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Mitch Daniels Defunds Planned Parenthood of Indiana, and Why You Should Care

This is a guest post by Lauren Bruce, life-long Indiana resident, founder of and former resident blogger at Feministe.

Last week, Jill reported that the state of Indiana might cut funding to Planned Parenthood as well as enacting some of the most restrictive abortion laws in the country. Yesterday that bill was signed into law, cutting two-thirds of funding to Planned Parenthood of Indiana as well as requiring doctors to tell women that life begins at fertilization and that a fetus can feel pain at or before 20 weeks of pregnancy.

So, this is a repeat of every other backwards pro-life law in the country, right?

No.

First, PPIN and the ACLU are challenging the constitutionality of the law on grounds that:

forcing doctors to give [inaccurate] information [to patients]… violates First Amendment free-speech protections. The lawsuit also contends that the new law’s defunding provision, by taking effect immediately, would void contracts and grants already in effect, violating the U.S. Constitution’s contract clause. The suit also says that the law imposes an unconstitutional condition on Planned Parenthood by requiring it to choose between performing abortions and receiving non-abortion-related funding, and says that the measure runs afoul of federal Medicaid law.

which could draw the blueprint for future challenges in other areas. It’s worth mentioning that PPIN is being targeted for providing a constitutionally-protected procedure that is already prevented from federal subsidies thanks to the Hyde amendment. PP is targeted for providing abortion services at all despite having separate funding streams for abortion-related and non-abortion-related services.

Also problematic, from an earlier version of the same article,

The Family and Social Services Administration also has expressed concerns that it could cause Indiana to run afoul of Medicaid policy and lose all $4 million the agency gets in family planning dollars. The bill technically cuts off funds to any entity that performs abortions. However, it exempts hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers, so Planned Parenthood is effectively the only target.

PPIN and ACLU were denied a restraining order meaning the law will take effect immediately while the judge reviews the constitutionality of this law. PPIN is reviewing its current funds to see how long they can cover existing services without state or federal revenue. From personal experience, I can tell you that waiting lists are so long for some non-PP community health clinics that people who need more urgent care, such as prenatal care or STI treatment and screenings will be forced to wait weeks or months to receive services or pay in full for private treatment.

Conservative groups in other states, meanwhile, are eyeballing the proceedings to see whether this attempt to bring down the Planned Parenthood baddie is successful. A similar bill is in working its way through the Kansas legislature with the support of Sam Brownback.

Former GOP Budget Director and current Indiana governor Mitch Daniels gestures while speaking at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's "Outlook 2003: State of American Business" conference, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2003 in Washington.  (AP Photo/Ian Wagreich, U.S. Chamber of Commerce)The second reason you should be paying attention: Say hello to Mitch Daniels.

There is a lot of speculation about Daniels running in the GOP presidential primaries in 2012. He’s a shoo-in, a relatively well-liked and successful governor who favors old-school conservative methods like privatization of public services and libertarian “live and let live” approaches to social issues. Daniels is seen as a move away from “populist evangelicalism” of the current GOP. He is even on record calling for a “truce” on social issues such as abortion and same-sex marriage in order to get fiscal issues, “the people’s work,” he says, through government.

That family planning is a fiscal issue on micro- and macro-levels is apparently a non-issue for Daniels, because he and other Indiana state officials are on record saying that birth control is easily accessible to everyone! Because as Sue Swayze, Daniels supporter and legislative director of Indiana Right to Life, says, “You can buy some types of contraceptive devices at Walmart.”

The numbers don’t lie. Fiscal conservatives should know, about half of all births in Indiana are funded by Medicaid today and PPIN estimates this will “cost the state $68 million in Medicaid expenses for unintended pregnancies by reducing birth control access.”

In short, this flip-flop in Mitch Daniels’ politics is a healthy indicator that he is shoring up the base for his presidential run.

So what can you do?

1. Contact Mitch Daniels and reiterate the importance of family planning services in responsible fiscal policy. If you’re in Indiana, contact your state representative and express your dissatisfaction with this bill.

2. Donate to Planned Parenthood of Indiana or to Planned Parenthood of America, who is helping PPIN with the legal proceedings. Per Mary in comments, “Annoyed/furious/concerned parties might also consider donating to the ACLU of Indiana, which is handling all the legal work with a staff of two overworked attorneys and a paralegal.” If you feel spicy, do it under Mitch Daniels’ name.

3. Spread the word, about the law and Daniels too. Let people know you donated today and why. Retweet, reblog, tumbl, post to your Facebook wall, whatever. Remember this guy’s face and his willingness to sacrifice healthcare for uninsured and low-income women for the sake of politics. He could be your next president.


