By W. James Antle, III on 12.15.09 @ 6:08AM
California Republicans will not avoid an abortion fight as they
try to pin down Carly Fiorina and Chuck DeVore on the issue.
In 1992, California Republicans held a blistering primary fight
between conservative Bruce Herschensohn and moderate Tom Campbell
to determine who would be their candidate in one of the state's
two Senate races that fall. The biggest issue separating them was
abortion: Herschensohn was pro-life, Campbell pro-choice
(Republicans nominated pro-choice John Seymour for the other
seat). When Herschensohn went down to defeat at the hands of
liberal Democrat Barbara Boxer, it was supposed to be a wake-up
call for Republicans.
The argument usually ran thus: The California GOP's conservative
primary electorate needs to recognize that they live in a
pro-choice state and cease their stubborn insistence on
nominating pro-life candidates for public office. This had at
least a superficial ring of truth, since polls confirmed the
state's pro-choice tilt and Democrats won most elections. Yet
ostentatiously pro-choice Republicans like Seymour and Campbell
also lost when they got their chance, suggesting that perhaps
Californians simply did not like Republicans. Since 1998, only
three have won statewide -- Arnold Schwarzenegger, who is
pro-choice, Bill Jones, who is pro-life, and Steve Poizner, who
is somewhere in between.
Abortion still divides the state party -- Poizner is already
trying to get to primary opponent Meg Whitman's right on the
issue -- but it does not divide the two Republicans running for
the right to take on Barbara Boxer this time around. Both
businesswoman Carly Fiorina and Assemblyman Chuck DeVore describe
themselves as pro-life and dismiss the idea that the issue could
doom them in 2010.
But don't expect comity in the culture wars just yet. While
Fiorina embraces the pro-life label, not everyone believes her:
the San Jose Mercury quoted unnamed "Republican
insiders" describing her as "moderate and pro-choice." In her
role as a surrogate for John McCain during the 2008 presidential
campaign, Fiorina raised pro-life eyebrows for erroneously saying
McCain had "never signed on to efforts to overturn Roe v.
Wade." She was later quoted as saying, "For those women who
are a single-issue voter on the subject of abortion, John McCain
won't get their vote, and I accept that."
Such statements can be exaggerated or taken out of context. In
the very same interview where she gave that last quote, Fiorina
also clearly said, "I personally happen to be pro-life. John
McCain has a very long pro-life record and he won't walk away
from that record." But for pro-life activists, the devil is in
the details.
"I believe that life begins at conception and I am personally
pro-life, except, of course, in the case of rape or incest or
health of the mother," Fiorina said at the start of her Senate
run. "In terms of government policy, I believe we need to do what
we can to reduce the number of abortions and I think we need to
provide alternatives to women to abortion, such as, for example,
making adoption more accessible." She has also "absolutely" said,
"I oppose the use of federal funding for abortion."
Discerning pro-lifers will ask: Why "personally"? How narrowly or
broadly does she define the health exception? What will her
abortion-reduction strategy entail in a climate where many
policies opposed by pro-lifers are pursued in the name of that
goal? Fiorina may find that navigating the code and buzzwords
associated with the abortion debate is more troublesome than
simply adopting the pro-life or pro-choice moniker.
Expect Chuck DeVore to seize on these doubts about Fiorina's
pro-life bona fides as he seeks to challenge her from the right
in the Republican primary. While Fiorina is relatively new to
politics, DeVore as a legislator has had a chance to vote
repeatedly on abortion-related issues and has compiled a pro-life
record. But once again, the devil is in the details.
DeVore voted to approve the California state budget in
2005 and
2008. Both budgets contained funding for Medi-Cal, the
state's Medicaid program. Medi-Cal uses state money to subsidize
abortion (the use of federal funds for elective abortion within
Medicaid is barred under the Hyde Amendment). Both times DeVore
voted yes the budgets passed easily, but with non-trivial numbers
of GOP no votes. Both times, efforts to separate out the abortion
funding from the budgets had already been defeated when the final
vote took place. Consequently, the budgets as passed contained
abortion funding.
As of 2004, Medi-Cal funded nearly 40 percent of all abortions
performed in California. According to the Women's Health Rights
Coalition, that amounts to "an estimated 90,946 induced abortions
out of the total 236,000 performed." Roughly $33 million is spent
funding abortions. Wynette Sills of the Coalition to Eliminate
Abortion Funding told a pro-life
website that 25 percent of the money goes to Planned Parenthood,
despite the abortion provider's reported $1 billion in revenues.
At the national level, the health care debate illustrates the
importance of having a precise understanding of how legislation
could result in taxpayer funding of abortion.
The DeVore campaign rejects the budget votes as an issue. "The
bottom line is this: Chuck DeVore is a pro-life leader in
California politics, and vastly stronger on the issue than his
primary opponent, Carly Fiorina," DeVore communications director
Joshua Trevino told TAS. "The fact is that no meaningful
California pro-life group considers a budget vote to be a litmus
test -- which is why the staunchly pro-life CA Republican
Assembly and the Capitol Resource Institute have given DeVore
successive 100% ratings year after year."
"Given his actual record, and given the repeated imprimatur of
pro-life activist groups, any critique of Chuck DeVore as somehow
insufficiently pro-life is weak indeed," Trevino continued,
contrasting this with a primary opponent he says was "AWOL from
every single pro-life fight in California, from parental
notification to the very budget debates you mention."
With Carly Fiorina and Chuck DeVore both running as pro-life
candidates, this isn't the Herschensohn-Campbell battle of
seventeen years ago. But expect California Republicans to have an
abortion fight during this primary race nevertheless.
topics:
Abortion, U.S. Senate Races 2010, Carly Fiorina