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Giuliani's Abortion Record Should Hearten Pro-Lifers
Human Events ^ | 1/18/20007 | Deroy Murdock

Posted on 01/18/2007 9:27:26 AM PST by Dark Skies

As pro-lifers prepare to mark Monday’s 34th anniversary of the Supreme Court’s Roe vs. Wade decision, many wonder whether they could support former New York mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani for president despite his pro-choice views. While some of Giuliani’s statements on abortion make pro-lifers fret, they should find his record surprisingly reassuring.

“I don’t like abortion,” Giuliani said in South Carolina’s The State newspaper last November 21. “I don’t think abortion is a good thing. I think we ought to find some alternative to abortion, and that there ought to be as few as possible.”

Nevertheless, Giuliani’s pro-life critics point to his April 5, 2001 address to the National Abortion Rights Action League’s “Champions of Choice” luncheon in Manhattan.

“As a Republican who supports a woman’s right to choose, it is particularly an honor to be here,” Giuliani said. He added: “The government shouldn’t dictate that choice by making it a crime or making it illegal.”

“I have a daughter now,” Giuliani told TV’s Phil Donahue during his unsuccessful 1989 mayoral campaign. Giuliani continued: “I would give my personal advice, my religious and moral views…I would help her with taking care of the baby. But if the ultimate choice of the woman -- my daughter or any other woman -- would be that in this particular circumstance, to have an abortion, I’d support that. I’d give my daughter the money for it.”

But did Giuliani’s mayoral deeds match such words?

According to the state Office of Vital Statistics, total abortions performed in New York City between 1993 (just before Giuliani arrived) and 2001 (as he departed) fell from 103,997 to 86,466 -- a 16.86 percent decrease. This upended a 10.32 percent increase compared to eight years before Giuliani, when 1985 witnessed 94,270 abortions.

What about Medicaid-financed abortions? Under Giuliani, such taxpayer-funded feticides dropped 22.85 percent, from 45,006 in 1993 to 34,722 in 2001.

The abortion ratio also slid from 890 terminations per 1,000 live births in 1993 to 767 in 2001, a 13.82 percent tail-off. This far outpaced the 2.84 percent reduction from 1985’s ratio of 916 to 1993’s 890. While abortions remained far more common in Gotham than across America (2001’s U.S. abortion ratio was 246), they diminished during Giuliani’s tenure, as they did nationally.

Giuliani essentially verbalized his pro-choice beliefs while avoiding policies that would have impeded abortion’s generally downward trajectory.

New York pro-lifers concede that Giuliani never attempted anything like what current Mayor Michael Bloomberg promulgated in July 2002. Eight city-run hospitals added abortion instruction to the training expected of their OB-GYN medical residents. Only those with moral objections may refuse this requirement.

Giuliani could have issued such rules, but never did.

Interestingly enough, after Giuliani left, Medicaid abortions under Bloomberg increased 5.19 percent from 34,722 in 2001 to 36,523 in 2003.

Asked if he could cite any Giuliani initiative that advanced abortion, New York State Conservative Party Chairman Mike Long told me, “I don’t remember, and I don’t think so.” He added: “I never remember seeing him promote the issue, to my knowledge.”

“I like him a lot -- although he doesn’t share my particular point of view on social issues,” televangelist Pat Robertson said May 1, 2005 on ABC’s “This Week.” “He did a super job running the city of New York and I think he’d make a good president.”

If Giuliani can sway Pat Robertson, can he attract other pro-lifers? Short of dizzying himself and others with a 180-degree reversal from a pro-choice to a pro-life posture, Giuliani should embrace parental-notification rules, so minors who seek abortions need their folks’ permission, as they now do for ear piercing. He should oppose partial-birth abortion, which even Democrats such as Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and liberal stalwart Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont have voted to prohibit.

Similarly, Giuliani should propose that Uncle Sam exit embryonic-stem-cell research laboratories and instead let drug companies -- not government -- finance such embryocidal experiments, if they must. He also could pledge to nominate constitutionalist judges skeptical of penumbras emanating outside Planned Parenthood clinics.

And, of course, Rudolph W. Giuliani should remind Republican primary voters that on his watch, total abortions, taxpayer-funded Medicaid abortions, and the abortion ratio all went the right way: down.

Mr. Murdock, a New York-based commentator to HUMAN EVENTS, is a columnist with the Scripps Howard News Service and a media fellow with the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace at Stanford University.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 2008election; electionpresident; giuliani; rudy
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To: Blackirish
Poll after poll after friggin poll shows the base LIKES Rudy.

