Abortion crusade
turns Republican women off Bush
DATELINE: New York -- GEORGE BUSH'S crackdown
on abortion has inflamed women in his own party to the
point where they are openly turning against their President.
Fuelled by a fear that a Bush victory in next
month's election could lead to many states overturning
30 years of legal terminations in the US, several moderate
Republican women are rebelling against the crusade against
sex education and unmarried women's access to contraception.
Linda Binder, a Republican State Senator in
the conservative state of Arizona, is typical. Despite
voting for Bush in 2000, she has pulled her support over
what she calls his 'wacky, far right' position on women's
rights.
'We don't want to go back to coathanger abortions.
. . As legislators, my fellow moderates are feeling the
push for more faith-based programmes on sex education
and contraception coming from the Bush administration,'
she said.
Binder, 56, is one of a growing number of
Republican women renegades infuriated by Bush's slogan
that the W in his name 'stands for women'.
Mary Lou Halliburton, a Colorado Republican,
is a retired lawyer who worked in the Nixon White House
and of the family who founded Halliburton - the company
once headed by Vice President Dick Cheney and now enjoying
a $ 7.5bn contract in Iraq.
She helped create a group called Republicans
Who Want Their Party Back.
'Our issues and concerns are everything from
foreign policy to deficit spending to choice to stem
cell research to the Iraq war,' she said.
If Bush is re-elected he is expected to appoint
more conservative judges to the Supreme Court, who will
overturn the 1973 Roe V Wade case that legalised abortion
in the US. Federal restrictions already imposed by Bush
on abortions have led to women being refused terminations
after only 13 weeks, the American Civil Liberties Union
said.
'It has become illegal here for a girl to
get an abortion without her parents' consent. You cannot
legally get the morning after pill - even if you have
been raped,' said Binder.
She will not reveal who she will vote for
on 2 November. But many suspect she will vote for Kerry.
Judith Allen, another lifelong Republican,
has no reticence. This former Superior Court clerk is
a member of Republicans for Kerry, which contributes
funds to the Democrats. It is estimated to have many
thousands of members.
'I just do not have the sense that Bush is
bright. And I'm embarrassed to say that about our President,'
she said.
Thousands of members of Republicans for Choice
went on the March for Women's Lives, the pro-abortion
march in Washington DC last spring. A new fashion item
was also first seen at the gathering - T-shirts declaring
'I've had an abortion'. The creator of the T-shirts,
New Yorker Jennifer Baumgardner, has since sold 600.
<< The Observer -- 10/24/04 >>