White House Shies Away From Planned Parenthood Defunding Talk
Press secretary Sean Spicer says the Trump administration won't commit to including the hot-button issue in the upcoming spending bill. In other women's health news, some states are still moving to protect access to contraception and Democrats try to reconcile their platform with a need to include anti-abortion voters.
The Hill:
WH Won't Commit To Defunding Planned Parenthood In Spending Bill
The White House refused to commit Monday to defunding Planned Parenthood in an upcoming must-pass spending bill, a sign it’s looking to avoid a government shutdown over the hot-button issue. President Trump viewed the now-dead Republican healthcare bill as “an opportunity to defund” Planned Parenthood, according to press secretary Sean Spicer, who wouldn’t say whether the president would demand defunding in future legislation. (Fabian, 3/27)
The Associated Press:
Some State Lawmakers Seek To Protect Birth-Control Access
Even with the Republican failure to repeal Barack Obama's health care law, Democratic lawmakers in some states are pressing ahead with efforts to protect birth control access, Planned Parenthood funding and abortion coverage in case they are jeopardized in the future. (Crary and Noon, 3/28)
Roll Call:
Abortion Opponents Look For A Home In Democratic Party
For supporters of abortion rights, the Democratic Party has become the only real option. But as the party struggles to make inroads in red states, where its economic message may resonate more than its social values, some Democrats think there needs to be more flexibility on that issue. ... But there’s no easy answer for the Democratic Party. The platform’s narrow focus on abortion rights is borne of a commitment to protect the rights of women to control their own bodies — a self-determination issue from which few Democratic lawmakers in Congress want to back away. (Pathé, 3/28)