Slate’s William Saletan believes that Dems, after 12 years in the wilderness, bring a diverse caucus with competing ideas to the table, and could use “an idea” that can hold the party together. Oddly enough, Saletan recommends abortion — specifically, reducing the number of abortions — as the Dems’ signature social issue.
If ever there were an issue on which Democrats looked amoral, this is it. Abortion as birth control. Culture of life. If it feels good, do it. Republicans use this kind of language to make Democrats unpalatable even to voters who don’t think abortion should be outlawed. Polls show that Democrats can win these voters back. And there’s no better place to rebrand yourself than on the issue where you originally got branded.
The remedy is simple: Democrats are for reducing abortion without banning it. The most effective way, short of abstinence, is through birth control. Birth control isn’t about doing what feels good. It’s about taking responsibility. This is no gimmick. It’s a model for a new, more responsible definition of responsibility.
To be sure, Dems have been for reducing abortions without banning them for quite a while, but have been waiting for the GOP to catch up. For all their rhetoric and demagoguery, Republicans don’t seem to care much about reduction and/or prevention at all. They support banning so-called “partial birth” abortions, but only 0.08 percent of abortions are performed in the third trimester. They support parental notification, but there’s evidence that these measures don’t curtail the number of abortions either.
The Dems, on the other hand, have stepped up. The party is overwhelmingly pro-choice, but that didn’t stop Senate Dems, for example, from unveiling the Prevention First Act last year, sponsored by Harry Reid (pro-life) and Hillary Clinton (pro-choice), which aimed to reduce the number of unintended pregnancies and the resulting abortions by taking prevention seriously, through a combination of family-planning programs, access to contraception, and teen-pregnancy prevention programs. The legislation picked up 26 co-sponsors, all of them Dems. The religious right balked at the idea — Dobson famously said “there is no middle ground” on abortion — and Senate Republicans refused to even consider the bill, proving once again that there’s only one side of the political divide offering serious policy proposals to reduce abortions in this country — and it’s not the Republicans.
Of course, the GOP isn’t in the majority anymore, and the Dems’ efforts to reduce the abortion rate is about to begin anew.
As the WaPo’s E. J. Dionne Jr. noted today, 23 pro-choice and pro-life Democratic House members recently highlighted their support for a broad set of programs “aimed at reducing teen pregnancy, promoting contraception and encouraging parental responsibility. But it also includes strong measures to offer new mothers full access to health coverage, child care and nutrition assistance.”
The public debate usually ignores the fact that abortion rates are closely tied to income. As the Guttmacher Institute has reported, “the abortion rate among women living below the federal poverty level . . . is more than four times that of women above 300 percent of the poverty level.” The numbers are stark: 44 abortions per 1,000 women in the lower income group, 10 abortions per 1,000 women in the higher income group.
In other words: If you truly care about reducing the number of abortions, you have to care about the well-being of poor women.
There are moral and practical reasons for members of both parties, and combatants on both sides of the abortion question, to embrace this approach.
Liberal supporters of abortion rights should be eager to promote a measure that does not make abortion illegal but does embrace goals, including help for the poor, that liberals have long advocated.
I continue to believe that Dems have every reason to add this to their policy agenda. First, it’s an effective way to reduce abortions without limiting personal freedoms. Second, it improves access to health care. Third, it’s a political winner that doesn’t alienate either side (both NARAL and opponents of abortion right have endorsed prevention measures). Ardent pro-life voters aren’t going to start voting for pro-choice Dems because of efforts like these, but there are plenty of people in a murky “gray area” that will find this message appealing.
In the meantime, Republicans are going backwards. The congressional GOP has ignored prevention and reduction efforts for years, and worse, the White House has just appointed an opponent of birth control to run federal family-planning programs.
Dems have generally steered clear of even mentioning abortion for fear of pushing away pro-life voters and causing a rift within the party. Now, they’ve finally seem to have found a way to take a proactive, politically salient approach to the issue — which just so happens to put Republicans on the defensive. It’s about time.