Archbishop Hughes and U.S. Catholic Bishops urge Congress to support legislation that embodies respect for all human life; access for all
The U.S. Catholic Church bishops and health care leaders agree with President Obama,
that the nation is in dire need of healthcare reform. We also urge people to evaluate the present
proposals being debated in Congress according to responsible moral criteria.
In light of this, New Orleans Archbishop Alfred Hughes is
asking local Catholics and people in the wider community to communicate with
their congressional representatives and senators to insist that their efforts
to accomplish healthcare reform include:
·
truly universal coverage (from conception to
natural death) with respect for human life and dignity;
·
access for all with a special concern for the
poor and inclusion of legal immigrants;
·
pursuing the common good and preserving
pluralism, including freedom of conscience and variety of options; and
·
restraining costs and applying them equitably
across the spectrum of payers.
At issue is the need to ensure that the first, truly
universal coverage respect human life
and dignity. According to reports, the
health care reform package in its current form threatens the largest expansion
of “abortion rights” since Roe vs. Wade by mandating coverage for abortions in
health plans and allowing for federal subsidies of abortion. Additionally, the package would seemingly
nullify many state regulations on abortion.
“The people of Louisiana and across the nation should not be
forced to have their hard earned tax dollars pay for abortion on demand,” said
Peg Kenny, Director of the Archdiocese of New Orleans Respect Life Office. “Abortion is not healthcare, and it should
not be included in any healthcare measure.”
This week, Bishop William J. Murphy, Chair of the U.S.
Bishops’ committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development wrote to Congress
saying, “On respecting life and dignity, no health care reform plan should
compel us or others to pay for the destruction of human life, whether through
government funding or mandatory coverage of abortion. Any such action would be
morally wrong.”
For decades the US Bishops have advocated for comprehensive
health care reform that would provide equitable access for all.
“All people need and should have access to comprehensive,
quality health care that they can afford, and it should not depend on their
stage of life, where or whether they or their parents work, how much they earn,
where they live, or where they were born,” wrote Bishop Murphy. “The Bishops’ Conference believes health care reform should be truly
universal and it should be
genuinely affordable.”
Locally, Archbishop
Hughes and pro-life leaders are encouraging parishioners and constituents to
write to Congressional leadership to pass comprehensive reform that explicitly
excludes abortion, and to call on President Obama to maintain his promise of
promoting “abortion neutral” policies that would not change the “status quo” in
regards to abortion funding and regulations.
“It is critical that Congress hears the message to support a
health care reform bill that respects life,” said
Kenny. “Any bill must exclude mandated
coverage for abortion and uphold longstanding laws that restrict abortion
funding and protect conscience rights.”
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