WASHINGTON — Opening long-awaited congressional hearings, a top Republican said Wednesday an investigation of Planned Parenthood was intended to protect taxpayers from the kind of "horrors" suggested by secretly recorded videos of group officials discussing the sale of tissue from aborted fetuses.
In a session highlighted by partisan clashes, Democrats said the investigation by the GOP-led House Judiciary Committee was just the latest in a decades-long effort to curtail abortion rights and was based on deceptively edited videos that show no evidence of wrongdoing by Planned Parenthood.
"The goal here is to smear Planned Parenthood," said Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y. Referring to infamous 1950s hearings that featured unfounded allegations that some federal officials were communists, Nadler added, "Sen. Joseph McCarthy would be proud of this committee today."
Two months ago, a small group of anti-abortion activists began releasing videos it furtively recorded. Republicans and conservatives say those videos show Planned Parenthood was illegally selling fetal tissue for profit and violating other federal prohibitions.
Planned Parenthood and its Democratic defenders say there is no evidence of wrongdoing.
Representatives from Planned Parenthood and the Center for Medical Progress, which made the videos, did not testify.
Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., said comments by Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton that the videos were "disturbing" undermine assertions that the investigation is inappropriate.
Goodlatte said Planned Parenthood "is granted huge amounts of federal funds" and Congress must "do what we can to ensure federal taxpayers are not contributing to the sorts of horrors reflected in the undercover videos."