Unholy Messaging
Obama’s faith-based
try vs. his positions.
By Douglas Johnson
The Barack Obama
“messaging machine” is now in full overdrive
mode, seeking to mislead religiously committed
Americans into thinking that Obama has a
middle-of-the-road position on abortion policy
and will promote “abortion reduction.”
In late
September, the Obama campaign kicked off a
“Faith, Family & Values Tour.” A team of Obama
surrogates — including Pepperdine University law
school professor Douglas Kmiec, evangelical
author Donald Miller, and former congressman Tim
Roemer of Indiana — will travel from state to
state, seeking the votes of religiously
committed Americans. According to a report on
BeliefNet.com, the surrogates will be “doing
grass-roots evangelizing for Obama in community
centers (neutral sites — no houses of worship)
and homes. The tour will continue for weeks in
most of the key battleground states.”
Another
article, on ChristianityToday.com, said that the
states to be visited by the tour during the next
month include Colorado, Indiana, North Carolina,
Georgia, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Missouri,
Florida, New Mexico, Virginia, and Wisconsin.
One
important part of the “faith outreach” sales
pitch has been to insist that Obama would
promote “abortion reduction” policies — that is
to say, policies that would have the practical
effect of reducing the number of abortions
performed, without actually restricting abortion
directly. This spiel was really a public
relations strategy cooked up at a liberal think
tank called third way, where veteran
pro-abortion activists develop “messaging”
strategies to help pro-abortion politicians
camouflage their positions. The third way
“Culture Program” (responsible for the “abortion
reduction” strategy, among other projects) is
directed by Rachel Laser, whose previous job was
with the Health and Reproductive Rights group at
the National Women’s Law Center, and who before
that worked for Planned Parenthood of
Metropolitan Washington, a major abortion
provider.
But despite
such efforts, more and more Americans are
learning that the real Barack Obama is firmly
committed to an agenda of sweeping pro-abortion
policy changes that, if implemented, could be
expected to drastically increase the numbers of
abortions performed.
One
component of the Obama abortion agenda, the
so-called “Freedom of Choice Act” (FOCA,
S. 1173),
is coming under increased scrutiny from many
quarters. The FOCA is the most sweeping piece of
pro-abortion legislation ever proposed in
Congress. It is a bill that would establish a
federal “abortion right” broader than
Roe v. Wade
and, in the words of the National Organization
for Women, “sweep away hundreds of anti-abortion
laws [and] policies.”
In
mid-September, every congressional office
received
a pointedly
worded two-page letter
on the FOCA from the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops (USCCB), signed by Cardinal Justin
Rigali, archbishop of Philadelphia and chairman
of the USCCB’s Committee on Pro-life Activities.
Rigali notes, in his opening paragraph,
“Pro-abortion groups and some of the bill’s
congressional sponsors have said they want this
legislation enacted soon.”
Personally,
I am aware of only one congressional sponsor of
the “Freedom of Choice Act” who has said
anything publicly, in the past year or so, to
indicate that he would like to see the bill
enacted soon. That sponsor is the Democratic
nominee for president of the United States,
Senator Barack Obama.
Obama is not
“merely” a cosponsor of the bill, but someone
who has declared enactment of the FOCA to be a
top priority. In his too-little-noted speech to
the Planned Parenthood Action Fund on July 17,
2007, Obama said, “The first thing I’d do as
president is sign the Freedom of Choice Act.
That’s the first thing that I’d do.”
Rigali’s
letter, and an accompanying six-page memorandum
from the USCCB’s legal office, explain with
great clarity the sweeping power of the language
contained in the FOCA. Both the letter and the
memorandum deserve a wide reading. Here, I will
quote only briefly from Rigali’s letter:
“First it
[the FOCA] creates a ‘fundamental right’ to
abortion throughout the nine months of
pregnancy, including a right to abort a fully
developed child in the final weeks for undefined
‘health’ reasons. No government body at any
level would be able to ‘deny or interfere with’
this newly created federal right. Second, it
forbids government at all levels to
‘discriminate’ against the exercise of this
right ‘in the regulation or provision of
benefits, facilities, services, or information.’
For the first time, abortion on demand would be
a national entitlement that government must
condone and promote in all public programs
affecting pregnant women.”
