Townhall...
A
Question of Principle
By Ken Connor
6/26/2011
In
modern politics, the “single issue
voter” gets a pretty bad rap. He
is seen
as unrealistic and intellectually myopic, a disservice to his party
and,
ultimately, his cause. Politics,
after
all, is about pragmatism; it is the art of the possible, and no
thinking person
allows themselves to be guided by their feelings on one single issue.
Of
course, this is pure bunk. Anyone
with a basic grasp of the ideological
identities that characterize modern American society know that there
are
certain “hinge” issues that tend to serve as electoral litmus tests for
many
voters. A woman’s
“right to choose”, for
example, is the political sacred cow for the Liberal, well-educated
urban
feminist demographic. For
those who
identify with the gay community, a candidate’s position on same-sex
marriage is
often of central import. For
the
Hispanic community it might be issues involving immigration policy, for
African
Americans, matters of race relations.
And of course, there are certain political
viewpoints that are assumed
by all to be non-negotiable. A
candidate
who embraced discrimination based on race, sex, or religion, for
example, would
be roundly condemned by all side of the political spectrum and deemed
disqualified from running for office, regardless of their intellectual
or
political qualifications.
For
those Americans whose political
identity is guided by their belief in the sanctity of life, a
candidate’s
position on abortion is often the make-or-break question. To this end, the pro-life
nonprofit Susan B.
Anthony List challenges conservative presidential candidates to sign a
pro-life
leadership pledge as a means of assuring voters that their commitment
to
defending the sanctity of life is paramount.
Specifically, the pledge addresses four key
issues related to
presidential leadership:
FIRST,
to nominate to the U.S. federal
bench judges who are committed to restraint and applying the original
meaning
of the Constitution, not legislating from the bench;??SECOND, to select
only
pro-life appointees for relevant Cabinet and Executive Branch
positions, in
particular the head of National Institutes of Health, the Department of
Justice, and the Department of Health & Human Services;
THIRD,
to advance pro-life legislation
to permanently end all taxpayer funding of abortion in all domestic and
international spending programs, and defund Planned Parenthood and all
other
contractors and recipients of federal funds with affiliates that
perform or
fund abortions;
FOURTH,
advance and sign into law a
Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act to protect unborn children who
are
capable of feeling pain from abortion.
Three
GOP presidential candidates
have, for one reason or another, refused to sign the pledge. They are Mitt Romney,
Herman Cain, and Gary
Johnson. Mr. Cain
has clarified that his
reticence has nothing to do with ideological opposition and everything
to do
with his understanding of checks and balances.
Johnson has identified himself as pro-choice,
so no surprise there. But
then there is Governor Romney. As
he is the presumed favorite, pro-life
voters have a lot to consider.
And
this is where the “single-issue”
voter stigma comes into play. Republican
pundits eager to set aside social issues in favor of economic matters
will
dismiss the kerfuffle over the pro-life pledge as an unnecessary and
divisive
distraction, and Liberal groups will cite the controversy as the latest
example
of the GOP’s slide into extremism.
In
reality, there are very serious,
very legitimate reasons for pro-life conservatives to question the
leadership
suitability of a candidate who is not willing to commit to Susan B.
Anthony
List’s pledge. Foremost,
a candidate’s
easy dismissal of pro-life matters for reasons of pragmatism or nuance,
or whatever
the reason, calls into question his fundamental belief about the
sanctity of
life. Life is
either sacred or it’s
not. Life either
begins at conception
and should merit the full protection of the law as such, or it doesn’t
and
shouldn’t. Any
refusal to elevate the
importance of right-to-life issues by necessity trivializes them.
Of
equal importance are the
constitutional implications of a candidate’s view of the abortion issue. It is the general
conclusion of those who
adhere to a strict constructionist view of the Constitution that Roe v.
Wade
represents the most egregious example of judicial activism in American
history. It was a
case of pure judicial
fiat, in which “emanations” and “penumbras” were fabricated and
employed in
order to prop up a politically motivated, fallacious decree. The implied “right to
privacy” led to a
perceived “right to choose,” which then led down the fatal path to a
“right to
kill.”
Thoughtful
conservatives will likely
be uncomfortable with a presidential nominee that subscribes to such
nonsense. Governor
Romney’s refusal to
sign the pro-life pledge may be rooted in some ill-conceived form of
pragmatism, but it comes at the expense of principle.
It may also come at the expense of his
nomination.
Read
it at Townhall
.
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