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NYT: Democrats Weigh De-emphasizing Abortion as an Issue - Reassessing touchstone election issues
New York Times ^ | December 24, 2004 | ADAM NAGOURNEY

Posted on 12/24/2004 7:08:45 AM PST by OESY

WASHINGTON, Dec. 23 - Democratic leaders say their party needs to de-emphasize the issue of abortion rights, concerned that Republicans have hurt the Democratic Party by portraying it as an uncompromising champion of abortion.

In interviews and public appearances since Election Day, Democratic officials have said that the party should open its doors to abortion opponents and that candidates should make abortion a less central focus of future campaigns.

Party leaders said they were not abandoning their fundamental support for abortion rights, but said Democrats should consider accepting some restrictions that enjoy popular support - like parental notification when teenagers receive abortions.

The remarks, taken together, amount to a significant reassessment of a touchstone issue of the Democratic Party after an election in which President Bush won a second term and his party strengthened its hold on Congress.

The debate also comes as Democrats are reappraising the party's positions on gay marriage, another social issue with which Republicans appeared to hurt Democratic candidates in the recent elections.

On abortion, Democrats said they were particularly frustrated that Republicans portrayed them as out of step on the issue during the campaign, noting that polls show a majority of Americans support at least some access to legal abortion.

"All these issues that put us into the extreme and not the mainstream really hurt us with the heartland of the country," said Donna Brazile, a Democratic Party leader who managed Al Gore's campaign in 2000. "Even I have trouble explaining to my family that we are not about killing babies."

Howard Dean, campaigning two weeks ago in Orlando, Fla., to succeed Terry McAuliffe as Democratic national chairman, drew nods of approval from Democratic state party leaders when he urged the party to embrace Democrats who oppose abortion.

"We ought not turn our back on pro-life people, even though the vast majority of people in this party are pro-choice," Dr. Dean said. "I don't have any objection to someone who is pro-life, if they really dedicated to the welfare of children."

"If somebody is willing to stick with us who is pro-life, that means they are the right kind of pro-life person," said Dr. Dean, the former governor of Vermont. "What I don't want to do is to have a national message that makes it impossible for you to be a conservative, or to be a progressive who can't win."

And Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, said Republicans had "been successful at painting the view of the pro-choice movement as abortion on demand - and nothing can be farther from the truth."

The post-election debate that has played out as the party seeks to choose a new leader has stirred concern among abortion rights groups, which have for more than a decade embraced Democrats as partners in their movement. Some advocates said they feared they might become scapegoats as the party seeks to assess the defeats of November.

"I think it's a big mistake for Democrats to think they can win politically by moving away from a pro-choice stand," said Nancy Keenan, president of Naral Pro-Choice America. "It's time for Democrats to stop playing the defensive role on this issue and of doing a better job of showing how extreme the other side really is."

Gloria Feldt, the president of Planned Parenthood, said Democrats "need to stop allowing the extreme, anti-choice right wing of the Republican Party to paint them into a corner where all they talk about is abortion. We have the high ground here if we focus our policy and our discussion on the prevention of unintended pregnancies."

But Democratic leaders said they were concerned that their candidates - in particular John Kerry - were perceived as morally untroubled about the issue.

"We let the Republicans define us as the abortion any time, anywhere party," said Gordon Fischer, the departing Democratic chairman of Iowa, a state where Mr. Kerry suffered one of his more frustrating losses to President Bush. "The Republicans get by as targeting us as the doctrinaire party, when they are the doctrinaire party. "

Howard Wolfson, a Democratic consultant and adviser to abortion rights groups and Mr. Kerry's presidential campaign, said the party had to rethink how it talked about the issue.

"The majority of Americans are pro-choice and yet a majority of Americans just voted for a president who wants to overturn Roe v. Wade," Mr. Wolfson said.

"There is a tremendous disconnect there," he continued. "Either we're going to begin talking about this a different way and making our arguments effectively, or we're going to keep losing."

Simon Rosenberg, the president of the moderate New Democratic Network and also a candidate to lead the Democratic Party, said: "Being pro-choice is not only a majority position in the party, it's a majority position in the country. I don't think we have to run away from choice as a party, but I do think we have to explain our position that we want to make abortion safe, legal and rare." That formulation was a trademark phrase of former President Bill Clinton.

Some Democrats from more conservative states have already found their own way on the issue voting in recent years to ban a procedure that its opponents call partial-birth abortion.

Timothy J. Roemer, a former congressman from Indiana and a member of the Sept. 11 commission, is one of them and he is running for leader of the party, making no secret of his views.

"I personally don't think that we should have late-term abortions or partial-birth abortions," Mr. Roemer said on CNN recently. "I think that's a moral blind spot."

In addition, some Democrats said that the changing environment might make Congressional Democrats less likely to go full force in trying to block any Supreme Court appointment solely on the basis of abortion if the nomination did not change the current 5-4 balance on the court.

Mr. Wolfson said that if Mr. Bush tried to replace a justice who supports Roe v. Wade with one who opposes it, than an all-out battle would begin. But he and other Democrats said that would not necessarily be the case if the president sought to replace one justice who opposes Roe v. Wade with another.