Rigali also
wrote:
“However,
there is one thing absolutely everyone should be
able to agree on: We can’t reduce abortions by
promoting abortion. . . . We cannot reduce
abortions by insisting that every program
supporting women in childbirth and child care
must also support abortion. No one who sponsors
or supports legislation like FOCA can credibly
claim to be part of a good-faith discussion on
how to reduce abortions.”
MAINSTREAM-MEDIA NEGLIGENCE
The
mainstream-news media have, with few exceptions,
been very compliant with Obama’s recent efforts
to downplay his hard-line pro-abortion history
and policy commitments, for the purpose of
winning the general election.
For example,
major media comparisons of the “abortion”
positions of Obama and McCain often describe
Obama’s supposed position in brief, vague terms,
such as “supports abortion rights” or “supports
Roe v. Wade,”
which will be interpreted in very different ways
by different people, and that avoid giving
readers or viewers information about the
specific abortion-related policies to which
Obama is committed. These opaque
characterizations are set side-by-side with
detailed explorations of whether McCain supports
any exceptions, the exact meaning of the
Republican platform plank on abortion, and so
forth.
The
describing of Obama’s position in brief, vague
ways is not the result of any dearth of detailed
information. During Barack Obama’s entire
political career, he has consistently supported
the most expansive and hard-line “abortion
rights” policies. For example, it is
well-documented
that in the Illinois state Senate, Obama led the
opposition to legislation to protect babies who
are born alive during abortions, and persisted
in his opposition even after Congress had
enacted a virtually identical federal bill
without a single dissenting vote. Obama has in
numerous ways actively misrepresented the
content of this legislation, and his actions on
it, but even when such misrepresentations were
proved by NRLC and others, the major media
simply let Obama abandon them and fall back to a
different set of equally misleading claims.
During the
Democratic-primary campaign, Obama and his
operatives energetically challenged any
suggestion that his past record on abortion or
future pledges were in the slightest degree less
supportive of abortion that those of Senator
Hillary Clinton. And, that was true. Indeed,
Clinton had voted for a federal Born-Alive
Infants Protection Act (BAIPA) that was
virtually identical to the Illinois BAIPA that
Obama personally killed, in the committee he
chaired, the following year.
Across the nation, crisis-pregnancy centers (CPCs)
provide all manner of assistance to women who
are experiencing crisis pregnancies, and they
save the lives of many children. Some states
have obtained a modest amount of federal funding
for such programs. Late last year,
RHrealitycheck.org, a prominent pro-abortion
advocacy website, submitted in writing the
following question to the Obama campaign (as
part of a
candidate
questionnaire):
“Does Sen. Obama support continuing federal
funding for crisis pregnancy centers?” The Obama
campaign response was short, but it spoke
volumes: “No.”
Yet, as soon
as Obama had secured the Democratic presidential
nomination, the Obama machine started sending
out very different messages in an attempt to
present Obama as a middle-of-the-roader on
abortion, a moderate, someone with a “nuanced”
position on abortion, someone committed to
government programs that would result in
“abortion reduction.” Obama gave an interview to
a religious publication in which he suggested he
favored significant limits on “late-term”
abortions (whatever that means). He quickly
amended that statement to clarify that he only
meant that a woman should not be able to get a
“late-term” abortion merely because she was
“feeling blue,” although even that hypothetical
“restriction” would clearly be impermissible
under the FOCA.
NEW YORK TIMES:
“LIES” SO EASILY PROVED AS TRUE
The
mainstream media’s complicity in Obama’s
soft-pedal strategy is illustrated by an
editorial that appeared in the New
York Times
on September 21, titled “Right to Smear.” The
editorial expressed the hope that the federal
courts and the Federal Election Commission would
prevent a group called The Real Truth About
Obama, Inc., from disseminating an ad that, the
Times
said, “trashes the candidate’s nuanced position
[on abortion]. It even employs an Obama-like
voice pledging to make taxpayers pay for
abortions, help minors conceal abortions from
their parents, and legalize late-term abortions.
To spread these lies, the group wants an
injunction . . .”
Well. Any
Times
editor with a computer and a rudimentary
familiarity with Google could have established,
within ten minutes, that each of the three
specific statements that the Times
refers to as “these lies” is, in fact, a
position which Obama firmly supports, and indeed
took pains
to highlight
to various liberal groups during his primary
campaign against Hillary Clinton. In fact, the
Times
editorial itself provides a pretty good
illustration of why citizen groups ought to be
able to present important information and
opinions, regarding those who seek public
office, directly to the public, without
government-imposed restrictions or rationing,
and without being filtered by “gatekeepers” such
as the editors at the New York
Times.
