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Associated Press, August 12,
2005
Under fire, abortion
rights group withdraws anti-Roberts ad
Author : Jesse J. Holland
DATELINE: WASHINGTON
An abortion rights group is withdrawing a heavily
criticized television ad that linked John Roberts
to violent anti-abortion activists, saying
its attempt to illuminate the Supreme Court
nominee's record has been "misconstrued."
After protests by conservatives, NARAL Pro-Choice
America said Thursday night it would pull the
ad that began running this week.
"We regret that many people have misconstrued
our recent advertisement about Mr. Roberts'
record," NARAL President Nancy Keenan
said.
"Unfortunately, the debate over that advertisement
has become a distraction from the serious discussion
we hoped to have with the American public,"
she said in a letter Thursday to Republican
Sen. Arlen Specter, who earlier in the day
had urged the group to withdraw the ad.
Specter, himself an abortion-rights supporter
as well as chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee that will question Roberts next month,
said the ad was "blatantly untrue and
unfair."
The NARAL ad criticized Roberts and linked him
with violent anti-abortion protesters because
of the anti-abortion briefs he worked on as
a government lawyer in 1991.
"The NARAL advertisement is not helpful
to the pro-choice cause which I support,"
Specter said in a letter to Keenan.
Keenan's response said the group would replace
the ad with one that "examines Mr. Roberts'
record on several points, including his advocacy
for overturning Roe v. Wade, his statement
questioning the right to privacy, and his arguments
against using a federal civil rights law to
protect women and their doctors and nurses
from those who use blockades and intimidation."
NARAL had planned a $500,000 ([euro]403,000)
campaign to show the ad for two weeks on cable
channel CNN, and on CBS, NBC and ABC TV affiliates
in Rhode Island and Maine.
At least one station already had refused to run
the ad. Mike Young, vice president and general
manager of WABI-TV in Bangor, Maine, said his
station ran the ad before deciding to pull
it Thursday after receiving a challenge from
the Republican National Committee.
"After careful thoughtful analysis, we determined
the ad was at worst false, and at best misleading,"
he said.
Conservatives and Roberts supporters have been
calling all week for NARAL to pull the advertisement.
Senate Democrats have not taken a position on
the ad. Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the
Judiciary Committee's top Democrat, told The
Associated Press that ads for and against Roberts
wouldn't sway senators weighing the confirmation.
"There has been much furor over these ad
campaigns, but I believe that television advertisements
are not the point, and should not be the focus
of debate or discussion," Democratic Sen.
Charles Schumer said Thursday.
Schumer said he would ask Roberts about the constitutionality
of abortion clinic protesting at his confirmation
hearing.
In 1991, Roberts helped write - on behalf of
the government - a Supreme Court brief in Bray
v. Alexandria Women's Health Clinic. In that
case, the court limited the federal help available
to abortion clinic owners who seek to stop
blockades by protesters.
Associated Press writer Pauline Jelinek contributed
to this report.
On the Net:
NARAL Pro-Choice America: http://www.prochoiceamerica.org
U.S. Supreme Court: http://www.supremecourtus.gov
Senate Judiciary Committee: http://www.judiciary.senate.gov
<< Associated Press -- 8/12/05 >>
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