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Wednesday, Jan 18 2017

Full Issue

With No Presidential Veto Protection, Planned Parenthood Braces For The Worst

Congress has long tried to defund the organization, and with control over both chambers and the White House, they might succeed. Meanwhile, The Washington Post fact checks Speaker Paul Ryan's claim that for every Planned Parenthood clinic there are 20 other centers to offer care for women, and hundreds rally in California to oppose threats to the organization.

A fierce battle over the future of reproductive rights is now underway in Washington as congressional Republicans made the first move last week to slash funding for Planned Parenthood. In starting to roll back the Affordable Care Act, the GOP is also planning to target the country鈥檚 largest women鈥檚 health-care provider. Planned Parenthood could lose millions in dollars of reimbursements from Medicaid and other funding as soon as this spring, if the repeal effort advances. (Snell, 1/18)

[Speaker Paul] Ryan said that for each Planned Parenthood clinic, there are 20 federal community health centers that can provide the kinds of services that Planned Parenthood provides. Is that correct? (Lee, 1/18)

Pink scarves, hats and boxing gloves symbolizing opposition to threats to defund Planned Parenthood were the fashion du jour Tuesday outside the state Capitol, where hundreds of people from around Northern California rallied to support the network of health clinics that treat many of the state鈥檚 low-income women. The midday mix of protest and party featuring pink-clad legislators and celebrities pushed back against federal threats to block Planned Parenthood from receiving Medicaid funding. Beneath the festivities in downtown Sacramento, however, roiled worry from patients about where they鈥檒l find affordable health care if the clinics close their doors. (Caiola, 1/17)

Actors Lena Dunham and Wilson Cruz on Tuesday decried congressional efforts聽to defund Planned Parenthood, saying it was an attack on women, the poor and others who rely on the clinics for basic health services聽and family planning...聽The 鈥淧ink Out鈥 rally on the Capitol steps, just three聽days before Donald Trump takes office, drew hundreds of demonstrators and a dozen or more state lawmakers. Many of the politicians聽wore bright pink scarves 鈥 and some of them put on pink boxing gloves 鈥 to show their support. (Murphy, 1/17)

And out of Texas聽鈥

The leaders of Texas Planned Parenthood asked a federal judge on Tuesday to block the state's bid to halt Medicaid funding for the healthcare group, which has long been targeted by Republicans for providing abortions. Planned Parenthood has said the threatened funding cut, by terminating Planned Parenthood's enrollment in the state-funded healthcare system for the poor, could affect nearly 11,000 patients across Texas. (1/17)

Lawyers for Planned Parenthood argued in federal court on Tuesday there could be devastating consequences for low-income Texas men and women if the reproductive health provider is kicked out of Medicaid. In the first day of a multi-day hearing in the U.S. District Court in Austin, Planned Parenthood lawyers and witnesses said in front of a packed courtroom that ending the organization鈥檚 reimbursements from the joint federal-state health insurance program for the poor and disabled could endanger access to family planning services for Texas鈥 most vulnerable populations. (Evans, 1/17)

A federal judge deciding whether Texas can block Planned Parenthood from receiving Medicaid dollars scolded attorneys Tuesday for rehashing the debate over secretly recorded videos that Republicans across the U.S. 鈥 Texas included 鈥 have used to try defunding the nation's largest abortion provider. (1/17)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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