By W. James Antle, III on 2.22.07 @ 12:08AM
Why John McCain and Mitt Romney are having trouble gaining the trust of pro-life voters.
Say you're a top-tier Republican presidential candidate whose
name isn't Rudy Giuliani. The polls are looking increasingly grim.
A survey released yesterday has the former New
York mayor more than 20 points ahead of his nearest rival. What do
you do?
Well, you might try dusting off the abortion issue to persuade a
pro-life party to turn against its pro-choice frontrunner. But that
seems to be too much for the two leading candidates nipping at
Giuliani's heels to manage.
Sen. John McCain's pro-life voting record isn't perfect -- he
has supported both federally funded fetal tissue research and
embryo-destructive experimentation -- but he has been consistent in
favoring abortion restrictions since the 1980s. He just hasn't been
especially comfortable expressing himself on social issues, and his
relations with pro-life leaders were strained by his attacks on the
religious right during the 2000 presidential race.
Campaigning in South Carolina last weekend, however, McCain
overcame his bashfulness. The senator told a crowd of 800 that he opposed the 1973
Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion. "I do not support
Roe v. Wade," McCain said. "It should be overturned."
A pretty unequivocal statement from a longtime pro-life senator.
But then the marvels of technology caught up with John McCain. The
Hotline posted a YouTube video of a 1999 McCain
appearance on CNN's Late Edition in which he said it was
"obvious" that "if we repeal Roe v. Wade tomorrow,
thousands of American young women would be performing dangerous and
illegal operations." The footage shows McCain advocating a
tolerance clause for pro-choice Republicans in the GOP
platform.
The clip was culled rather dishonestly. McCain actually
bookmarked his statement of inclusion with two separate calls for
Roe's "ultimate repeal." There is a powerful pro-life case
for pursuing legal protection of the unborn gradually and in a
manner that is consistent with low maternal abortion death rates.
Yet to activists, the senator's language sounds too much like
standard pro-choice debating points, so it becomes a liability.
And it wasn't the only time he had used such phrasing or sounded
so uncertain on Roe. In August 1999, the San Francisco
Chronicle quoted him as telling the paper's editorial board:
"I'd love to see a point where (Roe vs. Wade) is
irrelevant, and could be repealed because abortion is no longer
necessary. But certainly in the short term, or even the long term,
I would not support repeal of Roe vs. Wade, which would
then force X number of women in America to (undergo) illegal and
dangerous operations."
Of course, when it comes to verbal gymnastics on abortion McCain
is an amateur while former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney deserves
a gold medal. But that didn't stop Romney's conservative coalitions
director, Gary Marx, from attacking McCain's commitment to life.
"Ask the pro-life movement where his leadership has been in the six
years since 2000 that he's been running for president," Gary Marx
said to the Politico."What has he
done?"
That's a pretty bold question given that Marx's man was
officially pro-choice for five years after 2000 -- and at least six
years before that. In fact, Romney's abortion shift is so
complicated even his special adviser for life issues can't keep it
straight.
Consider pro-life activist James Bopp's argument on National Review Online: "In
his 1994 Senate run, Romney was endorsed by Massachusetts Citizens
for Life and kept their endorsement, even though he declared
himself to be pro-choice, because he supported parental-consent
laws, opposed taxpayer-funded abortion and mandatory abortion
coverage under a national health insurance plan, and was against
the Freedom of Choice Act, which would have codified Roe
v. Wade by federal statute."
All true. But Bopp doesn't seem to realize that Romney reversed
most of those positions over the course of the 1994 campaign. After
accepting the endorsement, Romney adviser Charles Manning told the
Boston Herald his boss actually "supports a federal health
care option that includes abortion services, would vote for a law
codifying the 1972 [sic] Roe v. Wade decision that
legalized abortion and backs federal funding for abortions as long
as states can decide they want the money."
Manning even suggested to the Boston Globe that the
largest pro-life organization in Massachusetts had endorsed Romney
because he had been pro-choice longer than Ted Kennedy. "[Kennedy]
was pro-life before Roe v. Wade and now he's changed,"
Manning explained. "Mitt has always been consistent in his
pro-choice position and that's why the group respects him." He
concluded that there were only "tiny nuances" distinguishing the
two candidates' abortion views.
By the 2002 gubernatorial election, YouTube reminds us, Romney
was denying that he had anything to do with the
Massachusetts Citizens for Life endorsement. Ruth Marcus reported that he was still equivocating as late
as 2005. That year, the 1970 switch on abortion he attributed to
his mother and a relative who died from an illegal abortion was
reversed when a doctor used the word "destroy" while describing
embryonic cloning -- a word choice the doctor in question has
disputed.
All part of the journey, one supposes.
Meanwhile, Giuliani soars despite offering social conservatives
few concessions. Perhaps the moral of the story is this: If you
can't respect life, at least try to respect pro-lifers'
intelligence.
topics:
John McCain, Abortion, Law, Supreme Court, NATO