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MARCH 16, 2010 ARCHIVED STORIES:
WASHINGTON (BP)--A pro-life effort to prohibit funding of abortion in health-care reform failed in the House of Representatives Budget Committee March 15. The committee voted 19-17 against an amendment to instruct that the pro-life language be included in a reconciliation bill the full House may consider in the | Pro-lifers contend that the country's abortion rate could go up if the bill passes. | next few days. The amendment called for inclusion of what is known as the Stupak-Pitts Amendment, which would prohibit federal funds from paying for abortions or subsidizing plans that cover abortions. The Budget Committee forwarded the reconciliation bill, which provides "fixes" to the Senate-approved, health-care measure, by a 21-16 vote. Three Democrats -- Reps. Marion Berry of Arkansas, Marcy Kaptur of Ohio and Jim Langevin of Rhode Island -- voted with all but one Republican on the committee to call for the Rules Committee to include the pro-life amendment. Rep. Scott Garrett, R.-N.J., did not vote. Rep. Jim Jordan, R.-Ohio, offered the amendment, telling the committee the language in the health-care bill approved by the Senate "represents the largest threat to innocent human life since Roe v. Wade was decided by the Supreme Court" in 1973. Jordan's amendment duplicated the language crafted by Reps. Bart Stupak, D.-Mich., and Joe Pitts, R.-Pa., and approved by the House before passage of the overall bill in November. The Stupak-Pitts Amendment maintains the current policy preventing federal funds from funding insurance plans that cover abortion. Read More
MORE NEWS
Gallup: Young adults trending pro-life
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)--Young adults ages 18-29 who once were among the top supporters of legalized abortion now are its leading opponents when compared to other age groups, according to a Gallup analysis of survey trends since the 1973 landmark Roe v. Wade decision.
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After wife's death, he still plants churches
MESA, Ariz. (BP)--As a Southern Baptist pastor for the last 30 years, and as a North American Mission Board missionary for the past six, Louis Spears has conducted many funerals. But none of them prepared him for the long, lonely walk behind his wife's casket nearly two years ago.
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Rankin apologizes for questioning Chapman's Great Commission commitment
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)--An apology has been extended by International Mission Board President Jerry Rankin to SBC Executive Committee President Morris H. Chapman ...
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GCRTF: Strategy change a must for SBC
Donated Bibles help inmates mark time

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Peter Lumpkins
FIRST-PERSON: Alcohol & the church (part 2)
CARROLLTON, Ga. (BP)--Southern Baptists are conservative Christians, and conservative Christians take very seriously the profound significance of God's Word, the Bible.
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