Fred Barnes
thinks that the pro-life movement has made significant gains
over the past few years. In a Weekly Standard essay
that makes a nice coda to the discussion
we had at the Spectator last week, Barnes also previews
what’s next:
The ultimate goal of pro-lifers remains what it’s always been:
overturning Roe v. Wade. They’re
reconciled to jumping through as many hoops as necessary to get
there. Americans United for Life specializes in creating model
antiabortion laws for states. It also has a strategic plan for
“reversing Roe” or “rendering it obsolete.” It starts
with “saving babies now” and preparing states for the “day
after Roe.”
AUL isn’t kidding about vitiating Roe without
overturning it. The key is to burden the abortion industry with
intrusive regulations. This amounts to using liberal means to
produce a conservative result. “When you regulate something, you
get less of it,” a pro-life leader reminds me. So precise
conditions at abortion clinics would be imposed, as Virginia did
this year. New requirements for safety, bookkeeping,
record-keeping, and reporting would be applied. That’s not all.
More laws limiting abortions would be needed, as would cultural
efforts to shrink the demand for abortions.
The informal division of labor among pro-life groups leaves SBA
with the conventional mission of electing candidates who are
pro-life to Congress and defeating those who aren’t. The group had
a sterling record in 2010, unseating 15 of the 20 Democrats who
claimed to oppose abortion but voted for Obamacare. Dannenfelser
intends to raise the bar on what’s expected from candidates SBA
supports: no more toleration of candidates who are “rhetorically
pro-life but not operationally pro-life.”
SpiralArchitect| 11.3.11 @ 4:24PM
"When you regulate something, you get less of it,"