The U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. / Credit: Andrea Izzotti/Shutterstock
CNA Staff, Jul 1, 2025 / 14:17 pm (CNA).
Senate Republicans on Tuesday passed President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” budget measure, including a provision to defund Planned Parenthood for a year, which pro-life advocates are lauding as a “major step” toward permanently defunding the abortion giant.
The bill was originally set to defund Planned Parenthood for a 10-year period. Last week, Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough disqualified more than a dozen provisions in the bill, including the portion defunding abortion providers, forcing Republicans to rework the language of the bill.
The Senate on Tuesday passed the reworked bill after a tiebreaking vote cast by Vice President JD Vance. Three Republican lawmakers — Sens. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, Susan Collins of Maine, and Rand Paul of Kentucky — opposed the bill on various grounds.
The reconciliation bill, which includes several spending cuts and tax breaks, still needs to go back to the House for a final round of voting.
While the defunding period is only a 10th of what pro-life lawmakers initially planned, it would still be significant progress, pro-life advocates argued on Tuesday.
Kristan Hawkins, the president of Students for Life, called the bill a “small but important victory,” noting that it “cuts an estimated $500 million from Planned Parenthood and abortion vendors,” though she acknowledged it was “for one year only.”
“This proves what we’ve said all along: Congress can cut Planned Parenthood’s funding — and they just did,” Hawkins said in a Tuesday statement on X. “The moral obligation is clear: If we can do it for one year, we must do it for good.”
Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America President Marjorie Dannenfelser called the passage “a crucial victory in the fight against abortion, America’s leading cause of death, and an industry that endangers women and girls.”
“The greatest pro-life victory since Dobbs is within reach!” she added.
Live Action President Lila Rose on Tuesday called the measure “a start but not enough.”
“The House should restore the 10-year defund they already passed,” she said.
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Fort Worth, Texas, Sep 21, 2018 / 10:57 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A missionary disciple is one who has encountered Christ personally and is then able to bring him to others, Archbishop Christophe Pierre said Thursday at the National V Encuentro.
Lia Garcia, director of Hispanic Ministry at the Archdiocese of Baltimore, speaks at a panel discussion exploring the impact of U.S. Latinos on the 2024 election hosted by Georgetown University’s Initiative on Catholic Social Thought and Public Life on Monday, Oct. 7, 2024. / Credit: Georgetown University/Art Pittman
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Oct 10, 2024 / 06:00 am (CNA).
As a record number of Hispanic Americans will be eligible to vote this November, many are asking what impact Latinos — and Latino Catholics in particular — will have on the 2024 election.
Though acknowledging the great diversity in culture and thought among American Hispanic communities, the panelists posited that the overarching values of family, faith, and care for the poor will factor largely into Latinos’ decisions at the ballot box this November.
“We are big on family, family values … We want to be welcoming and be very attentive to the needs of others,” said Lia Garcia, one of the panelists and the director of Hispanic ministry at the Archdiocese of Baltimore.
“We throw big parties, we eat a lot of food,” she added, laughing. “Everybody is invited to our gatherings, so our faith teaches us that we are built to be in communion in relationship with God and in relationship with one another.”
Hispanics don’t fit into a box
Speaking with CNA after the panel, Garcia said that in her work with Hispanic Catholics, she has heard “a lot of anxiety about what is going to happen” and “about who is going to win” the presidency.
She said that many Hispanic voters “feel pinned” between conflicting priorities held by Trump and Harris.
“They feel that they have to choose between the issue of abortion and defending immigrants,” she said. “Latino Catholics are very much for life. You can see that in our big families. But they also have a concern about the immigration issues. Even if immigration doesn’t directly affect them because now they’re documented, but they know someone, they know a family member, they know a colleague … it’s really scary to people how Latinos are portrayed to the rest of the world as criminals.”
A member of the audience asks a question during a panel discussion exploring the impact of U.S. Latinos on the 2024 election hosted by Georgetown University’s Initiative on Catholic Social Thought and Public Life on Monday, Oct. 7, 2024. Credit: Georgetown University/Art Pittman
Hispanic voters have historically favored Democrats in national and local elections. The panelists noted, however, that Republicans have been faring better with Latinos in recent elections and polls, giving credence to predictions that the Hispanic vote is no longer a monolith.
Recent polling on Hispanics backs up this theory. Newsweek reported this week that while Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris is still leading among Hispanics by a wide margin, 56% to 38%, her lead has shrunk from the 59% Joe Biden held in 2020 and even further from the 66% held by Hillary Clinton in 2016.
Instead of loyalty to a party, panelists said Hispanics appear motivated mostly by their family values and concern for the poor and downtrodden.
Father Agustino Torres, a priest with the New York-based Franciscan Friars of the Renewal, said that in his ministry to young Latinos he has witnessed that Hispanic youth “have this fire” for caring for the downtrodden, especially for poor migrants.
“Sometimes we’re American Catholics rather than Catholic Americans. We allow our politics to inform our faith rather than our faith informing our politics,” Torres said. “But this is the reality: I’m responsible for you and you’re responsible for me. If I see someone falling down on the sidewalk, like, I am obligated because of my baptism, and this is a good thing … This is the Gospel.”