21 thoughts on Mitch Daniels Defunds Planned Parenthood of Indiana, and Why You Should Care

  1. There is a lot of speculation about Daniels running in the GOP presidential primaries in 2012. He’s a shoo-in, a relatively well-liked and successful governor who favors old-school conservative methods like privatization of public services and libertarian “live and let live” approaches to social issues. Daniels is seen as a move away from “populist evangelicalism” of the current GOP….

    THIS. Pay attention. Indiana is a Rust Belt state that has a considerable number of “blue” voters in its urban areas. I wouldn’t be at all surprised to see Daniels as the GOP pick, in an attempt to get Rust Belt swing voters (most of whom are not evangelicals and who take issue with the GOP’s strong emphasis on southern culture). The Rust Belt is going to make or break the next Presidential election. So. If you think, “why should I give a shit what happens to those rubes in Indiana?”….think again.

  2. This will cause people to die. I am sure of that. I read in the New York Times that it will cut $3 million funding for STI screenings, birth control, and cancer screenings.

    Several “moderates” in my family have mentioned that they hope he would run for president (ugh, I know). I will be sure to inform them that there is nothing moderate about this guy.

    It’s hard to believe that Indiana’s government was blue for that brief moment in 2008.

  3. I just love these “fiscal conserviatives” who seem to think that well rounded health care is a social issue, not a fiscal one. As was proven in Saskatchewan (you know the province that gave birth to the idea of “Canadian” health care) by introducing healthcare and not raising taxes for the next few years; Well rounded health care at worst is fiscally even. At best it saves the government net-net. So smart fiscal conservatives should bet the farm on health care organizations like Planned Parenthood, Red Cross, and whatever local pro bono health clinics exist in the state.

    P. S. I am a fiscal conservative who firmly believes that good health care lowers overall required state (or province) spending. As such my support of PP is because of the large volume of accomplishments of the organization, nothing more, nothing less.

  4. “So smart fiscal conservatives should bet the farm on health care organizations like Planned Parenthood, Red Cross, and whatever local pro bono health clinics exist in the state.”

    Yes and yes!

  5. My check for $500 goes out this weekend. Fucking morons. If you want to stop abortion, prevent unwanted pregnancies. Defunding PP is surely NOT going to achieve your goal.

  6. All the stuff coming out of the statehouse this year has been sad, but this bill is just depressing.

    I will call and write, but I don’t think anyone will care or notice. Kinda like how the dems left the statehouse for a month and it barely got mentioned in national news.

    Oh and I totally believe Mitch will be the republican nominee, running all over the country in his My Man Mitch winnebago.

    Sigh.

  7. From what I hear, the funding cuts also affect PPIN’s disease intervention program, which monitors health providers in the state–not just PP clinics–for positive STD tests and notifies the patient’s partners for him. Horrible people, those dastardly PPIN folk.

    Annoyed/furious/concerned parties might also consider donating to the ACLU of Indiana, which is handling all the legal work with a staff of two overworked attorneys and a paralegal.

  8. Mary: Annoyed/furious/concerned parties might also consider donating to the ACLU of Indiana, which is handling all the legal work with a staff of two overworked attorneys and a paralegal.

    Good call!

    Michele: My check for $500 goes out this weekend.

    THANK YOU.

    La Lubu: Indiana is a Rust Belt state that has a considerable number of “blue” voters in its urban areas. I wouldn’t be at all surprised to see Daniels as the GOP pick, in an attempt to get Rust Belt swing voters (most of whom are not evangelicals and who take issue with the GOP’s strong emphasis on southern culture).

    Gretel: Several “moderates” in my family have mentioned that they hope he would run for president (ugh, I know).

    Special emphasis on Lubu’s and Gretel’s comments. Daniels appeals to this red state, blue-leaning voter because of his supposed moderate views. Until this year, his personal politics may have been socially conservative, but his concentration on fiscal politics made him a repeat governor in Indiana (despite some extremely unpopular privatization decisions and the time zone fiasco). *IF* he decides to run, he will run as a modest, moderate, scandal-free Rust Belt governor who was one of GWB’s trusted advisors and who doesn’t carry the social baggage that so many other GOP candidates will. It will be instructive to remember that this man signed in one of the most draconian health policies in the nation that defunded the healthcare of millions of women indefinitely to underline a point about abortion politics.

  9. I agree with the other commenters that Daniels is definitely trying to burnish his wingnut credentials for a presidential run – if not 2012, then 2016 (though the timing suggests it’ll be 2012).

