After the failed attempt to repeal Obamacare and the blocked travel bans, United States President Donald Trump is looking for ways to appeal to his constituency and his political base without disappointing.

One controversial item that is high on his agenda is Planned Parenthood, a national network of medical centers focused on birth control and women’s healthcare; President Trump wishes to cut off funding for this clinical non-profit network mostly because it provides legal abortions.

Since the abortion issue is very controversial across all facets of American society, President Trump and his advisers have been looking into various ways of bolstering their argument against Planned Parenthood.

The bottom line is that the abortion issue alone may not convince Americans that funding should be stopped for this charity.

Trump and his advisors are looking for more political ammunition, and they may have found it in research that indicates low-income women are not really getting some of the healthcare ostensibly provided by Planned Parenthood.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has defended Planned Parenthood by explaining that they perform breast cancer screenings.

The problem with this claim is that it is not entirely correct; Planned Parenthood refers women to outside medical facilities where they can get mammograms and other diagnostics.

While it is true that Papanicolaou smear and HPV testing are available right on the premises of Planned Parenthood clinics, those are diagnostics design to detect cervical cancer.

To say that the charity performs breast cancer screenings is not true.

The latest version of the measure would cut some services to women on Medicaid, critics say. CBS 2's Dorothy Tucker reports.