[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 73 (Wednesday, May 13, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H2885-H2886]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IN DEFENSE OF LIFE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from West
Virginia (Mr. Mooney) for 5 minutes.
Mr. MOONEY of West Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to speak about
an issue that I care deeply about: protecting unborn babies.
Later today, this body will vote on H.R. 36, the Pain-Capable Unborn
Child Protection Act. This legislation should not be controversial. It
simply protects unborn babies that a preponderance of scientific
evidence has proven can feel pain. We are talking about the sixth month
of pregnancy.
This bill is an important step in protecting the unborn. I am a proud
cosponsor. I look forward to casting my vote in favor of the
legislation later today.
Recently, a group of students at West Virginia University made news
for courageously speaking out in defense of life at an abortion clinic
near Morgantown. I know firsthand that it is not always politically
correct to stand for your values, but we should never back down from
protecting the unborn.
I applaud these brave WVU students for their actions. Their
willingness to stand for life reminds me of my days at Dartmouth
College, when I served as the president of the Dartmouth Coalition for
Life. I remember standing in the cafeteria and handing out educational
materials about protecting the unborn and the development of life.
While I may not have won any popularity contest by standing up for my
beliefs that life is precious and abortion is wrong, I sure got my
fellow students thinking about the pro-life issue.
My pro-life commitment was cemented even further when I became a
father. I have three children. And actually today, my youngest daughter
turns 7 months old.
I am pleased to represent the State of West Virginia, where the pro-
life movement is thriving, and the rights of the unborn are being
restored. In fact, just this past February, our West Virginia State
Legislature passed our own Pain-Capable Unborn Protection Act by wide
bipartisan margins.
In the State Senate of West Virginia, the exact same bill banning
abortion after 20 weeks passed the State Senate of West Virginia by a
vote of 29-5, with 11 of 16 Democrat State senators in my State--that
is 68 percent of the Democrats--voting for the bill. In the West
Virginia State House of Delegates, the vote was 88-12; again, with two-
thirds
[[Page H2886]]
of State house members that are Democrats voting for the bill. This is
a bipartisan issue.
I am hopeful today that a strong bipartisan majority in this Chamber
will follow the example of my home State of West Virginia and pass the
Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act so these protections are
extended to unborn babies in every State in the United States.
I am honored to also be the lead cosponsor of the Life at Conception
Act, which simply clarifies that human life begins at conception.
There is no question that we, in the pro-life community, have our
work cut out for us. President Obama and most Democrats in Congress
refuse to protect life at any stage.
One of the best examples of how out of touch the other side on this
abortion issue came just a few weeks ago across the aisle in the
Senate, where Democrats were willing to block a bill aimed at
protecting victims of human trafficking simply because it included a
provision that prohibited taxpayer funding of abortion. They are the
extremists on this issue.
Look at President Obama, himself. In 2008, when he was running for
President and he was in a debate against John McCain in the Saddleback
Church forum moderated by Rick Warren, the moderator asked President
Obama when life began, and the President's response was: ``Whether
you're looking at it from a theological perspective or a scientific
perspective, answering that question with specificity, you know, is
above my pay grade.''
The President of the United States said it is above his pay grade to
say when human life begins. That is a shame.
When I ran for Congress, I made the commitment to the people of the
Second District of West Virginia that I would do everything in my power
to defend the unborn. I continue to be guided by my faith, my values,
my education, and my constituents on this issue. I look forward to
working with my colleagues to defend the innocent and give a voice to
the voiceless unborn babies.
____________________