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Hunter Baker: Erasing Henry Hyde

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WORLD Radio - Hunter Baker: Erasing Henry Hyde

An Illinois county board tries to cancel a pro-life legacy


Former U.S. House of Representatives Judiciary Committee Chairman Henry Hyde, R-IL, during a press conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. on September 28, 1998. Getty Images / Luke Frazza / AFP

NICK EICHER, HOST: Today is Tuesday, April 1st. Good morning! This is The World and Everything in It from listener-supported WORLD Radio. I’m Nick Eicher.

MARY REICHARD, HOST: And I’m Mary Reichard. WORLD Opinions contributor Hunter Baker now on the lasting legacy of a pro-life champion.

HUNTER BAKER: In February, members of the DuPage County board in Illinois voted to remove longtime Congressman Henry Hyde’s name from the county courthouse. To my knowledge, this is the first time a name has been removed from a government building for a person whose primary achievement was pro-life legislation.

Who was Henry Hyde? He was a member of Congress representing a suburban district in Chicago from 1975-2007. Although he never ascended to a greater office, Henry Hyde’s name was attached to some of the most important legislation of the last 50 years. His Hyde amendment passed in 1976. It prohibited the use of federal funds to pay for abortions except in certain circumstances such as protecting the life of the mother. The legislation was historic in its impact because it represented the first reversal for pro-abortion policy after the sweeping decision of the Supreme Court in Roe v. Wade. Through Congress, Americans were able to draw a line so as to limit the federal government’s support of abortion. It was important to do so because abortions soared despite the belief of some abortion advocates that the procedure would be little-used given the availability of the birth control pill.

While it was Ronald Reagan who emphatically made the Republican party a pro-life party it was Hyde who made the first big move. Until the Court overruled Roe with its Dobbs decision, the Hyde amendment was a staple of the national debates over abortion. It stood as a kind of marker indicating that while abortion was permitted as a constitutional right, it was more tolerated by the nation than enthusiastically endorsed. Hyde’s amendment was both morally right and politically brilliant.

Now, Hyde’s name comes off of a county courthouse. As the Wall Street Journal pointed out, this is no removal of a former Confederate or proponent of southern segregation. Henry Hyde’s signature contribution to American public affairs was preventing federal money from being used to fund abortions. Joe Biden supported the Hyde amendment for nearly four decades. Hillary Clinton’s running mate Tim Kaine, U.S. senator from Virginia, had also been a supporter of the amendment. It looks as though a blue-leaning county now finds it acceptable to remove the name of a man who successfully authored an abortion limitation once supported by some of the biggest names in American politics, left and right. Given that the removal of a name conveys a sense of real dishonor, this is a moment that should not pass lightly.

There are some important responses to the removal of Hyde’s name. First, there is nothing dishonorable about Henry Hyde’s career as a pro-life stalwart. On the contrary, the measure he authored gained the support of many major American politicians. Second, there is something painfully partisan about going around to various edifices and wiping out names of people who no longer fit the electoral profile of the area.

The assumption would seem to be that ardent pro-life leadership of the type Hyde embodied somehow doesn’t accord with that Obama-esque arc of history that bends toward justice.

But I think the board members of DuPage County are the ones who have failed to see far enough to discern the arc of just sentiments and action. Abortion no longer has the prestige of the Supreme Court behind it, and that’s important.

And no matter how many short-term victories contribute to the seeming triumph of abortion rights advocates, I believe the longer the issue stands before us the more likely it is that we will confront the reality. We cannot continue to sustain the illusion that one child has rights and the other does not merely because he or she is wanted by his or her parents. Henry Hyde is likely to see his pro-life reputation grow as we stride into the future.

I’m Hunter Baker.


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