The Tea Party + Michael Bloomberg = Better “Abortion” Discourse??
Wednesday, December 8th, 2010Last month I had the pleasure of attending a breakfast with Linda Greenhouse and Reva Siegel hosted by Harvard’s LSRJ (the Boston LSRJs are all besties and its fantastic! I strongly recommend LSRJs in other cities become bffs with each other). It was a great event where Greenhouse and Siegel spent most of the time discussing their book, Before Roe v. Wade. The most poignant part of the discussion for me was when the authors/professors/superstars spoke about how the abortion issue was injected into political party platforms in the 1972 Presidential election. The gist of it is that in the ‘72 election Pat Buchanan, a strategist for Nixon, advised the Republican candidate to make abortion a central issue in his campaign as a way to attract Catholic and social conservative voters. Specifically, Buchanan recommended that Nixon portray Democratic candidate George McGovern as someone who favors “abortion, amnesty, and acid (the drug),” even though the candidates had SIMILAR VIEWS on abortion and neither had really spoken about those views during the campaign. Nixon employed the strategy, won the election, and a “pro-life position” became as embedded in the Republican platform as small government and lower taxes, and a “pro-choice position” became as embedded in the Democratic platform as social programs and gun control.
The point to take away from this moment in history is that abortion has not always been embedded in party platforms, and in fact it hasn’t been so for that long. I.e. there is NO inherent reason why Republicans should be pro-life, Democrats pro-choice, and more importantly that abortion should be a campaign issue at all. (more…)