By Byron York
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
"This election, to me, is about which candidate is
more likely to return us to full employment," says former President Bill
Clinton in a new ad released by the Obama campaign. Most voters would agree, at
least if one believes countless polls that show the economy and jobs are the
nation's top concern.
So why are Democrats planning to make their convention a
celebration of abortion and gay marriage? The Obama campaign has given a new
and prominent surrogate role to Sandra Fluke, the former Georgetown law student
and full-time lefty activist who achieved notoriety after Rush Limbaugh called
her a bad name because of her energetic promotion of taxpayer-financed
contraception.
This week, Fluke's role has been to attack Republicans
over Rep. Todd Akin's "legitimate rape" statement. "Mitt Romney
and Paul Ryan tried to distance themselves from the remark," Fluke wrote
in an Obama campaign email, "but the fact is they're in lockstep with Akin
on the major women's health issues of our time."
Fluke is just one part of the Democrats' plan to target
Akin and the GOP on abortion. The Washington Examiner's Paul Bedard writes that
the Democratic convention is becoming an "anti-Akin affair," with
party leaders lining up NARAL Pro-Choice America's Nancy Keenan, Planned
Parenthood's Cecile Richards, the actress Eva Longoria, Sen. Barbara Mikulski
and Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren, in addition to Fluke, to highlight
"women's issues" in Charlotte.
There will be a lot of talk about abortion, all of it
from one side. But not all Democrats agree with Fluke and her fellow speakers
when it comes to abortion; in May of this year, Gallup found 34 percent of
Democrats identify themselves as pro-life. And, perhaps more important to
President Obama's re-election prospects, 47 percent of independents describe
themselves as pro-life.
Why would a party that wants to attract the largest
possible number of votes this November make such extravagant pronouncements on
abortion, knowing that one-third of its own members and nearly one-half of
independents disagree?
And that's just abortion. Democrats have already decided
to make support for gay marriage a plank in the party's platform. The party's
15-member platform drafting committee unanimously voted to do so last month
after hearing testimony from advocates of gay marriage. They did not invite any
opponents of gay marriage to testify, suggesting that when it comes to writing
a platform, the Democratic process is not entirely democratic.
According to the most recent Gallup poll on the matter,
65 percent of Democrats believe gay marriage should be legal, while 34 percent
believe it shouldn't. A full 40 percent of independents believe gay marriage
should not be legal. And the Democrats are holding their convention in a swing
state, North Carolina, where voters recently approved a constitutional
amendment banning gay marriage.
The rational design behind all this is that Barack Obama
can't be re-elected without winning big among women. The newest Gallup polling
shows equal gender gaps: Mitt Romney leads the president 50 percent to 42 percent
among men, while the president leads Romney 50 to 42 percent among women. It's
a gap that has been consistent for months now, and Obama hopes to eke out a
victory by making a few more women nervous about voting Republican in the last
weeks of the campaign. "The Obama campaign believes that college-educated
women, and the margin the president could win among them, will decide the
election," says a well-informed Democratic strategist not connected to the
campaign.
But not all of this is a rational calculation. If you
stand on the floor of a Democratic convention when a speaker is discussing
abortion, you can feel the depth of the emotion that many Democrats feel on the
issue. Conservatives like to say abortion is a liberal sacrament. Maybe that's
going too far, but it is very, very important. And when something means so much
to a group of people, they can easily convince themselves that it means that
much to others, too.
Meanwhile, the voters continue to say, overwhelmingly,
that they want their president to focus on the economy and job creation. By
choosing to spotlight abortion and gay marriage at their national convention,
Democrats could give voters the impression that they've got their priorities
all mixed up. Sandra Fluke may draw headlines, but does she really represent
what voters think is most important?
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