2016-11-23T22:10:00+00:00

Albuquerque, N.M., Nov 23, 2016 / 03:10 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- A fire – allegedly set by arsonists – has closed a pro-life pregnancy center and chapel in New Mexico, shutting down its operations for the foreseeable future. The Albuquerque Fi... Read more

2016-11-23T21:23:00+00:00

Paris, France, Nov 23, 2016 / 02:23 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- A French court has drawn international backlash for ruling that a popular video showing happy children with Down syndrome was “inappropriate” for French television. “It’s... Read more

2016-11-23T16:09:00+00:00

Vatican City, Nov 23, 2016 / 09:09 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On Wednesday, it was announced that Pope Francis has named two local priests as auxiliary bishops of the Archdiocese of Detroit, and has chosen a priest from Orange County to become an auxiliary bishop for that diocese. Fr. Gerard W. Battersby and Fr. Robert J. Fisher are the priests who will be stepping up as the newest auxiliary bishops in Detroit, while Fr. Timothy E. Freyer will become an auxiliary bishop of Orange. “All of us in the Archdiocese of Detroit are deeply grateful that Pope Francis has named Father Battersby and Father Fisher, two well-loved and respected priests in our archdiocese, to be auxiliary bishops in our local church,” Archbishop Allen Vigneron of Detroit said in a Nov. 23 press release announcing their appointment.  “Both of these new bishops bring a rich set of gifts and talents to the roles they will play in leading our community in our mission to share the Good News of Jesus,” he said. The two bishops-elect will be introduced by Archbishop Vigneron at a 10:30 a.m. news conference in the archdiocese’s chancery. They will be ordained Jan. 25, 2017, at the Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament in Detroit.  Fr. Battersby, 56, was born in Detroit as the youngest of nine children, along with his twin brother, and attended St. Benedict Parish and School in Highland Park. He got a bachelor’s degree in biology from Wayne State and worked in the pharmaceutical and appraisal industries before entering the Sacred Heart Minor Seminary in 1993, earning his Masters of Divinity degree.  After his1998 priestly ordination, he served in various pastoral roles around the archdiocese, including at St. Thecla Parish in Clinton Township and at St. Gerard, Immaculate Heart of Mary, and Presentation-Our Lady of Victory parishes in Detroit.  The priest was then named director of graduate seminarians at Sacred Heart Major Seminary in 2007, and was later assigned to graduate studies at the University of St. Thomas in Rome. Since 2011, Fr. Battersby has served as the vice-rector and dean of seminarian formation at Sacred Heart Major Seminary, and since 2015 has also served as pastor of St. Mary of Redford Parish in Detroit. In the Nov. 23 press release, the bishop-elect thanked God and the Pope “for this inestimable blessing,” saying he accepted the task of being “a co-worker” in the ministry of Jesus Christ with joy and confidence. He also thanked Archbishop Vigneron, “who has been truly a good shepherd and a sterling exemplar to me.” Fr. Fisher, 57, was also born in Detroit, but was the oldest of four children. He attended Epiphany and St. Bede elementary schools and University of Detroit Jesuit High School, earning a bachelor's degree in management science from University of Detroit. After graduation, Fisher took charge of the camping services department of the Catholic Youth Organization camps near Port Sanilac before entering Sacred Heart Major Seminary in 1986, where he earned his Masters of Divinity degree.  He was ordained a priest for Detroit in 1992, after which he went on to serve at Our Lady Star of the Sea Parish in Grosse Pointe Woods, St. Angela Parish in Roseville, and St. Lawrence Parish in Utica, as well as becoming director of priestly vocations for the archdiocese.  Since March 2014, the bishop-elect has served as rector of the National Shrine of the Little Flower Basilica in Royal Oak. In the press release, Fr. Fisher said he was “humbled” by the Pope’s decision to name him bishop, and expressed his gratitude for the guidance and support shown him by Archbishop Vigneron. “With the prayers of the community, I will direct all my energy toward sharing Christ in and through the Church,” he said. Bishops-elect Battersby and Fisher will join fellow Auxiliary Bishops Donald Hanchon and Arturo Cepeda in helping Archbishop Vigneron to serve the 1.3 million Catholics who currently live in the Michigan counties of Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, Monroe, Lapeer and St. Clair. As for the Diocese of Orange, Fr. Freyer, 53, will be stepping up to help Bishop Kevin Vann as the diocese’s new auxiliary bishop. Born in Los Angeles Oct. 13, 1963, the bishop-elect attended Huntington Beach High School before entering the Saint John Seminary in Camarillo, where he studied from 1981-1989. He was ordained a priest for the Diocese of Orange June 10, 1989. After his ordination, Fr. Freyer served the diocese in various capacities, including as Parochial Vicar of Saint Hedwig Parish in Los Alamitos, of Our Lady of Fatima Parish in San Clemente and of Saint Catherine of Siena Parish in Laguna Beach.  He also served as pastor of Saint Mary Parish in Fullerton and of Saint Boniface Parish in Anaheim before being named as the diocese’s Vicar for Clergy in 2012. He speaks both Spanish and English.    Read more

