A
_Abyssinia
Guest
Next president could elect 4 supreme court justices. If Obama is reelected the reversal of roe v wade will be put back probably decadesHow many Justices are going to resign in the next four years? Will Romney, if elected, be able to get his choice for Supreme Court approved by Congress? No one is overturning Roe v Wade because business doesn’t want it and so, they can talk all they wa nt, but when we had the most Republican controlled government in history under GW Bush, no one touched Roe v Wade.
1st presidential debate in 2000 Bush declared that he would not try to overturn roe v Wade
Before Bush was elected as president, he said that he would support Supreme Court judges who would strictly interpret the Constitution. A strict stance on abortion, he indicated, would not rest at the top of his list of requirements for an appointee, though he had voiced strong personal opposition to most forms of the procedure. He said, “I will not have a litmus test for my judges, except for: Will the judge strictly interpret the Constitution, and not use the bench to write social policy?”
Donors would probably donate for a short time, but why would major donors donate nearly $500 million a year? What benefit would it bring to them? If donors want to donate money that is their decision, but the goverment should not be giving federal funds to a business that has $1 billion in personal assets and has made over $500 million in profit in last 9 years. Morally planned parenthood do not deserve taxpayer funds because they are an abortion provider and considering the scandals exposed by Live Action it is not right to give them money. Economically given the financial state of America giving money to them is not a priorityNot because of Roe v Wade being overturned but because 20% of their funding comes from government grants that can be withdrawn. Someone I know at Planned Parenthood, however, estimated that if a Romney, Tea Party influenced Administration withdrew all that money, their major donors would probably donate twice as much to make up for the loss, which is what they did during the Susan G. Komen debacle.