WASHINGTON ((By
Stephanie Simon, LATimes) July 26, 2007
—
Sensing an opportunity to
impress religious voters — and tip elections — Democrats in Congress and
on the campaign trail have begun to adopt some of the language and
policy goals of the antiabortion movement.
For years, the liberal response to abortion has been to promote more
accessible and affordable birth control as well as detailed sex
education in public schools.
That's still the foundation of Democratic policies. But in a striking
shift, Democrats in the House last week promoted a grab bag of programs
designed not only to prevent unwanted pregnancies, but also to encourage
women who do conceive to carry to term.
The new approach embraces some measures long sought by antiabortion
activists. It's designed to appeal to the broad centrist bloc of voters
who don't want to criminalize every abortion — yet are troubled by a
culture that accepts 1.3 million terminations a year.
"It's not as exciting as arguing," said antiabortion activist Serrin
Foster, president of Feminists for Life. "But it's the best possible
thing for women."
The Reducing the Need for Abortions Initiative provides millions in new
funds to:
• Counsel more young women in crisis to consider adoption, not
abortion.
• Launch an ad campaign to inform needy women that they can receive
healthcare and other resources if they are "preparing for birth."
• Expand parenting education and medical services for pregnant women,
in some cases by sending nurses to their homes.
• Offer day care at federal job-training centers to help new mothers
become self-sufficient.
The initiative, part of a broader appropriations bill, passed the House
with solid bipartisan support. A separate measure, still pending, calls
for funding maternity and day-care centers on college campuses so
pregnant students won't feel they must have an abortion to stay in
school.
Such efforts are aimed at alleviating the concerns women often cite to
explain why they've turned to abortion: financial strain, fear of
raising a baby alone, disruption to work and school.
"We are willing to talk about anything that helps women make good
choices," said Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.), co-chairwoman of the
bipartisan Pro-Choice Caucus. Preventing unplanned pregnancies, she
said, "is not the whole story."
Rep. Tim Ryan of Ohio, a Democrat who opposes abortion, goes even
further. For the first time, he said, his party is sending a forceful
message to conflicted women: "Bring the baby to term, and we'll provide
for you."
The Senate will take up the spending package later this year. In the
meantime, liberal stalwart Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) is working with
staunch conservative Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) to mandate more support
services for pregnant women carrying fetuses with genetic abnormalities,
such as Down syndrome. Focus on the Family, an influential conservative
ministry, praises that bill as "lifeaffirming."
But conservatives also accuse Democrats of using abortion rhetoric to
sell the right on traditional liberal priorities, such as healthcare
funding. Democrats have rejected other ideas that conservatives consider
highly effective in reducing abortions, such as requiring women to view
ultrasound images of the womb.
"In terms of bridging the ideological gulf, you need to ask: Is this a
two-way street?" said David K. DeWolf, a law professor at Gonzaga
University in Spokane, Wash., who has advised antiabortion groups.
Rep. Mike Pence, a Republican from Indiana, sees hypocrisy in the fact
that much of the new family planning funding will go to Planned
Parenthood. The money can't be used to terminate pregnancies — it's for
birth control and gynecology services. But Pence says it's ludicrous to
send tax dollars to the nation's largest abortion provider in the name
of reducing abortions.
"That's not a common ground I can accept," Pence said.
From the left, too, the new strategy has drawn barbs. Rep. Louise
Slaughter (D-N.Y.) urges her party to stick to promoting contraception,
instead of trying to sway women's choices after they conceive.
"I don't believe any woman decides between having an abortion or not on
the basis of 'Is there day care available?' " Slaughter said. "Our aim
here is to let women know we can help them not get pregnant."
Democratic strategists, however, say that message is too simplistic.
From a practical standpoint, increasing access to contraception will not
eliminate abortion. Roughly half of all women who seek abortion said
they were using some form of birth control, albeit inconsistently, the
month they conceived. Some of the states, such as California, that have
spent the most to improve access to family planning still have among the
nation's highest abortion rates.
From a political perspective, Democratic strategists warn that
emphasizing birth control gives voters a bad impression — "that
Democrats are just about free love, not morality," said Rachel Laser, an
analyst for the progressive think tank Third Way.
She has been urging Democrats to embrace programs aimed at helping women
in crisis keep their pregnancies, in an effort to show voters that
"pro-choice" does not mean "pro-abortion."
The leading Democratic presidential candidates are increasingly making
that more nuanced case.
At a recent presidential forum, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York
decried the failure of activists on both sides to work together to bring
down the number of abortions. She repeated a mantra her husband made
famous more than a decade ago: Abortion, she said, should be "safe,
legal and rare."
Then Clinton paused and added deliberately: "And by rare, I mean rare."
At another forum, this one sponsored by Planned Parenthood, Sen. Barack
Obama of Illinois called a woman's right to abortion "one of the most
fundamental freedoms we have in this country." But he also urged
alliances across ideological lines to promote initiatives that value
motherhood, such as paid maternity leave.
"If the argument is [too] narrow, oftentimes we lose," Obama said.
Democrats first began field-testing this message in 2006. Candidates for
governor in Ohio and Michigan made a point of talking about abortion
reduction even as they supported abortion rights.
In one mailer, Ohio candidate Ted Strickland spoke of his desire to give
all children "every opportunity to reach their God-given potential. This
includes working together, across our differences, to reduce the need
for and numbers of abortions."
Both Strickland and Michigan incumbent Jennifer Granholm won their
campaigns. Exit polls showed they did better than national Democrats
among weekly churchgoers — and much better among white evangelicals, who
tend to be conservative on abortion.
"This approach is not going to all of a sudden bring the pro-life crowd
over to the Democrats, but it creates an opening," said Eric Sapp, a
political consultant who helped craft the Michigan and Ohio campaigns.
With the nation so closely split, even a small boost in support for the
Democrats "could reshape the political landscape," Sapp said.
The Rev. Joel Hunter symbolizes the potential.
An evangelical megachurch pastor in Florida, Hunter says he's "very
strongly pro-life." He's also disillusioned: The right has spent three
decades on legislation and litigation, yet one in five pregnancies still
ends in abortion.
This fall, Hunter plans to urge his congregation of 10,000 to support
politicians who work hard to reduce abortions — even if they don't share
the goal of protecting every single one of the unborn.
"It's past time to reach out," Hunter said. "There's so much more that
can be done without compromising our principles."