Showing posts with label Abortion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abortion. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 28, 2022

Quote of the Day (The Editors of ‘Commonweal,’ On the Supreme Court’s Reversal of ‘Roe v. Wade’)

“Now that Roe is finally overturned, the [Roman Catholic] Church must think through the implications of its success. An issue that has dominated public discourse and reshaped American society over half a century remains far from settled—morally, politically, legally, culturally. Catholics ambivalent about abortion and discouraged by the Church’s alliance with the right will continue to tune out the bishops or even disaffiliate. Meanwhile, the left’s often cavalier dismissal of the moral status of the unborn makes productive debate on this issue increasingly difficult. With lawmaking on abortion returned to the state level, partisan divides and regional differences will deepen. Women will continue to seek out abortions, through legal and extralegal means, including medications delivered by mail. Abortion is likely to remain the subject of protests, sloganeering, and demagoguery. As we have seen across the decades—from the murders of abortion doctors and the bombing of clinics to recent attacks on pregnancy-counselling centers and a death threat against Justice Brett Kavanaugh—some people on both sides of this issue are willing to resort to violence. Such violence is likely to increase in this moment of uncertainty.”—"The End of Roe: A Test for American Democracy” (editorial), Commonweal, June 25, 2022

As I thought of the changed landscape in the wake of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, a line from the prophet Isaiah came to mind: “Come, let us reason together.”

My fear is that this fervent hope will fall on deaf ears. 

The wounds from the past half-century—the vitriol and hypocrisy of this opening salvo of the culture wars—have already infected the body politic, in the form of a Democratic Party ready to accept not only some of the most liberal abortion laws in the industrialized world but also among the highest rates of abortion in that sphere, while the Republicans jiggered their own self-imposed rule for Supreme Court confirmations in election years and aligned itself with a would-be authoritarian peddling conspiracy theories like a snake-oil salesman.

And that does not even take into account, as the editors of the Catholic opinion journal Commonweal note, the damage to religious institutions like the Church.

Now, I fear, what may be about to ensue will only further divide families and friends. None of this had to happen had each side only engaged in mutual respect and a willingness to compromise.

Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Essay: Abortion—Biden’s ‘Eagleton Moment’


“It’s troubling that [former Vice-President Joe] Biden should so easily abandon what, until the other day, seemed a deeply held position. It is also troubling that a major element of the Democratic Party is so intolerant of an opposing idea that it would doom a candidacy on that basis alone. This lockstep abortion platform seeks to impose a simplistic position on a morally vexing issue and is reminiscent of 1992, when at the Democratic National Convention the party denied a pro-life Democrat, Gov. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania, a speaking slot.”—Richard Cohen, “Joe Biden’s Flip-Flop on Abortion Reeks of Insincerity,” The Washington Post, June 10, 2019

Last week’s Presidential debates were enough to make John Kasich, speaking yesterday morning at Chautauqua Institution, issue a warning: “The Democrats have moved so far to the left that they’re going to re-elect Trump if they’re not careful.”

Part of me couldn’t help thinking that, as a lifelong Republican, the two-time Presidential candidate was not exactly a disinterested observer. But part of me couldn’t help agreeing with him, particularly when he went on to say that America was a “center-right and center-left country.” By the end of the two debates, the leftward tilt of his opponents had left little room for front-runner Joe Biden to tack back toward the middle—assuming that he does win the nomination.

You don’t have to go far to see where the new lines of orthodoxy are forming: single-payer health insurance with no role for the private sector; reparations for descendants of African-American slaves; the closing of ICE. But perhaps the greatest danger to the eventual Democratic nominee is taxpayer-funded abortions for all situations.

For the preservation of American democracy and even of world order and peace, there is nothing—nothing—so important as ridding the Oval Office of its current pestilential occupant. That’s what makes so infuriating the Democratic left’s insistence on repealing the Hyde Amendment barring federal funding for abortion except to save the life of the woman, or if the pregnancy arises from incest or rape—and Biden’s abject surrender to that demand only a day after re-asserting his four-decade support of it.

There is a reason for the endurance of this legislation (named for the late Illinois Congressman Henry Hyde) since its enactment in 1976: It’s the closest legislative attempt to take into account so many Americans' ambivalence about abortion. That uncertainty also explains, for instance, why, though sentiment for same-sex marriage has moved decisively in a favorable direction in far less time, this country remains as fundamentally divided about abortion as it was when Roe v. Wade was handed down in 1973.

