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On Abortion, the Pennsylvania
Senate Race, the Democrats' 2006 Election Strategy, and What Comes Next
By Leah Fishbein & RJ Schinner, 5/9/06, (Send us your comments) (article below)
While the right to abortion hangs in the balance, the
Democratic Party leadership has decided on a strategy of 'finding common
ground.' This strategy could also be
called outright capitulation to the theocratic onslaught on the rights and
lives of women. As we decide how to
respond to this choice by the Democrats, let us think long and hard about what
kind of future we want for this country, and for the world. As we wonder over compromises on issues of
war, torture, police state measures, theocracy and every other outrage the Bush
regime is cementing into place, let us not resign ourselves to quietly
accepting what we would have found intolerable a few years ago. Let us learn, stand strong, and confront this
fight head on. If we give up ground,
they will only continue to take more. Santorum and Theocracy A recent New York Times article[1] sheds
some light on the Democrats' 'common ground' strategy on abortion, which is
concentrated in the Pennsylvania Senate race.
Rick Santorum, the Republican incumbent, is quite possibly one of the
most reactionary elected officials in the country. He has sought to ban abortion and wrote the
bill that sought to include teaching intelligent design in the 'No Child Left
Behind' Act.[2] He supports a constitutional amendment to ban
gay marriage, and has been called doctrinaire and sanctimonious.[3] Santorum often makes comments in the vein of a speech he
gave to the Heritage Foundation in D.C. called 'The Necessity of Truth,' In
this speech, he calls out to the country, asking how so many Americans can have
such great faith in God and still feel so constrained from expressing their
views in the public sphere, in terms of legislation and policy.[4]
(By the way, the answer, Senator Santorum, is the establishment clause). In a
quote from a recent article, the list against Santorum is long and heavy(they
note that he has 'likened Democrats to
Nazis, claims Terri Schiavo was âexecuted,' said the mainstream media lies
about him, equated homosexuality with bestiality, and claimed the Catholic
priest pedophile scandal in Boston was really no surprise since Boston is âa
seat of academic, political and cultural liberalism'.'[5] Overall, he has attempted to lead the Senate in imposing a
theocracy on US
society. While Santorum's agenda may find support from the White House and
far-right Christian fundamentalist movements, it is in stark contrast to what
most people consider an acceptable way of governing society. Santorum-lite Not Our Savior Because of his radically
fundamentalist views, and fascistic attempts to take control of the bodies and
minds of people living in the US,
taking on Santorum should be a piece of cake. The 2006 race is a seemingly
perfect opportunity to drag his reactionary program into the light of day. He stands for everything most people are
against. However, the Democratic Party
leadership has opted for a different strategy: run Santorum-lite. Enter Bob Casey, Jr. Casey is adamantly against
abortion. He strongly supported Alito
and Roberts' nominations to the Supreme Court, and has been an avid cheerleader
of Bush's war on Iraq.
He
also agrees with Santorum on stem-cell research, which he is against. [6] While Casey isn't quite as reactionary as the
GOP's ultra-conservative poster-boy (unlike Santorum, he ( at least at this
point ( is not openly opposed to contraception), the notion that this is what choice
means in November is not only disgusting, but clearly leads to a quiet
acceptance of abortion being banned outright. Casey has made such statements
as, 'I am and I have always been
pro-life,' as well as 'I support the current federal policy on embryonic stem
cell research and would oppose the Castle bill to expand federal support of
embryonic stem cell research.' While
running for State Treasurer of Pennsylvania in 2004, he stated that if Roe V.
Wade were overturned, he would only desire to provide exceptions for the life
of the mother, and not for cases of rape or
incest. [7] So we have in our hands a candidate against,
among other things, science and choice. In Order to Defeat
Them, You Must Become Them While the notion of a Democratic candidate running with
similar positions to Santorum makes one cringe, the fact that top Democrats are
vigorously defending and promoting his candidacy is immoral and
outrageous. Casey was handpicked by
Chuck Schumer (Chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee), who has made it his goal to give up
principle in the name of political expediency.