Let’s take a closer look at three purported
“lies” that the Times
wants the machinery of the federal government to
suppress:
(1)
Regarding “pledging to make taxpayers pay for
abortions,” Obama has done just that. He has
pledged that abortion (a.k.a. “reproductive
health care”) will be part of his national
health-insurance plan, and he has said that “the
first thing I’d do as president” is sign the
FOCA, which would clearly invalidate all state
and federal policies limiting funding for
abortion, as the bill’s chief sponsors and
advocates openly proclaim. Moreover, in the
Illinois senate Obama voted against restricting
public funding for elective abortions.
Obama also
advocates repeal of the Hyde Amendment, the law
that since 1976 has blocked almost all federal
funding of abortion. This has been one of the
most successful “abortion reduction” policies
ever adopted. By even the most conservative
estimate, there are more than one million
Americans alive today because of the Hyde
Amendment — some of them are probably turning
out for Obama’s “Faith, Family, & Values Tour”
pep rallies. Even the Alan Guttmacher Institute
(linked to Planned Parenthood) and NARAL admit
that the Hyde Amendment (and the similar
policies adopted by many states) have resulted
in many, many babies being born who otherwise
would have been aborted — indeed, the
pro-abortion groups periodically put out papers
complaining about this effect. According to
a 2007 NARAL
factsheet,
“A study by The Guttmacher Institute shows that
Medicaid-eligible women in states that exclude
abortion coverage have abortion rates of about
half of those women in states that fund abortion
care with their own dollars. This suggests that
the Hyde amendment forces about half the women
who would otherwise have abortions to carry
unintended pregnancies to term and bear children
against their wishes instead.”
In 1993,
there was debate in Congress over whether to
continue the Hyde Amendment. The Congressional
Budget Office (at that time under Democratic
control) wrote, “Based on information from the
Centers for Disease Control and from States that
currently pay for abortions using state funds,
the federal government would probably fund
between 325,000 to 675,000 abortions each year
[if the federal government resumed Medicaid
funding for abortion]. The increase in the total
number of abortions would be smaller, however,
because some abortions that are currently funded
by other sources would be partially or totally
paid from federal funds . . .”
Although
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and most other Democratic
congressional leaders are hostile to the Hyde
Amendment, the law has been extended anyway
because
President
Bush issued a letter
in early 2007 saying that he would veto any bill
that weakens any existing pro-life policy.
However, because the Hyde Amendment (and a
number of similar provisions that govern other
federal programs) must be renewed annually,
things could change quickly under a president
determined to re-establish federal funding of
abortion on demand.
(2)
Regarding Obama’s desire to “help minors conceal
abortions from their parents,” all laws
requiring parental notification or consent for a
minor daughter’s abortion would without doubt be
invalidated by the FOCA. Moreover, since
entering the U.S. Senate, Obama has had two
opportunities to vote directly on the question
of parental notification for interstate
abortions on minors, and he voted no both times.
(Voted against the Child Custody Protection Act
[S. 403], July 25, 2006, Senate Roll Call No.
216, and voted against cloture on the Child
Custody Protection Act as amended by the House
to include provisions of the Child Interstate
Abortion Notification Act, September 30, 2006,
Senate Roll Call No. 263.)
More than
half of the states have parental notification or
consent laws in effect, which the Supreme Court
has said are permitted under Roe
v. Wade
as long as they meet certain requirements,
including availability of judges to authorize
abortions without parental notification or
consent.
A recently
released study by Michael New
, assistant professor of political science at
the University of Alabama, found that laws
requiring notification to or consent of at least
one parent prior to a minor’s abortion have
reduced the abortion rate among minors, in
states that have enacted such laws, by
approximately 13.6 percent on average (even
though these laws have court-mandated judicial
bypass provisions). In states that enact laws
requiring the involvement of both
parents, the in-state abortion rate among minors
dropped by about 31 percent.
(3)
Regarding “legalize late-term abortions,” the ad
script to which the Times
was objecting actually says that Obama would
“make partial-birth abortion legal.” Obama
opposed a partial-birth abortion ban in
Illinois, and he criticized the U.S. Supreme
Court for upholding the federal ban in 2007. The
FOCA was reintroduced the day after that Supreme
Court decision came down, at which time the FOCA
chief sponsors proclaimed that the bill was
necessary to (among other things) nullify the
Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act.
