Posted on 09/08/2003 8:09:36 AM PDT by Liz
WASHINGTON - Multi-billionaire George Soros has committed $10 million to a new political organization designed to prevent President Bush from winning re-election. Pro-life advocates see the development as a reaction to pro-life advances made under the Bush administration and Republican control of Congress.
The group, representing labor, environmental and women's organizations, is dubbed Americans Coming Together. It plans to spend $75 million to "elect progressive officials at every level in 2004" in 17 targeted states: Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Iowa, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin.
"The fate of the world depends on the United States and President Bush is leading us in the wrong direction," Soros maintained.
The billionaire cited the president's foreign policy as his chief motivation for starting the new political action committee.
"The 'Bush doctrine' is both false and dangerous. The rest of the world is having an allergic reaction to it, as we have seen in Iraq. We need to change direction," Soros said.
Before this initiative, Soros was known primarily as a philanthropist. He has donated as much as $1 billion after the fall of the Soviet Union to prevent the proliferation of nuclear weapons.
According to the Capital Research Center, a Washington watchdog group that tracks grants to left-wing causes, Soros has also been a longtime supporter of abortion and euthanasia. His grant organization, the Open Society Institute, gave 150 grants totaling $30 million to pro-abortion programs from 1998 through this year.
"As the son of a mother who was a member of the Hemlock Society I cannot but approve," Soros said of the nation's most widely known pro-euthanasia organization. The Hemlock Society recently changed its name to End-of-Life Choices.
Soros, an immigrant from Hungary, put his money where his mouth is and his foundation gave a three-year $15 million grant to start a pro-euthanasia foundation called the Project on Death in America. The organization dispenses grants to other pro-euthanasia groups across the country.
Soros is not the only pro-abortion billionaire getting into the political arena these days. Berkshire Hathaway chairman Warren Buffett, who has supported pro-abortion causes, was appointed a financial adviser Aug. 13 to California gubernatorial hopeful and screen actor Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Americans Coming Together tapped Ellen Malcolm to run the new organization. Malcolm will also remain in her current position as head of Emily's List, which gives money only to female candidates who support unrestricted abortion on demand.
"Americans Coming Together's creation is further evidence that mainstream America is coming together in response to President Bush's extremism - on the environment, reproductive choice, workers' rights, civil rights and other critical issues," Malcolm said.
In addition to Soros' contribution, Americans Coming Together has received $12 million dollars from other millionaires and an additional $8 million from labor unions.
That this political action committee has raised $30 million from well-financed individuals and organizations has many in the pro-life community openly questioning its contention of being "mainstream."
"I wish I had George Soros and his millions," said Carol Tobias, political director for the National Right to Life Committee. "But I'm not scared by it. The pro-life movement has always faced obstacles and overcome them."
She said that electing pro-life candidates to office in 2004 would depend on grass-roots support from everyday people, not from billionaires.
"We've known for a long time that the pro-abortion lobby has had more money than us. But we have more people on our side. And people can work, people can volunteer and people can convince friends and neighbors to vote for candidates," she said.
"George Soros has a lot of money, but he only has one vote," Tobias said.
Deal Hudson, editor of Crisis magazine and an adviser to the White House on Catholic issues, lamented that Soros has followed Microsoft chief executive officer Bill Gates in abortion advocacy.
"Once again, how tragic that one of the world's wealthiest has been paying his millions to reducing the world's population by supporting abortion," he said.
Hudson said that while money is always crucial in elections, it would not be the most important factor in the races next year.
"Any party that fails to get out the grass-roots will lose regardless of the amount of money spent," he said.
Americans Coming Together has said it won't spend its money on media-driven campaigns but in grass-roots activism.
Jennifer Bingham serves as executive director for the Susan B. Anthony List, which sees itself as the pro-life answer to Emily's List.
Bingham wouldn't venture to say if Americans Coming Together would become primarily focused on abortion but said Malcolm's words speak for themselves.
"All I can tell you is about Emily's List," Bingham said. "The abortion issue is their litmus test."
Bingham noted that Emily's List was not forgiving to two senators, Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas and Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, when they voted to ban partial-birth abortions.
"Ellen Malcolm wrote in their newsletter that they would never support them again," Bingham said.
She said Emily's List cares most about abortion, but it will find out what issue will drive pro-abortion voters to the polls.
"They [identified] 'pro-choice' voters and then they found out what got them to vote," said Bingham, who applied the same tactics to the work of the Susan B. Anthony List.
"You need to talk to voters about what they care about," Bingham said. "People who don't vote, we don't bother with. We target pro-life women who are inconsistent voters."
