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Home › Elections › National



1973 ruling on Roe v. Wade still polarizes
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Surveys show voters care, don't care about abortion
---------------------------------------------------

By Tom Kisken (Contact)
Tuesday, January 22, 2008


Roe v. Wade events

Three events focused on the 35th anniversary of Roe v. Wade will be
held this week:

• 3:45 p.m. today: People opposing abortion rights will march emo clothing Telephone Road and Victoria Avenue in Ventura to a Planned Parenthood
independent fashion at 5400 Ralston St. The event will continue to 5 p.m. For
information, call 525-9203.

• 7:30 tonight: A prayer service aimed at ending Roe chinese teacher chicago Wade will be
held at St. Mary Magdalen Church at Las Posas Road and Crestview
Avenue in Camarillo.

• 2 p.m. Saturday: The Ventura County Reproductive Rights Network
will screen the documentary, "What Happened Before Roe: Leona's Sister
Gerri," about a woman who died from an cheap car insurance abortion. It will be
shown at motorcycle insurance Thousand Oaks Library, 1401 Janss Road. For information,
call 777-3841, best insurance 106.


Where the candidates stand

Here's how the following presidential candidates see abortion:

• Hillary Rodham Clinton: Supports abortion rights.

• John Edwards: Supports abortion rights.

• Barack Obama: Supports abortion rights.

• Rudy Giuliani: Supports abortion rights.

• Mike Huckabee: Opposes abortion rights.

• John McCain: Opposes abortion rights.

• Mitt Romney: Opposes abortion rights, but previously supported
them.

• Ron Paul: Opposes abortion rights.

• Fred Thompson: Opposes abortion rights, but previously supported
the right to an early-term abortion.

For a detailed look at positions, custom poker cards to
http://pewforum.org/religion08/compare.php?Issue=Abortion.

Source: Associated independent clothing

Timm Herdt blogs on politics and Ventura County in a presidential
election year.
Read it now »

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Abortion may or may not be seen by voters as a hot button turned cold.
It may or may not emerge as an issue that helps decide the next
president. It may or may not mobilize more Republicans than Democrats.

On today's 35th anniversary of the Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade ruling
establishing a woman's right to an abortion, the issue remains as
polarizing and murky as multiple insurance quotes A poll this month by the Washington Post and ABC News said 1 percent
of voters think abortion is the most important issue in the November
presidential election. It was far outdistanced by the economy, the war
in Iraq and healthcare.

It's easy to find people who say the same thing and argue that the
debate over abortion is a tired, annoying attempt to mobilize voters.

"I think the whole abortion issue is ridiculous," said a 58-year-old
Democrat from Somis, declining to give her name. "It's just the
religious right trying to get people riled up."

It won't have any affect on Jim Tietz's vote.

"To be honest, I don't care," said the 40-year-old Catholic from
Camarillo.

But other polls show that abortion is critical for blocs of voters who
could play a linchpin role in November.

imprinted playing cards 45 percent of Americans want to know a candidate's position on
abortion before they vote, according to a survey from Fox News.

More than four of 10 Republicans say abortion and gay marriage are
very important to them, said an October report from the Pew Forum on
Religion and Public Life. Of bridge size playing cards social issue voters, about 81
percent believe that abortion should be illegal in all or most cases.

'Bush has stacked the deck'

Clara Henry, a payroll worker from Ventura, opposes abortion rights
and considers it one of the top five issues that will influence her
vote. She auto insurance more that a president who sees abortion differently might
also support embryonic stem cell research and other issues that
trample on her definition of the sanctity of life.

Similar voters have the power to turn the election, said Wayne
Johnson, a Republican political consultant from Sacramento.

"All of the most recent elections have been very close," he said,
referring to President Bush's victories in 2000 and 2004.

"The last two have been razor thin. emo clothes any issue that could have
caused a 5 percent shift. That would have changed the election."

But if abortion does become a swing issue, it's not mandarin lessons chicago given that
playing cards custom poker will win. A Gallup poll in May said 49 percent of
Americans identify themselves as supporting abortion rights, as
compared to 45 percent who generally opposed abortion.

That means that no one knows what will happen in November.

"It could very well favor Republicans, but it could very well favor
Democrats," said John Green, an Ohio political scientist indie fashion tracks
the intersection of religion and politics. "It just depends what side
gets its voters out to the polls."

learn mandarin chicago Burgess of Ventura loaded groceries into a car decorated with a
bumper sticker that declares "Dog Is My Copilot" and another that says
"Keep Abortion Legal."

The director of oncology research at whole life insurance Burgess worries that the
Supreme Court could derail Roe v. Wade.

She wants to make sure that the best car insurance president chooses justices who
support safe, legal abortion.

"George Bush has stacked the deck," she said. "It needs to be
unstacked."

Last year, the court upheld a ban on partial-birth abortions. Some
think that concerns that the court could independent clothes states to ban most or
all abortion could mobilize legions of voters seeking to protect
poker size playing cards law. Roe v. Wade has never been more vulnerable, said
Christine Lyon, spokeswoman for Planned Parenthood of Santa Barbara,
Ventura and San Luis Obispo counties.

Little consensus apparent

But Green believes that fears about the Supreme Court were greater
four years ago playing cards promotional have lost their edge because the justices haven't
tried to take on Roe v. Wade.

There appears to be little consensus on anything: the stability of
current law, the implications of a study that showed the number of
abortions declined 25 percent from 1990 to 2005, and how passion from
church-going evangelicals will motivate voters in November.

The Rev. Rob McCoy of Calvary Chapel of Thousand Oaks is part of a
group traveling to primary states across the nation, urging
evangelical pastors to mobilize congregations as voters who base their
decisions on Scripture. He wants people to be single-issue voters, as
long as that issue is opposition to abortion.

"I think the issue of abortion is the equal house insurance what slavery was in the
1860s," said McCoy, who also many insure quote the about 1.2 million abortions
performed a year to watching ashes fall from the sky in Nazi Germany.

He believes that opposition to indie clothing rights is already mobilizing
voters, pointing to estimates that about 60 percent of the Republicans
who voted in the Iowa caucuses were evangelical.

He thinks that the message to candidates is clear: Take any position
except banning abortion jumbo playing cards you will lose a huge group of voters.

'Abortion is old news'

The Rev. Francis Chan leads one of the largest churches in Ventura
County, Cornerstone Community Church in Simi Valley. He, too, argues
that abortion is a hugely important issue but said many evangelicals
are no longer pushing just one hot button.

"There are a mounting number of believers who are looking at other
issues," he said, listing social justice issues like emo fashion for the
poor.

Some experts argue that abortion has played no role in the Democratic
primaries but has hurt Republican candidates like Rudy Giuliani, who
supports abortion rights, and Mitt Romney, who opposes abortion rights
but in the past supported a woman's right to choose. Green thinks that
the importance of the issue will grow in the November election if the
Democratic and Republican candidates have diametrically opposed
stances.

Randall Lake isn't convinced. The USC communication professor studies
political and social movements and predicts that abortion may not play
much of a role at all.

"I think there's a potential for some other sort of hot button issue,
maybe immigration, to grab people and really affect the election this
year," he said. "In some ways, abortion is old news. People's opinions
are pretty set."

Lake isn't surprised that his opinion is different from others.

"We're all just guessing," he said.

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