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New York Times (USA), January 24, 2005
Senator Clinton
Seeking Shared Ground over Abortions
DATELINE: ALBANY
Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton said on Monday
that the opposing sides in the divisive debate
over abortion should find ''common ground''
to prevent unwanted pregnancies and ultimately
reduce abortions, which she called a ''sad,
even tragic choice to many, many women.''
In a speech to about 1,000 abortion rights supporters
near the New York State Capitol, Mrs. Clinton
firmly restated her support for the Supreme
Court's ruling in Roe v. Wade, which legalized
abortion nationwide in 1973. But then she quickly
shifted gears, offering warm words to opponents
of legalized abortion and praising the influence
of ''religious and moral values'' on delaying
teenage girls from becoming sexually active.
''There is an opportunity for people of good
faith to find common ground in this debate
-- we should be able to agree that we want
every child born in this country to be wanted,
cherished and loved,'' Mrs. Clinton said.
Her speech came on the same day as the annual
anti-abortion rally in Washington marking the
Roe v. Wade anniversary. [Page A17.]
Mrs. Clinton's remarks were generally well received,
though the audience was silent during most
of her overtures to anti-abortion groups. Afterward,
leaders of those groups were skeptical, given
Mrs. Clinton's outspoken support for abortion
rights over the years.
Mrs. Clinton, widely seen as a possible candidate
for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination
in 2008, appeared to be reaching out beyond
traditional core Democrats who support abortion
rights. She did so not by changing her political
stands, but by underscoring her views in preventing
unplanned pregnancies, promoting adoption,
recognizing the influence of religion in abstinence
and championing what she has long called ''teenage
celibacy.''
She called on abortion rights advocates and anti-abortion
campaigners to form a broad alliance to support
sexual education -- including abstinence counseling
-- family planning, and morning-after emergency
contraception for victims of sexual assault
as ways to reduce unintended pregnancies.
''We can all recognize that abortion in many
ways represents a sad, even tragic choice to
many, many women,'' Mrs. Clinton told the annual
conference of the Family Planning Advocates
of New York State. ''The fact is that the best
way to reduce the number of abortions is to
reduce the number of unwanted pregnancies in
the first place.''
Leading anti-abortion campaigners, in both New
York and nationwide, pounced on Mrs. Clinton
as a suspect spokeswoman for compromise and
common ground.
''I think she's trying to adopt a values-oriented
language, but it lacks substance, at least
if you compare it to her record,'' said Tony
Perkins, president of the Family Research Council
in Washington. ''If you look at Senator Clinton's
voting record on this issue, it's like Planned
Parenthood's condoms -- it's defective.''
Mrs. Clinton's address came as the Democratic
Party itself engages in its own re-examination
of its handling of the issue in the wake of
Senator John Kerry's loss in the presidential
race.
Democratic senators such as Harry Reid of Nevada
and Dianne Feinstein of California have also
pressed for a greater focus on reducing unintended
pregnancies, and some Democratic consultants
have urged that party leaders mint new language
to reach voters who identified moral values
as a top issue for them in last November's
election.
''Our focus in the speech was to make sure that
she still communicated that she was pro-choice
-- she doesn't want to undermine that -- but
she also thinks we can have some common ground
among all sides and make abortion rare,'' Neera
Tanden, legislative director for Mrs. Clinton,
said in a telephone interview.
Before the election, Mrs. Clinton was a visible
and public defender of abortion rights, appearing
at a huge rally in Washington last spring and
denouncing what she called Republican efforts
to demonize the abortion rights movement.
And in her remarks, she seemed to acknowledge
that this image of her was well known by anti-abortion
campaigners while adding that, to her, it did
not tell the full story about her views. ''Yes,
we do have deeply held differences of opinion
about the issue of abortion and I, for one,
respect those who believe with all their hearts
and conscience that there are no circumstances
under which any abortion should ever be available,''
Mrs. Clinton said, going on to assert that
even some critics still support abortions in
some cases, such as when the life of the mother
is at risk.
The senator also made a nod to the values issue
on Monday in praising faith-based and religious
organizations for promoting abstinence.
''Research shows that the primary reason teenage
girls abstain from early sexual activity is
because of their religious and moral values,''
Mrs. Clinton said.
Mrs. Clinton made clear that she did not favor
abstinence-only programs of sexual education.
''We should also recognize what works and what
doesn't work and to be fair, the jury is still
out on the effectiveness of abstinence-only
programs,'' Mrs. Clinton said. ''I don't think
this debate should be about ideology -- it
should be about facts, and evidence. We have
to deal with the choices that young people
make, not just the choices we wish they would
make.''
Mrs. Clinton's remarks drew some gasps and head-shaking
from those gathered here when she offered a
string of statistics and data that, her aides
said, were meant to show that preventing unwanted
pregnancies could be a unifying issue for supporters
and opponents of abortion rights.
Several audience members inhaled sharply, for
instance, when Mrs. Clinton said that 7 percent
of American women who do not use contraception
make up 53 percent of all unintended pregnancies.
She also cited research estimating that 15,000
abortions a year are by women who have been
sexually assaulted, one of several reasons,
she said, that morning-after emergency contraception
should be made available over the counter.
After the speech, several members of the audience
said they viewed Mrs. Clinton as a ''hero''
of the abortion rights movement, but also noted
that her address seemed intended to reach more
conservative and religious voters as well as
perhaps in hopes of broadening her base of
support for a possible 2008 run.
''I understood what Senator Clinton meant when
she said abortion could be a sad and tragic
choice, but we see women express relief more
than anything else that they have the freedom
to choose,'' said Martha Stahl, director for
public relations and marketing for Northern
Adirondack Planned Parenthood. ''Mrs. Clinton
really seemed to be reaching out here.''
Christina Fitch, legislative director of the
New York State Right to Life Committee, said:
''She's talking about common sense, common
ground, but we have yet to see her reach out
her arms like a lot of other people have and
support things like a partial-birth abortion
ban. We want to see her extending olive branches
on protecting life.''
Mrs. Clinton supported a proposed ban on late-term
abortions as long as it included an exception
to protect the health of the mother; in turn,
she has opposed such a ban when it lacked that
exception. She has also supported some state
parental notification laws under which a teenager
must involve at least one parent in the decision
-- but only when there is an exception in the
laws that allows the judge to bypass the law
and let the teenager obtain an abortion on
her own -- a process known as ''judicial bypass,''
which Mrs. Clinton has also supported before.
Mrs. Clinton also weaved several jabs at the
Bush administration into her remarks, at one
point saying that the White House had put the
lives of many women and girls worldwide ''at
risk'' by restricting abortion counseling services.
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