By Sean Higgins on 7.28.04 @ 12:07AM
A remnant attempts to save the party from itself.
BOSTON -- As delegates gathered at Boston's Fleet Center on
Monday, a smaller group of loyal Democrats met a few blocks away at
the state capitol to mull over the party's future -- and their role
in it.
Democrats for Life of America, Inc., a pro-life group, had hoped
to have one of their own speak at the convention this year.
Instead, they were given the brush-off.
They were clearly disappointed. But they've come to expect that
kind of treatment ever since the late Pennsylvania Gov. Bob Casey
was blocked from giving a pro-life speech in 1992. For all its
rhetoric about inclusiveness, the party shuns its own pro-life
wing.
And yet these pro-life Democrats say they're not going anywhere.
Former Boston mayor and ambassador to the Vatican Raymond Flynn
said they would save the party's soul -- and perhaps it's life as
well.
"The people here in the Fleet Center are not bad people. They
just want to win elections," he told the group, which included
Eunice Shriver and Bob Casey Jr.
"We just need to prove to them that Democrats can win as
pro-lifers."
A long time ago, Democrats did.
In the 95th Congress (1977-8), the Democrats had a 292-seat
majority that included 125 pro-life Democrats. To many Democrats,
the pro-life stance it seemed a natural fit with the party's
self-image as defender of the little guy.
That changed in the 1980s when the party became pro-choice.
"Reagan Democrats" now had one more reason to join the other side.
They did and soon the party's pro-life wing began to shrink.
Today, in the 108th, the Democrats have 206 seats and about 30
pro-life Democrats. To pro-life Democrats it is not a coincidence
that the party's loss of its majority status coincided with the
disappearance of their fellow pro-lifers.
The remaining pro-lifers have tried to make this point to party
leadership, with little apparent success. They argue that if the
party would only compete for pro-life votes rather than giving them
up to the Republicans it could make inroads into "Red" Bush
states.
Democrats could even make inroads to the youth vote that
way.
MTV's Rock the Vote released a poll Monday that found that 41%
of first-time voters, an overwhelming plurality, think abortion
should be legal only "in the most extreme cases."
Another 13% want it outlawed entirely. Overall 54% of first-time
voters lean pro-life.
"It's more bad news for the pro-choice movement," said Hans
Riemer, Rock the Vote's political director.
But winning those voters would require the Democratic Party to
cross its dominant, and well-funded, pro-choice wing -- something
party leaders are not willing to do.
For example, earlier this year, Rep. Jim Oberstar (D-Minn.) and
Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.) asked DNC head Terry McAuliffe to simply
put a link on the DNC web site to DFL's website. Even a token
gesture like that was rejected.
So it's hardly surprising that a speaking role was out of the
question.
"It would have been a nice refutation of the GOP's
characterization of the Democratic Party" as too liberal, said
Massachusetts Speaker of the House Tom Finneran.
One pro-life Democrat, Georgia Sen. Zell Miller, is getting a
prime-time convention slot, only it's at the Republican
convention.
At their private event Monday, the pro-life tried to ignore
their party's snub and remain upbeat.
"Science is on our side," Finneran said. Ultrasound technology,
with its ability to look inside the womb, is changing public
opinion he said.
There are other reasons for pro-life Democrats to think they
might yet emerge from the shadows. The decision of some Catholic
bishops to refuse communion to pro-choice lawmakers has raised
alarm bells in the party.
And then there's Kerry's recent claim that despite voting
pro-choice, he is personally opposed to abortion.
"A lot of people say that," said Kristen Day, executive director
of Democrats for Life. "But he's never said that before."
UPDATE: During his pro-stem cell research speech Tuesday evening
Rep. Jim Langevin (D-R.I.) appears to have snuck in an oblique
pro-life reference.
He said: "I am fully committed to protecting life at every
stage." According to Ms. Day, he's a pro-life Democrat.
topics:
Abortion, Law