Feb 14, 2020

Kansas leader decries attempts to tie abortion, Medicaid

Posted Feb 14, 2020 7:00 PM
In January, Senate Majority leader Jim Denning and Gov. Laura Kelly announced the plan to expand the state's Medicaid program -photo courtesy office of Kansas governor.
In January, Senate Majority leader Jim Denning and Gov. Laura Kelly announced the plan to expand the state's Medicaid program -photo courtesy office of Kansas governor.

BY JOHN HANNA

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A top Republican lawmaker in Kansas on Friday disputed what has become a key talking point for GOP colleagues who are blocking a bipartisan plan to expand the state's Medicaid program by arguing that it could lead to taxpayers funding elective abortions.

Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning, a Kansas City-area Republican, sent an email Friday to senators decrying what he called “inaccurate verbal and written statements” used to justify opposition among anti-abortion lawmakers and groups to expand the plan he drafted with Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly.

Abortion opponents want to pass an amendment to the Kansas Constitution declaring that its Bill of Rights does not “secure” the right to an abortion, overturning a state Supreme Court decision last year. The measure passed the Senate but failed in the House, and its backers are promising to block any debate on Medicaid expansion until the proposed amendment is put on the ballot for voters' possible approval.

Anti-abortion lawmakers and groups have argued over the past week that a Kansas law banning state funding of abortions is likely to fall to a legal challenge unless the anti-abortion amendment is enacted. They also contend that expanding Medicaid likely increases the number of women could obtain taxpayer-funded abortions.

But Denning said in his email that “there is NO link.” Denning voted for the proposed anti-abortion amendment when the Senate approved it.

Denning said under a section of the Medicaid expansion bill, pregnant women specifically would not be covered by the expanded part of the program but by the traditional Medicaid program.

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