But, whether a product of the Left’s fury at anything associated even peripherally with Donald Trump, punitive new restrictions in states like Alabama, or Biden’s willingness to stretch too far for the Presidential prize that has long eluded him, the narrowed debate among Democrats this past week on this issue consigns what should be a searching discussion of moral ambiguity to a simple bumper sticker: “choice.”

Remarkably, their patent political foolishness matches their moral myopia.

Already, Trump is trotting out a line that will undoubtedly join his jabs about “socialism” a year from now: “Virtually every top Democrat also now supports taxpayer-funded abortion right up to the moment of birth,” he said at his campaign kickoff rally in Orlando two weeks ago.

For any other candidate other than the insult-spewing, managerial disaster in the Oval Office, this would have been the electoral equivalent of a haymaker. It may still be enough to make thousands of former or on-the-fence voters think twice about electing any Democrat.

Just when they can’t afford to lose the vote of any Republicans or independents disgruntled by Trump’s misconduct but sympathetic to some of his policies, the Democratic left has angered and alienated them.

Nice going, people.

I don’t think that terms like “liberal” or “progressive” apply to this group. The one that does is “Jacobin,” named for the extreme radicals who, before they were done, took the French Revolution beyond its initial aims of “liberty, equality, fraternity” to intolerance of other viewpoints, the Reign of Terror—and a reaction that saw a new strongman, Napoleon Bonaparte, rise from the chaos.

And so now, New York, Illinois, Rhode Island and Nevada have liberalized their abortion laws. Increasingly, there are no limits allowed to discourage partial-birth abortion, abortion on the basis of a preferred gender for a child—or, astoundingly for a party that has long championed greater regulation in all sectors of the economy to ensure safety, decriminalizing, in Nevada, supplying abortion-inducing pills without the advice of a doctor.

Washington Post columnist Michael Gerson has rightly pointed out the fateful step taken by the Jacobin Democrats: not merely permitting abortion under the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade guidelines, but actively promoting it.

It might be easy for the Left to dismiss this criticism by Gerson, a religious conservative who served as a speechwriter for George W. Bush. But it’s harder to ignore when the same argument is made by two liberals, Gerson’s Post colleague Cohen or PBS pundit Mark Shields, who correctly identify the multiple problems in Biden’s quick-as-a-blink capitulation to the absolutist wing of his party:

*If Biden had to change his position, he had plenty of time to do so before now. All the way down to his formal entrance into the primaries this year, Biden could have adjusted the position on abortion that he first staked out in his 2007 campaign memoir, Promises to Keep: “I’ve stuck to my middle-of-the-road position on abortion for more than 30 years. I still vote against partial birth abortion and federal funding, and I’d like to make it easier for scared young mothers to choose not to have an abortion, but I will also vote against a constitutional amendment that strips a woman of her right to make her own choice.”  By waiting till he was called out on the campaign trail, he furthered the decades-long impression that he is an inept Presidential candidate who can’t survive the primaries.

*Biden did not have to see himself cornered as the sole Democratic candidate who had voted for the Hyde Amendment. In fact, every single Democrat now running for the Presidency has cast a vote for the various spending bills that have included the amendment, according to this report by Carter Sherman of Vice. To be sure, they have said they have not voted for that specifically, but merely to maintain the mechanism to keep the government running. But the overall impact is about the same as those on Capitol Hill who said they opposed the Vietnam War but kept funding it.

*It will be far easier for Trump to cast Biden as an ideological weathervane. Think John Kerry looked bad after those windsurfing commercials in the 2004 election? Think what the President can do all by himself to Biden, without any TV ads. If he hasn’t cast about for a suitable nickname to match, rest assured it’s coming soon.

*The party that prides itself on “diversity” means that in terms of race, ethnicity and sexual orientation, not ideology. This weekend, New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof took many of the paper’s readers—and, more widely speaking, college student activists—for demonizing conservatives and evangelicals. “Too often, we liberals embrace people who don’t look like us, but only if they think like us,” he pointed out.

Over the last couple of years, centrist voters—of both Democratic and Republican stripes—have been searching for a “Sister Souljah” moment, similar to Bill Clinton’s 1992 primary season repudiation of an extremist member of an otherwise traditional and loyal element of his party.

Instead, this past month centrists got Biden’s “Eagleton moment”—a sudden, undignified abandonment of what had seemed like absolute support for a person or position. That reference might mean little or nothing to the under-30s voters that Democrats keep touting as the electoral wave of the future, but it will strike a chord among the Baby Boomers who gave Trump his margin of victory over Hillary Clinton in 2016.

