Antiabortion movement
hoping for electoral victory in Miss. By Sandhya Somashekhar, Friday, November
4, 5:26 PM, http://www.washingtonpost.com
An insurgent antiabortion movement that is
gaining momentum nationwide is hoping for its first electoral victory Tuesday,
when Mississippi voters will decide whether to designate a fertilized egg as a
person and potentially label its destruction an act of murder.
If approved, the nation’s first “personhood”
amendment could criminalize abortion and limit in-vitro fertilization and some
forms of birth control. It also would give a jolt of energy to a national
movement that views mainstream antiabortion activists as timid and complacent.
“They’ve just taken an incremental approach,”
said Les Riley, the founder of Personhood Mississippi and a self-described
tractor salesman and father of 10 who initiated the state’s effort. “We’re just
going to the heart of the matter, which is: Is this a person or not? God says
it is, and science has confirmed it.”
“Life-at-conception” ballot initiatives in
other parts of the country, including Colorado last year, have failed amid
concerns about their far-reaching, and in some cases unforeseeable,
implications.
But proponents of the amendment — who were
inspired partly by the tea party movement — say they are more confident of
victory in Mississippi, a Bible Belt state where antiabortion sentiment runs
high and the laws governing the procedure are so strict that just one abortion
clinic exists.
Opponents of the measure, including Planned
Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union, have eroded support for it
by casting it more broadly as an infringement on women’s health and an example
of government overreach. Like backers of the amendment, dubbed “MS 26,” they
have turned out at college football games to distribute literature and spend
weekday evenings working phone banks — although not Wednesdays, because so many
people attend church that day.
“A lot of people think this is just about
abortion, but it’s not about abortion,” said Valencia Robinson, an abortion
rights and HIV activist in Jackson, who spent Friday knocking on doors. “It’s
bad for women’s health, it’s bad for our economy, and my strongest point is,
it’s just government intrusion in our personal lives.”
Still, the Nov. 8 measure has broad support
that stretches across party lines, with both the Republican and Democratic
gubernatorial candidates voicing support for it (the Democrat, Johnny DuPree,
has expressed concern about how it would affect birth control and in vitro
fertilization).
For years, the strategy favored by conservative
activists nationally has been to gradually decrease access to abortion by cutting
government funding and imposing restrictions, such as requiring women to view
ultrasound images before the procedure.
The aim has been to reduce the number of
abortions while awaiting a mix of justices on the U.S. Supreme Court that would
be inclined to overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 decision that legalized abortion.
An energized group of activists has grown
impatient with that approach. They take an uncompromising position on abortion,
opposing it even in cases of rape and incest. Some also oppose making
exceptions to save the life of the mother, arguing that both lives are equal
and that doctors do not have the right to choose to save one over the other.
Some even object to the term “fertilized egg.”
“It’s an embryo,” said Walter Hoye, a California
pastor and president of the Issues 4 Life Foundation. “Calling it a fertilized
egg is dehumanizing.”
Personhood efforts are underway in more than a
dozen states, including Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia and Ohio. The movement has
grown recently with the help of passionate young antiabortion advocates and
more seasoned activists who have grown disenchanted with the pace of change.
They view their approach as an answer to the
Roe decision, which concluded that the term “person” does not apply to the
unborn under the 14th amendment. “If this suggestion of personhood is
established,” Justice Harry Blackmun wrote in the opinion, the abortion rights
advocate’s case “collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be
guaranteed specifically by the Amendment.”
“I see that as a directive from the court that
says, look, if you want to protect unborn children, you’d better recognize them
as persons in the full legal sense,” said Rebecca Kiessling, spokeswoman for
Personhood USA. Kiessling, an attorney, is the product of rape; her mother
tried twice to obtain back-alley abortions before giving her daughter up for
adoption, said Kiessling, who has become a sought-after speaker since penning a
pamphlet called “Conceived in Rape.”
Many legal experts say the activists are
misinterpreting Blackmun’s language, and that the Mississippi measure likely
would not stand up in court. If upheld, it could open a host of sticky
questions, including whether a woman with cancer would be prevented from
receiving chemotherapy if it could kill her fetus.
They say the legal approach could backfire,
forcing the courts into making a decision unfavorable to antiabortion
activists. That concern has led to skepticism from more established
antiabortion groups, including the Eagle Forum, which opposed Colorado’s
personhood initiative last year, warning that “its vague language would enable
more mischief by judges.”
National medical groups have opposed personhood
efforts, saying they ignore the fact that, left to nature, a large number of
fertilized eggs do not survive to birth. Such measures could limit access to
birth control measures that prevent embryos from implanting in a woman’s
uterus, such as intra-uterine devices. They could restrict in-vitro
fertilization, which typically involves fertilizing several eggs and then using
just one or two of them.
Personhood supporters say such concerns have
been drummed up by opponents, and that common sense will prevail in situations
like the the example of the woman with cancer. The Mississippi measure does not
deal with the question of enforcement, and if the amendment is adopted, the
courts may decide that the state’s homicide laws cannot apply, Kiessling said.
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