Kerry Will Hold Pro-Abortion Rally Prior to Sunday's Abortion March
by Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
April 23, 2004
Washington, DC (LifeNews.com) -- Presumptive Democratic nominee
John Kerry will further solidify his pro-abortion credentials with a
rally in support of abortion today. The event comes just before Sunday's
pro-abortion march that organizers hope will draw one million people.
While abortion advocates are concerned about two pieces of legislation that Bush has signed -- the ban on partial-birth abortions and a bill to protect pregnant women and their unborn children from violence -- Kerry is drawing their attention to the likely Supreme Court appointments that will be made during the next four years.
"If you need any motivation let me give
you three little words -- the Supreme Court," Kerry now says in
his stump speech. Kerry also warns that possible Supreme Court openings
"jeopardize the right to an abortion."
Kerry's participation at the rally drew opposition from pro-life advocates.
"Imagine, just a few short days after meeting
with Cardinal McCarrick and trumpeting the fact that he's a Catholic
'in good standing' who received the Eucharist at Easter, he's now a
major
speaker at the largest gathering of abortion activists this year,"
says Deal Hudson, editor of Crisis Magazine.
"Bill Clinton, certainly no friend to the pro-life cause, never
once addressed an abortion rally in all his years as president. If Clinton
wouldn't even attend these events, what does it say that Kerry will,"
Hudson added.
During the rally, Kerry is expected to contrast his pro-abortion position
with Bush's pro-life perspective.
Planned Parenthood President Gloria Feldt said that Kerry is not expected to attend the march on Sunday.
The next president will likely make two or three appointments to the Supreme Court, which could possibly change the balance of the high court that currently favors Roe v. Wade 6-3.
Pro-life advocates agree that the Supreme Court is a crucial issue for pro-life voters in the 2004 presidential election.
Should Kerry win, and appoint pro-abortion justices,
abortion's legality could be set in stone for decades. On the other
hand, a second Bush presidency could give pro-life supporters their
first legitimate chance to overturn the landmark abortion decision since
the 1992 Casey decision. Then, the Supreme Court upheld pro-life legislation
but reaffirmed the central tenets of Roe v. Wade.



