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Title: Why the GOP Isn’t as Pro-Life as You Think
Source: Slate
URL Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_ ... the_gop_s_abortion_stance.html
Published: Jan 23, 2015
Author: Betsy Woodruff
Post Date: 2015-01-23 09:07:35 by Willie Green
Keywords: None
Views: 1637
Comments: 4

How a core Republican principle got complicated.

Last October, Reince Priebus gave a speech with a conspicuous omission. Just 33 days before the midterm elections, the Republican National Committee Chairman headed to George Washington University to give a speech on the issues that bring Republicans together. Priebus ticked off a lengthy list of policy proposals that all the party’s candidates could highlight, noting that they could work for anyone, “whether you’re running for governor in New England or Congress in the South or statehouse in the West.”

The speech was highly detailed. The chairman praised specific pieces of legislation and touted the construction of the Keystone Pipeline and the passage of a Balanced Budget Amendment as issues that could unite GOP politicians. On these points and many others, Priebus was clear as glass. But on one enormous issue, the chairman was oddly opaque.

“As Republicans we’re pro-family; and we’re also pro-life,” he said, according to the transcript of his prepared remarks. “So when a woman faces an unplanned pregnancy, society should offer our support and compassion. She should know that adoption is possible. Our laws should be improved to make adoption an easier path for families who want to open their homes to children.”

And that was it. The GOP is pro-life, the chairman said, so the GOP supports making adoption easier. Priebus didn’t add anything beyond that. He couldn’t have, given the reference to the party’s New England gubernatorial candidates, almost all of whom are pro-choice. As the last 24 hours have shown, anti-abortion votes are a dicey prospect for some Hill Republicans. And the Keystone Pipeline just might have broader support among Washington Republicans than the pro-life movement.

That’s not to suggest that GOP is about to become pro-choice. (That would be ludicrous.) When it comes to American politicking, the GOP is unquestionably the best hope of the pro-life movement. Priebus wrote an op-ed for LifeSiteNews that appeared on Thursday—the same day as the March for Life—that celebrated the GOP’s support for legislation restricting abortion. “We must do everything we can to protect life and defend the rights of those who can’t yet defend themselves,” he wrote. And he described himself as “a pro-life chairman of a pro-life party.” That’s true. But it’s also complicated.

When it comes to abortion, the party’s platform is unequivocal. “We support a human life amendment to the Constitution and endorse legislation to make clear that the Fourteenth Amendment’s protections apply to unborn children,” it reads. But here’s the thing: Plenty of prominent, powerful Republicans don’t buy that. A few weeks after Priebus’s George Washington University speech, pro-choice Republicans had a strong showing in the midterm elections. Charlie Baker, for example, won the governor’s race in royal blue Massachusetts by two points. And Bruce Rauner, a pro-choice, Romney-esque gubernatorial candidate, walloped Democratic incumbent Pat Quinn by nearly 5 percentage points in Illinois. In Nevada, pro-choice Gov. Brian Sandoval sailed to re-election and would likely win warm backing from national Republicans if he challenged Sen. Harry Reid. In the Senate, two Republicans—Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Mark Kirk of Illinois—have the same score of 40 percent on the National Right to Life scorecard as Reid. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, an Alaska Republican, is just 10 points ahead of them.

It’s instructive to contrast the Republican Party’s inclusivity on the issue with the Democrats’. There’s a steady trickle of Democratic state legislators joining the GOP because of the issue—see Washington state Sen. Mark Miloscia and Missouri state Rep. Linda Black—while national Republicans went out of their way to make pro-choice midterm candidates like Massachusetts’ Richard Tisei and Oregon’s Monica Wehby feel welcome in the party.

It is almost as if Republicans are taking the advice that Sen. John McCain dished out shortly after the party got spanked in the 2012 elections. The Arizona Republican went on Fox News Sunday and said that the party should “leave the issue alone” because it hurts them with young voters and women. His basic point was that Republicans should talk about how they’re pro-life, but avoid actually doing anything about it.

At the moment, this seems to be the House Republican leadership’s strategy. National Journal reported that Rep. Renee Ellmers told her colleagues that voting for the 20-week ban could hurt them with millennials. They proceeded to pull the bill at the last minute, and House leadership is currently scrambling to rewrite the language of the 20-week ban in a way more amenable to some members.

Some Hill Democrats praised the decision to scuttle the bill. Rep. Loretta Sanchez, a California Democrat, said she thinks the move is a sign the party is changing.

“I believe that they’re coming to a realization that America is a pro-choice country, that the majority of Americans realize that Roe v. Wade should stand,” she said. “So I think they’re having a conflict within their own Republican conference.”

“There are two parties within the GOP,” she added.

Rep. Trent Franks, the Arizona Republican who sponsored the bill, sounded chagrined.

“There’s no animosity or anger on my part, whatsoever, toward anyone,” he said. “I only hope now that all of us, especially on the pro-life side, will come together and do what’s necessary to move forward to affect this critically important goal of protecting pain-capable babies and their mothers from this atrocity of very late-term abortion on demand.”

He added that he was sure the bill would have passed overwhelmingly if it had gotten a vote. That’s probably true, but it never got that far.


Poster Comment:

GOP candidates always sell out to the highest bidder.
Corporate profits trump all other issues.

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#1. To: Willie Green, all (#0)

During the time the GOP had control of the entire federal government only one man wrote legislation concerning abortion. That one man was Ron Paul. The bill was called the Sanctity of Life Act. It was submitted in the 109th, 110th, 111th and 112th Congresses. Depending upon which year, it only had between 4 to 5 co-sponsors. The bill was bottled up in Republican-controlled committees and not allowed to be voted on.

Had the Republican Party really gave a damn about the genocidal murder of this nations children there would have been multiple dozens of bills at the very least and/or the leadership would have pushed an anti-abortion agenda and created a single bill that everyone would have co-signed and voted upon.

Abortion is clearly a tool used to manipulate idiots who have short memories, put words above deeds, and give partisans an excuse to vote for the "slightly to the right of the Democrats" party. The GOP is the party of baby murder just like their organized crime partners the Democrats.

Fibr Dog  posted on  2015-01-23   10:12:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: All (#1)

A vote for the GOP, just like a vote for Democrats, is a vote for infanticide. But of course, ensuring the Dems are beat is much more important than the lives of infants.

Fibr Dog  posted on  2015-01-23   10:31:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Fibr Dog (#2)

A vote for the GOP, just like a vote for Democrats, is a vote for infanticide.

Yeah, but at least the GOP pretends to be against it.

It's all a scam to keep pro-life voters on the Republican plantation.

“Truth is treason in the empire of lies.” - Ron Paul
Americans who have no experience with, or knowledge of, tyranny believe that only terrorists will experience the unchecked power of the state. They will believe this until it happens to them, or their children, or their friends.
Paul Craig Roberts

Deckard  posted on  2015-01-23   10:35:05 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Deckard (#3)

Yeah, but at least the GOP pretends to be against it.

And that's really all that is needed for the millions of partisans masquerading as Christians in this country.

Fibr Dog  posted on  2015-01-23   10:37:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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