WASHINGTON — Hopes for passage of a popular bill to fight human trafficking were all but dashed Wednesday after the debate devolved into a partisan fight over restricting abortions.
What should have been an easy legislative win in Congress turned into a finger-pointing blame game. Democrats say Republicans slipped the abortion provision in without their knowledge; Republicans counter that Democrats should have been paying closer attention to the legislative language.
Now, the bipartisan bill that would establish a $30 million victims fund and provide law enforcement tools to clamp down on human trafficking appears headed for defeat.
“All of a sudden, some of our colleagues woke up, I guess, yesterday morning, and said … they were outraged,” said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, the bill’s author. “It would be a real shame and a tragedy if something that was designed to help these vulnerable kids was killed here in the Senate.”