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NATIONAL RIGHT TO LIFE COMMENTARY
October 9, 2004
KERRY'S ANSWERS IN DEBATE
MISREPRESENTED HIS RECORD
ON EMBRYONIC STEM CELL RESEARCH,
PARTIAL-BIRTH ABORTION, and PARENTAL NOTIFICATION FOR ABORTION
This is a commentary from the National Right to Life Committee (NRLC)
regarding statements made by Senator John Kerry (D-Mass.) during the second
presidential candidates' debate on October 8, 2004. For further
information,
send email to
legfederal@aol.com,
or call 202-626-8825 or
202-626-8820.
The
statements below may be attributed to NRLC Legislative Director Douglas
Johnson.
EMBRYONIC STEM CELL RESEARCH
AND HUMAN CLONING
In response to question regarding the merits of using adult stem cells
versus embryonic stem cells in research, Kerry said, "Now I think we can do
ethically guided embryonic stem cell research. We have 100,000 to 200,000
embryos that are frozen in nitrogen today from fertility clinics. These
weren't taken from abortion or something like that. They're from a
fertility clinic. And they're either going to be destroyed or left frozen."
NRLC's disagreement with Kerry's support for federal funding of research
that requires killing human embryos created by in vitro fertilization (IVF),
and our agreement with President Bush's policy, are set forth in detail
elsewhere,
click here.
We make here this additional key point: When Kerry says "embryonic stem
cell research," he does NOT mean ONLY using human embryos who were frozen
after being created by IVF to produce pregnancies.
On July 13, 2004, Kerry also cosponsored S. 303, a bill to promote the
creation of human embryos by cloning for use in stem cell research. The
bill specifically provides that these human embryos must not be allowed to
develop past 14 days, which is why pro-life opponents refer to it as a
"clone and kill" bill. This bill has NOTHING to do with research using
embryos created by in vitro fertilization. Rather, it would advance the
establishment of what President Bush has aptly referred to as "human embryo
farms." For further explanation of this bill, the blatantly conflicting
statements by the Kerry campaign about the bill, and two recent public
opinion polls on the issue of using cloning to produce human embryos for
research, see this memo:
http://www.nrlc.org/Killing_Embryos/kerrydoubletalk082404.html
PARTIAL-BIRTH ABORTION
Senator Kerry said, "I'm against the
partial-birth abortion,
but you've got to have an exception for the life of the mother and the
health of the mother under the strictest test of bodily injury to the
mother."
First of all, the
Partial-Birth Abortion
Ban has (and has always had) an explicit exception to allow the method to be
used if it were ever necessary to save the life of a mother. (This is a
point that Senator John Edwards directly misrepresented in a press release
the day the bill was signed into law by President Bush, on November 5, 2003.)
John Kerry repeatedly voted for "substitute amendments" that would have
wiped out the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act and substituted "phony bans"
that would have (1) allowed partial-birth abortions with NO restrictions in
the fifth and sixth months, which is when the vast majority are performed,
AND ALSO (2) allowed partial-birth abortion even in the seventh month and
later either for "health" reasons -- a term that legally includes mental and
emotional "well being" (for example, Feinstein Substitute, May 15, 1997,
roll call no. 288, failed 28-72), OR, in another approach, allowed
post-viability abortions for any degree whatever of "risk" of serious
physical health damage -- a standard that a leading practitioner of late
abortions said would apply to every pregnancy (Daschle Substitute, May 15,
1997, roll call no. 70, failed 36-64; and Durbin Substitute, October 20,
1999, roll call no. 335, tabled 61-38).
After these killer substitutes were rejected, Kerry voted against passing
the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act every chance he got -- six times.
For more documentation on this issue, see
http://www.nrlc.org/EandP/Weeklystandardkerry.htm
and
http://www.nrlc.org/abortion/pba/PBAall110403.html
PARENTAL NOTIFICATION
In response to a statement by President Bush that Sen. Kerry opposes
requiring parental notification for abortion, Kerry replied: "Secondly,
with respect to parental notification, I'm not going to require a 16- or
17-year-old kid who's been raped by her father and who's pregnant to have to
notify her father. So you've got to have a judicial intervention. And
because they didn't have a judicial intervention where she could go
somewhere and get help I voted against it. It's never quite as simple as
the president wants you to believe."
Kerry's answer completely misrepresented his voting record on parental
notification requirements. Kerry has repeatedly voted AGAINST parental
notification requirements even though they incorporated provisions, as
required by the Supreme Court, to permit any minor to go before a judge to
waive parental notification, and/or that simply allowed the minor herself to
foreclose notification by informing the abortion provider that she is the
victim of rape, incest, or sexual abuse.
Moreover, in a statement issued by his campaign on July 15, 2004, Kerry
offered far most expansive objections to parental notification requirements,
including what he sees as the danger that such requirements put teenagers at
"risk" of "unwanted childbirth." The July 15 statement went on, "And that's
why Kerry voted for common-sense parental consent measures that encourage
young woman to talk to their parents about options surrounding an unwanted
pregnancy, BUT still make sure that the young woman's welfare and safety is
protected by including BROAD EXEMPTIONS for grandparents, aunts, and uncles
to provide consent, [OR] the young woman's doctor to indicate that a medical
emergency exists, [OR] a court determines that an abortion would be in the
young woman's best interest, OR a licensed or certified professional
certifies that parental notification could put the young woman at risk."
[capitals added for emphasis]
This Kerry statement is still posted on the Internet at
http://blog.johnkerry.com/rapidresponse/archives/002134.html#more, or it
may be obtained by fax or e-mail from NRLC.
Regarding Kerry's votes against parental notification, we cite here just two
examples.
In 1998 Kerry voted to block the Child Custody Protection Act. This bill
would make it a federal crime to take a minor across state lines for a
secret abortion in order to evade a home-state parental notification law --
but the bill applied ONLY to the state parental notification laws that had
passed federal court approval, all of which include the judicial bypass
provisions required by the Supreme Court. (Unsuccessful attempt to invoke
cloture on S. 1645, Sept. 22, 1998, roll call no. 282).
In 1991, Kerry voted against multiple genuine parental notification
amendments, supporting instead various proposals to codify parental
circumvention. For example, Kerry opposed the Coats Amendment (July 16,
1991, Coats Amendment to S. 303). The Coats Amendment would have required
organizations that receive certain federal funds to notify one parent before
performing an abortion on a minor, but it contained a number of broad
exemptions, covering any cases in which the minor "declares" that the
pregnancy resulted from incest with a parent OR "declares" that she had been
subjected to OR was at "risk" (degree of risk unspecified) of "sexual abuse"
OR "child abuse" OR "child neglect." In addition, the Coats Amendment
contained a medical emergency exception. Kerry voted against it. Here is
the full text of the Coats Amendment, electronically copied from the
Congressional Record, but with capitals added for clarity:
[No notification need
occur if] (2) The physician with principal responsibility for making the
decision to perform the abortion certifies in the minor's medical record
that she is suffering from a physical disorder or disease making the
abortion necessary to prevent her death and there is insufficient time to
provide the required notice. [OR] (3) THE MINOR DECLARES that the pregnancy
resulted from incest with a parent or guardian of the minor OR that she has
been subjected to OR is at RISK of sexual abuse, child abuse, OR child
neglect by a parent or guardian, as defined by the applicable State law,
provided that in any such case the physician notifies the authorities
specified by such State law to receive reports of child abuse or neglect of
the known or suspected abuse or neglect before the abortion is performed.
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