GOP Quacks the Whip on Lame Duck Session
If there’s one thing Republicans are anxious to wrap up this Christmas, it’s Democratic control. Conservatives were hoping to put a bow on the failed majority of Senator Harry Reid (D-Nev.) in a more relaxed atmosphere, but thanks to a perfect winter storm of executive orders and funding debates, members are bracing for a flurry of activity over the next 10 days. As usual, the two parties put themselves in a holiday jam by kicking the government funding bill to this month, when peace and goodwill are sure to be in short supply. Instead of in-depth conversations on each agency’s needs, Sen. Reid has almost never allowed spending measures to come to the floor – forcing both chambers to pass short-term patches to keep the lights on.
If there’s one thing Republicans are anxious to wrap up this Christmas, it’s Democratic control. Conservatives were hoping to put a bow on the failed majority of Senator Harry Reid (D-Nev.) in a more relaxed atmosphere, but thanks to a perfect winter storm of executive orders and funding debates, members are bracing for a flurry of activity over the next 10 days.
As usual, the two parties put themselves in a holiday jam by kicking the government funding bill to this month, when peace and goodwill are sure to be in short supply. Instead of in-depth conversations on each agency’s needs, Sen. Reid has almost never allowed spending measures to come to the floor – forcing both chambers to pass short-term patches to keep the lights on.
And while the House has done its work, carefully rolling appropriations bills into one big omnibus, Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) is facing a new political reality: the outrage over the President’s dictate on illegal immigration. Suddenly, conservatives are looking for any weapon to blunt the White House’s decision to grant amnesty to as many as five million undocumented Americans – and stripping money from Homeland Security seems to be a logical place to start.
But that strategy has its pitfalls too, not the least of which is a long, drawn-out showdown that could be politically costly to both sides before the new Congress starts. Republicans will have plenty of time to float ideas tomorrow at their meeting in the Capitol basement. Some members are rallying around a two-track approach, where the entire government – except immigration enforcement – would be renewed until September 2015. That means Congress would carve out the spending necessary for the President’s amnesty order and roll it into a short-term plan that would give Republicans an opportunity to tackle the issue first thing next year when they control both chambers.
Regardless of which path conservatives take, pro-lifers are fighting to make ObamaCare a priority in all of them. While liberals are busy pretending taxpayer-funded abortion doesn’t exist in health care, one state is quite proud to admit it: California. The country’s biggest state also took the biggest step in passing off abortion costs on locals under an August rule that orders health insurance companies to cover it – regardless of their objections or their policy holders’. Several members of FRC’s pastors network are leading the charge against the mandate, which affects everyone from religious institutions to churches and universities.
And while the Golden State’s policy obviously violates federal law, the Obama administration has no interest in enforcing it – let alone abiding by it. That’s why conservatives are doing everything they can to attach language to the spending bills that would give Californians the ability to beat back the attack on their First Amendment rights. Congressmen Dr. John Fleming (R-La.) tried to fix the West Coast problem earlier this year by introducing the Abortion Non-Discrimination Act to make the ban on taxpayer-funded abortion permanent in every state – and to add a private right of action so it could be enforced. Ultimately, the House combined it with Rep. Diane Black’s (R-Tenn.) Health Care Conscience Rights Act which took aim at the HHS mandate. Despite being included in the Labor-HHS spending bill, it was never voted on.
In the next two weeks, pro-lifers have a unique opportunity to kill California’s anti-conscience scam by attaching ANDA to a must-pass piece of legislation. Encourage your member to do exactly that! Contact them and tell them to give taxpayers an early Christmas present: no taxpayer-funding for abortion!
Oklahoma Gives Greens the Red Light
It may be the Good Book, but it’s getting a bad rap in Oklahoma. Just months after being the first district to adopt a new Bible as literature curriculum, the Mustang School District is scrapping the idea – dashing the hopes of a community anxious to take an objective look at the Book America was founded on. For the Hobby Lobby owners behind the idea, it was a surprise blow.
As most people remember, the Green family is best known for its Christian faith, taking it all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court for a landmark win against the HHS mandate. This year, the family was hoping to give students a deeper look at the important role that faith played in shaping Western Civilization and America through an elective class on the Bible. For now, those hopes are on hold after the suburban district caved to another campaign of intimidation from the Freedom From Religion Foundation. Despite being completely optional the curriculum came under fire from the politically-correct crowd for daring to discuss the most influential religious text in world history.
Like Texas, Georgia, Tennessee, and Arizona, Oklahoma legislators joined the ranks of states open to the idea of giving students the opportunity to study the Bible from a standpoint of literature and history. “It’s not intended to be a study of the Bible,” said state Rep. Todd Russ ®. “It’s intended to be an additional tool for presenting our heritage and the history of America and the value system of America and where it came from.” And the idea was popular with more than local lawmakers. Not only did it pass Oklahoma’s Education Committee unanimously, but in a survey of elective classes, this Bible course was the students’ top pick.
And a constitutional one, at that. Bible survey courses like this one have already withstood scrutiny from the courts – enabling states like Louisiana to implement curriculum like this when I was a state legislator. As Steve Green told parents in the Oklahoma City region last year, the courses (which were designed by some of the foremost scholars from Jerusalem to Oxford) doesn’t aim to convert – but inform. “There are lessons from the past that we can learn from, the dangers of ignorance of this book. We need to know it, and if we don’t know it, our future is going to be very scary,” Green explained. No other religious text has had a greater influence on “our government, education, science, art, literature, family,” he told the district.
Freedom From Religion Foundation complained that the class made students a “captive audience” to religious indoctrination. But students can’t be held captive to a class they choose! This is just another small-time bully from the anti-Christian crowd picking a fight with a local school district it assumes doesn’t know any better. Maybe someone ought to remind these religious censors that the Bible wasn’t just a part of the curriculum in America – it was the curriculum until the secularists began imposing their religion on everyone. Yesterday, I discussed this Bible controversy on “Fox and Friends.” If you missed it, check out the video below.
This is a publication of the Family Research Council. Mr. Perkins is president of FRC.