01 6A - Wednesday, September 28, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com House panel asks Planned Parenthood to hand over records PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP President Barrack Obama greets supporters after speaking at a Democratic fundraiser at the Paramount Theater, Sunday, Sept. 25, in Seattle, Wash. Obama grapples with memoriesI of 2008 hope GOP questions spending of public funds on abortions WASHINGTON (AP) - A Republican-led House panel has asked the Planned Parent- hood Federation of America to hand over more than a decade's worth of documents in a probe of whether the organiza- tion improperly spends public money on abortions. Democrats and Planned Parenthood supporters say the 90-year-old group is audited regularly and publicly and that the probe is the latest Republi- can run at shutting it down. At issue is whether Ameri- can taxpayers are unwittingly underwriting elective abor- tions, in violation of federal law. Absolutely not, says Planned Parenthood. But congressional Republicans are not so sure. Planned Parenthood, the nation's largest provider of abortions and an array of other health services, is at the cen- ter of the fight. Republicans portray the organization as primarily focused on perform- ing abortions, and charge that taxpayer funds for family plan- ning and other health care ser- vices indirectly subsidized that role. They've launched multiple efforts this year alone to bar federal money from the group as long as it provides abortions. The Planned Parenthood Fed- eration of America - the formal name of the organization - says taxpayer money is strictly separated. "The committee has ques- tions about the policies in place and actions undertaken by PPFA and its affiliates relat- ing to its use of federal funding and its compliance with federal restrictions on the funding of abortions," Rep. Cliff Stearns, chairman of the House Energy and Commerce investigations subcommittee, wrote in a Sept. 15 letter to Planned Parenthood President Cecile Richards. Due by the end of the month: internal audits of how much Planned Parenthood received and spent in government money from 1998 to 2010. Stearns also requests any state audits of PPFA for the last 20 years that have not been made public, as well as a description for how "segregation between family planning and abortion services is accomplished," and how the practice is monitored for com- pliance. "The American taxpayer does not want to be in the business of abortion, and this investigation is an important first step toward ending public funding of the nation's largest abortion provider," said Char- maine Yoest, president and CEO of Americans United for Life, which earlier this year conducted and presented to Stearns' committee its own study on Planned Parenthood. Democrats say the group's 800-plus health centers nation- wide provide an array of servic- es, from screenings for cancer to testing for sexually transmit- ted diseases. Abortion, they say, is only one of Planned Parent- hood's services. The law bars the group from usingtax money for the procedure. They cast Stearns as only the latest Republican to assail women's health services. The group is audited regularly by the Department of Health and Human Services' inspector general and state Medicaid pro- grams,and the results are made public, the Democrats said in their response yesterday. "These audits have not iden- tified any pattern of misuse of federal funds, illegal activity or other abuse that would justify a broad and invasive congressio- nal investigation," Democratic Reps. Henry Waxman of Cali- fornia and Diana DeGette of Colorado wrote. Planned Parenthood's Rich- ards said in a statement that the investigation was really aimed at "undermining access to care." Nonetheless, the group was responding to Stearns' let- ter "in a timely manner." Abortion politics nearly scuttled President Barack Obama's health care overhaul in the final hours of debate last year, and has popped up in the budget fights that have domi- nated the new, more conserva- tive Congress since January. President works to regain momentum, starting in Denver DENVER (AP) - Remember when Barack Obama first ran for president and people were really into him? Obama remembers it, too; but not the same way some of his supporters do. Bidding for re-election in tough economic times, Obama says there is some "revision- ist history" going on about how great that first race was. His strategy is to bring disil- lusioned supporters back into the fold by addressing their feel- ings of discouragement head- on and reminding them they signed up for something tough to begin with - even if now they just remember the "hope" and "change" posters. And he's telling them bluntly they will have to be even more determined and find different sources of inspiration this time around since he is not the fresh face. "I'm grayer, I'm all dinged up," Obama told a Hollywood fund- raiser crowd Monday night. "And those old posters everybody has got in their closet, they're all dog-eared and faded. And so the energy of 2008 is goingto have to be generated in a different way." The approach is one Obama almost has to take if he's to rec- oncile memories of his historic 2008 campaign with the dispir- iting realities of governing a divided country amid a sagging economy and unemployment topping 9 percent. Yesterday, Obama was in Denver, the city where he accepted the Democratic presi- dential nomination three years ago before an adoring crowd of 80,000. Tuesday's event, a speech at a high school to pro- mote his jobs plan, wasn't an attempt to recreate that specta- cle or recapture that energy. But the contrast did under- score how much harder it can be to inspire as president than as candidate. He was pushing a nearly $450 billion jobs plan that has little if any chance of getting through a divided Congress. It's a far cry from three years ago in Denver when the presi- dent told the huge crowd, "It's time for us to change America." Comments from people waiting to hear Obamaspeak yesterdayday showed how much has changed. "It doesn't feel the same. Peo- ple aren't excited," said Adrienne Hernandez, 26, an electrical engineering student in Denver. "There's a lot of fear, a lot of anx- iety. It's totally different." Brooke White, 36, a profes- sional blackjack dealer from Denver, said she was an Obama volunteer in 2008. "I'll volunteer again, but I'm not as into it, I'll tell you that," White said. "I'm not so excited, I'm not as motivated. I worked so hard four years ago. I don't have the same motivation to get out there and work every single day like I did in '08." It would have been tough for the realities of the Obama presi- dency, with its deal-making and compromises, to compete with the inspirations of the Obama campaign under the best of circumstances. He's encoun- tered far from the best, with the tough economy and Republicans attacking him at every turn. But for Obama, the disillu- sionment goes even deeper than the political reality that govern- ing is harder and uglier than campaigning. , Obama's campaign was pre- mised on the notion of uniting the country and changing the very way Washington worked. But that's something he's acknowledged he failed to do. 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