The New Hampshire Executive Council on August 5 denied a contract to Planned Parenthood of Northern New England that would have given PPNNEÂ $638,900 over a two-year period. The vote follows the release of the fifth video by the Center for Medical Progress showing Planned Parenthood personnel in other states procuring body parts of aborted children and discussing pricing for various specimens.
Councilor Chris Sununu (R-Newfields), who had declined before the meeting to indicate how he would vote, opposed the contract. He had supported a Planned Parenthood contract in 2011. On Wednesday, he joined Councilors Joe Kenney (R-Union) and David Wheeler (R-Milford) in the majority. Councilors Colin Van Ostern (D-Concord) and Christopher Pappas (D-Manchester) supported the contract with PP.
Governor Maggie Hassan said before the vote, âIâm sure Planned Parenthood would review its operations if this was voted down.â That statement was missing from her official response after the vote, in which she proclaimed herself âincredibly disappointedâ by the Councilâs decision. âIt is clear that todayâs vote is the result of an ideological and political attack against Planned Parenthood and a womanâs right to make her own healthcare decisions âŠThe councilâs vote to defund Planned Parenthood will hurt the health and economic well-being of thousands of Granite Staters.â
The Governor’s official statement made no reference to the fact that the Council at the same meeting approved family planning contracts with three other agencies, two of them abortion providers. All the family planning contracts had been presented to the Council in a single package before Kenney asked that the contracts be unbundled, allowing action on one to leave others unaffected.
In New Hampshire, the Governor has no veto power over an Executive Council vote.
In the discussion preceding the vote, Sununu said âIâm pro-choice and I support Planned Parenthood, but in my district, women have no [other] choice.â He unsuccessfully urged Hassan and his fellow Councilors to âtake a step backâ and support a study of health care options in Sununuâs southeastern New Hampshire district. He said he got calls from constituents who wanted family planning services but not at Planned Parenthood. He also expressed concern about activities at other Planned Parenthood affiliates documented in the CMP videos, which were dismissed by Hassan, Van Ostern and Pappas (in identical language) as âheavily edited.â âIâve watched that video cover to cover with no edits,â countered Sununu. âIâm pro-choice, but thatâs not the issue here.â
Kenney acknowledged that he would vote against the PP contract because of the revelations in the CMP videos. âIâm not comfortable voting for anything with Planned Parenthoodâs name on it. And the people against this contract that I got calls from were women.â
Pappas said it would be âinhumaneâ to deny PP its contract, and he criticized reliance on the CMP videos. Van Ostern called opposition to the contract âideology.â
Wheeler reminded the Governor that he had called on her earlier in the week to order an investigation into PPNNE. âYou canât divorce whatâs going on nationally from Planned Parenthood of Northern New England.â
Planned Parenthood New Hampshire Action Fund held a rally in front of the State House before the vote. The group posted an online statement before the vote warning that health care for 12,000 women would be at risk if the contract was denied. The proposed contract amount over two years was roughly two-thirds of what PPNNE spent on fundraising in 2014, or about 40% of what it spent on public policy the same year.  PPNNE has also strongly denied that it is involved in what it calls âvoluntary fetal tissue donation.”
Planned Parenthood of Northern New Englandâs PAC and Action Fund spent more than $15,700 to support Hassanâs 2014 gubernatorial campaign. The same groups spent $30,400 on Executive Council races.
Photo of Executive Council meeting by Kevin Avard.
Cross posted from Leaven for the Loaf. Tweets from the August 5 vote may be viewed @leaven4theloaf.