This emerging debate is the latest fallout from Mr. Kerry's loss as Democrats argue the reasons for his defeat. In doing so, the party is struggling to balance the views of its most loyal members with the need to block Republicans from broadening their appeal through cultural issues. Senator Tom Daschle of South Dakota, the Senate minority leader, lost re-election after a campaign in which his opponent, John Thune, spotlighted Mr. Daschle's support of abortion rights

Evidence of the reappraisal has come in the rolling post-mortems of Mr. Kerry's loss, and the campaigning now going on to replace Mr. McAuliffe. Here in Washington, Senate Democrats elected as their leader Harry Reid of Nevada, an opponent of abortion, without a murmur of objection. It was Mr. Reid and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the House minority leader, who first pressed Mr. Roemer's candidacy for Democratic leader.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: California; US: Iowa; US: Nevada; US: South Dakota; US: Washington
KEYWORDS: abortion; babies; brazile; bush; childwelfare; clinton; daschle; democrats; dnc; dncchairman; feinstein; feldt; gaymarriage; gordonfisher; gore; howarddean; kerry; lostdems; lyingliars; mcauliffe; morality; nancykeenan; napalminthemorning; naral; newabolitionists; newdemocratic; now; parentalnotification; partialbirth; partyofthehindparts; pelosi; pest; plannedparenthood; portrayals; prochoice; prolife; reid; republicans; roemer; roevwade; scapegoats; simonrosenberg; teenagers; thune; values; wolfson; wot
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To: LibFreeOrDie
Amazing isn't it? This is the part that gets me...

Abortion was legal in all 50 states prior to Roe v. Wade in cases of danger to the life of the woman.

41 posted on 12/24/2004 10:27:52 AM PST by TigersEye (Free speech! It's not just for Democrats anymore!)
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To: Ghengis
And Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, said Republicans had "been successful at painting the view of the pro-choice movement as abortion on demand - and nothing can be farther from the truth."

I know this to be false, based on a Planned Parenthood mailer I received several years ago. It stated that their goal for the year was to achieve "unrestricted access for abortions after 28 weeks."

42 posted on 12/24/2004 10:27:55 AM PST by LibFreeOrDie (A Freep a day keeps the liberals away.)
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To: goldstategop
"Lack of principles on the other side got them where they wanted and now they're telling the public what they think it wants to hear."

- Exactly. You just can't "hide" a major plank in your Party platform and pretend to the voters that it's no longer something that's important. The Dems have to purge it's senior ranks of all the pro abortion activists and publicly distance itself from associated groups such as Planned Parenthood as a start in convincing voters that it's a real policy shift and not just an election tactic.
43 posted on 12/24/2004 6:58:14 PM PST by finnigan2
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To: OESY

Howard Dean is a former Planned Parenthood abortion doctor. That says it all.


44 posted on 12/24/2004 7:25:32 PM PST by Holden Magroin
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To: OESY
Democratic officials have said that the party should open its doors to abortion opponents and that candidates should make abortion a less central focus of future campaigns.

Excellent!

This proves that uncompromising opposition to abortion works. Playing footsie with murderers doesn't.

45 posted on 12/24/2004 7:32:56 PM PST by Aquinasfan (Isaiah 22:22, Rev 3:7, Mat 16:19)
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To: finnigan2

They're stuck. They can't abandon their "Conshituencies"; all they can do is try to find a way to respin themselves in the media to "reposition" themselves.

We shouldn't even be debating whether they'll actually change - they don't deserve credit for being capable of change, because they're not. Instead, we should be strategizing what we can do to force them to continue to tear themselves apart internally.


46 posted on 12/24/2004 11:46:40 PM PST by fire_eye (Socialism is the opiate of academia.)
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To: Kuksool; Raycpa
Great analysis, they know the judicial appointment issue is lost, its time to retrench.

Where would the Demo's donors go? The Demos know that they can slide on a few issues and the money will keep flowing, they are not the majority of course.
47 posted on 12/26/2004 8:16:06 AM PST by schu
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To: Aquinasfan
Putting aside most of the content of this piece, since it is nothing but disingenuous spinning by conscience-less liberals, allow me to sum it all up in one short sentence:

Pro-lifers are WINNING!

48 posted on 12/26/2004 8:24:52 AM PST by EternalVigilance
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To: OESY

I wondered how they'd spin this nonsense, and they're just getting started!


49 posted on 12/26/2004 8:26:31 AM PST by hershey
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To: OESY

"Post Election Selection Trauma (PEST) continues unabated."

Indeed. They are still lying to each other, and themselves, and think that somehow, out of that fraudulent soup, they will nurture a return to power.

Instructive as to just how seriously distorted the "reality" of the true believer can become.


50 posted on 12/26/2004 8:28:20 AM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: OESY

earlier similar thread, must be a disinfo campaign from the DNC:

Pro-life Democrats
Posted on 12/18/2004 9:00:18 PM PST by gregd
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1304419/posts


51 posted on 12/26/2004 6:31:47 PM PST by SunkenCiv (There's nothing new under the Sun. That accounts for the many quotes used as taglines.)
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