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Mitch Daniels Faces Tough Decision On Effort To Defund Planned Parenthood

Mitch Daniels Planned Parenthood

TOM DAVIES and DEANNA MARTIN   04/28/11 11:16 AM ET   AP

INDIANAPOLIS — As Mitch Daniels, the Republican governor of Indiana who last year called for a "truce on the so-called social issues," approaches his deadline for deciding whether to run for president, state lawmakers have put on his desk a pair of showcase conservative ideas.

In the final days of the state's legislative session, lawmakers approved plans to create the nation's broadest private school voucher system and make Indiana the first state to cut off all government funding for Planned Parenthood.

Daniels has pushed the voucher program, but the Planned Parenthood measure could present a political predicament for him as he nears a decision on whether he will run for president.

The governor has said it's a decision he'll make after lawmakers adjourn for the year, but he told The Indianapolis Star Thursday that he would not have an announcement this weekend even though the legislative session ends Friday. Spokeswoman Jane Jankowski confirmed Daniels' comments to The Associated Press but said he was unavailable for comment.

The Indiana House approved both ideas Wednesday, sending them to Daniels to decide what to do next.

The Planned Parenthood measure is a significant victory for the anti-abortion movement and would cut the $3 million in federal money the state distributes to the Planned Parenthood organization for family planning and health programs. It also ban abortions after the 20th week of pregnancy unless there is a substantial threat to the woman's life or health and requires women seeking an abortion be told that life begins at conception and that doctors performing abortions have admitting privileges in a nearby hospital.

As Daniels considers the measure, he could be forced to make a decision between the state's fiscal interests and a prime goal of his party's social conservatives.

If he signs it, Indiana risks losing $4 million in federal grants for family planning services. If he vetoes it, Daniels could antagonize ardent social conservatives already wary of his public statements about the importance of focusing on economic issues.

Daniels has drawn the ire from cultural conservatives for saying that the next president "would have to call a truce on the so-called social issues until the economic crisis is resolved." And he's reiterated that position by saying, "Purity in martyrdom is for suicide bombers."

But signing the bill could also provide Daniels with the political cover he needs from those who question his commitment to social conservative causes. He could point to it throughout the presidential campaign as evidence that opposition to abortion rights and other social causes are part of his political makeup.

A Daniels spokeswoman said the governor would not comment until the bill arrives on his desk for action. He'll have seven calendar days once he receives the bill to take action. He also could allow it to become law without his signature once those seven days pass.

Planned Parenthood says abortions account for just 3 percent of the services it provides. Planned Parenthood clinics across the country perform 1 million screenings for cervical cancer, 830,000 breast exams and some 4 million tests and treatments for sexually transmitted diseases. Abortion-rights supporters say cutting funding for Planned Parenthood would primarily hurt poor women who often have few choices for health care.

Conservative lawmakers say, however, that any money the organization receives at least indirectly supports abortions.

The voucher program, meanwhile, would allow even middle-class families to use taxpayer money to send their children to private schools. It's contentious, but something Daniels himself has pursued.

Unlike other voucher systems that are limited to lower-income households, children with special needs or those in failing schools, Indiana's program will be open to a much larger pool of students, including those already in excellent schools. Families would have to meet certain income limits to qualify, with families of four making up to about $60,000 a year getting some type of scholarship.

Daniels' agenda mirrors ideas being pushed nationwide by Republicans empowered by 2010 election victories. But Daniels has successfully led Indiana – a conservative state not known for going out on a limb – into uncharted education territory.

"Other states are going to be taking notice about how far Indiana's going," said Robert Enlow, president of the Foundation for Educational Choice.

Opponents say Daniels' agenda will hurt public schools by taking money and students away.

"He says that his motivation is to improve student achievement, but so many of these reform measures are not aimed at improving student achievement," said Nate Schnellenberger, president of the state's largest teachers union. "He wouldn't be siphoning public money from public schools if he was concerned about those students who remain at public schools."

