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Today's News & Views
February 1, 2005
PPFA Chooses Political Operative
Editor's note. I am at the printer's watching the February issue
of National Right to Life News roll off the presses. If you are not a
subscriber call today: 202-626-8828. As is our custom, I'm offering a
sneak preview at one of the stories in this month's edition.
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New President at Planned Parenthood
By Randall K. O'Bannon, Ph.D., NRL-ETF Director of Education and
Research
Turning to an experienced political operative with a fresh face, the
Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA) named Cecile Richards,
the daughter of former Texas Governor Ann Richards, as the
organization's new president. Richards will take over the helm of the
nation's largest abortion chain in mid-February.
Richards replaces interim president Karen Pearl, who took over from
Gloria Feldt in 2005. Feldt led the organization from 1996 to 2005. She
stepped down in January 2005, saying she felt it was "time for me to be
making a transition."
The number of abortions performed at Planned Parenthood clinics
increased by two-thirds during Feldt's tenure--from 153,367 in 1996 to
255,015 in 2004. This occurred at the same time the number of abortions
nationally was declining.
But PPFA experienced setbacks. The group also saw its favored candidate
twice lose the presidential election, closed several clinics, had to
face the media after the death of a teen given the abortifacient RU486
at one of its California clinics, and was publicly embarrassed by a
Consumer Reports study finding PPFA-brand condoms substandard.
Feldt rose from within the ranks of Planned Parenthood. She assumed the
presidency after running one of the group's larger regional affiliates.
Though Richards did at one time serve on the board for the Planned
Parenthood Action Fund, most of her experience comes from the political
arena.
According to an August 2004 profile in Texas Monthly (TM), Cecile
Richards is "ambitious, successful, and highly partisan." She is "as
pure a creature of the Democratic left" as the magazine says George W.
Bush is of the Republican right. The periodical describes her as "a
striking six-footer and longtime labor organizer with a bright,
explosive laugh who can stop a room when she walks into it."
Her mother a woman who would become governor, her father a top
labor-union lawyer ("even more radical, more partisan than Ann"), Cecile
and her siblings grew up stuffing and sorting political mailings,
learning precinct politics, and hosting anti-war rallies at their home,
according to TM. "I grew up in a very political family," Cecile told TM.
"Other families did bowling. We did politics."
After graduating from Ivy League Brown University in 1980, she first
worked as a labor organizer in California and in Louisiana. She met her
husband, Kirk Adams, in 1982. Adams was also a labor organizer, and as
of 2005 was chief of staff for Service Employees International Union,
the largest union in America. The couple has three teenage children.
Richards and her family moved back to Austin in 1990 to help with her
mother's campaign for governor. According to TM, in 1994, when Ann
Richards lost her bid for reelection to George W. Bush, Cecile formed
the Texas Freedom Network with the goal of countering the influence of
conservative Christians in Texas politics. She also recruited
sympathetic clergy to form the Texas Faith Network, a political advocacy
group that TM says now has 500 members.
When husband Kirk took a job as organizing director for the AFL-CIO in
Washington, Cecile moved with her family in 1998 and took a job at the
Turner Foundation for media mogul and abortion propagandist Ted Turner.
Her job, Richards told TM, was "to help build the infrastructure of the
choice movement in America." In that job, TM says, Richards "worked
closely with organizations like Planned Parenthood and distributed grant
money around the country."
In 2002, Cecile Richards became deputy chief of staff to pro-abortion
Democratic House Minority Whip Nancy Pelosi (D-Ca.), who now is the
House minority leader. In the summer of 2003, she left that job to
become president of America Votes, the position Planned Parenthood
plucked her from after a year-long search for a new leader.
To get a better idea of what Planned Parenthood saw or was looking for
in Richards, it helps to learn more about America Votes. America Votes
came into existence in July 2003, coordinating the "get out the vote"
activities of what opensecrets.org identified as "more than 20
Democratic interest groups trying to defeat President Bush in November
[2004]."
Members of that group, who opensecrets.org says contributed $50,000
each, include stalwart Democratic Party supporters such as the AFL-CIO,
the National Education Association, the NAACP National Voter Fund, and
the Sierra Club. Also notable are the inclusion of explicitly
pro-abortion groups such as EMILY's List, NARAL Pro-Choice America, and
the Planned Parenthood Action Fund.
While the group itself spent over $3 million on the 2004 election,
perhaps more significant was its coordination of the efforts of some of
its more powerful members, such as MoveOn.org ($21.5 million in its own
2004 election expenditures), America Coming Together ($78 million), and
the Media Fund ($57.7 million), headed by former Clinton White House
deputy chief of staff Harold Ickes (figures from opensecrets.org).
America Votes sought to make sure that member activities weren't
duplicated, that voters were contacted by groups with whom they were
most likely to be sympathetic, and that the timing and placement of
advertising best suited the candidate they supported. According to
Richards' Planned Parenthood bio, the member groups of America Votes
collectively spent more than $350 million on political activities in
2004.
Texas Monthly says, "The new organization, fueled by huge personal
donations from the likes of billionaire activist George Soros, yielded
immediate dividends." Expenditures from member groups like the Media
Fund and the MoveOn.org Voter Fund "allowed Kerry's message to stay on
the airwaves in March while his campaign scrambled to refill its
coffers."
Ultimately, of course, Kerry and America Votes lost the 2004 election,
but Richards' work and political skills obviously impressed the board of
Planned Parenthood. There is some concern that America Votes will
founder without Richards according to Chris Cillizza's Washington Post
blog, 1/11/06).
However, despite its declared commitment to "reproductive health care,"
there is little doubt that Planned Parenthood has landed, not a doctor,
a nurse, or some experienced medical administrator, but a new leader
with deep political roots, extensive political connections, and access
to some of the political left's deepest pockets.
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If you have any comments, please send them to Dave Andrusko at
dandrusko@nrlc.org
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