As the idiot in chief has been known to say in inappropriate contexts, I question the premise. Melinda Henneberger claims (without giving figures) that all sorts of liberal, pacifist, Catholic women either supported Bush or didn't support Kerry because of the abortion issue. Oddly enough, she admits that this group of "swing voters" went for Gore in 2000. So did they all suddenly become more committed to outlawing abortion in four years? Was it 9/11 or the Iraq war that pushed them over the edge? What a piece of claptrap!
Here it is, nevertheless:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/22/opinion/22henneberger.html?_r=1&oref=sloginOp-Ed Contributor
Why Pro-Choice Is a Bad Choice for Democrats
By MELINDA HENNEBERGER
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Even in the real world, a pro-choice Republican nominee would be a gift to the Democrats, because the Republican Party wins over so many swing voters on abortion alone. Which is why Fred Thompson, who is against abortion rights, is getting so much grateful attention from his party now. And why, despite wide opposition to the war in Iraq, Democrats must still win back such voters to take the White House next year.
Over 18 months, I traveled to 20 states listening to women of all ages, races, tax brackets and points of view speak at length on the issues they care about heading into ’08. They convinced me that the conventional wisdom was wrong about the last presidential contest, that Democrats did not lose support among women because “security moms” saw President Bush as the better protector against terrorism. What first-time defectors mentioned most often was abortion.
Why would that be, given that Roe v. Wade was decided almost 35 years ago? Opponents of abortion rights saw 2004 as the chance of a lifetime to overturn Roe, with a movement favorite already in the Oval Office and several spots on the Supreme Court likely to open up. A handful of Catholic bishops spoke out more plainly than in any previous election season and moved the Catholic swing vote that Al Gore had won in 2000 to Mr. Bush.
The standard response from Democratic leaders has been that anyone lost to them over this issue is not coming back — and that regrettable as that might be, there is nothing to be done. But that is not what I heard from these voters.
Many of them, Catholic women in particular, are liberal, deep-in-their-heart Democrats who support social spending, who opposed the war from the start and who cross their arms over their chests reflexively when they say the word “Republican.” Some could fairly be described as desperate to find a way home. And if the party they’d prefer doesn’t send a car for them, with a really polite driver, it will have only itself to blame.
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