They will remember how George McGovern, the 1972 Democratic nominee for President, said, after the news broke of Thomas Eagleton’s electroshock therapy for treating depression, that he would back his running mate “1000 percent”; that he went back on his word just a couple of days later; and that an electorate already regarding McGovern quizzically now saw him as a weak, incompetent mess.

Biden’s abrupt about-face holds the potential for similar damage to Biden. It could even come from the left: On occasion, Garry Trudeau has neatly summed up the essence of certain politicos with an object rather than a face: a lit bomb for Newt Gingrich (referencing his destructive impact), a waffle for Bill Clinton (for his ideological dexterity). If he ever gets around to treating Biden in the same fashion, the object could be a humble piece of beach footwear: a flip-flop.

The split-the-difference posture that Biden jettisoned after a landslide of pressure was the party’s last nod in the direction of abortion being “safe, legal but rare”—Clinton’s rhetorically shrewd gesture to the uneasiness so many Americans feel about the procedure. You can take it to the bank that the last adjective goes by the wayside through the easier access desired by the Jacobin Democrats—and enacted into law in places like New York and Illinois.

Among the worst offenders is New York’s Senator Kirsten Gillibrand. She didn’t make much of an impression in the debates, but she represents a useful barometer of the worrisome new direction of her party as it relates to abortion: the equation of qualms about abortion to anti-Semitism and homophobia.

 “Imagine saying that it’s OK to appoint a judge who’s racist or anti-Semitic or homophobic,” she said in a Des Moines Register interview a couple of weeks ago. “Asking someone to appoint someone who takes away basic human rights of any group of people in America ... I don’t think those are political issues anymore.”

“All these efforts by President Trump and other ultra-radical conservative judges and justices to impose their faith on Americans is contrary to our Constitution, and that’s what this is,” she continued, adding: “There is no moral equivalency when you come to racism. And I do not believe that there is a moral equivalency when it comes to changing laws that deny women reproductive freedom.”

By this newly heightened rhetoric, the Jacobin left is not just imposing a litmus test but also a religious one. They effectively foreclose any appointment of a Catholic, for instance, who, in all other particulars about racial and economic justice and foreign policy, sides with the party, except for abortion.

The Democratic hierarchy has been struggling mightily to bring back to the fold voters in the Rust Belt who left the party in 2016. Do they really think Biden’s change will lure them back now, given the high proportion of Catholic voters in those states?

Once more, the Jacobin wing of the party has changed the conversation from the economic issues that are winners to the social ones that have kept them out of the White House these past 2½ years. They have just made the obstacles to winning it back that much harder to clear.

A Democratic path to victory will be assured as much by softening GOP support as by turning out their own hardcore supporters, but you’d better believe it will be far closer than the pollsters and pundits are forecasting now. Remember: not only did few foresee a Trump victory, but a number even foresaw a punishing landslide against the GOP.

In November 2020, in the not-unlikely event of another Trump victory, the Jacobin left would be well-advised to stop casting around for forces to blame, domestic or foreign, but instead take a long, hard look in their own mirrors. In their game of idiot’s delight, they’re already doing everything they can to hand re-election to Trump—and nowhere with as much moral obtuseness as in the abortion issue.

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Mario Cuomo: The Power—and Limits—of Words



In the 1980s and 1990s, walking near the campus of New York University, I continually passed a Protestant church. Instead of a quote from the Bible or even a theologian, the church would invariably post on its outside bulletin board passages from contemporary secular figures. More often than not, I saw quotes from the published diaries, speeches or articles of Mario Cuomo.

In the Reagan Era, the New York governor customarily elicited this same level of devotion among liberals that the more religiously inclined gave to saints. Today, following his death on New Year’s Day at age 82, I offer not reverence, but respect, for his life and legacy.

In 1984, while Ronald Reagan’s re-election campaign was trumpeting the America being remolded by his trickle-down economic policy as a “shining city on a hill,” Cuomo warned presciently of the income inequality that was making the nation “A Tale of Two Cities” in his eloquent keynote address at the Democratic Convention.

In the area beyond the sight of the White House, Cuomo said, “There are more poor than ever, more families in trouble, more and more people who need help but can't find it. Even worse: There are elderly people who tremble in the basements of the houses there. And there are people who sleep in the city streets, in the gutter, where the glitter doesn't show. There are ghettos where thousands of young people, without a job or an education, give their lives away to drug dealers every day. There is despair, Mr. President, in the faces that you don't see, in the places that you don't visit in your shining city.”