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INDIANAPOLIS — As Mitch Daniels, the Republican governor of Indiana who last year called for a "truce on the so-called social issues," approaches his deadline for deciding whether to run for pre...
INDIANAPOLIS — As Mitch Daniels, the Republican governor of Indiana who last year called for a "truce on the so-called social issues," approaches his deadline for deciding whether to run for pre...
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Brenda Starr
Time is before us. Time is after us.
09:15 AM on 04/29/2011
It's always been easier to just smack women around than to grow up.
08:22 AM on 04/29/2011
"can't make change"
01:52 AM on 04/29/2011
Over the last 2 years, 327 million has been pulled from K-12 education. Daniels and the GOP are announcing that 150 million will be added next year. Do the math 327-150 =177...that is a LOSS of 177 million to schools!! 26.4 million (of the added 150 million) is earmarked for all day kindergarten. While this is a positive, all day Kindergarten is still not fully funded (meaning parents still have to pay more for it). And for programs that currently exist, this is a LOSS of 203.4 million (177 + 26.4). And we can watch this amount just go up and up as they need to fund the voucher program for charter schools.

Now between the 3 million in Federal Support for Planned Parenthood and the 4 million in Grant for Family Planning, this is 7 million in Federal Dollars that will not be coming to IN. So where is IN going to come up with an additional 7 million to pay for women's healthcare (pap smears, mamograms, breast cancer screening, cervical cancer screening, testing for sexual transmitted disease, so on). NONE of this 7 mil supports abortion!!

So with the loss of dollars in the Education System and the loss of dollars in Women's Healthcare, just how many JOBS are going to be lost? How many services will be lost? How much more will Women's Healthcare cost as the ER is the main place women have to go for these services?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sharin
severely liberal and proud of it
09:27 AM on 04/29/2011
thank you for this concise information
f&f
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Doug Whitinger
Question everything
02:07 PM on 04/29/2011
Not to mention Daniels' push for school vouchers and charter schools. No need to fix the current system, let's just abandon it. Sick.
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blinkthink
Tax Wall Street Trades Now
07:54 PM on 04/29/2011
Well, Republicans need to teach their children how to disrespect the entire nation, our elected leader, so taxpayers here need to be paying for the learning academy of the Jr. Redstate Theocracy.
01:18 AM on 04/29/2011
"He says that his motivation is to improve student achievement, but so many of these reform measures are not aimed at improving student achievement," said Nate Schnellenberger, president of the state's largest teachers union. "He wouldn't be siphoning public money from public schools if he was concerned about those students who remain at public schools."

none of the GOP have any interest in keeping America strong.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rogo99
They're the new extreme right-you know...the rest
06:05 AM on 04/29/2011
Pointing to failure of the schools to justify defunding, then using the further failure to keep the policy going. Self-fulfilling prophesy.
10:06 AM on 04/29/2011
The Republicans need an undeducated public. Thinking people see through trump, palin and the fundamentalist preachers. The rest drink the coolaid
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somsoc
All humans are atheists at birth.
12:05 AM on 04/29/2011
As many have done, as I have done, it is worth reviewing history to show just how far to the re!ch the Grand Pollution Preverts have moved. Senator Barry Goldwater, Presidential GOP candidate in 1964, supported the following:

Gay rights to include gay marriage, gays in the military and having gays treated as an identified class for civil rights issues.

But more to the point for this article, BG and his wife not only supported Planned Parenthood, they actually volunteered their time to work at its clinics in Arizona and made substantial personal financial donations to the organization. BG was considered radically right wing, so much so that he was not electable and soundly defeated.
11:51 PM on 04/28/2011
Why the Huffington Post is focusing on Mitch Daniels (a very real threat to Obama in 2012).
In 2008, Mitch was reelected Governor of Indiana, receiving more votes than anyone who has ever run for office in Indiana. Mitch received 24% of the Dem vote in '08, up 11% from 2004. He received 20% of the African American vote, up 13% from '04. Mitch won every age demographic, including the 18-29 year-olds. The governor did as well with independents as he did with the general population, winning the independent vote by a 57%-39% margin.

Daniels was re-elected to the governor’s mansion in 2008 by a wide margin even as his state went blue. Voters rewarded him for having eliminated in four short years a $200 million hole in Indiana’s budget.

