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Dale_M
Guest
Whether or not overturning Roe could have been a determining issue in presidential campaigns is speculative. I am not sure that, even with the USCCB pushing the issue, that it would have worked. In the era of Women’s Liberation, abortion was seen as an overdue right and any attempt to remove it would have been very hotly contested. And I am not sure that Catholics would have been anymore willing to let abortion determine their votes than they are today.This is a little disingenuous. If we consult lawyers, you are correct that executive mandates are very much different than Supreme Court decisions. But in the larger picture, if the bishops had excercised a bit more muscular leadership in 1973, Roe could have been overturned within 12 years. Presidents select SC nominees, you realize.
I disagree with that very much. I do agree that many Catholics who wanted to justify downplaying abortion as an issue wrapped themselves in the Seamless Garment. But that was just a fig leaf to cover the views they already held.One can argue whether or not Cardinal Bernadin intended that effect when he made his “seamless garment” explanation. But the results are the same regardless of his intentions. It was a pastoral disaster that rendered catholics impotent as a moral influence on American politics for 30 years.
Arguably, the pro-life movement in choosing to abandon the Seamless Garment approach helped to diminish the pro-life cause by essentially turning it into a politically conservative movement instead of one which reached across the aisle.
