The OPM, following the overturning of Roe v. Wade, which legalized abortion nationwide in 1973, released guidance for federal employees using sick leave crossing state lines for “medical care.”
Rubio wrote in his letter, “It is obvious given the timing of the announcement that the purpose of the OPM guidance is to facilitate federal employees traveling out-of-state to obtain an abortion.”
The OPM document omits words such as “abortion” and “reproductive health,” Rubio noted, and instead says, “an employee may find it necessary to travel longer distances, including out of state, to obtain medical care” and “[i]n such instances, sick leave may be used to cover necessary travel time.”
“One is left to believe these phrases were intentionally omitted in this guidance by lawyers in the executive branch to circumvent Congressionally-mandated Hyde protections,” the senator wrote.
He cited President Joe Biden’s having said that “if any state or local official, high or low, tries to interfere with a woman’s exercising her basic right to travel [for abortion], I will do everything in my power to fight that deeply un-American attack.”
The Hyde Amendment was first introduced in 1976, and has been part of federal budgets every year since. It must be attached each year to federal budget bills. Biden excluded the Hyde Amendment from his budget request to Congress for the 2022 fiscal year.