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- <text id=91TT2610>
- <title>
- Nov. 25, 1991: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 25, 1991 10 Ways to Cure The Health Care Mess
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 46
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST
- The Abortion Issue--Again
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> For George Bush, abortion is the issue from hell. "You
- know how he deals with it," Republican National Committee
- chairman Lee Atwater told me shortly before he died last March.
- "He doesn't. You mention abortion to the President and he stares
- at the floor, fiddles with his glasses, paces around the room,
- trots out some old story to change the subject. Those who need
- to talk to him about it check his mood closely. If he's testy,
- you postpone the discussion--and since there's no surer way
- to make him testy than to mention abortion, most often those
- discussions never take place."
- </p>
- <p> Postponement is a luxury Bush can no longer afford. The
- President has already vetoed legislation broadening abortion
- rights five times, and a sixth, even more controversial proposal
- will hit his desk soon. This time the question concerns abortion
- counseling. Congress has voted to overturn the "gag rule," the
- federal regulation that forbids doctors at 4,000 federally
- funded family-planning clinics even to mention the abortion
- option to pregnant women. Another veto is expected, but the
- White House and Republican campaign advisers are split over the
- political repercussions.
- </p>
- <p> The "let it be" school points to the President's sagging
- popularity and proposes that Bush avoid adding to his troubles
- by appearing to stifle free speech. This group would let
- Congress's action become law. The "stick it to 'em" school is
- led by White House chief of staff John Sununu, a longtime
- antiabortion activist. Sununu and his allies argue that a veto
- will protect Bush's political base. "There's no chance the
- right-to-lifers will defect to the Democrats if he signs the
- bill," says a White House aide. "What we're worried about is
- their staying home on Election Day. It is increasingly clear
- that we're going to need an energized pro-life vote in the '92
- general election--and possibly even before, if Pat Buchanan
- challenges the President in the primaries. This is no time to
- violate the old axiom. We've got to stay with the folks who
- brought us to the dance, and the pro-lifers are a large part of
- that contingent."
- </p>
- <p> The gag-rule debate is only the latest skirmish in a war
- over abortion that could injure Bush severely. The ultimate
- battle will be joined if the Supreme Court overturns the
- landmark abortion-rights decision, Roe v. Wade, before next
- year's election--an action some pro-choice activists would
- ironically welcome. Planned Parenthood, for one, is eager to
- throw the issue into the political arena as quickly as possible,
- and so is urging the high court to consider immediately
- Pennsylvania's restrictive abortion law, on the assumption that
- the conservative Justices appointed by Bush and Ronald Reagan
- would use the occasion to strike down Roe. Almost every Bush
- aide except Sununu is apoplectic at that possibility. The last
- thing they want is for abortion to become the campaign issue
- that tears the electorate apart; they've got enough trouble with
- the economy. Most observers believe the court will wait, but
- even if reconsidering Roe is put off until 1993, Bush will face
- another bruising fight over abortion at next summer's Republican
- Party convention in Houston.
- </p>
- <p> A group of G.O.P. activists encouraged by Atwater's "Big
- Tent" philosophy--the notion that the party can accommodate
- different ideological views--are out to modify the party
- platform's antiabortion plank. As currently written, the
- platform asserts that "the unborn child has a fundamental right
- to life which cannot be infringed," a position that refuses to
- embrace exceptions for rape, incest or danger to the mother's
- life. "We are not going to roll over again," says Ann Stone, who
- heads Republicans for Choice. "We will continue to be somewhat
- civil, but we are no longer going to be silent."
- </p>
- <p> Stone likes the pro-choice Republicans' chances because of
- the take-no-prisoners rhetoric of pro-life Republicans like
- Phyllis Schlafly and because of widespread revulsion against the
- tactics of Operation Rescue, the organization whose efforts to
- close abortion clinics in Wichita will expand to five other
- cities this week. Stone has already raised close to $1 million
- and hopes to have organized 250,000 "Choice Republicans" by
- January. She has cleverly cast the issue as one of freedom from
- governmental tampering with individual rights. "Schlafly would
- have you think that to be pro-choice means you must be
- pro-abortion," says Stone in her most successful fund-raising
- letter. Schlafly "doesn't believe a woman has the right to make
- this important decision for herself...As Republicans, we
- oppose government interference in our private lives."
- </p>
- <p> A majority of the 1988 G.O.P. convention delegates were
- pro-choice. They supported the pro-life position out of loyalty
- to Bush. Most of those delegates will return next year, and
- Stone hopes this time they will vote their conscience. She is
- actively lobbying the '88 delegates, and she is chartering state
- affiliates to ensure that pro-choice Republicans challenge
- pro-lifers when the '92 delegates are selected. Insisting that
- "no one wants to hurt the President," Stone's suggested platform
- language would gracefully bow to Bush's antiabortion views while
- stating clearly that dissent from the President's stance can be
- tolerated by the party without recrimination. Sununu, naturally,
- is against watering down the pro-life provisions. In
- mid-September he stated that the President will accept "no
- change" in the platform. But on Oct. 8 Vice President Dan Quayle
- indicated that Atwater's Big Tent is both politically wise and
- consistent with Bush's thinking. Either Sununu or Quayle is
- wrong--and Bush isn't talking.
- </p>
- <p> This one could go down to the wire, with the President
- bending to the political winds as he perceives them at the time.
- All that is certain is that whatever position Bush finally
- adopts will be glorified as an affirmation of principle--and
- that principle will be the last thing on his mind.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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