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Activists Hear Right Notes from White House

ByMarc J. Ambinder
January 31, 2002, 10:11 PM

A L E X A N D R I A, V a., J A N 31 -- Instead of a big name—a Bush or an Aschroft—the White House offered policy manna for conservative activists attending the Conservative Political Action Conference in Virginia Thursday.

For more than two decades, CPAC has been a sturdy oak of the conservative movement's message operation. It's where Ronald Reagan honed his skills as a political orator and where young conservatives can glom off the gleam of celebrities like Caspar Weinberger and Dr. Laura Schlessinger. This year, it's a singularly strong launch pad for the president's domestic agenda, which he outlined Tuesday during his State of the Union address.

Speaking first, Marc Racicot, the chairman of the Republican National Committee, praised the party platform—a code phrase, of sorts, and a bow in the direction of pro-lifers, who hope to keep front and center the party's staunch opposition to abortion. A Republican Party spokesman said Racicot wasn't saying anything new but was merely affirming his fidelity to the president's position on the contentious issue.

A bit later in the day, Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy G. Thompson said that the administration would spend $135 million to combat teen pregnancy. The money would fund programs that primarily stress sexual abstinence.

Most significantly, but not immediately noticed by the flock, was Thompson's announcement of a small change in regulatory language. From now on, fetuses will be classified as children for the purposes of S-CHIP, a health insurance program.

Thursday afternoon, Thompson told reporters at a Washington hospital that the policy change wasn't pro-life or pro-choice, but was merely aimed at providing prenatal care to women. But Thompson's remarks at CPAC came moments after he reaffirmed the administration's opposition to partial birth abortion and its support for parental notification laws. "Unborn children should be welcomed to life and protected in law," he said." Abortion rights groups immediately denounced the decision but other politicians who support abortion rights were more cautious, hoping that the new language would give states more flexibility to sign women up for health insurance.

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