2016-11-23T14:11:00+00:00

Vatican City, Nov 23, 2016 / 07:11 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The Synod of Bishops met in Rome this week to finalize the preparatory document and questionnaire that will form the basis of the discussion for the upcoming gathering to discuss youth, faith and discernment. Pope Francis presided over the Nov. 21-22 meeting, which marked the second time the Ordinary Council of the Secretary General of the Synod of Bishops have met since the members were announced. The Council for the General Secretariat of the Synod of Bishops is charged with preparing for the Ordinary Synod, which takes place every three years to discuss a specific theme of importance in the Church. Serving as an advisory body to the Pope, the synod of bishops was established by Pope Paul VI in 1965 by the motu proprio Apostolica sollicitudo to “strengthen (the Pope's) union” with other bishops and to “establish even closer ties” with them. The Synod Council is composed of a permanent Secretary General (Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri) and Undersecretary (Bishop Fabio Fabene), as well as 15 members – 3 from each continent, with Asia and Oceana (Australia) counted as one – and three appointed by the Pope. Announced Oct. 6, the theme for the next Ordinary Synod, scheduled to take place in October 2018, will discuss “Young People, the Faith and the Discernment of Vocation.” According to a Nov. 23 Vatican communique, before getting down to business, the Synod Council’s two-day meeting opened with a speech from the secretary-general, Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, who thanked Pope Francis for his presence and congratulated two council members who were made cardinals by the Pope Nov. 19: Cardinal Sergio Da Rocha of Brasilia and Cardinal Carlos Osoro Sierra of Madrid. Though they aren’t members of the Synod Council, Cardinal Joao Braz de Aviz, Prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life; Cardinal Beniamino Stella, Prefect of the Congregation for Clergy and Cardinal Kevin Farrell, Prefect of the dicastery for Laity, Family and Life, were invited to join the meeting, given their competency surrounding the synod theme. Discussion focused largely on the “Ordo Synodi Episcoporum,” which is basically the regulations that establish the composition of the synod and how it functions, as well as the preparatory document and questionnaire that will be sent out to bishops’ conferences around the world ahead of the 2018 gathering. The document was elaborated on by the secretary-general, Baldisseri, with the help of “the competent experts” on the synod theme, according to the communique. Council members then expressed their appreciation for the document before giving suggestions on how it could be made better. The document, which includes a questionnaire, will be sent out to Episcopal Conferences and to Synods of Eastern Catholic Churches “sui iuris” (independent) so that it can be distributed to dioceses and other ecclesial institutions throughout the world in order to prepare for the 2018 Ordinary Synod. During the meeting, members of the Synod Council split up into small groups divided by continent in order to identify specific questions regarding youth “in different geographical and cultural contexts.” Proposals for the preparatory text and questionnaire were then collected and inserted into the document, which was then “approved unanimously.” When it came to discussion on the “Ordo Synodi Episcoporum,” members discussed the regulations and listened to a presentation given by Bishop Fabene, undersecretary of the council, who spoke about the work already in progress regarding the revision of the synodal legislation with the help of experts. Fabene’s presentation, the communique noted, was followed by “a fruitful exchange of views.” Read more

