No matter how hard he tried to work out a compromise with the religious right about reproductive rights for women, no matter how hard he tried to please both sides....in the end he is their target now.
When does our side learn that if you start out talking compromise and bipartisanship with extreme ideologues, it will come back to bite you in the butt.
Sarah Posner at Religion Dispatches has a post about with many interesting points.
“Centrist” Advocates of “Common Ground” Endorse Abortion Restrictions in Health Care BillYes, that is the truth. Our centrist Democrats are anti-choice, and they are having trouble now talking their way around it.
Senate Democrats clinched the final vote for cloture -- breaking the Republican's filibuster -- of their health care bill early this morning by securing the vote of Ben Nelson (D-NE) with a restrictive abortion amendment that infuriated both pro-choice and anti-choice activists. The amendment, now part of the bill that the Senate will vote on later this week, would require women purchasing coverage from the insurance exchange with federal subsidies to write two checks: one for their premium, and one for the portion of the premium that would cover a (hypothetical) abortion. In addition, states could opt out of allowing insurers who cover abortion to participate in exchanges in their states -- placing a further impediment on accessing an abortion for some women.
Posner said it was the so-called center who advocate common ground who gave their stamp of approval.
Casey now being targeted.
Casey is now the target of the hard-right anti-abortion movement for even proposing the compromise, with protests outside his office and television ads running against him in his home town. Nelson is in its crosshairs as well, with former presidential candidate Mike Huckabee traveling to Nebraska with the tea partiers to compare him to Judas.
Clearly looking for religious cover, Casey issued a press release Friday touting the support of leaders like Sojourners' Jim Wallis, Evangelicals for Social Action's Ron Sider, and the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference's Samuel Rodriguez.
There you go. He looked for cover from the religious community.
Posner asks if it should even be necessary to get religious approval as political cover. I totally agree.
Is that what we need, though -- making a religious stamp of approval essential political cover? The House Democratic leadership took heat from church-state separation and reproductive health advocates for caving at the eleventh hour to the USCCB. Requiring another religious stamp of approval for a compromise abortion amendment -- even if it angered the Bishops -- doesn't fix the problem that one medical procedure is singled out as requiring a divine imprimatur. (It doesn't appear, notably, that any member of the Senate felt the need to seek the approval of the many pro-choice religious groups who oppose restrictions.)
Exactly right. They did not feel the need for the approval of pro-choice religious groups, or even the pro-choice groups which have traditionally been the allies of the Democrats.
Maybe they need to
pay more attention to "the left" "the progressives" who were basically treated as irrelevant the last few week.They have beat the drum loudly against a women's reproductive rights, and they have basically won. Our party makes a pretense of standing up to them, but in the end they get their way.
Now it is quite common for Democratic forums to treat an abortion as something a woman chooses to do, just like if she decided to get cosmetic surgery. The right wing has managed to take a serious heartbreaking, emotional, wrenching issue and turn into something very casual. It worked very well. Women's rights to birth control methods are also being challenged by the religious right, the anti-choice pharmacists joined by doctors who allow their religious belief to get in the way.
Since our Democrats have held Congress they upped the amount of money for failed abstinence only training by 28 million dollars. Every time it looks like someone will stand up on the issue, they cave again.
I hear the abstinence only funding was still in the bill heading up to vote time. $50 million dollars worth of it.
The fact that the Speaker of the House sat down with Catholic Bishops, the fact that they helped write Ben Nelson's abortion clause....indicate the conversation is getting pretty one-sided.
Under Democratic control the congress refused to allow women in the military access to emergency contraception in 2007. Has that been changed? Not sure.
There has been almost no change in the rights of gays. There are moments when it looks like progress is being made, but then things come to a halt.
The religious right should not be dictating their agenda to our party.
And we should not be tolerating it.