Re: federal funding of Planned Parenthoood and abortion, I know
that Joseph Lawler never
expected better of Scott Brown, but I did. And I suspect that
many Massachusetts voters did as well.
Sure, I understand that Brown faces reelection next year in
overwhelmingly liberal Democrat Massachusetts. No one expects him
to be a stalwart advocate for unborn children. But is it really
asking too much for him to oppose appropriating taxpayer funds to
subsidize abortion?
For the longest time, after all, that was the common ground
shared by pro-life advocates and pro-choice “moderates” within the
Republican Party. The latter would support abortion “rights,” but
promised not to use taxpayer funds to subsidize or promote
abortion.
But now, apparently, even that fair-minded compromise has been
discarded. You not only have a “right” to abortion, you also have a
“right” to have that abortion paid for by the taxpayer.
Yet as Jim Antle points
out, when Brown ran for the Senate he “specifically opposed
federal funding for abortion.”
As Hot Air’s AllahPundit
asks, the question now is: Has Brown gone too far? Has he done
too much to appease the Left, such that conservatives now have no
choice but to oppose him, or at least to sit on their hands come
the 2012 election?
I’m not sure. Maybe. At some point, after all, conservatives
must conclude that it is better to lose on principle than to win by
jettisoning core beliefs.
On the other hand, Brown is a smart pol who seems always to give
himself wiggle room.
For example, with respect to Planned Parenthood, as AllahPundit
observes, Brown says he is in search of a “compromise” measure. In
fact, he initially “voted in favor of the House GOP proposal that
would have made the cuts…”
I’m not sure what such a “compromise” measure would entail. As I
say, the real and longstanding compromise involves supporting (or
at least tolerating) abortion “rights,” while opposing taxpayer
funding of abortion. Anything less than that strikes me as an
unacceptable sellout.