Recently, one of my favorite
attention-getting disasters, Governor Rick Perry, must have been unsatisfied
with his failed GOP campaign fiasco and decided to take a stance against a
program actually benefitting Texas.
The only reasons I can come up with for his ridiculous claims of
government overreach is that he wanted to get back in the action and go against
the Obama administration. I don’t
know what he expects to accomplish with his bold claims of funding the Women’s
Health Program without federal help, doesn’t he realize the only people taking
him seriously anymore are crazed super-conservatives.
If
Texas plans on ever overcoming the damage done by its republican politicians
concerning federal funding for Women’s Health Program (WHP) through Medicaid,
our elected officials need to abandon their stance on barring women’s health
care providers that are in any way affiliated with abortion providers from
receiving funding. Perry and other
lawmakers have put in to motion something I worry cannot be undone. Perry defends his position on defunding
women’s health providers associated with abortion clinics with the state law
prohibiting taxes from going to organizations that promote abortion. The federal government, through
Medicaid, will not fund a state program that violates federal law. This particular law prohibits states
from discriminating against qualified providers. The main target of Perry’s issue is Planned Parenthood. What blows Perry’s argument to nothing
is the fact that not one of the 11 Planned Parenthood clinics, once funded but
now closed due to budget cuts, provided abortion care. What these combined 11 clinics did
provide in there last year were 20,565 clients health exams, including: 13,184
cervical cancer screenings, 14,163 breast cancer screenings, and 33,974
sexually transmitted infection screenings/treatments. And Rick Perry publically boasts the state’s targeting of
Planned Parenthood. The people
responsible for this budget cut anticipated it to cripple Planned Parenthood,
ending the “abortion industry.”
Unfortunately,
defunding family-planning clinics will likely backfire on the Republicans. With an increase of closing clinics,
more women will be left without health care. Other losses likely to occur are an increased number of
unplanned Medicaid-paid births, an increased number of cancers detected in
later stages of disease, increase in abortions, higher rates of STD’s, more
children forced to be a part of the Children’s Health Insurance Program, and
all resulting in costing us more money that we don’t have. If the Republicans hadn’t been so
shortsighted, they’d realized the budget cut wont benefit anyone, putting an
unnecessary burden on all of Texas.
Even
if Governor Perry and the rest of the Republican party’s argument for standing
up to “Washington bureaucracy because it’s the right thing to do” were
accurate, Perry still used this issue for marketing preparations for a
potential presidential run (which didn’t work out, did it?). Perry, Greg Abbott, and the rest of
those taking a similar stand don’t genuinely care about women’s health care, as
do the women it actually affects.
This is just another building block for campaigning to them.
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