2016-11-23T13:08:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Nov 23, 2016 / 06:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Some of the greatest challenges to ending hunger worldwide are “fragile states” threatened by instability, conflict, and climate change, a new humanitarian report says. Yet despite this, one initiative believes poverty-induced hunger can be eliminated in 13 years – and that there's already been movement toward this goal. “We will never be able to end hunger or extreme poverty unless the United States and the international community focuses attention and resources on the challenges facing fragile states,” Rev. David Beckmann, president of Bread for the World Institute, stated on Monday. “Hunger and poverty in these countries are only going to get worse due to climate change.” The institute, a non-profit that educates on ending hunger, unveiled the 2017 Hunger Report at the National Press Club on Monday. The annual report is advertised as “the Institute’s largest annual analysis of the state of world hunger.” Ending world hunger by 2030 is one of the Sustainable Development Goals, a set of goals adopted last year by world leaders at a United Nations summit. The goals are set through the year 2030. Ending hunger is a massive undertaking, Monday’s report admitted, but progress has been made in recent years in fighting poverty. “From 1990 to 2015, the global poverty rate was cut by more than half. In 1990, 1 in 4 people experienced hunger; today it’s 1 in 9,” a group of religious leaders admitted in a statement at the beginning of the report. “We are humbled by the opportunity God has given us to contribute to this progress.” Signers of the statement included Carolyn Woo, outgoing CEO of Catholic Relief Services, and Sister Donna Markham, O.P., president and CEO of Catholic Charities USA. Yet the leaders admitted that “the road to ending hunger and poverty will be far from easy.” In order to accomplish this massive goal, the countries with the worst situations must be helped first, the report said, noting that “if we continue on the current path, it is estimated that by 2030, two-thirds of the people who experience hunger will live in fragile states.” What are these “fragile states” and why are their needs so important? They have the worst rates of hunger with three common causes – “civil conflict, poor governance, and vulnerability to climate change,” the report stated. Since widespread poverty creates more opportunity for conflict and terrorism, these states are “perhaps the greatest challenges on the road to 2030,” the statement by religious leaders said. These countries “are a national security issue for the United States,” Rev. Beckmann stated. “Extreme poverty and hunger combined with a growing youth population in these countries can provide fertile ground for terrorism and trafficking.” Some of the worst examples of these states are Syria and South Sudan, the report explained. For instance, “within two years of the start of the Syrian civil war, the country had lost 35 years of development gains, including 3,000 schools damaged or destroyed, another 2,000 converted to shelters for displaced people, nearly a third of all public health centers destroyed, half the population living in poverty, and half the workforce unemployed.” And “not all fragile states are low-income,” the report said, noting that “Syria and Iraq are middle-income fragile countries” because of sustained conflicts in those countries. “No amount of humanitarian and development assistance can help if large groups of armed people continue killing one another or sowing terror.” And the causes of instability, like climate change and conflict, can be interrelated. “For example, Somalia, one of the most conflict-affected countries in the world, is among the most vulnerable to climate change,” the report noted. “According to one analysis, seven of the 10 countries most vulnerable to climate change are also at risk of conflict. The potential for climate change to destabilize countries in some of the most volatile regions of the world is why the U.S. military considers climate change a threat to national security.” What can be done to solve the problems in these countries, which are either rising or already full-blown crises? The U.S. must focus on not only effectively delivering aid, but empowering the citizens to support themselves, through investment. The report cited Pope Francis here, noting that a solution “requires participation from people who are living in poverty and enduring hunger.” It quoted from Pope Francis’ Sept. 2015 address to the Sustainable Development Goals summit, “to enable these real men and women to escape from extreme poverty, we must allow them to be dignified agents of their own destiny.” Some of the other policy recommendations included “allowing for much greater flexibility” in foreign aid, investing in rural agriculture and the creation of jobs to fight poverty and unemployment, and helping other countries “respond to natural disasters.” “The challenges we see are not new to people of faith. Vulnerable communities are part of the sacred stories highlighted in Scripture,” the statement by religious leaders read, noting Biblical accounts of natural disasters and conflict. “Floods (Genesis 7:7), drought (1 Kings 17:7-9), famine and vulnerability of women (Ruth 1-5), political instability (1 Samuel 21:10), ethnic struggles (Acts 18:1-2), and religious persecution (Acts 8, 11, 12) have affected peoples throughout the ages,” the leaders stated. “With abiding faith and courage, we address this challenge called fragility as a barrier to ending hunger—for all people regardless of their faith tradition. We urge the U.S. government and the international community to come together to invest more in fragile countries to promote peace, create stability and opportunity, and build resilience.” Read more