These polls are meaningless. Once the MSM Foleys up Rudy real good, the base will hate him. And they've got a TON of material to work with. And if you think the race-baiting against G. W. Bush was bad in 2000, you ain't seen nothin' yet....
221 posted on 01/18/2007 11:23:00 AM PST by Antoninus ( Rudy McRomney as the GOP nominee = President Hillary. Why else do you think the media loves them?)
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To: My GOP

"No, the base doesn't make up 51% of the voting population. We have to be able to carry the independent swing voters. That was the lesson of 2006. I'm surprised at all fast that lesson has been forgotten."

No, but they are the ones who donate money, put signs in their yards, man the phones, campaign for a candidate and drive people to the polls. How many of your independent swing voters are gonna do that??

The lesson of 2006 was act like Republicans or lose your support.


222 posted on 01/18/2007 11:23:13 AM PST by FreeInWV
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To: ArrogantBustard

I will be back to discuss this further but I have to go to grocery to stock up as 8-10 inches of snow are expected into our area starting tomorrow. Already bought propane this morning but now need to stock up on some others things and make sure that the wood is brought onto the front porch for the fireplace. Mundane things to do with a major storm coming in for the 2nd weekend in a row.

My deck still has 2 inches of ice and more in some places along with half my driveway and all of the walk. Walk in the grass and stomp your feet so you don't fall. You can go sledding down my hill with no sled it is that icy.

Back for further discussion later today!


223 posted on 01/18/2007 11:23:14 AM PST by PhiKapMom (Common Sense Conservative - Vote Rudy/Allen - Take Back the House and Senate in '08)
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To: Blackirish

I'm not a Rudy hater I just don't think he can win the Primary. And if he could, I don't think he could win the General.

The press may love his star power now but as soon as the primary is over he will be the GOP's sleeze bag (my idea of their take not necessarilly how I feel about him) night after night after night. I'm sorry, but sure, we understand divorce however when you're personal numbers affect the national statistic mmmmmm I don't know how that's gonna fly in a two year campaign.


224 posted on 01/18/2007 11:23:24 AM PST by GulfBreeze (Proverbs-"A fool says in his heart, there is no God."-Meaning: God doesn't believe atheists exist.)
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To: Fierce Allegiance

"Hunter, because he doesn't have to backpedal and lie to appeal to conservatives (and I don't mean people like you)."

Hunter can't win the general. Conservatives can't win the general by themselves. And I am a conservative.




225 posted on 01/18/2007 11:23:35 AM PST by My GOP
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To: onyx; My GOP
Apparently, a lot of posters here have no idea about what it takes to mount successful campaign.

EXACTLY!! I read that it is going to take $100 Million Dollars in 2008 to run a successful presidential campaign! Scary!!

226 posted on 01/18/2007 11:24:46 AM PST by areafiftyone (Politicians Are Like Diapers - Both Need To Be Changed Often And For The Same Reason)
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To: areafiftyone

I think the cost was more than that in 2000.


227 posted on 01/18/2007 11:25:40 AM PST by onyx (DONATE NOW! -- It takes DONATIONS to keep FR running!!)
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To: GulfBreeze

"I'm sorry, but sure, we understand divorce however when you're personal numbers affect the national statistic mmmmmm I don't know how that's gonna fly in a two year campaign."

This is no shot at Ronald Reagan. I love Ronald Reagan. However he won despite being divorced and despite the fact Nancy was 3 months pregnant when they got married.


228 posted on 01/18/2007 11:26:17 AM PST by My GOP
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To: Antoninus

Once the MSM Foleys up Rudy real good




Rudy ain't no George Allen. The NYTimes was anti-Rudy all the time.

He will take on the MSM just fine. He's been there done that.


229 posted on 01/18/2007 11:26:57 AM PST by Blackirish (David Dinkins:"Rudy as President is kind of frightening.My question will be, will I move to Bermuda")
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To: Blackirish

Wrong...


230 posted on 01/18/2007 11:27:19 AM PST by GulfBreeze (Proverbs-"A fool says in his heart, there is no God."-Meaning: God doesn't believe atheists exist.)
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To: Dark Skies
"“I don’t like abortion,” Giuliani said in South Carolina’s The State newspaper last November 21. “I don’t think abortion is a good thing. I think we ought to find some alternative to abortion, and that there ought to be as few as possible.” "

As an update to Rudy's previous statement on abortion...Rudy vowed to "never personally" get an abortion should he get the nomination, an unnamed spokesman disclosed./ sarc. (kinda)
231 posted on 01/18/2007 11:27:35 AM PST by Beagle8U
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To: My GOP

Nancy wasn't Reagan's 4th wife...


