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FEBRUARY 22, 2010, ISSUE   |   VIEW COVER   |   BUY THIS ISSUE   |   SUBSCRIBE TO NR



Michael J. New

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The Case for Pro-Life Optimism
Yes, Obama's election is a setback, but things aren't so bad as they seem.

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The pro-life movement is despondent. During the recent election cycle, pro-lifers incurred a series of disappointing political defeats, culminating in the election of a president who steadfastly supports keeping abortion legal. Furthermore, some pundits suggest that the Republican party’s pro-life stance hurt its candidates, and thus the party should take a more moderate position.

Worse, the new president has pledged to support the Freedom of Choice Act (FOCA), which would give the legislative and executive branches’ seal of approval to the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision and roll back many of the pro-life movement’s hard-fought gains. Because of the recent electoral losses in the U.S. Senate, the pro-life movement is desperately scrambling to find 41 senators to mount a successful filibuster.

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Is this the dystopian scenario we face today? Nope. What I have just described is the political landscape in 1993, the last time the pro-life movement found itself in the political wilderness. There were plenty of reasons for pessimism at the time, but the movement refused to give up and went on to make some very impressive gains during the 1990s—gains that remain today, and should give pro-lifers plenty of hope for the future.

One such gain is Republican strength at the state level. After the 1992 election, Republicans held control of both chambers of the state legislature in only eight states. After the 1994 election, Republicans gained control in eleven additional states, for a total of 19. Even though Republicans have fared poorly during the past two elections, this number has only dropped to 15.

This bodes well because states play a leading role in enacting pro-life legislation. Since 1992, approximately 17 states have enacted parental-involvement laws. Also, 28 states have adopted informed-consent laws, which give women seeking abortions information about fetal development, sources of support for single mothers, and potential health risks incurred by obtaining an abortion. And 24 states have enacted waiting periods. A number of articles published in peer-reviewed academic journals (and my own studies released by the Heritage Foundation and the Family Research Council) have found that many of these pro-life laws succeed in reducing abortion.

Further, the effort by pro-lifers to ban partial-birth abortion during the 1990s resulted in some small, but resilient, changes in public opinion. In particular, noticeably fewer Americans support abortion on demand. This shift produced real political results: Serious efforts to remove the pro-life plank from the Republican party platform have fizzled, and Democrats have tried to distance themselves from the abortion issue and do more, at least rhetorically, to reach out to pro-lifers. Neither Barack Obama nor John Kerry even mentioned his support for legal abortion in his acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention.

Yet another reason for optimism: While the pro-life movement has not always invested a lot of resources in youth outreach, Students for Life of America (SFLA) has taken up the slack during the past few years. SFLA’s field program, which sends out representatives to help launch campus pro-life groups, has been very successful. Last year SFLA helped start pro-life groups on 94 different campuses. Currently, it estimates, there are 480 active campus pro-life groups in the country. Furthermore, its annual conference typically draws over 500 students. This year’s conference, which will be held this coming Saturday at Catholic University of America, might be even larger.


The pro-life movement has also reached out to women facing crisis pregnancies. The Silent No More campaign provides powerful testimonies from women who have suffered emotional and physical pain after undergoing abortions. Feminists for Life has made great progress in urging a number of college campuses to be more accommodating for single mothers. The Vitae Caring Foundation has conducted important research about the best ways of approaching women who are facing crisis pregnancies. It has effectively used this information in its nationwide television ad campaigns.

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