2016-11-23T10:42:00+00:00

Vatican City, Nov 23, 2016 / 03:42 am (CNA/EWTN News).- While the Jubilee might be over, Pope Francis hasn’t stopped talking about mercy, telling faithful Wednesday that the works of mercy of counseling the doubtful and instructing the ignorant, ... Read more

2016-11-23T10:02:00+00:00

Rome, Italy, Nov 23, 2016 / 03:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In a sit-down interview with CNA Monday, Cardinal Joseph Tobin opened up about his appointment and his thoughts on the U.S. elections, as well as Pope Francis’ warning to cardinal’s against ‘polarization’ and his emphasis on mercy. The new cardinal, who not only got his red hat Saturday, but was recently appointed Archbishop of Newark, admitted that all the changes he’s undergoing have “been difficult,” and, like Peter walking on the water, he’s had a few “sinking moments” in terms of getting distracted by everything, and is trying to keep his gaze fixed on the Lord. He also spoke about the recent election of Donald Trump and Mike Pence as president and vice president of the United States, respectively, and how he sees the “polarization” Pope Francis spoke about in his homily to the new cardinals affecting the Church, particularly in the U.S. As a remedy, Tobin suggested dialogue, saying Pope Francis’ insistence on mercy and stronger collaboration by talking things out is something “he didn’t just dream up,” but is in fact perfectly in tune with his predecessors, and is part of “a great movement of the Holy Spirit, which was the Second Vatican Council.” Please read below for the full text of CNA’s conversation with Cardinal Tobin:Q: A lot of people might have asked you this, but you were kind of the surprise pick in this year’s round of American cardinals. Why do you think the Pope chose you? I think among those people you were talking about, there’s probably no one more surprised than I. I really don’t know why the Holy Father picked me. The best I can figure is because I’ve had a bit of international experience, for 20 years I worked outside of the United States, basically. And I have a couple of languages, but beyond that, you’d have to ask him.Q: You’ve worked a lot in certain Vatican dicaseries, you’ve headed up a lot of investigations, and you seem to be the ‘go-to’ man on this point. Do you think he perhaps saw a competency there that prompted the decision? Perhaps. I’ve had different experiences, which have given me maybe a greater sensitivity to some of the challenges facing the Church’s mission today. But I also have enough realism to know that my experience is limited, too. It’s a big world.Q: You’ve had a lot of experience, and you’ve had a lot of changes recently, too. You were named cardinal, but also as the new Archbishop of Newark. How are you handling all these changes? It’s really been difficult, because from a spiritual perspective I’ve been very distracted in prayer; it’s been hard to stay focused on Jesus and I consider that so important, because one of the scenes in Scripture that I identify so much with, because I like Peter, I’ve always kind of identified with Peter, and there’s a scene where Jesus is not in the boat with them and the storm is up and they’re really frightened and they think their lives are over and then they see this figure walking on the water, and they cry out in fear. And Peter yells something that I think is pretty silly. He says, ‘if it’s you, let me walk on the water.’ I would have said ‘calm things down,’ ‘get us home,’ ‘make it stop,’ but he said ‘if it’s you let me walk on water,’ and Jesus says ‘come.’ So he steps out of the boat and begins to walk. And the Gospel is pretty clear on this detail: as long as he can keep his eyes fixed on Jesus, he can walk, but when he’s more conscious of the wind and the waves, then he begins to sink. But Jesus pulls him up and says ‘oh man of little faith.’ So I think I’ve had a few of those ‘sinking moments,’ so I’ve been trying to get my eyes back fixed on him.Q: As you are moving forward in this transition to Newark, they’ve ever had a cardinal, so what are you hoping to do there, and what do you think the presence of a cardinal will do for the area? Well I think that other than seeing somebody in red from time to time, what I hope to bring there is the possibility of being a good bishop for them. They may not have had a cardinal, but they’ve had a lot of good bishops and I think that that’s principally what I can bring, which is a pretty serious and daunting expectation. So I want to be a good bishop for the people of those four counties.Q: I know you’ve probably been asked this a lot as well, but on the U.S. elections: I think