232 posted on 01/18/2007 11:28:04 AM PST by GulfBreeze (Proverbs-"A fool says in his heart, there is no God."-Meaning: God doesn't believe atheists exist.)
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To: FreeInWV

The base turned out in 2006. It was the moderates, independents, and libertarians that turned on us. Lets not have that happen again in 2008.


233 posted on 01/18/2007 11:28:10 AM PST by My GOP
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To: areafiftyone

What brought that word to mind goes back to when my oldest daughter was in high school. They always held a contest for Miss BHS who was actually a football player dressed as a girl for one of the homecoming events. This linebacker in one of her classes shouts out when they told him that he had to dress up like a girl for the competition -- "I am a homophobe" and then a few choice words to say why he wouldn't dress up as a girl.

Everytime I see comments on here like today, it reminds me of her classmate and I laugh all over again. One of the guys who did dress up kept going up to him 'flirting' and he got furious. His fellow students had a ball with it as he never lived it down.


234 posted on 01/18/2007 11:28:17 AM PST by PhiKapMom (Common Sense Conservative - Vote Rudy/Allen - Take Back the House and Senate in '08)
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To: R.W.Ratikal
i AM FOR LIFE BUT I AM AGAINST GOVERNMENT BEING THE ARBITRATOR OF WHETHER IT SHOULD EXIST.

OK. I'll be coming by to shoot you later. Meet me at the door--I'm bringing my twelve guage, so as long as you don't run it will be quick and painless. When the cops arrive, I will show them your post and they will tip their hat and let me go on my way. After all, they wouldn't want to be the arbiter of whether you exist or not.

Just kidding!

Get the point? If a fetus is a person (and for those of us who live in the real world where science exists, it is) then the fact that he or she is in the womb has nothing to do with whether someone should be able to kill them.

235 posted on 01/18/2007 11:28:37 AM PST by Mr. Silverback ("Safe sex? Not until they develop a condom for the heart."--Freeper All the Best)
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To: GulfBreeze

And Judith Nathan isn't Giuliani's 4th either :)


236 posted on 01/18/2007 11:28:51 AM PST by My GOP
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To: GulfBreeze
When does a child in the womb's God Given and FEDERALLY guaranteed right become an unimportant issue?

When the woman carrying it decides to abort it.

Remember, only women can stop abortion.

237 posted on 01/18/2007 11:29:00 AM PST by Rudder
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To: My GOP
I'll vote for whoever the GOP nominee is. I'll do anything to keep Hillary and Obama out of the White House. How about you?

I don't vote for liberals. If the GOP puts up a liberal, I won't vote for him/her. The party affiliation of said liberal means next-to-nothing to me.

And there's the crux of your problem. Folks like you will pull the lever for whoever the nominee is. The social conservatives expect the GOP to nominate a bona fide conservative and won't accept a liberal with a track-record pretending to be conservative.

Now, the question remains--do you berate people like me for our principles, further alienating us, or simply come to the conclusion that there must be a better candidate out there who can unite and fire up the base?

I know what the "common sense" answer is. I wonder if the Rudy-boosters do...
238 posted on 01/18/2007 11:29:36 AM PST by Antoninus ( Rudy McRomney as the GOP nominee = President Hillary. Why else do you think the media loves them?)
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To: My GOP
That's the strangest analogy I've ever heard and how it relates to politics, I have no idea.

Easy. The MSM is fractured. Audiences are fractured. The old political media model is shifting. Candidates such as Rudy will need tens of millions of dollars to achieve diminishing returns to convince the base to vote for them in the primary. Candidates such as Hunter will draw supporters more through non-traditional channels - because no hard-sell is needed. Dean followed this strategy and did well initially - he lost it with the famous shriek, not due to any inherent failings in his plan.

Once Hunter shows some strength, he will then start to draw more money.

239 posted on 01/18/2007 11:29:39 AM PST by dirtboy (Duncan Hunter - a candidate who doesn't need infomercials to convince you he's a conservative)
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To: bornacatholic
The Lust for money is the root of all evil and you can not legislate morality.

BINGO!

240 posted on 01/18/2007 11:29:39 AM PST by PhiKapMom (Common Sense Conservative - Vote Rudy/Allen - Take Back the House and Senate in '08)
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