Even Barbara Boxer, one of the more outspoken pro-choice Democratic
Senators, called the decision to run Casey 'a pragmatic choice', and added, 'by
the way, to dislodge Santorum is a pro-choice victory'. We wonder if we heard her correctly. Electing an anti-choice candidate is now
defined as a pro-choice victory? In
addition to being irrational, this idea sets into motion a deadly proposal, one
that postulates that that in order to defeat the theocrats, we must become
them. The title of a recent campaign fundraiser captures this
'logic' well: 'Pragmatic Progressive Women for Casey.' This approach (one in which we give up what
we're supposed to be fighting for in order to win an election) is a failure in
principle as well as in results. When
what is at stake is whether or not women have control over their own bodies,
such methods are unacceptable. Simply
put, are we for or against a return to back alley abortions? The pro-choice movement fought long and hard
to win the right to abortions, birth control and family planning. These are things that we take for granted in
today's world. In addition, the women's
rights movement fought innumerable battles to advance the position of women in
society. While much remains to be done
to achieve a society of equality between women and men, we can all agree that
the Bush regime's moves to ban abortion (and birth control) and enforce
'traditional values' (i.e. patriarchy) need to be stopped. Are we willing to lose our grasp on what the right to
abortion means for women in exchange for a merely tentative majority of
Democrats in Congress, a majority which isn't actually fighting to hold on to
those advances? What will that majority
really mean when we have pro-war, anti-choice Senators like Casey
'representing' us? What if these
concessions do not translate into a majority?
We will have traded the right to choose, without the option of taking it
back. The most despicable aspect of
this turn of events is the way that Casey's candidacy seems to be something of
a model for the Democratic Party. Each
of the nine women Democratic Senators went so far as to sign a letter of
support for Casey. Howard Dean has said,
"I have long believed that we ought to make a home for pro-life
Democrats."[8] Groups like Democrats for Life
(whose president Carol Crossed says that "The right to choose is most
certainly this party's right to lose") state goals such as helping to
elect anti-abortion Democrats and supporting anti-abortion legislation.[9]
These anti-choice Democrats are very present in politics(and this is not
a one-shot problem. Other anti-abortion Democrats running for Congress include Bill
Gluba for Representative of Iowa, Bart Stupak for Representative of Michigan
and James Oberstar for Minnesota, as well as Ben Nelson for Senator of
Nebraska, among others. And none other
than Tim Kaine, the newly elected anti-choice governor of Virginia, was selected to give the
Democrat's rebuttal (if you can call it that) to Bush's state of the union
address. Somehow, all the betrayal of the people's will is justified
by the need to take back Congress in 2006.
But the question remains: what good will this majority do if the new
members have 'lite' versions of the positions of those they are replacing? The Bigger Picture To get a deeper grasp of the stakes involved here, it is
important to look at the backdrop from which the Casey campaign is emerging. Powerful forces inside and outside of
government are attempting to impose a theocracy in the US, with a
hateful and intolerant brand of Christian fundamentalism masquerading as
morality. From fundamentalist churches,
organizations, and media garnering millions of die-hard supporters, to those
who finance them, to theocrats elected and appointed to government positions
and agencies (including Congress, the military, the judiciary, the FDA, and
more), all the way up to the White House, there are big plans in the making. They not only intend to outlaw abortion. Most of them also desperately want to erase
the idea of family planning, ban birth control, at least jail abortion
providers (some want to execute them) and to force women into their
'traditional' roles exclusively as homemakers and child-bearers. These fundamentalists have already unleashed violence and
repressive legislation on the LGBTQ community, and on abortion providers and
their clients. They preach bigotry,
hate, and a general rejection of people living lifestyles outside of their
narrow and intolerant 'morality'. In the
midst of an AIDS crisis with millions suffering in Africa
and around the world, their 'abstinence only' policies have denied people the
contraceptives that would be saving countless lives. These interests and powerful forces are out
to remake society based on their fundamentalist ideology, and they have already
gone quite far in doing so.[10] Abortion, in particular, has been latched onto
as a way to break the floodgate open for their agenda, to gain support. By distorting science and inventing a concern
for life, the "pro-lifers" and the Bush administration, with help from the
non-opposition of the Democrats, have dragged official politics far to the right. Undoubtedly, the real motivation for the
'pro-life' (or anti-choice) movement is to impose the most vicious patriarchy
over women, as is evident in their denial of promotion of contraceptives and
sex education. [11] There is a great divide in our society over abortion. The side opposed to women's right to choose
organizes mass (and mindless) rallies, creates blockades at women's clinics,
uses violence against doctors, and gets support from the highest levels of
government. The pro-choice side has right, scientific fact, and the majority of
the population on its side, but still does not find an unequivocal voice
fighting for its position in the halls of power. 74% of Americans agree that the
decision to have an abortion should be between "a woman, her doctor, her
family, her conscience and her God.'[12] 76%
oppose an amendment to the Constitution that would make all abortions
illegal. In addition, only 19% of
Americans think that abortions should be illegal in all circumstances.[13] This majority has been systematically demobilized by
Democratic Party leaders who preach common ground with fascists and religious
fanatics. These 'leaders' refuse to
argue scientific facts against religious lunacy and cede the moral high ground
to those who want to force women back into the home, rather than struggling for
a society which is based on equality between men and women. Giving up the rights (and lives) of women is
justified by the mantra of what's 'electable'. Hillary Clinton calls
abortion a "sad, even tragic choice", and urges 'common
ground" with anti-choice advocates. There are two problems with this logic. First off, abortion is not morally wrong in
any way. It is essential for women to
have control of their bodies; a fetus is not a human being, but a clump of
cells.[14] In a society where access to
abortion is already extremely limited, we do not need to work to decrease the
number of abortions, but to make abortion more accessible to the many women who
cannot obtain them because of class status.