many are anticipating that immigration is going to be a very big topic with this administration. You yourself have had conflicts with Pence about this in the past. Are you anticipating difficulty on this issue? What I would say, and maybe this helps begin to answer your question, is that there were also a lot of things we cooperated on, and we worked very well together. We did have this disagreement about the question of barring Syrian immigrants from Indiana, and I think that probably in the aftermath, the courts have upheld the view that the archdiocese took, that we were actually following the law. But what I’m hoping is that the new administration will be interested in establishing a respectful dialogue with the bishops' conference. We don’t govern the United States of America; there’s a government that does that, but I think the government, in reaching decisions aimed at the common good, should at least take into account the experience of the Catholic Church and its leadership. And I think on the other hand, we have to be respectful of the government and we have to pray for those who govern us while being conscious of what the Gospel calls us to be today.Q: Given the fact that there are going to be things we’ll agree on and things we’ll disagree on, in your opinion, what do you think are the greatest opportunities that we already have for cooperation with this administration, and what are the areas you think might be problematic? Let me use an example of where I’ve defended governor Pence, because I think it might illustrate a response to your question. The government was criticized very often in the media in Indiana for presenting itself as a Christian, American conservative. And the media or the people who disagreed with him said ‘you should present yourself only as an American.’ And I would say in his defense, to believing people, that sounds idolatrous. That you would put something else above your relationship with God. So what I would hope the administration would understand is that as believing people, nothing can come above our relationship with God. It’s a relationship that’s not just lived inside the walls of the Church, a synagogue or a mosque. It means that we live in a certain way and we hold certain values as part of it. Now for the longest time in the history of the United States, those values and the values of the government or as the society at large were not as contradictory as they can be, or at least as they feel in these recent decades. So I think because of that we owe it not simply to our life of faith to be authentic, we owe it because our faith is something good we can give to the people of the United States and the people of the world. So hopefully we’ll be able to cooperate with the new administration, and hopefully they will be open to listening to us and to the conclusions we’ve reached in our own life of faith.Q: Turning to your appointment and the appointment of your brother cardinals, Cardinal Cupich and Cardinal Farrell, we were surprised to see that three Americans were named in this consistory. We expected one or two at most, but three was a surprise. Why do you think the Holy Father placed such an emphasis on Americans this time around? Once again I’ll have to let myself off the hook, because it would be really interesting to ask him! I think it’s good for Americans to remember, as well established and as good as the Catholic Church is in the United States, in the global picture we’re only six percent of the Church, so we’re a really small little sliver and certainly I think, for better or for worse, we have a lot of opportunities to make a difference in the world and in the Church, but numerically, if that’s what you’re going by, we’re rather small. I don’t know why the Holy Father (did it). Maybe because some cardinals have retired in recent years – Cardinal McCarrick, Cardinal Mahoney, Cardinal Levada, and some have gone home to God, like my friend Cardinal Francis George. Perhaps he felt it was time to renew this particular ministry in the United States.Q: I wanted to ask another follow-up question on the Pope’s homily. He spoke about the importance of staying united and not falling into polarized attitudes. The Holy Father is obviously bringing it up for a reason, so in your opinion, where do you see this polarization in the Church, and how can it be overcome? I think he’s bringing it up because it’s a reality. It’s a reality because we live in a polarized world and there’s always a risk that (believers) uncritically adopt in the Church some of the tendencies, if you will, in the wider world. I’ve seen that in my work in other countries, for example in Eastern