Abortion advocates blast Rauner for not
signing pledge to protect taxpayer-funded abortion
·
Jul 10, 2018
Personal PAC CEO Terry
Cosgrove says Gov. Bruce Rauner can't be trusted to defend abortion protections
Rauner himself signed into law.
Abortion
advocates blasted Gov. Bruce Rauner at a news conference Tuesday morning for
failing to sign a pledge to protect a controversial bill that allows
taxpayer money to be used for abortions.
Personal
PAC President Terry Cosgrove took Rauner to task at the event in Chicago, the
morning after President Donald Trump announced his latest Supreme Court
pick. Personal PAC is a political action committee focused on electing
candidates who support abortion rights.
Cosgrove
said that the governor hasn’t signed a pledge sent to him by Personal PAC
stating that he would protect the law as it is under House Bill 40. Rauner
signed HB40 into law last year, upsetting conservative supporters.
The
bill allows for taxpayer money to pay for abortions through Medicaid and state
employee healthcare plans.
“The
truth is, if re-elected, Gov. Rauner has proven he can’t be trusted to protect
legal abortion in Illinois, unless the voters of Illinois have a written
promise that if re-elected he won’t do anything to repeal, diminish or amend HB
40,” Cosgrove said.
Cosgrove and
others at the news conference said that Rauner’s failure to sign the pledge
they gave him was enough to drop him in favor of Democratic challenger, J.B.
Pritzker, who signed the pledge.
Rauner
faced political backlash for his decision on HB40. Anti-abortion Republicans
across the state lashed out at the governor for signing the bill after
promising not to engage on controversial social issues. Rauner also had
previously said he would veto the measure. Rauner gave similar assurances to
Cardinal Blase Cupich, the cardinal has said.
Rauner
responded to questions about Personal PAC's criticism later that day.
"I
signed legislation here in the state of Illinois so that womens' reproductive
rights are protected regardless of what happens at the federal level," he
said.
The
news conference came the morning after President Donald Trump announced his
nomination to replace Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy with Washington
D.C. federal Judge Brett Kavanaugh, signaling a possible shift to the right in
the political dynamics of the nation’s highest court.
During
the debate on HB40, lawmakers warned that the bill was necessary in the event
that Roe v. Wade was overturned. Trigger language in the law would take effect
should that happen, ensuring access to abortion is still enshrined in Illinois
law.
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