Second, there is no common ground to be found with those seeking to ban
abortion ( they are determined in their objectives, and their agenda needs to
be tackled as the reactionary patriarchy that it is. Those who have been sucked into this
theocratic movement due to its 'pro-life' posture must be won over to the right
side of the divide. Furthermore, the strategy of seeking 'common ground' only
pushes society further in the fascist direction. Running an openly anti-choice candidate is
the logical extension of this strategy, and if this politics of concession is
cemented in place for the 2006 elections, the terms of debate in Congress will
soon become whether to only outlaw abortion or whether to also jail doctors and
ban birth control. Simply put: That
which you will not resist and mobilize to stop, you will learn ( or be forced (
to accept. What's Needed The recent ban on abortion in South Dakota has served as a wake-up call to
many. As the World Can't Wait ( Drive
Out the Bush Regime Call describes, 'Your government is moving to deny
women here, and all over the world, the right to birth control and abortion . .
. The Bush regime is setting out to radically remake society very quickly, in a
fascist way, and for generations to come. We must act now; the future is in the
balance.' As millions begin to wake up to this reality, the question
becomes whether this outrage will be turned into an opposition that can be
mobilized to stop this, or whether it just becomes a tail on the Democratic
donkey. While over a million women and
men came out to the 'March for Women's Lives' in 2004, this sentiment has not
been organized into a force with the understanding and determination necessary
to stand up to the current onslaught.
Instead, people have been told to put their hopes and dreams into the
same Democrats running around promoting Bob Casey, and increasingly the
'a-word' (abortion) becomes absent from protest demands and even from
pro-choice organizations' vocabularies.
Unlike the forces opposed to abortion, at this point the right to
abortion will disappear if it isn't
pressed in every progressive niche of society each day. As women, young and old, all over the country, have begun to
notice, our futures are in the hands of a regime that will not hesitate in
reinforcing the archaic notions of childbearing as incubation, the nuclear
family as the only option and women as slaves to their husbands. The time to act is now, because to allow
society to be taken down this road is intolerable. We know they are strong. We see what is looming on the horizon, and we
are furious as well as scared. But to
channel these powerful emotions into political action that is not bound by the
Democrats' strategy of common ground and capitulation with fascists and
religious fanatics, into organized resistance, is the only action we can take
to stop this. If the outrage that is brewing is mobilized into an
unequivocal resistance that is willing to argue for a scientific understanding
of abortion and a morality that refuses to allow women to be forced back into
the home, it can stop the moves to ban abortion and usher in the avenues for
further advances in the status of women in society. No single race for office, and nor a
Democratic majority that refuses to oppose the Bush regime, is worth trading
the rights to our futures. Furthermore, the attacks on the right to abortion cannot be
isolated from the whole onslaught the far right is a part of. The Bush regime is on a mission ( both to
wage a war on the world for global domination, employing torture, massacres,
and a doctrine of pre-emptive attacks in the process; and to remake US society
in a fascist direction, with increasing police state measures, radical changes
in governing norms (including the rule of law), the imposition of theocracy,
the suppression of science, and the blatant neglect and racism that left
thousands to die in New Orleans. If this
whole package is not repudiated and the regime implementing it is not driven
from power, it will be impossible to stop any single outrage. All those deeply concerned about preserving
the right to abortion need to also bring their efforts to bear on stopping
the whole onslaught the attacks on abortion are part of. The
future is unwritten. WHICH ONE WE GET IS UP TO US.
(Send us your comments)
[4] Santorum, Rick 'The Necessity of Truth' Heritage Lecture #643, http://www.heritage.org/Research/Religion/HL643.cfm
[9] Tolfree, Christine. 'Pro-life Democrats rally
during Boston
convention' Catholic News Service: August 2, 2005
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