Robertson Cites Abortion Rights Peril to GOP Ticket : Christian right: Broadcaster reminds party of its reliance on loyal ‘field troops,’ who could be turned off.
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WASHINGTON — Christian broadcaster Pat Robertson said Saturday that the nomination of a Republican presidential or vice presidential candidate who favors abortion rights “could bring the ticket down” by dampening enthusiasm among Christian activists and other social conservatives.
Robertson’s was the latest in a series of warnings from religious conservatives about the risk the party will take if it abandons or downplays its longstanding opposition to abortion.
“We don’t like to make ultimatums, and I can’t speak for all the people, but I think their lack of enthusiasm could bring the ticket down because these are the field troops who do the work, stuff the envelopes, knock on the doors, make the telephone calls and give the money,” Robertson said in an interview on the CNN program “Evans & Novak.” “We really need to keep that conservative wing of the party active.”
But Robertson also held out two olive branches to GOP leaders looking to mute the divisive abortion issue: He dismissed discussion among some religious conservatives about starting a third party to press social issues, and left the door open to softening the hard line against abortion in the Republican platform.
Currently, the GOP platform commits the party to supporting a constitutional “human life amendment” that would ban abortion. But with polls showing a clear majority of Americans opposed to banning abortion, even leading Republican candidates who describe themselves as pro-life have been notable in their absence of enthusiasm for that position.
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Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas, for instance, has said that, if elected, he would not seek to overturn the Supreme Court’s Roe vs. Wade decision guaranteeing the legal right to abortion. And on Friday, Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole hedged his support for the human life amendment language in the platform. “I supported the human life amendment one time,” he said after a rally in his hometown of Russell, Kan. “I’m not certain of that (now).”
In the field, only conservative commentator Patrick J. Buchanan, former State Department official Alan Keyes and Rep. Robert K. Dornan of Garden Grove--all of whom are long-shot contenders--are stressing opposition to abortion. Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter, who announced his candidacy last month, and California Gov. Pete Wilson, who is expected to declare next month, support abortion rights.
During the past year, a small group of conservatives, including GOP strategist Bill Kristol, has been circulating proposed platform language that would reaffirm the party’s opposition to abortion but drop the reference to the human life amendment. In his comments Saturday, Robertson did not directly endorse that approach, but he echoed the arguments of its sponsors.
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Discussion of a human life amendment, he said, “at this point in time is a meaningless exercise. There is no way, given the present makeup of Congress, that we could get a two-thirds vote for a constitutional amendment banning abortion. It’s just not possible.”
Robertson described the anti-abortion section in the GOP platform as “language of principle” and added that he “would hate to see the Republican Party go away from that principle.” But he said he “certainly will work with people to craft something that’s significant”--a formulation that strongly suggests he would be willing to accept changes in the existing language.
In an interview Saturday, Kristol said Robertson’s comments were encouraging to those seeking revisions in the platform. “It is very important that Robertson has signaled that the Republican Party can continue as a principled pro-life party without tying it to the language of past platforms,” he said.
Robertson was much less conciliatory about the prospect of nominating either a presidential or vice presidential candidate who supports abortion rights. His comments echoed the controversial remarks by Ralph Reed, executive director of Robertson’s 1.5-million member Christian Coalition organization, who warned in February that social conservatives would not back a GOP ticket that included an abortion rights supporter.
Dole, Gramm and the other leading GOP contenders criticized those remarks as an improper attempt to impose a “litmus test” on the party. Reed insisted that he had not meant to threaten the party, only to warn Republicans of the likely consequences if it included a supporter of abortion rights on the ticket.
Asked specifically Saturday about Wilson, Robertson said he does not consider him a serious contender for the nomination. Robertson praised front-runner Dole, who has never stirred much enthusiasm among religious conservatives in the past, saying that “he’s a couple of laps ahead of any other candidate right now” in polling of Christian Coalition members. The race “is his to lose,” Robertson said.
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