I'm writing this column in Clinton, Connecticut, where I live part of
the year and hope to vote in November. I'm abandoning the antiquated
voting booths of New York City because I want to do my bit to help the
Democrats take back the House and Senate. Connecticut is a major
battleground. Democratic Senate candidate Ned Lamont gets most of the
press attention, thanks to his surprise upset of Joe Lieberman, now
running on the Egomania ticket, but for the balance of power in Congress
the House races are the ones that count: If Joe Courtney beats Rob
Simmons, and Diane Farrell beats Chris Shays, and Chris Murphy beats
Nancy Johnson, little Connecticut will give the Dems three of the
fifteen seats they need to take back the House. That's quite an
opportunity! Or maybe not: NARAL ProChoice America wants Nutmeg Staters
to vote for Lieberman, and for Republicans Simmons and Johnson. (They
haven't made up their minds about Shays, who blotted his prochoice
copybook in 2003 by voting to ban so-called "partial birth" abortion.)
Just north, in Rhode Island, they're supporting Lincoln Chafee for the
Senate against his Democratic challenger Sheldon Whitehouse. All these
contests are close. NARAL's money, volunteers and stamp of approval
could make a difference--perhaps even the difference.
With all due respect to NARAL, an organization I've supported faithfully
for years, Are they out of their minds? "We're not a partisan
organization," NARAL president Nancy Keenan told me when we spoke by
phone. "Party politics are not where we get involved." But for the
prochoice agenda to have a shot, Congress must change hands. It's that
simple. The dwindling number of prochoice Republicans are the party's
useful idiots, permitted to cast futile votes against the "partial
birth" abortion ban or right-wing Supreme Court nominees like Samuel
Alito and John Roberts, or in favor of federal funding for birth control
and sex ed (while casting hundreds of other votes along party lines)
because their function is to hold on to seats a more reactionary
candidate--an antichoice hard-liner, say--couldn't win. That's why in
the Rhode Island primary Bush campaigned for Chafee, who didn't even
vote for him in 2004, instead of Chafee's challenger in the primary,
Steve Laffey, whose antichoice and right-wing positions would have
handed the election to the Democrats.
The Republican Party can do the math. Why can't NARAL? Actually, it can.
Take a look at "Why We Need to Take Back Congress" on NARAL's website
(www.prochoiceamerica.org):
In the last 10 years, Congress has voted 147 times to restrict
reproductive-health services, including abortion and birth control. This
November, we have an opportunity to stop these attacks on choice by
electing six more pro-choice senators and 15 new House members. Need
help imagining what a pro-choice Congress would look like? Here are some
examples of how Congress would shift in pro-choice hands:
- Pro-choice lawmakers would control key committees, and
pro-choice lawmakers would instantly become a majority on every panel.
- Rather than sitting through anti-choice hearing
after hearing, called by anti-choice committee chairs, new committee
chairs could spend their time promoting women's health.
- Anti-choice lawmakers would no longer have a forum to spread
propaganda on the "myths and effects" of Roe v. Wade, nonexistent
syndromes like "post-abortion trauma," or allegations that RU 486 is
dangerous for women.
- Pro-choice lawmakers
could hold hearings to investigate the FDA's refusal to approve
emergency contraception over the counter, the devastating effects of the
global gag rule on women's health, and pro-choice measures that could
reduce America's staggeringly high rate of teen
pregnancy.
- Pro-choice forces would control the
Senate and House floor schedules. This means that we could avoid
anti-choice legislative attacks--and instead, see votes on pro-choice
bills that have been held up.
Six and fifteen, the magic numbers. Obviously, "prochoice" and
"antichoice" are fig leaves here; these changes will take place when
Democrats, not "prochoicers," become the majority party. When I asked
NARAL political director Beth Schipp about this, she repeated that NARAL
was a bipartisan organization. "We need support in both parties. I can
take out a fully antichoice incumbent, so why would I turn my back on my
friends?" Well, maybe because the friends, unfortunately, stand in the
way of that larger goal, the six and fifteen, without which reproductive
rights will continue their slow death by strangulation at the hands of
the party in power.
I'm singling out NARAL here, but the same argument applies to other
progressive single-issue groups that support Republican incumbents. The
theory is, you need supporters in both parties, and if you're not loyal
to incumbents who support your cause, you lose your leverage. That
rationale explains why in 1998 the gay rights organization Human Rights
Campaign supported the sleazy antichoice conservative Republican Senator
Alfonse D'Amato against his Democratic opponent Chuck Schumer. In 2004,
in return for his role in raising the minimum wage in New York State,
the Working Families Party supported Nick Spano, longtime Republican
state senator from Westchester, against his Democratic challenger,
Andrea Stewart-Cousins, a progressive black woman. She lost by eighteen
votes. Eighteen votes! Thanks, WFP, for shoring up the GOP majority in
the New York State Senate.
Stories like these are the reason I prefer to support individual
candidates. They may betray you and break your heart, but at least you
are not canceling your own vote, and funding your own funeral.
Copyright © 2006 The Nation
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