Pro-Abortionists Try to Revise History
Part One of ThreeBy Dave
Andrusko
Good evening, and thanks for taking
time to read Today's News & Views. Part Two rebuts the latest pro-abortion
article insisting that abortion has no negative impact on women.
Part Three is a sober reminder
that a pro-assisted suicide governor has been elected in Vermont. Over at
National Right to Life News Today (www.nationalrighttolifenews.org),
we talk about President Obama's appearance on "60 minutes." You'll also be
encouraged by how the public still believes that husbands ought to be
notified when their wives want to abort. Our last article for the day
explains how the euthanasia situation in Belgium is being misrepresented.
Please send your comments on Today's News & Views and National Right to Life
News Today to daveandrusko@gmail.com.
If you like, join those who are following me on Twitter at
http://twitter.com/daveha.
If
I were a pro-abortionist, one of many who lost last week in no small measure
because of the public's rejection of ObamaCare, I would console myself by
knowing that there will be a vigorous effort by my troops to
revisit/reinterpret/revise what actually happened November 2. Not just so I
would feel better, but to assure my fellow supporters of ObamaCare and the
abortion agenda in general that this had nothing to do with the wave that
swept a huge number of House and Senate Democrats out of office.
In addition if they are able to
absolve ObamaCare of blame, it might also strengthen the spines of all
Democrats as Republicans seek to repeal and replace ObamaCare, aptly
described by soon-to-be House Speaker John Boehner as a "monstrosity."
Most non-partisans would ignore a memo
(based on "exit polling") produced by the Democratic National Committee's
communications director which concluded (according to the Washington Post's
Chris Cillizza) that "health-care reform was--at worst-- a neutral factor
for the party. "
Cillizza, in a piece yesterday titled
"What effect did health-care reform have on election?" offered two other
scenarios. A Democratic strategist argued that health care was important but
not because the public rejected the substance of ObamaCare but because
people saw the party's huge emphasis on it was at the expense of a focus on
the economy and jobs.
"It is not correct to say Tuesday's
vote was a referendum on health care, but it did help set the stage for
Tuesday," according to Democratic pollster Fred Yang.
The third (and only accurate)
explanation was one we talked about last week which came from Republican
pollster Bill McInturff. He took two polls a month apart in the 100 most
targeted House districts and asked the respondents if they had seen
television ads about health care law. Some 70% had and fully understand the
ads were critical of ObamaCare.
The most important conclusions based
on what respondents said? That "51 percent called their vote a message of
opposition to the law, while just one in five said it was a sign of support
for it," Cillizza wrote. "A majority of independent voters, a voting bloc
that Republicans won by a whopping 18 points, also said in the McInturff
survey that their vote was in opposition to the law."
In a memo summarizing the results,
McIntruff concluded, "This election was a clear signal that voters do not
want President Obama's health care plan."
NRLC did important polling as well.
Twenty-seven percent of voters in a
poll conducted by the polling companyTM inc said abortion funding in the
health care law affected their vote and they voted for candidates who
opposed the health care law as opposed to only 4% who said abortion funding
in the health care law affected their vote and they voted for candidates who
favored the law.
National Right to Life has also
repeatedly pointed out that the Obama Health Care Law will mean massive
rationing of health care including the rationing of life saving treatment,
if allowed to go into effect. The public agrees and clearly showed last
Tuesday night that they oppose rationing.
Forty-four percent of voters said
rationing in the health care law affected their vote and they voted for
candidates who opposed the health care law while only 10% said rationing in
the health care bill affected their vote and they voted for candidates who
favored the Obama Health Care Law.
Overall 54% said they oppose the
health care law (44% strongly) while only 39% favor it (26%
strongly)--almost a 3-2 margin.
You will hear a loud insistence that
ObamaCare did not cripple pro-abortion Democrats. Don't be fooled.
Part Two
Part Three |