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- NATION, Page 30Bush's No-No On AbortionThe President's twin vetoes slow the pro-choice momentum
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- Abortion-rights activists may be winning over politicians and
- the public, but they still lack the muscle to override their most
- powerful opponent. Two weeks ago, George Bush vetoed a bill to
- permit Medicaid to pay for the abortions of the victims of rape or
- incest. Last week, by a count of 231 to 191, the House of
- Representatives fell 51 votes short of the two-thirds majority
- necessary to overturn him. Bush then vetoed the District of
- Columbia's $3.4 billion annual budget because it includes Medicaid
- funds for abortion.
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- The President called his first veto agonizing; he supports the
- right to an abortion in cases of rape or incest. His second veto,
- which came as he was leaving town for Costa Rica, indicated how
- firmly he has decided to stand with the right-to-life movement: the
- D.C. budget he killed also contained $32 million for the
- Administration's drive to make Washington a show case in the war
- on drugs.
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- Antiabortion forces also took heart last week from victories
- in Pennsylvania and Michigan. The Pennsylvania house of
- representatives voted 143 to 58 to prohibit most abortions after
- 24 weeks, require that women be informed of the medical risks of
- abortion and impose a 24-hr. waiting period. Michigan's senate
- approved a bill that would require parental consent to abortions
- for girls 17 years old or younger.
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- Pro-choice forces nonetheless feel they have the political
- momentum. A TIME/CNN poll of 1,000 adult women last week indicated
- a dramatic shift on the issue since the Supreme Court ruled in July
- that states could pass laws restricting abortion. Only 12% said
- abortion should be illegal under all circumstances. More over, 66%
- disagreed with the Supreme Court ruling, and 54% said abortion is
- one of the most important issues facing the country today.