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Perry Says Women’s Health Program Won’t Die

March 8, 2012 4:15 pm by: Brian Baresch

By Jay Root, Texas Tribune

Gov. Rick Perry said Thursday that Texas will find the money to continue to fund the Medicaid Women’s Health Program, no matter what the federal government does. But Planned Parenthood won’t be allowed to participate.

“We’re going to fund this program … that’s a moot point,” Perry said. He declined to say where he’d get the roughly $35 million the federal government provides every year, but told reporters that the state would not drop the program that has become a political football between Washington and Texas.

“We’ll find the money. The state is committed to this program,” he told reporters. “This program is not going away.”

Perry and Republican leaders in the Legislature don’t want Planned Parenthood to be allowed to participate in the $40 million-per-year program, which is designed to help low-income women get birth-control pills, family-planning help and cancer screenings. Though no clinics that accept funding from the program may perform abortions, the state’s Health and Human Services Commissioner signed a rule last week that forces Planned Parenthood clinics, which provide more than 40 percent of the program’s services, out of the program anyway.

The Obama administration believes that move is illegal, and has said the federal government will not renew the Medicaid waiver program at the end of March if Planned Parenthood and other clinics affiliated with abortion providers are excluded. Currently, the state puts in $1 for every $9 contributed by the federal government to the Women’s Health Program.

The governor said Texas has a “multibillion-dollar budget, so we have the ability to be flexible.” He said Texas taxpayers shouldn’t be forced to send their dollars to Planned Parenthood clinics, which can refer for abortions even if they can’t perform them.

“Texans don’t want Planned Parenthood, a known abortion provider, to be involved in this,” he said. “We’ve made that decision, and that should be the state’s right to decide.”

Original story:

Gov. Rick Perry blasted the White House and federal judiciary Thursday for messing with Texas over abortion policies and redistricting maps.

Speaking on the Mark Davis radio show on WBAP in Dallas, Perry said the federal courts were to blame for delaying Texas’ primaries to May 29. He said the judges should have accepted the Legislature’s GOP-drawn redistricting maps.

“We crafted a good plan and these judges decided they were gonnna stick their nose in it and fouled it up and cost us money and pushed it back, and they didn’t really make any substantive changes,’’ Perry said.

Democrats and minority groups alleged the state maps that lawmakers drew last year were illegal and discriminatory. They sued to have them thrown out.

A San Antonio court issued new maps that were more favorable to Democrats, but the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that it had overreached. Now an interim plan is much closer to what the Legislature originally wanted, but the primary has been delayed from early March to late May.

“It was all for naught from my perspective,” Perry said.

Perry is also touting states rights’ in his fight with the Obama Administration over the Medicaid Women’s Health Program, which provides contraception and well-woman exams to more than 130,000 women each year.

Clinics providing abortions already are prohibited from receiving money from the Women’s Health Program. So Planned Parenthood, the nation’s largest provider of abortion services, doesn’t perform abortions at the clinics participating in the Women’s Health Program.

But Perry and Republican leaders in the Legislature don’t want Planned Parenthood to be allowed to give out birth control pills or cancer screenings, either. Because the non-profit group is such a large player — responsible for serving about 40 percent of the women in the program — the feds say they can’t renew the program if Texas excludes Planned Parenthood.

Perry has taken the position that Texas would forgo the $40 million program — which receives $9 for every $1 the state spends — rather than give Planned Parenthood any of the funding. But, he argues any fault for the demise of the program lies with the Obama administration.

“This administration decided that we’re going to kill this program, we’re not going to fund this program,” Perry said. “This is the administration using abortion as a political tool.”

Perry dropped his bid for the White House in January, but he has signaled he will keep speaking out on states’ rights and 10th Amendment protections against what he sees as an overreaching federal government.

“This administration has clearly said, ‘We can do better than Texas. As a matter of fact, we’ll run Texas. You all just send us more money, and we’ll tell you what you can do and how you can do it,’” Perry said on the radio show. “No thank you Mr. President. That’s not what the 10th amendment says, and we’re going to stand up for it and we’re going to fight for it every day.”

Later today, Perry will take part in a giant welcoming ceremony for state Rep. J.M. Lozano, R-Kingsville, who just defected from the Democratic Party. Other Republican leaders, including Comptroller Susan Combs, House Speaker Joe Straus, R-San Antonio and Attorney Gen. Greg Abbott, are also expected to attend.

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