Tom Piatak

Is John McCain Really Pro-Life?

Posted by Tom Piatak on February 14, 2008

In his recent address to CPAC, John McCain told the audience that “I believe…in …the steadfast defense of our rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, which I have defended my entire career as God-given to the born and unborn,” and asserted that “I have proudly defended my 24 year pro-life record.” This is also a theme stressed by McCain apologists, including William Bennett and Seth Leibsohn, who led off their hosannas to McCain at National Review Online on Feb. 7 with a recitation of his pro-life credentials. But what can pro-lifers really expect from a President McCain? The answer, I fear, is what they got from the first President Bush—unenthusiastic lip service, and little more.

Notably, neither McCain nor Bennett and Leibsohn mention McCain’s enthusiastic support for federal funding of embryonic stem-cell research. It is impossible to square that support with principled belief in the pro-life cause, unless McCain’s operative principle is, “I will support legal protection for the unborn, unless it is politically inconvenient.” Neither of them mention McCain’s recent statement, reported in the Washington Post on Feb. 3, that “It’s not social issues I care about.” Nor do they mention his statement to the San Francisco Chronicle on Aug. 19, 1999, “[C]ertainly in the short term, or even the long term, I would not support the repeal of Roe v. Wade which would then force X number of women in America to [undergo] illegal and dangerous operations.” In the same interview, McCain stated he would not have a “litmus test” on abortion for judicial nominees.

There are other warning signs as well. McCain’s former Senate colleague, Rick Santorum, an indefatigable champion of the unborn, has stated that, behind the scenes in the Senate, McCain did his best to prevent pro-life legislation from coming to a vote on the floor. Robert Novak has reported that McCain has described Justice Samuel Alito, whom Bush appointed to the Supreme Court after conservative opposition scuttled the Harriet Miers nomination, as “too conservative.” Novak has also reminded his readers that, at the time Vermont Republican Jim Jeffords switched his support to the Democrats in the Senate, McCain was in negotiations with the Senate Democrats to do the same thing.

McCain’s champions point to the Supreme Court, which Republicans seeking to assuage restless conservatives always do.  Of course, there is no guarantee the next President will be able to make any nominations to the Supreme Court.  GOP propagandists regularly warned in 2000 that Al Gore would get to pick three new Supreme Court justices, but in fact George W. Bush had zero Supreme Court vacancies to fill in his first term.  It is true that one of the most liberal members of the Court, John Paul Stevens, is 88 years old, but mere age is no impediment to continued service in the most powerful gerontocracy since Leonid Brezhnev’s Politburo, and it is possible that Stevens will be on the Court when the next President leaves the White House.  And the rest of the Court is of an age that makes continued service through the next four years likely.

More significantly, Republican fixation on Supreme Court appointments is a sign of political timidity at best, or a Machiavellian disregard of social conservatives at worst.  The Constitution actually gives Congress tools to use against an activist judiciary, including judicial impeachment and the authority to restrict the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court.  But the GOP has steadfastly refused to use those tools.  And the Republican track record on Supreme Court appointments is only a little short of disastrous, including such liberal stalwarts as Earl Warren, William Brennan, Harry Blackmun, John Paul Stevens, and David Souter, and such feckless moderates as Sandra Day O’Connor and Anthony Kennedy.  Indeed, Blackmun authored Roe v. Wade, and Souter, O’Connor, and Kennedy reaffirmed it in their joint opinion in 1992’s Planned Parenthood v. Casey decision. And it is useful to remember that even though Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito are widely assumed to favor overturning Roe v Wade, the same was said of a Supreme Court to which Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush had appointed a majority of the justices—the Casey decision showed just how wrong such thinking had been.

