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- LAW, Page 75Flip-Flop
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- The A.B.A. drops pro-choice
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- Conventions of the American Bar Association are usually
- about as exciting as, well, a gathering of lawyers. Not this
- time. Last week the A.B.A.'s House of Delegates voted 200 to
- 188 to rescind the organization's pro-choice position. The
- group, which had adopted the pro-choice stance only last
- February, passed a resolution stating that the issue is
- "extremely divisive" and that the A.B.A. would take no official
- stand on it.
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- The A.B.A. had decided to reconsider after 1,500 of its
- 360,000 members quit in protest, costing the organization
- $300,000 in dues. The vote was a victory for pro-life forces,
- who had waged a $50,000 campaign, with the help of the Roman
- Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago. U.S. Attorney General Dick
- Thornburgh also pitched in, warning the group that the A.B.A.'s
- role as an evaluator of federal judges could be compromised by
- the pro-choice stance.
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- Critics of the about-face pointed out that the A.B.A. often
- takes positions on controversial constitutional questions,
- including flag burning, the right to die and gay rights. "It
- is an absolute sham to think that neutrality can ever be
- attained again," said Estelle Rogers, who spearheaded the
- movement to save the pro-choice resolution. "This gives comfort
- to people who want to criminalize abortion." The only thing the
- two sides seemed to agree upon is that the schism will result
- in continued -- and acrimonious -- debate.
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