Rush: Obama's infanticide vote 'most shocking, underreported, significant story I can ever remember'
Ben Johnson
Fri Feb 24
PALM BEACH, FLORIDA, February 24, 2012, (LifeSiteNews.com) – The nation's number one talk show host drew
attention to Barack Obama's history of supporting infanticide on Friday's show.
Discussing this week's CNN debate in Mesa, Arizona, Rush Limbaugh told his listeners said the president's vote
against the Illinois version of the Born Alive Infant Protection Act in 2001, 2002, and 2003 amounted to "the most
shocking and underreported significant story I can ever remember."
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich raised the issue of Obama's support for infanticide after CNN debate moderator
John King asked the presidential hopefuls a question about birth control.
The question met with loud audience disapproval, as it was widely interpreted as intended to embarrass Rick
Santorum.
Gingrich, who replied first, objected that in 2008, "not once did anybody in the elite media ask why Barack
Obama voted in favor of legalizing infanticide."
"If we're going to have a debate about who the extremist is on these issues, it is President Obama who, as a
state senator, voted to protect doctors who killed babies who survived the abortion," Gingrich said. "It is not
the Republicans."
As a state senator, Barack Obama voted against a bill that would require abortionists to provide care to an
infant who is born alive during the course of a failed abortion. The legislation was brought forward after Jill
Stanek, a nurse at Christ Hospital in Oak Lawn, exposed abortionists' practice of abandoning babies born alive
after failed abortions, leaving them to die in a hospital utility room.
President George W. Bush signed the federal version of the Born Alive Infant Protection Act in 2002. The federal
bill passed the U.S. House in an overwhelming 380-15 vote, with a majority of outspokenly pro-abortion
representatives supporting the legislation. Even after NARAL withdrew its opposition to the federal version of
the bill, Obama had continued to oppose the state version.
"We talked about it during the 2008 campaign," Limbaugh told an audience of millions. "Nobody wanted to hear it.
The hopey-change thing was just too big of a theme."
Newt "had the courage to use the word 'infanticide,'" he said. "It's exactly what was being defended. And
unbelievable as this may sound to those of you who never heard about this, every word of it is true."
All four Republican candidates voiced their opposition to the HHS mandate, as well.
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