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No Compromise on the Hyde Amendment

: Star Parker on

Last year we went through the longest government shutdown in history.

The point of contention was the extension of what were supposed to be temporary additional Obamacare subsidies enacted during COVID-19.

"Temporary" in Washington means forever. This is what must change.

The "temporary" subsidies were supposed to expire last year. But Democrats could not resist the opportunity to push Republicans up against the wall and associate them with Obamacare premium increases.

A deal was cut to address the subsidies after the first of the year and get the government funded and opened. Which is what happened.

Now the House is dealing with the subsidies. The truth is no different now than it was last year. Obamacare is rife with inefficiencies and fraud, and the additional subsidies add hundreds of billions in red ink to a federal government already bleeding massive deficits.

Now we have another issue. Democrats do not want the Hyde Amendment, which, for half a century, has prohibited use of federal funds for elective abortion, applicable to Obamacare.

Where we wind up, if it's up to Democrats, is more inefficient heath care expenditures, exacerbation of an already dire fiscal state of the nation, and now allowing taxpayer money to fund abortion through Obamacare plans.

Democrats are looking at President Donald Trump's current shaky polling numbers and believe that, plus more government spending and abortion, will win them back Congress in 2026.

I say, "bring it on."

Republicans must brand the Democratic Party as what it has become -- the vehicle leading our nation to fiscal and social bankruptcy.

When Congress passed the Hyde Amendment in 1976, the vote was bipartisan. Both Democrats and Republicans agreed that federal funds, our tax money, should not be used to fund abortion.

The vote was 199 to 165. The 199 votes in support of Hyde consisted of 107 Democrats and 92 Republicans.

Bipartisanship in support of life, bipartisanship opposed to using taxpayer dollars to fund the destruction of life, is, unfortunately, a relic of the past.

Now we have one party, Republicans, that cares about life, family and children. And, another party, Democrats, is the opposite.

 

In 1975, the year before the Hyde Amendment was passed, 18% of Republicans and 19% of Democrats, said, per Gallup, that abortion should be "legal under any circumstances."

In 2025, 10% of Republicans and 56% of Democrats say abortion should be "legal under any circumstances."

In 1979, per Gallup, 87% of Democrats ages 30-50 and 84% of Republicans ages 30-50 were married. That's a difference of 4 points.

In 2024, 49% of Democrats and 67% of Republicans ages 30-50 were married. That's a difference of 18 points.

The Institute for Family Studies reports that "Conservative women born between 1975-1979 -- women who finished having children -- have a completed family size of 2.1." For liberal woman it's 1.5.

With a national fertility rate at 1.6 -- 2.1 being the rate at which the population is not shrinking -- we have a problem.

As Trump makes more bold initiatives around the world -- not to be the world's policeman, but to protect our interests and take a stand in an increasingly dangerous world -- it must be clear what principles America stands for.

The movement of the country away from its core principles -- the movement toward big government, toward collapse of family and marriage, and loss of reverence for the sanctity of life -- is a direction that has been led by the Democratic Party.

To lead abroad, to inspire direction at home, Republicans need to be rooted in our principles.

A nation that taxes citizens' hard-earned income and allows those taxes to fund abortion is not a nation that is strong at home and that can command respect abroad.

The barn door may be open to extend the Obamacare subsidies a few years.

But if Republicans care about 2026 and after, those subsidies must be covered by the Hyde Amendment.

Star Parker is founder of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education. Her recent book, "What Is the CURE for America?" is available now. To find out more about Star Parker and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

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Copyright 2026 Creators Syndicate, Inc.

 

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