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Player of choice: how ex-NARAL head Kate Michelman learned to play by Washington's rules--and was taken down by them.


With Liberty and Justice For All: A Life Spent Protecting the Right to Choose By Kate Michelman Hudson Street Hudson Street can refer to:
  • The Manhattan street -- see Hudson Street (Manhattan)
  • The 1978 TV series A.E.S. Hudson Street
  • The 1995 TV series "Hudson Street -- see Hudson Street (TV show)
 Press, $24.95.

Twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
 ago, Kate Michelman came to Washington to take the helm of the National Abortion Rights Action League. She inherited a movement that had won the right to abortion in the courts but couldn't defend it at the polls. Her adversaries controlled the presidency, the Senate, and, within two years, an apparent majority on the Supreme Court.

By 1993, Michelman and her allies had turned the tide of war. Pro-life politicians were losing elections, defecting, or assuring voters that abortion was constitutionally untouchable untouchable

Former classification of various low-status persons and those outside the Hindu caste system in Indian society. The term Dalit is now used for such people (in preference to Mohandas K.
. The court had flinched from overturning Roe v. Wade Roe v. Wade, case decided in 1973 by the U.S. Supreme Court. Along with Doe v. Bolton, this decision legalized abortion in the first trimester of pregnancy. . Pro-choicers held the White House and Congress. If Michelman had retired then, her memoir might have been a tale of triumph. Instead, it's a plea. Pro-lifers have captured every branch of government and enacted the first federal abortion ban. The Democratic Party is rethinking its position. "The arc of history is bending into a circle," she laments.

How did this happen?

The first thing you have to understand is where Michelman came from. She was a stay-at-home Catholic wife. She bore three children in three years by relying on the rhythm method rhythm method
n.
A birth control method dependent on abstinence during the period of ovulation.


Rhythm method 
 for birth control. Then her world fell apart: Her husband left her; she found out she was pregnant with a fourth child; she aborted the pregnancy; she went on welfare. Gradually, she got back on her feet. Trained in child development, she became an administrator of social service nonprofits, going from child care to family planning family planning

Use of measures designed to regulate the number and spacing of children within a family, largely to curb population growth and ensure each family’s access to limited resources.
 to abortion. The sequence is important. Michelman ended up in the abortion rights debate because she saw what unwanted births did to mothers and kids.

Years ago, Michelman explained this to me for a book I was writing about her and the movement. She wanted someone to write her version of the story. I demurred and wrote my own, but I see in her book the same person I saw then: a gentle idealist toughened by Washington, making brutally rational decisions but determined to see the best in people. She was treated badly by doctors--particularly the hospital panel that interrogated her before granting her pre-Roe abortion--but she defended them against restrictive legislation and harassment. She was treated badly by men, especially her first husband, but she defended all the harassers and adulterers--Bill Clinton, Bob Packwood Robert William "Bob" Packwood (born September 11, 1932) is an American politician from Oregon and a member of the Republican Party. He was forced to resign from the United States Senate, under threat of expulsion, in 1995 after allegations of sexual harassment, abuse, and assault , Chuck Robb--who stood with her for abortion rights.

The toughness came when she had to choose between half a loaf and nothing. In 1989, she helped Doug Wilder become governor of Virginia The Governor of Virginia serves as the chief executive of the Commonwealth of Virginia for a four-year term. The position is currently held by Democrat Tim Kaine. Qualifications , overriding pro-choice purists who objected to Wilder's support of mandatory parental consent Parental consent laws (also known as parental involvement or parental notification laws) in some countries require that one or more parents consent to or be notified before their minor child can legally engage in certain activities.  for teenagers' abortions. In 1992, she allowed federal pro-choice legislation to be stripped down, hoping to pick up enough votes to pass it. In the 2000 presidential primaries, when Bill Bradley For other uses, see Bill Bradley (disambiguation) and William Bradley.
William Warren "Bill" Bradley (born July 28, 1943) is an American hall of fame basketball player, Rhodes scholar, and former U.S.
 claimed to be more reliably pro-choice than Al Gore, Michelman endorsed Gore and rebuked Bradley, killing Bradley's candidacy.

This memoir explains each of these decisions. Michelman makes good arguments for the difficult calls of her early years. But by the end, she is blinded by earnestness. "Bradley called himself 'the only candidate who's always been pro-choice,' a charge I felt was unfair," she writes. Unfair? Bradley was right: Gore had previously supported pro-life legislation and had opposed Medicaid funding of abortions throughout the Clinton administration. So why did Michelman endorse Gore? Because, she argues, "If Bradley succeeded in raising questions about Gore's commitment to reproductive rights, it would be difficult to mobilize pro-choice voters when, as every serious observer expected, the Vice President won the Democratic nomination." Michelman the welfare mom had become Michelman the powerbroker, deciding which candidates would live or die, going not by their voting records but by their electoral prospects.