    Although it’s no consolation for the people of Indiana, I have some hope that the Republican party has become so insane that any major presidential candidate who can survive a primary will be unelectable in the general.

  10. I’m not in Indiana (my own state is freaking conservative to begin with…Wyoming), but I’m incandescent with rage and I don’t know what to do about it. I don’t have money I can donate, or much time that I can spend. But I want to do something, anything to challenge this.

  11. Hey….I found this via Racialicious; this further confirms my suspicions that Daniels will be in pole position for the GOP, which will inevitably try and distance themselves from all the Stars-and-Bars waving.

    It doesn’t get much play in the media, but frankly, the Stars and Bars and portrayal of southern culture as the “Real America” truly pisses off a ton of the “white ethnic” (translation: people of southern and eastern European descent), moderate, working-class, swing-voters. If the GOP attaches itself to the Confederacy, it will have strong ramifications in the next election (especially if the Dems counter with emphasizing Obama’s immigrant heritage—-how the hard-working son of an immigrant rose to the Presidency).

    After I read that Telegraph article, I took my daughter to the “Y” for swim class. On the way there, Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Sweet Home Alabama” was playing on the radio. I thought back to the first time I heard that song, in the car with my father in 1974. He was fucking livid at the lyrics (which include “Watergate does not bother me” and “where the Governor’s true”–a reference to the famously segregationist George Wallace), cursing back at the radio. I remember exactly where we were—what street we were on and everything—primarily because of his reaction to that song. He’d never reacted that way to any song on the radio; wouldn’t even turn the channel when songs he didn’t particularly like came on (something I do all the time!).

    My father isn’t a swing voter. He’s a union man and a socialist, who has typically voted Democratic as the lesser of two evils since Illinois (unlike Vermont) isn’t going to back a socialist candidate. But…he’s fairly representative of men of his generation and background when it comes to his attitudes toward the South. GOP strategists recognize this, and are going to play against it by pushing Daniels—a northern son of immigrants without evangelical baggage. Someone who has already boldly named Condoleeza Rice as his potential running mate.

    Daniels and his GOP backers are already setting their plays in place. This is the real contender, folks. Forget about Romney or Huckabee.

  12. “as well as requiring doctors to tell women that life begins at fertilization and that a fetus can feel pain at or before 20 weeks of pregnancy.”

    Forcing health care professionals to give politically motivated philosophical opinions will be a travesty. When people are in power they forget the effects that this kind of decisions will have when they are no longer in power. I hope this get repealed. More than nothing for the shake of women needing or wanting an abortion, but also because is an ugly prospect for all.

    Tomorrow could be other position anti religious , or agains any particular believe. Or could be the imposition of secularism.

    They are so blind in there effort to control women that they forget:Tomorrow a different political view point could be also be imposed from the Drs desk.

  13. @LaLubu – “Daniels and his GOP backers are already setting their plays in place.”

    Absolutely true.

    But the very fact that GOP elites are quietly getting behind Daniels may cause him to lose the primaries. Tea Partiers will decide the 2012 GOP primaries, and to TP’ers, GOP elites are as anathema as socialists. The Tea Party movement is actually against anyone at all currently in office (whom TP’ers identify as part of the “elite”). TP’ers are also less concerned with winning elections than with modifying the political culture from below. That’s why, in Delaware in 2010, Christine O’Donnell was nominated even though she was hilariously unelectable. The TP’ers didn’t care if she won; they just wanted to make a political statement. So the fact that Mitch Daniels is a current officeholder with successful (in GOP eyes) experience as governor might turn TP’ers against him.

    Finally, even though Mitch Daniels’ non-evangelicalism might conceivably win over independents and moderates, it will not endear him to Southern Republicans, who have been the storm troopers of GOP electoral victories since 1980. The GOP has learned since 1980 that it cannot win the White House without Southern Republicans. The GOP is now shackled to the South. So, unless Mitch Daniels pledges allegiance to the Confederacy (so to speak), Southerners might torpedo his nomination.

    La Lubu’s comment accurately outlines why GOP elites favor Daniels as a nominee — he’s an experienced officeholder who so far does not identify with (white) Southern issues. But for that very reason GOP primary voters won’t support him (or so I think). I’ll bet the 2012 GOP nominee will be a non-officeholder who is an expert at holding his/her finger to the wind (but not Gingrich), and Obama will coast to reelection unless both unemployment and fuel prices are so high that any non-incumbent has a plausible chance.

  14. The concern isn’t stopping abortion, but stopping women from excercising agency, sexual and otherwise. Cut off birth control and you cut off the ability to plan a family and a life. *$!

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