Father Agustino Torres, a priest and member of the Franciscan Friars of the Renewal, pointed out that
“sometimes we’re American Catholics rather than Catholic Americans. We allow our politics to inform our faith rather than our faith informing our politics.” Credit: Peter Pinedo/CNA
“When we teach this, they are just like, ‘yes,’ and it unites their worlds, family, faith, outreach,” he said.
To be clear, like most Americans, U.S. Hispanics are most concerned with the economy. EWTN published a poll of U.S. Catholics in September that found that most of the country’s Hispanic Catholics — 56.8% — said the economy (including jobs, inflation, and interest rates) is the most important issue deciding their vote this election cycle.
The next-highest priorities were border security/immigration at 10.5%, abortion at 9.7%, health care at 5.3%, and climate change at 5%.
Yet, according to panelist Santiago Ramos, a Catholic philosopher at the Aspen Institute, even when it comes to their approach to economic issues, Hispanics do not easily fit into the political right or left.
Ramos said Hispanics challenge the “nationalist, right-wing” as well as progressivist categorizations.
“There is a community aspect to our existence, family-oriented, dare I call it socially conservative aspect to our existence that doesn’t always mesh with mainstream liberal institutions,” he explained. “So, there are all sorts of ways that we pop up in American politics and force people to see things they don’t want to see.”
Among new voters, Hispanics loom large
Aleja Hertzler-McCain, a reporter on Latino faith and American Catholicism for Religion News Service, pointed out that half of the new voters who have become eligible to vote since 2020 are Hispanic.
According to the Pew Research Center, there will be 36.2 million eligible Hispanic voters this year, up almost 4 million from 2020. While noting that U.S. Hispanics historically have low voter turnout, Hertzler said the sheer volume of new Hispanic voters could have a “big impact” on the election.
Whatever the outcome of the election, Garcia said she is “really excited” to see the Hispanic community have its voice heard in the democratic process.
“I can’t wait to see that. I’m really excited about the election for that particular reason,” she said.
“The beauty of our culture,” Garcia went on, “is we can draw from our own experiences growing up with big families, big celebrations, and also with our faith that draws us to relationship with one another. And I think that is where we can sense how [concern for] the common good is not only something that comes from God but comes from our culture as well.”
Belleville, Ill., Oct 2, 2019 / 05:29 pm (CNA).- Planned Parenthood announced Wednesday the opening of an 18,000 square foot, $7 million “mega” abortion clinic in southern Illinois, just a dozen miles from Missouri’s last remaining Pl… […]
8 Comments
What about the millions losing their health insurance via cuts to Medicaid? What about cuts to nutrition programs like SNAP? This article is a joke. It looks like a White House press release. Why was this poor excuse of journalism even published? Anything to make Trump look good. Pathetic.
Which is why we need one payer health care like other wealthy countries. Our for profit health care makes money for CEO’s and billionaires but fails millions of Americans.
Do you actually think this bill is a good thing? You seem intelligent and not a MAGA sycophant,so what’s your response to this bill? Or is anything Trump does wonderful?
Please enlighten us.
If you’ve noticed what’s been happening in nations with nationalized healthcare & ageing populations like the UK & Canada, there’s growing support for euthanasia. Only so many resources are available & when a country’s total population percentage becomes increasingly elderly, more resources will be used & more tax dollars required. That’s not a winning proposition when the workforce shrinks in proportion.
It’s a good illustration why we need more young immigrants but even that may not be enough to save things like Medicare. Social Security is expected to not be able to pay out benefits in full within less than 8 years.
It has nothing to do with that. It’s about fiscal responsibility and economic justice. If you are breaking the law to be here illegally, you shouldn’t be eligible for handouts of any kind. That’s common sense.
What about the millions losing their health insurance via cuts to Medicaid? What about cuts to nutrition programs like SNAP? This article is a joke. It looks like a White House press release. Why was this poor excuse of journalism even published? Anything to make Trump look good. Pathetic.
I lost my excellent, private insurance some 15 years ago because of Obama, who lied about his vaunted healthcare fix. Spare me the tears.
Which is why we need one payer health care like other wealthy countries. Our for profit health care makes money for CEO’s and billionaires but fails millions of Americans.
Do you actually think this bill is a good thing? You seem intelligent and not a MAGA sycophant,so what’s your response to this bill? Or is anything Trump does wonderful?
Please enlighten us.
If you’ve noticed what’s been happening in nations with nationalized healthcare & ageing populations like the UK & Canada, there’s growing support for euthanasia. Only so many resources are available & when a country’s total population percentage becomes increasingly elderly, more resources will be used & more tax dollars required. That’s not a winning proposition when the workforce shrinks in proportion.
It’s a good illustration why we need more young immigrants but even that may not be enough to save things like Medicare. Social Security is expected to not be able to pay out benefits in full within less than 8 years.
The cuts to Medicaid apply to illegals who should not be getting healthcare on the taxpayers’ dime. It’s the right call.
Keep drinking the MAGA Kool Aid.
It has nothing to do with that. It’s about fiscal responsibility and economic justice. If you are breaking the law to be here illegally, you shouldn’t be eligible for handouts of any kind. That’s common sense.
Athanasius:
Couldn’t have said it any better.