Even in retrospect, Michelman can't see this episode for the throat-cutting it was. She sees herself not as Bradley's executioner EXECUTIONER. The name given to him who puts criminals to death, according to their sentence; a hangman.
     2. In the United States, executions are so rare that there are no executioners by profession.
 but as Gore's loyal friend. That's why she's baffled that the same was done to her. First, Clinton cut a deal with Republicans to sacrifice international family planning funds. Then, John Kerry's campaign scratched her from a rally, fearing she would offend Catholics. Then, the Democratic Party began recruiting pro-life Senate candidates and pushing pro-choice hopefuls out of the way. Democrats are treating women's rights The effort to secure equal rights for women and to remove gender discrimination from laws, institutions, and behavioral patterns.

The women's rights movement began in the nineteenth century with the demand by some women reformers for the right to vote, known as suffrage, and
 as "the easiest ballast to cast overboard," Michelman protests. But that's politics. One day, you're chucking ballast; the next day, you're the ballast.

How did abortion rights become a burden for Democrats? Michelman says it never was. But I think the story begins in 1993 when pro-choicers gained control of Washington. "Rather than judging and controlling the decisions women made, the nation could focus on improving the conditions that shaped their lives and choices," she writes. It's easy to see why a woman who was interrogated by a panel of doctors hates the idea of judging abortions. The word "judgment" appears throughout her book, always with distaste. But most Americans do judge abortions. They think all abortions are tragic, and some are worse than others. Many pro-choice people believe that. So do most women who have abortions. Pro-choice activists thought the era of judging abortion was over. It wasn't.

Michelman thinks the tide turned against her in the mid-1990s, when pro-lifers began running ads with the message, "Life, What a Beautiful Choice." NARAL's pollster poll·ster  
n.
One that takes public-opinion surveys. Also called polltaker.

Word History: The suffix -ster is nowadays most familiar in words like pollster, jokester, huckster,
 found that the message worked. He pointed out that NARAL NARAL National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League  spoke to the public only when abortion rights were threatened; it had no everyday values message to counter the appeal of babies and motherhood. Michelman's answer was an ad campaign touting choice as a value. "I have a strong will to decide what's best for my body, my mind, and my life," said the female narrator NARRATOR. A pleader who draws narrs serviens narrator, a sergeant at law. Fleta, 1. 2, c. 37. Obsolete. . Michelman's favorite ad showed a woman preparing to dive into a pool. "The image cut to the heart of the issue: a strong, decisive woman fully in control of her life, taking risks and responsibility," she recalls. The heart of the issue? Diving? The change of subject betrayed weakness. On abortion, NARAL seemed mute. It didn't understand that choice wasn't a value. Choice was a framework within which values needed to be aired.

In Michelman's memoir, you can see hints of what NARAL could have said and might yet say. She was drawn to the issue by the idea of healthy families and children. Her most compelling arguments for the public funding of abortion involve women who might otherwise die and orphan their kids. The women who initially persuaded Clinton to veto the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act The Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act (Public Law 108-105, HR 760, S 3, 18 U.S. Code 1531)[1] (or "PBA Ban") is a United States law prohibiting a form of late-term abortion that the Act calls partial-birth abortion. The U.S.  were those who had had unhealthy pregnancies but managed, thanks to that procedure, to have healthy children afterward. Parenthood is a powerful theme. Why not embrace it wholeheartedly whole·heart·ed  
adj.
Marked by unconditional commitment, unstinting devotion, or unreserved enthusiasm: wholehearted approval.



whole
?

Because that would require an admission that abortion is bad. In her closing pages, Michelman vows to protect abortion rights "without apology." Yet in the next sentence, she writes that "every woman would prefer to avoid this choice if she can." Which is it? Here and there, she notes that birth control and sex education could make abortion less necessary. She challenges pro-lifers to pursue that project but never quite says the same to pro-choicers. Nor does she mention the print ads NARAL once tried on that theme. Why not? Maybe they felt too preachy preach·y  
adj. preach·i·er, preach·i·est
Inclined or given to tedious and excessive moralizing; didactic.



preach
. "We never rendered value judgments on what the woman should do," Michelman says of her early days with Planned Parenthood Planned Parenthood

A service mark used for an organization that provides family planning services.
. "That was her choice. That was Roe's ultimate promise" No. Roe's promise was freedom of choice, not freedom from judgment. You can't stop us from judging, any more than you can stop us from having sex. It's our nature.

William Saletan is Slate's national correspondent and author of Bearing Right: How Conservatives Won the Abortion War.
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Title Annotation:On Political Books
Author:Saletan, William
Publication:Washington Monthly
Date:Dec 1, 2005
Words:1288
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