Looks like a good record to me. I vote for common sense in Washington.
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somsoc
All humans are atheists at birth.
12:07 AM on 04/29/2011
Mitch D. is so far from being a true Dem. a true progressive it is not even funny, I wish he were more like Grayson or Jerry Brown.
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blinkthink
Tax Wall Street Trades Now
12:14 AM on 04/29/2011
Gov. Daniels is a Republican.
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somsoc
All humans are atheists at birth.
12:15 AM on 04/29/2011
Whoops, what was I thinking, I dropped my scotch, that is my excuse. Mitch D. is a very well entrenched fasc!st, with little compassion for our citizens and a callous disregard for civil rights, equality, justice or the rule of law.
02:11 AM on 04/29/2011
If Daniels was to run again today, the results would be VERY different. The educational reforms that he has proposed and signed (or is about to sign) into law will gut the educational system in the state. When tax dollars will go to fund charter schools and pull a signifcant amount from traditional schools, and then charter schools can have less than 50% of the teachers licensed (language in the original bill) and they are not held to the same performance standards as traditional public schools. Then even more dollars are taken from traditional K-12 public schools and given to higher education for students who graduate in their Jr year (which the scholarship will not cover 1 yr of college and there is no guarentee that the courses will transfer). Students would be better off taking AP courses at a lower cost to the Students (and their families) as well as to the Taxpayers. And as all this money comes out of K-12 education, there will not be enough to provide any real type of education to the majority of students.

On Education, more residents are opposed to Daniels. Then add in the Right to Work and removal of collective bargaining (already signed in education). His support is dwindling by many.
08:20 AM on 04/29/2011
Hogwash! You must belong to the teachers union. We have spent millions on education and have high school graduates who can make change for a dollar in their head. What logic supports this as an education? We have teachers who are a disgrace to the profession. Someday, I'm going to YouTube some of the conversations that go on in the teachers lounge. I avoid the negativism that flows in the group. If Indiana law allowed it, Mitch would coast to another victory. Hope that he decides to run for president.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nomadrdw
Zen Druid
11:46 PM on 04/28/2011
of course one of the things that is not being talked about with the charter schools is the "approval process."
each of these private schools has a board of directors that must approve each and every student, and of course, ALL of those students have to meet the standards set by that individual board, and of course, they don't have to publish or make public any of those standards. so once again, the students that don't measure up will be left with what ever is left over then for the public schools. all this will do is create greater and greater education disparity.
and as far as PP is concerned, after all, it is only the middle class and poor of Indiana that need them so of course, the bigots and religious fanatics here in Indiana have decided to abandon them as well.
he has tried twice to privatize the food stamp program here, and both times cost the state millions of dollars and were both total disasters.
11:40 PM on 04/28/2011
Mitch Daniels will be an excellent president.
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blinkthink
Tax Wall Street Trades Now
07:55 PM on 04/29/2011
Yeah, his fas cism is compelling.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
caseyblab
09:55 PM on 04/28/2011
No problem with funding wars however.
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05:02 PM on 04/28/2011
It's a real shame that the guy considered to be the most moderate and sensible of the republican presidential aspirants would even consider signing these counterproductive pieces of legislation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
outsidethemainstream
06:10 PM on 04/28/2011
moderate & sensible republican is oxymoron
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nomadrdw
Zen Druid
11:48 PM on 04/28/2011
the real shame is that here in Indiana, we know the truth and know that all he is here for is to sell Indiana for the profit of his cronies and all at the cost to the people and environment of the state.
08:25 AM on 04/29/2011
Hogwash again! Move to Chicago!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
studmoose
This Micro-Bio Intentionally Left Blank
04:05 PM on 04/28/2011
Abortion-rights supporters say cutting funding for Planned Parenthood would primarily hurt poor women who often have few choices for health care.

Yep! Most of those women will be poor and minorities living in urban areas - who will give birth to children requiring dependent care and social services!

On top of that, THEY WILL MOSTLY VOTE DEMOCRAT!

This will help to accelerate the demise of the GOP - with their apparent support!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TraceyES
08:14 PM on 04/28/2011
I guess there's a silver lining in EVERY cloud...
08:55 PM on 04/28/2011
It's so true.

The country might lose its white majority around 2050.
Why?
Because minorities have higher birth rates.

And most working class minorities I know (family, friends, neighbors) tend to vote Democrat.

Fewer legal abortions.......means more coat hangers.......and more minority births to poor women.

Hmmmm
I hope I live long enough to see how this plays out.
I'm nosy.
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somsoc
All humans are atheists at birth.
12:09 AM on 04/29/2011
Too bad Mitch Daniels' mother did not know how to use a coat hanger.
10:04 AM on 04/30/2011
What I see in the future is millions more single mothers with babies for the tax payers to support. And support we will for years and years. Seems to me birth control would be cheaper. But then I'm not as smart as Mitch so he must be right. And then again womens health issues are not his concern. But I have a question for every grandfather, father, brother, uncle, cousin, etc. out there: what if it was your granddaughter, daughter, sister, niece, etc. What if they had cancer but couldn't afford to go to a doctor, didn't find out they had cancer until it was to late? How will you feel when someone you love dies getting a blotched abortion. Just for once put this on a personal level and ask yourself do we want the government to pass more laws based on religion or should govenors stay out of religion and stick to the law?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
studmoose
This Micro-Bio Intentionally Left Blank
04:02 PM on 04/28/2011
Enjoy your school voucher program... IT WILL ADD 20% TO YOUR LOCAL SCHOOL TAXES!