Europe. People there had little use for communism and had real reasons to oppose it and criticize it and finally make it fall. But some of the shadow side of communism affected the people living there. This sort of distrust that characterized people in a sort of Soviet-state, passed into the Church. I would visit communities say in Ukraine, or Belarus, where the priest did not want to talk to me inside the house for fear of being overheard. Well, that’s not the sort of confidence and trust we want to have in the body of Christ. I think coming back to the States after 20 years, I was a bit surprised at the degree to which the “red state, blue state” model has come into the Church, where we like to figure out a label we can put on somebody. So we’ll ask questions like ‘what do you read?’ or ‘what websites do you visit?’ That’s an important one for people. Because if I can figure it out, then I can put a label on you rather than saying ‘oh you’re a disciple of Jesus like me,’ or ‘I’m like you.’ But it’s rather ‘are you a real one or not? Because I figure I am.’ So I think that and the lack of dialogue at times in sort-of combative groups even within the Church, is another sign of this polarization the Holy Father was addressing. So I think the homily was beautiful because it was directed at real situations, and showing us just how important our work as cardinals would be, and addressing the polarization and providing an alternative to it.Q: How do you think that can best be done? The first encyclical Paul VI wrote during the Second Vatican Council was called Ecclesiam Suam, and among other things it proposed dialogue, not just as a nice way of talking with each other, but as a real way of loving each other and different characteristics of dialogue, of authentic dialogue, like meekness. I don’t believe that I have a corner around all the truth, but (that) I can learn something by listening to you. Confidence that God doesn’t want us to live in hermetically-sealed units. The ultimate mission is always the mission of Jesus from the heart of God. To do what? Well, to reconcile; we just heard it yesterday from the reading from Colossians. So I think that dialogue that is aimed at reconciliation is the greatest antidote to polarization.Q: On the topic of dialogue, Pope Francis has been emphasizing the topic of dialogue and mercy a lot. In one of his interviews leading up to the close of the Jubilee, he spoke about how he sees it as the path of the Second Vatican Council moving forward, and that it takes a century to really unpack the fruits of it. Do you think that with this emphasis we’re starting to see on dialogue, on stronger collaboration to pull away from these polarizations and the emphasis on mercy, are we perhaps starting to see some of the fruits of the Council? I think so. Certainly things coming out of the Council, once again referring to that encyclical, these are things Paul VI proposed, before you were born, in 1965, 1964. So it was out there, but I think it was always challenged too by these sort of centrifugal forces that fragment societies and threaten to fragment even the body of Christ. So you have a very good insight in that what the Holy Father is proposing, he didn’t just dream up. It’s part of, particularly, a great movement of the Holy Spirit, which was the Second Vatican Council. And if you look at the opening address of John XXIII, “Gaudet Mater Ecclesia,” “Mother Church Rejoices,” it’s astounding to see. You say, my God, Francis could have written that. But it means that he’s that much in tune with what’s happening.Q: So What Francis is doing isn’t necessarily anything new? No, no, no. It’s as old as the Gospel. And it’s as fresh as the challenges we face today.Q: So do you think his emphasis on being open to the Holy Spirit is following the same path? That it’s perhaps what we’ve seen before? He talks about his predecessors a lot, so we see his predecessors doing the same things, but is Francis just doing it with a fresh gaze? Absolutely. This openness, what you’re describing very well, is what goes by the fancy name of ‘discernment.’ I found it interesting in 2012, just the documents in preparing for the Synod on the New Evangelization, one of the preliminary documents mentioned the word discernment 24 times, so what it's saying is that our mission today isn’t simply a recipe that we’ve had all along. What we have, we have to apply to the circumstances of today. And how do we do it? I think in that sense the Holy Father is following very closely to St. John Paul II and Benedict on the need for discernment, which is examining the signs and times and places in the light of faith. Read more

