BillP: You very eloquently have defended the right of an individual to vote for a pro-abortion candidate under certain conditions. A number of us, I think, wonder if you can define and defend what ‘truly grave moral reason’ in THIS election you felt took priority over the issue of abortion. The arguments that any good Catholic had the right in accordance with Church teaching to vote for Obama only makes sense if that individual can also defend such a ‘truly grave moral reason.’ I, personally, don’t see such a reason. So, maybe you can enlighten us on what you think we don’t understand. If you can’t - thanks for playing.
I will keep you in my prayers.
My reasons for voting Obama over McCain boil down to efficacy. There is simply put no prospect that either of these men is going to make a meaningful impact on the number of abortions performed in this country. I say this for three reasons:
1st: The party of the presidency has no correlation with the number of abortions performed in the US each year.
Carter: 1,196,683
Reagan : 1,327,361
Bush I: 1,393,505
Clinton: 1,103,033
Bush II : 843,029
Avg. for GOP 1,187,965
Avg. for Dem 1,149,858
(before getting too excited about Bush’s decline, the number of abortions has been trending down since they peaked at 1.4 million during the Bush I administration in 1990)
In short, there is no correlation whatever between the pro-life stance of the president and the number of abortions that occur during his term.
2nd; The president, no matter how pro-life, has no authority to end abortion. Right now that power resides in SCOTUS. Right now, seven of the nine members of the court have been appointed by nominally “pro-life” presidents.
Has the SCOTUS overturned Roe v. Wade? No.
Is there any practical possibility that a Justice committed to overturning Roe v. Wade will be confirmed by a Democratically controlled Senate? No, in fact, 41 Democratic Senators would be enough to filibuster any such nomination.
Was there EVER a possibility of the 2008 election producing a filibuster-proof GOP dominated Senate? No.
3rd: McCain ain’t all that pro-life. In the 2000 campaign and even as late as 2007 he was trying to get the GOP platform changed to permit incest, rape and life of the mother exceptions. McCain has also said if his daughter had an unwanted pregnancy it would be her decision whether she carried the child or not.
blogs.abcnews.com/politicalradar/2007/04/mccain_still_wa.html
abcnews.go.com/Video/playerIndex?id=4823197&affil=wls
McCain is also on record has having come to regret the Senate’s interference in the Terry Schiavo case and being in favor of embryonic stem cell research.
msnbc.msn.com/id/8245636/
In short, McCain is only pro-life when he needs the support of the base, and even then he is only as pro-life as he needs to be.
Since McCain wasn’t the “great pro-life ender of abortion”, the next question is will Obama make the problem worse? Well, abortions have been trending down for the last 18 years and Obama’s chances of getting the FOCA passed into law are non-existent (the GOP has 41 senators and can filibuster it). The preponderance of the evidence is that the downward trend will continue.
Since, as I’ve demonstrated, the party of the president has no practical effect on abortion, and since McCain wasn’t authentically pro-life anyway, it simply became a matter of deciding based on the other aspects of the candidates. In terms of foreign and domestic policy, respect for human rights and the rule of law, I feel that Obama is the better choice.