The fixed school costs will remain the same to provide the Public School option, while you will be adding 20% more in costs and transportation funds to support the Private School option.

Then, when a couple of kids leave Public School for Private School, they will take that money with them, but there will not be a reduction in classroom costs in the public school - EVERY TOWN WILL SEE A GROSS SPIKE IN SCHOOL TAXES!
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Salguod
We don't need no stinking badges (or micro-bio)
05:45 PM on 04/28/2011
As a certified liberal with two children in a private school, I just don’t understand this argument. If the public schools are overcrowded, what is wrong with some public school students going to private school? Surely, this will help the overcrowding issue and reduce class size. Sure, the tax money leaves the public school, but the tax payers no longer have the expense and obligation of educating that child. I don’t see how this harms the public school unless the public school is sitting empty. I don’t see that where I live. What should we do here? Do we all need to have 8 kids and put them all in public school to prop up a failed public school system?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
05:56 PM on 04/28/2011
Show us your certification papers please.

Then we can talk.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
studmoose
This Micro-Bio Intentionally Left Blank
06:25 PM on 04/28/2011
The public infrastructure is in place, just in case you situation changes and your children begin using it. Those funds are already dedicated to the school system. It is you who have chosen to take the extra burden upon yourself to send your kids to a private school.

The voucher system will not necessarily strip or redirect those funds away from the public schools into your pocket for use in a private school system. These will be additional funds above and beyond what is already being spent. They have to come from somewhere.

The class sizes are already established and have been for decades, where a certain amount of enrolles are in the public system. If there are three classes of 25 children in 3rd grade, and 6 children leave for a private school, that is still 69 children for 3rd grade - too many to consolidate down to 2 classes, so that $49K is stripped from that elementary school but their fixed costs remain the same. Guess what happens where there is a shortfall like that? Higher taxes for all.

In New Jersey, most of the charter schools cannot meet the standards of their public counterparts. Scott Walker's Milwaukee test has failed with 20-25 percent lower standardized tests. They now want these private 'corporate' schools not to participate in standardized testing while rolling out this failed model across the state. In NJ, private schools only average about 5 percent higher in test scores, but that does not factor in the fact that public schools have to accept everyone - not just children from parents who force their kids to learn. When that is factored in, the private and parochial schools score lower than state schools.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
realpolitic
When in Rome.......
03:08 PM on 04/28/2011
Indiana should lose federal  grants for family planning services.   The measure to subsidize middle class families to send their children to private schools only hurts the school system.  The measure just reflects how much Republicans hate unions in that they want to seemingly close down public schools to get rid of teacher unions.  These issues are more culture war issues and have little to do with good governance or sound fiscal management.  In fact, when Republicans get in they solely focus on the culture wars and give little thought to governing.
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blinkthink
Tax Wall Street Trades Now
12:17 AM on 04/29/2011
There was also an effort made to reduce teacher educational requirements in Indiana.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
realpolitic
When in Rome.......
04:20 PM on 04/29/2011
Yes, seems like they want the kids to fail.
02:39 PM on 04/28/2011
Ironic that the same people arguing to eliminate federal funds to Planned Parenthood because, according to them, federal money supports abortions indirectly, previously justified the Chamber of Commerce funding attack ads against Democrats because, according to them, foreign money received by the Chamber wasn't a part of the money funding the ads.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LLovejoy
Secular Humanist
05:05 PM on 04/28/2011
Good point!
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Hoosierbrad
I know it when I see it.
02:23 PM on 04/28/2011
I have no doubt; I have lived here throughout his two terms; the man will do the wrong thing.
02:44 PM on 04/28/2011
#1400
I lived through both of Tim Pawlenty's terms in Minnesota and I feel exactly the same way.
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realpolitic
When in Rome.......
03:09 PM on 04/28/2011
No offense, but living in Indiana must be really dull.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
IndyStacey
Everyone does better when everyone does better.
04:56 PM on 04/28/2011
Indianapolis is great city, great sports, concerts, parks, museums and the people are very friendly. It is a blue dot, surrounded by red.