% IssueDate = "3/10/03" IssueCategory = "Health" %>
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Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) said he supports the administration's position and has removed his name from legislation, which he sponsored last year with Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), that would have authorized $2.2 billion over two years for the Global Fund. Abortion Politics Congress has also become embattled in debate over the president's plan to extend the Mexico City policy to apply to the new funding (Gay Stolberg, New York Times, 3/6). The policy -- which was originally implemented by President Reagan at a population conference in Mexico City in 1984, removed by President Clinton and reinstated by Bush on the first day of his presidency -- "bars U.S. money from international groups that support abortion, even with their own money, through direct services, counseling or lobbying activities." Under the policy, outlined by a senior Bush administration official in a Feb. 11 memo to the State Department, social services groups that deal with abortion services would have to administer AIDS programs separately from family planning programs in order to receive funds from the administration's new AIDS initiative (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 3/5). Some conservatives, such as Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), want the White House to write the policy into law, but others on both sides of the issue said that such a move could "derail" the passage of an AIDS funding bill, according to the Times. Frist and Rep. Henry Hyde (R-Ill.), chair of the House International Relations Committee and an antiabortion advocate, have been trying to discourage colleagues from pushing for the insertion of such language into a bill. "I want the AIDS bill to pass and I think misdirected attention to other issues might overly burden the AIDS bill," Hyde said. Both Houses Drafting Legislation
"It could tie up the AIDS funding bill for weeks and weeks and weeks," Holly Burkhalter, an official with the Boston-based Physicians for Human Rights, said of the Mexico City policy debate. She added, "If we don't pass a good global AIDS authorizing bill in the next couple of weeks I think our window is closing" (New York Times, 3/6). This summary is from the Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report http://www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/hiv provided by kaisernetwork.org), a free health policy news summary and webcasting service of The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. The Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report is published for kaisernetwork.org by National Journal Group Inc. © 2003 by National Journal Group Inc. and Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved |
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