New Campaign Will Motivate Pro-Life Women to Vote in November

Politics   |   Steven Ertelt   |   Jun 12, 2012   |   1:44PM   |   Washington, DC

Concerned Women for America president Penny Nance announced today the launch of She Votes 2012, a million-dollar nationwide campaign to get out the vote in the November general election.

Nance said the goal is to raise awareness and activism of women in key states, resulting in stronger conservative leadership on the state and national level.

“We know that when conservatives vote their values, they elect men and women whom CWA and CWA members can work with to see that founding principles are applied and enacted into law,” Nance said. “We need conservatives to turn out in great numbers in order to get legislation passed that will move our great country back to a secure footing.”

The She Votes 2012 campaign will work to mobilize members in key states to change the trajectory of the nation through grassroots education and activism as organizers focus on voter registration, identification and turnout.

“We will light a ‘grassfire’ amongst our constituents to reach women, families, and cultural leaders,” Nance said.  “This is a critical election year, and the time is now for women to stand up and let their voices be heard.”

Field directors will use phone-banks, social media, and public events to encourage voter participation.  They will work with state CWA chapters, other organizations, and local churches as they carry out the mission of She Votes 2012.

President Barack Obama and his pro-abortion allies have attacked presidential candidate Mitt Romney and pro-life advocates over a supposed “War on Women,” but recent polling data revealed it hasn’t been effective as Romney has seen an uptick with his support among women.

At the end of May, the ABC News/Washington Post poll showed a sharp increase in his standing with women boosted Mitt Romney to his highest favorability rating of the presidential campaign while Obama’s favorability had slipped.

Obama still beats Romney in favorable ratings overall, by an 11-point margin, 52 vs. 41 percent. But that’s down from 21 points last month, giving Romney the better trajectory. And both get only even divisions among registered voters, marking the closeness of the race between them.

All Romney’s gains have come among women – up by 13 percentage points in personal popularity from last month, while Obama’s lost 7 points among women. (Views among men have been more stable.) Obama’s rating among women, 51 percent favorable, still beats Romney’s 40 percent – but again that margin is far smaller than what it was six weeks ago.

An ABC/Post poll last week found improvement for Romney in vote preferences among married women. This survey finds that his gains in personal favorability, instead, come predominantly among unmarried women, who saw him uncommonly negatively earlier this spring.

In addition to women, Romney’s gained 9 points among moderates from a month ago (albeit just to 39 percent favorable, vs. Obama’s 58 percent in this group) and 9 points among Republicans (to 78 percent favorable).

In addition to losing ground among women, Obama’s popularity has dropped by a slight 8 points, to 45 percent, among independents, classically the swing voters in presidential elections. Fifty-two percent of independents see him unfavorably, putting him numerically underwater in this group for the first time since December. Romney is at 40-46 percent favorable-unfavorable among independents, also numerically in negative territory.

The poll, conducted by Langer Research Associates, shows Obama’s popularity is the same as George H.W. Bush’s in June 1992, the year Bush lost re-election over the same weakened economy Obama faces now.

Planned Parenthood was apparently unconcerned that its overblown rhetoric attacking Romney has been failing as it endorsed Obama and announced it is putting $1.4 million into attack ads trashing Romney as anti-woman. The ads slam Romney for his supposedly “harmful positions on women’s health” because he favors not forcing religious groups to pay for birth control and abortion-causing drugs for their employees.

The ad buy targets Romney’s previous comments saying he would “get rid” of federal taxpayer funding for the abortion business and Planned Parenthood indicated the ad buy would target places like West Palm Beach, Florida; Des Moines, Iowa; and voters in northern Virginia.

Romney called for de-funding Planned Parenthood earlier this year.

“I also feel that the government should cut off funding to Planned Parenthood,”said. “Look, the idea that we’re subsidizing an institution that provides abortion, in my view, is wrong. Planned Parenthood oughta stand on its own feet and should not get government subsidy.”

Romney also touted his pro-life credentials, saying, “I am a pro-life individual, I was a pro-life governor, I served as a pro-life governor, I’m a pro-life candidate. I simply do not want to participate in anything that takes the lives of an unborn child.”

Romney has called for de-funding Planned Parenthood previously.

In November, Romney had an opinion column in USA Today in which he advocated numerous ways to balance the federal budget, one of which involves eliminate funding to Planned Parenthood.

Romney proposes repealing Obamacare — which pro-life groups virtually unanimously opposed because of concerns related to taxpayer funding of abortions, rationing issues, and lack of conscience protections for pro-life medical workers. He says that will save $95 billion in 2016.

The fourth item on Romney’s list is one that will delight the pro-life voters he needs to secure the GOP nomination to face Obama:  “Eliminate Title X family planning programs benefiting abortion groups like Planned Parenthood.”

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Romney previously pledged to de-fund the Planned Parenthood abortion business in October during his speech before the Values Voter Summit.

“Our values must also encompass the life of an unborn child,” Romney told the thousands of pro-life advocates gathered for the Family Research Council event. “There are, of course, strong convictions on both sides of this issue. Yet it speaks well of our country that almost all Americans recognize that abortion is a problem.”

“The law may call it a right, but no one ever called it a good. And in the quiet of conscience, people of both political parties know that more than a million abortions a year can’t be squared with the good heart of America,” Romney said.

The former governor pivoted from a philosophical position to talking about his political views and what he would do if elected president.

“I support the Hyde Amendment, which broadly bars the use of federal funds for abortions,” Romney said, “As president, I’ll end federal funding for abortion advocates like Planned Parenthood. I’ll protect a health care worker’s right to follow their conscience in their work.”

“I will nominate judges who know the difference between personal opinion and law. It is long past time for the Supreme Court to return the issue of abortion back to the states by overturning Roe v. Wade,” he added.