by
Gary Bauer
January 26,
2008
LifeNews.com:
Gary Bauer is the president of American Values, a former Republican
presidential candidate, and the former president of the Family Research
Council.
What
does Planned Parenthood do when its not destroying unborn babies?
It raises money to help elect politicians who will pass laws that
will make it easier for Planned Parenthood to kill babies. Planned
Parenthood is already raking in record amounts of taxpayer-funded
subsidies (over $305 million in 2006) and record-high revenues (close
to $900 million in 2006).
Now Americas largest abortion seller is planning to get directly
involved in politics.
Planned
Parenthood has unveiled the One Million
Strong campaign, during which it will spend $10 million in trying
to persuade one million people to vote for pro-abortion candidates
in 2008.
When combined with Emilys List, Americas largest political
action committee, which hopes to exceed the $46 million it raised
in 2006, and NARAL, which plans to spend another $10 million, its
clear that the abortion industry is desperate for its political agenda
to prevail.
This desperation is not surprising. Theres been good news recently for the pro-life cause.
Polls show Americas youth are increasingly pro-life compared with their parents and grandparents generations.
And In 2007, some 400 bills related to abortion were considered by state legislatures, a more than 50 percent increase from 2006. Many of these new laws require that women be given the opportunity to view an ultrasound of their child or be given information about fetal pain and the development of their child in the womb. These types of window to the womb laws have revealed the unborn child as a living, breathing, feeling human being, and at earlier stages than previously imagined possible.
And these laws are making a real difference. Last week, the Alan Guttmacher Institute, Planned Parenthoods research wing, released data showing a 25 percent decline in the number of abortions since 1990, to the lowest point in 30 years.
All this is good news for the country but not for Planned Parenthood, most of whose revenues are generated from abortion. T
he pro-abortion lobby understands that as long as Roe vs. Wade stands, most abortions will continue to take place. And to make sure Roe, responsible for as many as 50 million abortions in the U.S. (more than the combined populations of 25 states), stands, the right president will have to be in place.
The next president will get to appoint as many as three justices to the Supreme Court. It is widely believed that the court is just one vote away from being able to overturn Roe v. Wade.
But Roe is not the only political front in the abortion wars. Another agenda item for the pro-abortion lobby is to pass the Freedom Of Choice Act (FOCA), which would codify Roe and overturn many of pro-life laws that have been passed by state legislatures over the last three decades.
According to the American Center for Law and Justice, The Freedom of Choice Act would create an absolute right to abortion that would override any federal, state or local law that simply interfered with that right, no matter how compelling the justification for the law. The House version of FOCA already has over 100 sponsors, and Hillary Clinton has also said shed sign it.
All this underscores once again the importance of the upcoming election.
I have discussed the importance of having leaders who understand the existential battle America faces in the war against Islamo-fascism. But America faces a battle for our existence here at home, too.
A
president is elected for four or eight years, but Supreme Court justices
are appointed for life. 2008 represents a crossroads for the pro-life
movement, and, like in the battle against radical Islam, an ideology
that embraces death, our battle against a culture of death here at
home will have implications that will last a generation.