FOCUS ON
FOCA
It is not
hard to understand why those who are trying to
package Obama for general-election consumption
do not want the spotlight to land on the
“Freedom of Choice Act.” It is, as USCCB
Associate General Counsel Michael F. Moses wrote
in
the legal
memorandum
sent to Congress with the Rigali letter, “a
radical measure. . . . It would impose upon the
entire country an abortion regime far worse than
anything wrought by Roe
or cases decided under it. It would jeopardize
many laws enacted by the people and their
elected representatives, at the federal and
state level, over the last several decades.”
Nor are such
statements solely the interpretations of critics
of the bill. When she reintroduced the FOCA in
2004, the chief Senate sponsor, Senator Barbara
Boxer (D., Ca.), issued
a press
release
in which she said: “That [the operative language
of FOCA] means women would have the absolute
right to choose whether to continue or terminate
their pregnancies before fetal viability, and
that right would be protected by this
legislation. The Freedom of Choice Act also
supersedes any law, regulation or local
ordinance that impinges on a woman’s right to
choose.”
Boxer
went on to spell out some of the tangible
effects of the FOCA:
That
means a poor woman cannot be denied the use
of Medicaid if she chooses to have an
abortion. That means that abortions cannot
be prohibited at public hospitals, giving
women more choices than private clinics.
That means that we respect a woman’s ability
to make her own decision, and don’t force
women to attend anti-choice propaganda
lectures, which submit women to misleading
information, the purpose of which is to
discourage abortion. That means that women
serving our country in the military overseas
would be able to afford safe abortions that
can be performed in a military hospital.
And, under our law, women who are denied
their right to choose, or discriminated
against will be able to go to court to
enforce the law.
When pressed
to address Obama’s support for the FOCA, Obama
advocate
Douglas
Kmiec recently said,
“I am not convinced this wholesale invalidation
of state law is what is intended by the drafters
of FOCA; what they have provided for in the
draft legislative language; or what the
judiciary would construe that language to mean.”
Since Kmiec
is “not convinced” by the plain language of the
bill or by the explicit statements of its chief
sponsors, most likely he will also remain “not
convinced” by the congruent assessments of the
bill disseminated by the groups that lobby for
its enactment. For example,
a Planned
Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA)
factsheet
explained, “FOCA will supersede anti-choice laws
that restrict the right to choose, including
laws that prohibit the public funding of
abortions for poor women or counseling and
referrals for abortions. Additionally, FOCA will
prohibit onerous restrictions on a woman’s right
to choose, such as mandated delays and targeted
and medically unnecessary regulations.”
The PPFA
factsheet also noted: “Parental consent or
notification statutes have been used as a tool
to deny access to abortion services for minors.
When such laws deny or interfere with the
ability of minors to access abortion services,
they would violate FOCA.”
Kmiec’s
nonchalant suggestion that the federal courts
would likely protect the states from the
destructive impact of the FOCA is certainly
unpersuasive, especially considering the type of
result-oriented jurists that Obama can be
expected to nominate to the U.S. Supreme Court
if he is given the opportunity.
It was very
definitely not part of the Obama “messaging”
strategy to talk to the “faith communities”
about Obama’s commitment to the “Freedom of
Choice Act” — a bill that, as Cardinal Rigali
points out, “would counteract any and all
sincere efforts by government to reduce
abortions in our country.” It is, however, an
honest journalist’s job to present information
about the contending candidates in a
straightforward, symmetrical fashion. That means
it is long past time for honest journalists to
start mentioning Obama’s commitment to the FOCA
— and to accurately describe what that bill
would do — at least as often as they discuss
McCain’s position on a constitutional amendment
on abortion.
The
Constitution does not give the president any
formal role whatever in the constitutional
amendment process. (A constitutional amendment
requires a two-thirds vote in each house of
Congress, and ratification by at least 38 state
legislatures, but not the president’s
signature.) With respect to regular bills,
however, such as the “Freedom of Choice Act,”
the president’s hand holds great power: to veto
the bill — thereby protecting hundreds of
pro-life laws and saving potentially millions of
human lives, which is what a President John
McCain would do if the “Freedom of Choice Act”
reaches his desk — or to sign the execution
order, as Barack Obama has pledged to do.
— Douglas Johnson is legislative director for
the
National Right to Life Committee.
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