I Prayed have prayed
Lord, we pray that the Mexico City policy preventing U.S. funds supporting abortion would stand.
Reading Time: 3 minutes

United States Agency for International Development (USAID) v. Alliance for Open Society International, Inc. (AOSI), a case heard by the U.S. Supreme Court this week, has not garnered much attention from pro-life advocates — but it should. . .

Watch as Jeanne Mancini, President of March for Life, shares answered prayer on our April First Friday Prayer Call. Click below to view:

Currently the PLGHP covers approximately $9 billion in foreign assistance and requires that “all NGOs receiving U.S. aid to refrain from performing or promoting abortion as a method of family planning in developing nations.”

Similar to the PLGHP, the policy in question in USAID v. AOSI deals with U.S. funding of overseas NGOs. It is being argued in the context of a public health program introduced by George W. Bush as the President’s Plan for HIV/AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and funded by Congress in 2003 under the name of “The Leadership Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Act.”

The program was designed to combat the world’s gravest diseases at a time when HIV/AIDS had taken the lives of more than 25 million people worldwide. By allocating billions of dollars to international HIV/AIDS relief, PEPFAR became the largest international public health program of its kind ever created. . .

PEPFAR, or, the Leadership Act required that recipients of funds meet two conditions: First, they must agree that no funds will be used to promote or advocate the legalization or practice of prostitution, and second, they must have a policy explicitly stating that they oppose prostitution. In 2013 the Supreme Court ruled that the latter of these two requirements — that an organization must have an anti-prostitution policy in place — violated First Amendment principles.

The question before the Supreme Court now is whether this same first amendment protection extends to foreign affiliates of U.S.-based NGOs.

This threat is not merely theoretical. During oral argument in this case, Justice Kavanaugh asked, “I’m interested in the implications of our decision in this case. In particular, if the government were to lose this case, would any other programs or statutes be invalidated or called into question by such a decision?”

The Solicitor General replied that it would affect the Mexico City policy in particular. “I think that there would be real concerns about that … I do think it would call into question a number of different statutory and administrative regulations of foreign speech that like — that likely couldn’t be applied domestically … It’s, in fact, commonplace for Congress and the Executive Branch to condition foreign aid to entities abroad on certain policy objectives, such as opposing terrorism or supporting women’s rights or opposing apartheid, or, in the case of the Mexico City policy, taking certain positions on abortion …”

In what was hopefully not a sign of what is to come, Justice Sotomayor replaced the word “prostitution” with “abortion.” She asked, “Mr. Michel, the long and the short of this is that a domestic agency that does not want to adopt a policy of being opposed to abortion but who is willing to not support it in a program, they can’t receive funds unless they affiliate with someone who will make the statement for them, correct?”

On its face this case is about whether foreign organizations have constitutional rights, but it could impact whether the American people through their elected representatives are able to withhold money from foreign entities that are doing things they don’t support. The PLGHP is popular policy with Americans. In fact, recent Marist polling shows that the large majority of Americans — 75% — are not in favor of funding for abortions overseas. We hope that the Court avoids a decision that would compromise this long-standing and popular pro-life policy.

(Excerpt from The Washington Times. Article by Jeanne Mancini.)

Comments (3) Print

Comments

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Rosalee
May 13, 2020

Maybe this is a good reason, why the church should step up to help, and not do so through the government, or agencies that do not uphold our values. If the church is giving the money, it should have every right to make stipulations for how the money they give is used.

1
Darlene Estlow
May 13, 2020

Father, I pray that as the Supreme Court debates and decides this issue, may they not approve abortion or protitution. May righteousness prevail that we would not have to support other nations in sinful behaviors

4
Barbara Kuhls
May 13, 2020

It should be obvious that you don’t tax Americans to pay other governments to participate in what Americans have deemed through legislation to be illegal here. I.e. prostitution. As for abortion, if 75% of Americans oppose taxpayers funding it domestically, why would a country grossly in debt pay for it abroad on the backs of Americans struggling to feed their families? This is not about “withholding “ .. it is about saying no to increasing national debt to pay for sin in other countries. Nothing in our constitution prevents us from saying no to foreign aid, or applying restrictions to aid given.

7

Partner with Us

Intercessors for America is the trusted resource for millions of people across the United States committed to praying for our nation. If you have benefited from IFA's resources and community, please consider joining us as a monthly support partner. As a 501(c)3 organization, it's through your support that all this possible.

Dave Kubal
IFA President
Become a Monthly Partner

Share

Click below to share this with others

Log in to Join the Conversation

Log in to your IFA account to start a discussion, comment, pray, and interact with our community.