    Jan 22, 2008 12:03 PM

Chapel Hill, North Carolina - John Edwards released the following statement on the 35th anniversary of Roe v. Wade.

"Roe v. Wade was an important step on the road to full equality, opportunity and dignity for women. On the 35th anniversary, it is important to reflect how far we've come as a nation, but more importantly how far we still have to go.

"I strongly support a woman's right to privacy and reproductive choices. That right has been under attack though -- by President Bush and his anti-choice agenda and by the Supreme Court, which has been moving the right-wing's agenda faster than we've seen in decades. The hard right turn of the Supreme Court is a stark reminder of why Democrats cannot afford to lose the 2008 election. Too much is at stake - starting with a woman's right to choose.

"As President, I will guarantee the right to choose and ensure that women can make choices in their lives with dignity and can participate in our society fully, as equals."

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-22 05:32PM | 0 recs
Re: Edwards statement

You always manage to show me up.

by Steve M 2008-01-22 05:33PM | 0 recs
Re: Hillary Clinton on Todays Roe v Wade

On the front page of johnedwards.com I found a link to this statement:

"Roe v. Wade was an important step on the road to full equality, opportunity and dignity for women.  On the 35th anniversary, it is important to reflect how far we've come as a nation, but more importantly how far we still have to go.  

"I strongly support a woman's right to privacy and reproductive choices. That right has been under attack though -- by President Bush and his anti-choice agenda and by the Supreme Court, which has been moving the right-wing's agenda faster than we've seen in decades.  The hard right turn of the Supreme Court is a stark reminder of why Democrats cannot afford to lose the 2008 election. Too much is at stake - starting with a woman's right to choose.

"As President, I will guarantee the right to choose and ensure that women can make choices in their lives with dignity and can participate in our society fully, as equals."

I hunted around Obama's site for a few but didn't find anything.  Perhaps one of his supporters will post it.

by Steve M 2008-01-22 05:33PM | 0 recs
Re: Hillary Clinton on Todays Roe v Wade anniversa

Not sure if Arizona is a Feb 5 state , but a poll is out there ,

Clinton 45%

Obama  24%

http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/story/1 07174

Also new california poll ,

clinton 39%

obama   28

Edwards  12

Among the Democrats, support remained almost identical from the previous week. Clinton leads Obama 39 percent to 28 percent, with John Edwards trailing at 12 percent. A week ago, Clinton led by 12 percentage points, 41 to 29, with Edwards at 13.

Only registered Republicans can vote in California's GOP primary, while Democrats and Independents can participate with the Democrats. The poll took this into account in qualifying likely voters for the survey.

http://thephoenix.com/article_ektid54916 .aspx

" I guess this was how the west was won."

lol.

Lets hope nothing unexpected happens.

by lori 2008-01-22 05:45PM | 0 recs

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