By W. James Antle, III on 2.26.03 @ 12:04AM
If ever Dennis Kucinich had a chance to bolt from the pro-life camp it was in 1998, when he ran against Randall Terry's man.
A friend of mine makes it a point to thank politicians who share
his commitment to the pro-life cause whenever the opportunity
presents itself. A few years ago, he approached his congressman,
Dennis Kucinich, and thanked him for standing up for the unborn
despite the pressures of belonging to a pro-choice party.
"I am very consistent on this issue," Kucinich replied. "I don't
eat meat."
Such is the length to which one must go these days to reconcile
progressivism with opposition to abortion. Pro-life Democrats are
not exactly unheard of in Ohio -- Tony Hall represented a
congressional district including Dayton for two decades and Tim
Ryan succeeded Jim Traficant in the 2002 election. Even some of the
pro-choice Democrats representing Ohio in Congress, such as Rep.
Marcy Kaptur and former Rep. Traficant, have a record of supporting
moderate abortion restrictions.
Yet pro-life Democrats far enough to the left to chair the
Congressional Progressive Caucus are as uncommon in Ohio as
elsewhere and thus tend to attract attention. Now vying to be the
left's "peace" candidate for the Democratic presidential
nomination, Kucinich has come to find this attention unwelcome and
the anomaly of being a pro-life leftist too much for him. In the
ignoble tradition of Ted Kennedy, Jesse Jackson, Richard Gephardt
and Al Gore he has apparently decided to jettison his old views in
favor of the Democratic Party orthodoxy.
Rather unaccountably, Kucinich argues that he has done no such
thing, that there is no discrepancy between his now-rabid
pro-choice position and his voting record. When confronted with the
fact that this record earned him a 90 percent National Right to
Life Committee rating in his first term and a 95 percent rating in
his second -- with the imperfections attributable to his support of
the Shays-Meehan campaign finance reform bill, not any directly
abortion-related vote -- he responds that this shows he was
pro-choice but opposed to taxpayer funding of abortion. However,
his votes for the partial-birth abortion ban and the Unborn Victims
of Violence Act went beyond opposition to publicly funded abortion
to support for legal protection of pre-born life.
The main advantage Kucinich has in his efforts to bob and weave
on the abortion issue is that during his time in Congress, the
pro-life movement has focused on incremental reforms rather than
sweeping changes like the human life amendment. While he is on
record affirming his belief in the sanctity of human life and that
life begins at conception, he has never had to vote on whether
Roe v. Wade should stand -- although according to the
Katha Pollitt column that Sean
Higgins credits in part for his shift, he did tell Planned
Parenthood that he disagreed with the substance of the decision in
1996. Nevertheless, he can somewhat plausibly claim to have never
been a hard-line pro-lifer because he has never had to vote on the
movement's ultimate goals.
His 1998 Republican challenger's position was far less
ambiguous. Joe Slovenec was a dedicated pro-lifer active in
Operation Rescue, the controversial antiabortion group known for
its acts of civil disobedience near abortion clinics. Slovenec
himself had been arrested in clinic protests.
After a third-party bid for the U.S. Senate in 1994, in which he
ran against Republican Mike DeWine's support for rape and incest
exceptions to a general abortion ban, Slovenec was one of a
half-dozen hard-right conservative candidates for Congress in 1998
that called themselves the Patrick Henry Men. Led by Operation
Rescue founder Randall Terry, the Patrick Henry Men were united by
a platform that included abolition of the federal income tax, an
end to federal welfare programs, gun rights -- and no-exceptions
opposition to abortion.
If ever there was an opportunity for Kucinich to clarify his
abortion views by asserting his belief in the right to choose, and
for pro-life activists to rally behind one of their own as a purer
alternative to the Democratic incumbent, it was during the 1998
campaign. Yet neither happened during this race. Kucinich never
assailed his challenger's abortion stance; instead his campaign
played up his own pro-life voting record to like-minded voters.
Moreover, the Slovenec campaign workers I knew at the time were
livid that some pro-lifers were satisfied with Kucinich's record.
They were especially concerned that the tendency of organizations
to favor incumbents would cost their candidate major pro-life
endorsements. Their worry was not entirely misplaced.
Ohio Right to Life, the state's largest and most important
pro-life organization, stayed neutral in the race. Kucinich, who
had narrowly ousted incumbent Republican Martin Hoke two years
before, defeated Slovenec by a two to one margin.
Was neutrality a mere concession to political reality, a way to
avoid alienating a sometime ally by backing a long-shot challenger?
In fact, Kucinich has actively competed for pro-life voters even in
campaigns where he was considered a safe bet for reelection. He
responded to Ohio Right to Life's 2000 candidate survey (which he
declined to formally fill out) with a letter in which he stated, "I
share your pro-life views." He went on to talk about the pro-life
votes he cast in Congress and his support for abortion alternatives
and means of avoiding unplanned pregnancies, including abstinence.
This was his last campaign before he began the long march away from
his previous position.
Kucinich now presents voters with the following dilemma: Which
is worse -- a candidate who abandons his convictions or one who
refuses even to admit that he has done so?
topics:
Abortion