2016-11-23T07:54:00+00:00

New York City, N.Y., Nov 23, 2016 / 12:54 am (CNA/EWTN News).- As the push for physician-assisted suicide continues throughout the country, Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York is asking the faithful to step up in opposing anti-life measures. “Cat... Read more

2016-11-22T23:50:00+00:00

Seattle, Wash., Nov 22, 2016 / 04:50 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The stories of poor people – and the need for Christians to help them – are the focus of the Washington state bishops’ newest pastoral letter.   “When we stop and l... Read more

2016-11-22T22:14:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Nov 22, 2016 / 03:14 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Specific pro-life policies are missing from President-elect Donald Trump’s agenda for his first 100 days in office, yet pro-life groups are nevertheless hopeful about the future of his administration. Despite the omission, Trump did include “two major pro-life issues,” said Tom McClusky, vice president of Government Affairs of March for Life Action: “nominating a Supreme Court Justice and repealing Obamacare.” “It is troubling that other pro-life policies are absent from the Trump administration's current list of priorities in the first 100 days; however, personnel is policy,” McClusky told CNA Nov. 22. In his view, Trump's appointments to his transition team and staff are helping create “one of the most pro-life administrations since President Reagan.” For instance, Trump has named Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) to be his attorney general and Reince Priebus to be his White House chief of staff – two figures who have drawn praise from pro-life groups like National Right to Life and the Susan B. Anthony List. In Trump’s “Contract With the American Voter,” where he laid out his agenda for the first 100 days of his presidency, he promised action in the areas of trade, immigration, and the economy. Notably missing, however, were any specific pro-life policy proposals. Moreover, he has not said if he will reinstate the Mexico City Policy, something that recent presidents have either overturned or reinstated in their first days in office. This policy, begun by President Reagan, bans U.S. foreign aid from going to non-governmental organizations that promote abortions. President Clinton overturned the policy during his first days in office, President George W. Bush reinstated it right after he entered the White House, and President Obama again overturned it at the beginning of his first term. Upholding or opposing the policy at the beginning of a president’s time in office is a predictor of how his administration will treat the abortion issue, but the policy is absent from Trump's written agenda. Trump had promised earlier during the campaign to support pro-life legislation like a late-term abortion ban; to defund Planned Parenthood, the nation’s largest abortion provider; and to uphold the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits taxpayer funds, largely through the HHS department, from going toward most abortions. He also had created a “Pro-Life Coalition” headed by the president of the Susan B. Anthony List, Marjorie Dannenfelser. And Trump's desire to reform or repeal the Affordable Care Act is seen by some as an important measure to fight abortion. “Obamacare was the largest expansion of abortion since Roe and Doe – so repealing Obamacare is no small feat,” McClusky explained. Pro-life groups had opposed the passage of the health care law in 2010 because they claimed it would fund elective abortions. In 2014, a government investigation found that federal dollars were probably funding elective abortions. In many cases the oversight mechanisms set up to ensure that abortion coverage was paid for separately from federal subsidies were not being followed. Also, in several states, all health plans on those exchanges included abortion coverage, violating the law that a plan free of abortion coverage be offered to those who could not pay conscientiously for coverage that included abortions. In his 100 days agenda, Trump also claimed he would undo “every unconstitutional executive action, memorandum and order issued by President Obama.” Whether this would include the repeal of any pro-abortion executive actions – like Obama’s undoing of conscience protections for health care workers or his repeal of the Mexico City policy – is unclear. Regarding the appointment of a Supreme Court justice, Trump has in the past promised to appoint a pro-life justice, although in the final presidential debate he would not say if he wanted the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 ruling which decided a woman’s right to an abortion. Yet pro-life groups remain optimistic for the near future. On the day after the recent presidential election, Dannenfelser called Trump and his pro-life running mate Mike Pence’s victory “an historic moment for the pro-life movement.” “We are poised to make the biggest executive, legislative, and judicial advances for the protection of unborn children and their mothers since Roe v. Wade was decided,” she said Nov. 9, noting the goals of “ending painful late-term abortions, codifying the Hyde Amendment, defunding Planned Parenthood, and appointing pro-life Supreme Court Justices.” “Donald Trump has committed to every single one of these goals,” she said. McClusky maintained that “It is too early to tell exactly how this will all turn out, but there is great hope amidst the pro-life community for the future. And in the meantime, we will continue to watch the other nominations closely, especially to Secretary of State and HHS.” Read more



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