And the Susan B. Anthony List has produced results. Twenty-two of its 32 endorsed candidates won, and it increased the number of pro-life women in Congress from seven to 12.
"We know if we get more pro-life women to vote, there will be more pro-life candidates elected to Congress," Bingham said.
One consolation to Bush supporters is that the Soros contribution will be dwarfed by the prowess of the president's campaign war chest.
Bush is expected to raise $200 million before his nomination in early September 2004. He will then have an additional $74 million in federal matching funds in the general election for the last months of the campaign.
Ultimately, political observers believe the election will likely not come down to money spent.
"Even accounting for Soros' millions, Bush will outspend the Democratic nominee overall," said Larry Sabato, a political science professor at the University of Virginia. "Both sides will have enough money to get across their messages. Money won't decide the race. The usual factors of the economy, war and peace, and scandal will."
"All the money in the world for the Democrats won't make a difference if the economy picks up and Iraq settles down," he said. "Bush will be re-elected easily under those conditions. Conversely, Bush will lose under the opposite conditions."
Joshua Mercer writes from Washington, D.C.
Be on alert.
They hate their fellow human beings so much they have made an avocation of finding legal ways to kill them.
For Soros, as an escapee from Nazi-occupied Budapest, this attitude is simply inexplicable and unforgivable.
Add Bill Gates to the Billionaire Baby-Killing Club.
Project on Death in America
Transforming the Culture of Dying
PDIA will not link properly. Access Home Page by clicking on 'reproduced here' linked below.
In November 1994, George Soros delivered a speech on the questions raised by the culture of dying in America. His speech, reproduced here, elaborated much of the origins and aims of the Open Society Institute's Project on Death in America.
Excerpts:
Third, we must increase the availability of hospice services for terminally ill patients removing restrictions on admittance and enhancing reimbursement regulations. We should consider laws that permit next of kin to decide to forego life sustaining medical interventions even when a patients wishes are not known. The government may have to help family members financially so that they can take care of dying persons at home by the least expensive means. These are only a few of the approaches to transforming the culture of dying that our project will be exploring in the months to come.
More:
This brings me to that hotly debated subject, physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia. This is the one aspect of dying that is talked about everywhere -- on television, in public forums, in newspaper headlines, and serious journal articles. Voters in Oregon just approved a law that makes it the first state to lift the prohibition against physician-assisted suicide.
As the son of a mother who was member of the Hemlock Society, and as a reader of Plato's Phaedra, I cannot but approve. But I must emphasize that I am speaking in my personal capacity and not on behalf of the Board of the Project on Death in America. There are members of the Board who take a different position and the Board as a whole wants to steer clear of the issue because it feels it has plenty to do before opening that Pandoras box. Instead of getting embroiled in the debate on physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia, they want to support the training of health care professionals, enabling them to provide humane, compassionate care to the dying, including improved physician-patient communication, patient-centered care, better physician judgment on withdrawing or withholding care, and familiarity with the principles and practices of palliative care.
****
I believe someone posted a reference to Judge Greer's interest in politics. George Soros is heavily involved in politics. Maybe there's a connection with George Felos, also. Guaranteed they are both dems.
Recent links:
Billionaire Pledges $10 Million to Defeat Pro-Life President
Multibillionaire Soros commits $10 million to new Democratic-leaning group
Soros Backs Anti-Bush Campaign With $10 Mln
George Soros Link to material on FreeRepublic
George Soros Google goes on for pages
I can't find a website for the specific Soros group, Americans Coming Together or ACT, although there are many by that name. Perhaps it isn't set up yet or perhaps they are obscuring it in some way.
When will they ever learn? For every action, there is a consequence - but in this case, the consequences are not what they were hoping.
When you loathe humanity and take it out on the unborn, you're liable to get that way.
It'll turn up .........FR won't give up on it.
I have three questions for Dr Dean. These are strategic rhetorical questions designed to back Dr Dean into a corner........whatever he answers will hurt his position on abortion. I would advise Bush to save these questions for the presidntial debates.
(1) Is Dr Dean an abortionist?
(2) An underage pregnant girl visited Dr Dean for medical attention. As a licensed practitioner, Dr Dean knew a crime -- a sexual assault -- had been committed on an underage girl. Did Dr Dean report he knew a crime had been committed as required by law? If Dr Dean did not report it, Dr Dean not only obstructed justice, in most states it is a separate crime not to report your knowledge that a crime has been committed. Was the Vermont Physicians' Licensing Board notified about Dr Deans conduct in this matter?
(3) There is a national movement to hold certain abortion clinic employees criminally liable if they fail to report incidences of sex crimes against children. Does Dr Dean support this legislation?
Yup.......even if I do say so myself (blush).......
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