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Associated Press , February 1, 2005
Departing Head
of Planned Parenthood Faults Kerry for Handling
of Abortion During Campaign
DATELINE: NEW YORK
The outgoing president of Planned Parenthood,
Gloria Feldt, commended her anti-abortion adversaries
Tuesday for their political skills and criticized
ally John Kerry for an ineffective defense
of abortion rights during his losing presidential
campaign.
"I have great respect for John Kerry, but
there's no question he did not articulate these
issues well," Feldt said in an interview.
"He seemed equivocal. He ceded the moral
high ground to the other side."
Feldt, 62, resigned last week - effective immediately
- after eight years as president of the country's
most influential and controversial family planning
organization. Her path to the top was unlikely:
at 15, she was newly pregnant in a small West
Texas town; by 20, she had three children and
dim career prospects.
Feldt had been conferring with her board of directors
for several months about stepping down and
described the departure as amicable - with
some differences over timing but not over strategies.
Feldt now plans to write, travel and enjoy new
freedom as a speaker. She cited her comments
about Kerry as something she would not have
dared say in her former post.
Under Feldt, Planned Parenthood escaped from
financial crisis and began taking the offensive
on policy issues, lobbying hard for abortion
rights, more access to contraceptives and comprehensive
sex education. Last year, the traditionally
nonpartisan organization gave Kerry its first-ever
presidential endorsement.
"It's not our fault that the pro-choice
candidate didn't win," Feldt said, contending
many voters were unsure exactly where the Democratic
candidate stood on abortion-related issues.
A Kerry spokesman expressed surprise at Feldt's
comments, noting that Kerry explicitly vowed
to oppose Supreme Court nominees who might
overturn the right to abortion.
"John Kerry's record in the Senate for 20
years and throughout the presidential campaign
was crystal clear that abortion should be safe,
legal, and rare," David Wade said.
Kerry's loss, and Republican gains in Congress,
have prompted some Democrats to question whether
they need to reach out to anti-abortion voters,
but Feldt insists that the cause of abortion
rights is not a political liability.
"The finger of blame shouldn't be pointed
at us who've been doing the work on the ground,"
she said. "The finger should be pointed
at the anti-choice extremists who don't even
support family planning programs that would
make abortions less necessary."
Yet she said abortion-rights supporters need
to take a cue from their foes in terms of political
organizing.
"You can't fault the anti-choice groups
for participating in the democratic process,"
she said. "They took over the Republican
Party precinct by precinct; they did it by
studying Democracy 101."
For many anti-abortion activists, Planned Parenthood
under Feldt was the No. 1 target of vilification.
Her resignation was greeted by the American Life
League with a news release titled, "Gloria
Feldt's Reign of Death Comes to End" -
alluding to the more than 1.3 million abortions
performed in Planned Parenthood clinics during
her leadership.
"I love a fight," Feldt said. "No
attack from an external source has ever gotten
me down.
"But what's problematic is that these attacks
create a social climate in which many people
are afraid. Many physicians are afraid to continue
providing their patients with a full range
of reproductive health care, including abortions."
Planned Parenthood is the country's largest single
abortion provider, performing more than 244,000
in 2003. Its 850 clinics treat more than 2.8
million people annually, offering contraceptives,
pregnancy and breast cancer tests, gynecological
exams and other services.
As a teenage bride, Feldt and her 19-year-old
husband moved to Odessa, Texas, where she initially
had no ambition but to be a wife and mother.
"I had this mental picture of what it would
be like to be this all-American girl with a
house and two little babies, and packing your
husband's lunch," she said. "That's
what I thought I wanted in my 15-year-old's
fantasy."
She began to develop a sense of social activism
while working part-time with Head Start, and
in 1974 began working at a Planned Parenthood
affiliate in Odessa. Later, she headed an Arizona
chapter founded by the wife of conservative
Republican Barry Goldwater.
"Her shoes will be tough to fill,"
said Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano, who as
a young lawyer worked with Feldt. "She
was always very pragmatic, very articulate,
very knowledgeable about the issues."
Looking back, Feldt speaks glowingly of the dedication
of her Planned Parenthood colleagues, and voices
dismay at the many recent state and federal
laws that have chipped away at women's access
to abortion. She's also concerned that future
appointments by President Bush may tilt the
U.S. Supreme Court and lower courts toward
anti-abortion positions.
"Reproductive rights are human rights,"
she said. "Whether and when to have children
is probably the most fundamental civil and
human right that any of us have."
<< Associated Press -- 2/1/05 >>
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