In a renewed effort to slash federal funding from Planned Parenthood, House Republicans plan to launch a new congressional panel to investigate abortion services by the embattled women’s reproductive health organization.
Tennessee congresswoman Marsha Blackburn unveiled in a YouTube video on Saturday the party’s three-part plan to limit abortion rights, a move she said would “defend our unborn children.” Her announcement comes after the release of highly edited videos secretly recorded by an anti-abortion group showed Planned Parenthood officials discussing fetal tissue donation. The videos have triggered backlash throughout Republican and conservative circles.
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“These videos show abortion being altered. It is really sickening,” Blackburn said. “We will establish a new select subcommittee that will focus its full attention, resources and subpoena power on getting to the bottom of these horrific practices.”
Blackburn said that GOP lawmakers will pass additional pro-life measures and “redouble our efforts so that you are not forced to fund this organization.” She added that Republican leaders will activate the “reconciliation process,” a procedural tool that prevent bills from being filibustered and pass with a simple majority in the Senate.
“Twice now, Senate Democrats have blocked our efforts to restrict funding to Planned Parenthood,” Blackburn said. “They defend the organization and its practices even though they freely admit they haven’t watched the videos.”
She later invoked Pope Francis’ visit to Congress this week, when he said human life should be defended at “every state of its development.”
The GOP’s strategy is similar to move they made last year to establish a committee to probe former secretary of state and Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s handling of the September 2012 attacks in Benghazi that left four Americans dead.
It also comes as federal lawmakers continue to spar over whether Planned Parenthood should get federal funds. Democrats had repeatedly vowed to block any legislation to defund the group. President Barack Obama promised to veto any spending bill that would strip funds from the reproductive health service group, a move that could trigger a government shutdown on Oct. 1.









