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NRL News
Page 32
January 2011
Volume 38
Issue 1
NRLC State Legislative
Strategy Conference Plans 2011 Pro-Life Agenda
By Dave Andrusko
Even before it became clear
there were massive pro-life electoral gains made on November 2,
National Right to Life knew that the potential for good in 2011
would be greatly enhanced if pro-life lobbyists, executive
directors, and legislative aides from around the country came
together to ensure a common state legislative agenda.
That’s exactly what happened
December 7 at the Key Bridge Marriott Hotel located just outside of
Washington, D.C. Attendees at the NRLC State Legislative Strategy
Conference learned from the best legislative analysts and
strategists in the Movement. (For more, see also pages 2, 6-7.)
With a net gain of 11
pro-life governors and an infusion of hundreds of additional
pro-life members of state Houses and state Senates, it was critical
to bring key pro-lifers in to make sure they had a common set of
issues to advance and a coordinated way of broaching the legislative
bodies.
NRLC President Dr. Wanda
Franz offered an excellent overview which set the table for the
all-day meeting. The breadth and depth of the action items she
outlined were sources of encouragement and excitement for all of
those in attendance.
At the top is protecting
unborn children capable of feeling pain from abortion. The model is
Nebraska’s “Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act” that prohibits
abortion after 20 weeks gestation based on compelling medical
evidence that by 20 weeks, if not before, unborn children have the
capacity to experience pain.
Nebraska abortionist LeRoy
Carhart, famous for performing abortions late in pregnancy,
responded by looking for new opportunities in Iowa, Indiana, and
Maryland. (He is now already performing abortions in Germantown,
Maryland.) All the more reason to pass laws similar to Nebraska’s in
as many states as possible.
But Director of State
Legislation Mary Spaulding Balch, J.D., had much more on her plate
to share with the people “who walk the legislative halls.” Those
initiatives included ensuring that ultrasounds are available to
women contemplating abortion; preventing public funds from being
used to subsidize health insurance that covers abortion as permitted
by the ObamaCare; and (at the other end of the life spectrum)
fighting the increasingly common practice by which so-called ethics
committee in health care facilities authorize denial of lifesaving
medical care—including food and fluids—against the will of the
patient or his or her surrogates.
Balch explained that many of
the newly elected state officials will be serving their first terms.
“They will be looking to pro-life lobbyists from NRLC’s state
affiliates for help not only in promoting the right legislation but
also in navigating through and around legislative potholes,” she
explained.
Balch believes that the
lobbyists who listened so attentively for seven hours “were happy to
see that other states are working on pro-life legislation and that
so many are confident legislation can be enacted in 2011.” She
added, “But how much we take advantage of these opportunities
depends on grassroots pro-lifers contacting their state
officeholders to make sure they know that these are priority items.”
2011, Balch said, “can be
one of the best years in a long, long time.” |