There is good reason to think that the many disappointments conservatives have experienced from the Supreme Court have been the result of more than bad luck.  In strictly Machiavellian terms, it is in the best interests of the Republican Party to keep Roe v. Wade the law of the land.  This allows Republicans to keep alive an issue that causes millions of Americans to reliably vote for GOP presidential nominees, while also not alienating powerful pro-choice Republicans—a group that includes many corporate donors as well as such famous persons as Nancy Reagan, Barbara Bush, and Laura Bush.  As long as the abortion issue is safely in the hands of the Court, Republicans can tantalize pro-life voters with the prospect of future nominees while continuing to blame the Court for lack of progress on the issue.  Indeed, Robert Novak, in his outstanding memoir Prince of Darkness, reports that George H. W. Bush appointed David Souter to the Supreme Court knowing full well that Souter favored Roe, despite the many promises Bush had made to pro-lifers over the years. And Souter’s champion in the Senate was John McCain’s friend and ally, former New Hampshire senator Warren Rudman, who knew of, and shared, Souter’s pro-abortion views.

In order for Roeto be overturned, we most likely need a president who is profoundly committed to the pro-life cause, who has a track record of regularly and passionately speaking out in defense of the unborn, and is in fact willing to impose a pro-life litmus test on his Supreme Court nominees. Unfortunately, John McCain’s words and deeds show that he will not be such a president. We can only hope that, if McCain does get to make nominations to the Supreme Court, his nominees will be far better than we have any rational basis to expect.


Comments

Excellent piece, Tom.  McCain’s entire political record is based on what he thinks will help get him elected or reelected.  In that sense, he’s the perfect candidate to continue the Republican policy of promising to protect the lives of the unborn, but making sure that Roe is never overturned.

That’s something to think about when everybody starts to fall in line because of Supreme Court appointments.  A Supreme Court with one or two more justices appointed by a President McCain is no more likely to overturn Roe than one with one or two more justices appointed by a President Obama.

They want to keep Roe in place to keep the illusion that conservatives are represented in government, which of course they are not.  Gay marriage is the new issue that they hope to never resolve because it keeps the masses occupied in their illusion.  It distracts everyone from the fact that they are in total agreement on wars for Democracy, wars on Ilsamofacism, surveilance of the people, an ever expanding police state, and bankrupting the country.  As Paul Gottfried pointed out in his recent column the FOX crowd and all the other media for that matter have their dream ticket, although originally they hoped for Hillary vs Rudy.

Mr. Piatak’s comments are especially important in light of the fact that the folks over at National Review are already starting the talk about how “reasonable people can disagree” about McCain but should still vote for him. 

They don’t spare any of the typical liberal compromise language: “Most Republican voters have taken a sensible view of this question.”

Yes, let’s all be sensible and consider life issues one view among many that can be thrown out in the name of compromise.  What’s really important is supporting “The Party”.  You don’t want to be one of those “extreme” wingnuts do you?

Mr. Piatik is quick to praise others for good articles. So am I. Good job.

Very nice piece, Tom. My son, who is a very
conventional Republican is always trotting out
McCain’s questionable opposition to abortion as
evidence of how “conservative” the Senator is. Somehow
I suspected that a moderate hero of the liberal-
neocon media could not be counted on to resist
the feminist lobby.

Roe will not be overturned in the next presidential cycle.  The Court will never do it; it will be accomplished only by a Congress that has been so instructed by voters who may also never come to that point of courage.  Tom’s insight about the Republican need to keep Roe intact is brilliant, and the best reason I have yet heard for conservatives to stay home and let McCain lose.

The GOP should be consigned to the dust bin of history.  With the exception of 1976
in which I voted for third-party candidate Tom Anderson and later when I voted for a
conservative Democrat for Ohio state auditor, I have voted Republican.  When I became
interested in politics (1967-1968) the Democratic party to me was the party of Vietnam,
inflation, race and campus riots, etc.  The “conservative” GOP seemed the only answer. I
believe there actually was a time when they could have become the conservative party in
America.  That day passed if it ever was a reality.  I will not vote for the rhetoric
any more.  Neither party’s national leadership is pro-life.  There are pro-life
conservative Republicans and there are pro-life conservative Democrats out in the
hustings.  But their value is simply to be milked for votes.  When the Buchanan
Republicans and the (George) Wallace Democrats wise up and walk out of their respective
parties, there may be the genesis of a truly traditionalist political party.  I ain’t
holding my breath on that one.

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