A majority is a majority, especially a 7 to 2 majority. If that kind of majority cannot win, even with 2 bad choices, then one can question the sincerity of the argument without being accused of ‘rationalizing for supporting an evil…,’ in my humble opinion.
What is this 7-2 majority? That doesn’t correspond to the present composition of the Court, either as to Repub appointees, Catholics or prolife justices.
Catholics are, indeed, a majority on the Court, by a 6 to 3 margin. Republicans are a majority by 5-4, but Kennedy, as I pointed out, is not consistently prolife, notwithstanding that he is a Republican. Four Republican appointees are Catholic and prolife, leaving one Repub appointee who is not consistently prolife, but did at least vote to uphold the partial birth abortion ban.
The Democrat appointees are all pro-abortion, regardless of religion. Of the Democrat appointees, only one is Catholic; Sotomayor, and she was appointed by Obama and supported by NARAL, which pretty much tells you where she stands. Kagan is not Catholic, but she, too, was appointed by Obama and supported by NARAL. Pretty obvious there. No Democrat voted to uphold the partial birth abortion ban.
So the record is this:
Republicans on the Court who have voted prolife-100%
Democrats on the Court who have voted prolife -0%
Republicans on the Court regarded as consistently prolife-80%
Democrats on the Court regarded as EVER prolife -0%
In the face of that, no one could maintain that there is “no difference” between the parties on the abortion issue unless one is simply trying to defend the Dem party’s terrible record by saying what nobody could possibly believe by looking at the facts.
You’re a Democrat, and we get that. But you can’t maintain equivalency between the parties on abortion when it obviously isn’t the reality of the matter.