Instead of the Social Darwinism at the heart of the President’s program, Cuomo called for a return to “the idea of family, mutuality, the sharing of benefits and burdens for the good of all, feeling one another's pain, sharing one another's blessings.”

Cuomo had tried out that idea of "family" two years before as he campaigned to become governor of New York. GOP opponent Lew Lehrman’s contention, that government should be “run like a business,” struck me at the time as inappropriate; now, it seems madness. (Which business would that be? Enron? “Chainsaw Al” Dunlap’s Sunbeam? Lehman Brothers?)

In contrast, Cuomo’s metaphor of the American people as a family struck me as homey but effective, something everyone could easily grasp, the same way that Franklin Roosevelt’s comparison of Lend Lease to lending a hose to a neighbor putting out a fire had been in WWII.

What’s more, it could resonate with immigrants who maintained continuing powerful ties to their ancestral lands—the kind of blue-collar, ethnic, often Catholic background from which I came, a voting bloc that Reagan had poached, to devastating effect, in the election of 1980.

My favorable impressions of one Cuomo appearance
In the late 1980s, I heard Governor Cuomo address the Direct Marketing Association (DMA) at its annual convention. The theme of the speech was “The New York Idea,” a title he would later use for a 1994 collection of his articles.

The “New York Idea,” in his formulation, involved “government using its resources to help create private sector growth, then requiring those who benefit from that growth to share some part of it so that hope and opportunity are extended to those who have not been as fortunate." 

Cuomo had already been governor for a term when I saw him, but aside from brief snippets about him on the news, I had never heard him at extended length till then. That afternoon, I came away mighty impressed, not just by his vigorous delivery of a prepared address but, perhaps even more so, by his response to questions that represented potential trouble, before an audience hardly predisposed to like him. He may have felt, as son Andrew remembered in his eulogy, that "you can’t possibly deliver a speech extemporaneously that is as well done as a written speech," but--perhaps from his practice as a lawyer--he knew how to think fast on his feet.

I know—and, at times, have seen—several techniques employed by politicians before audiences with, shall we say, tough questions. The first, the baldfaced lie, while hardly beyond the ethical ken of politicians, is potentially the most dangerous if it is uncovered. A second approach, which might be termed “grabbing by the smooth handle,” was raised to its highest art form by Bill Clinton; it can involve either using ambiguous words that convince a listener that the politico agrees with him, or the politician being so “in the moment” that he somehow persuades even himself as he speaks that he agrees with the questioner. A third approach, rephrasing a question in such a way that it becomes a topic far more comfortable to address, can lead, if performed clumsily, to absolute contempt from the audience. (I saw this happen to California’s Gov. Gray Davis, who, addressing a business group, spoke about his pet issue, education—then, when asked about their specific real-estate concerns, immediately turned the topic back to education, with not the slightest attempt to show a connection. Few left that day without feeling he was the very definition of an empty suit.)

Cuomo would have none of this. He told the DMA audience straightaway why he would not back their preferred positions, cited several well-developed reasons for his stance, and took the edge off only slightly at the end with a joke at his own expense. At the conclusion, he was hardly ready to be lifted and carried aloft out of the building, but I think he left many listeners with a grudging respect for his mastery of the issues and his refusal to pander.

I found out later that Cuomo was unafraid to walk into the lion’s den on other occasions, too. Two years before the fall of the Berlin Wall, Sidney Blumenthal recounted in his account of the 1988 Presidential campaign, Pledging Allegiance, Cuomo was one of only two Democratic hopefuls (the other being Gary Hart, before his self-destructive fling with Donna Rice) to foresee a near future beyond the Cold War—and the governor said so, shockingly, before a conservative audience.

Verbal fencing
As someone who made (and continues to make) his living with words, I was impressed with Cuomo’s apparent facility with language. So, at least initially, were reporters who covered him. That may have been part of the problem with this great hope of liberals—and a portent of what they encountered when they succeeded in putting another progressive given to soaring words, Barack Obama, in the White House.

Cuomo famously observed, “You campaign in poetry but govern in prose.” As it turned out, he was not equally comfortable with both.

In 2004, a decade out of office, Cuomo wrote a book called Why Lincoln Matters. Obviously, he felt he shared with the first Republican President not only a legal background but an ability to use oratory to move the electorate to greater acceptance of the marginalized. It was less obvious if Cuomo grasped that this latter skill would have been insufficient without Lincoln’s shrewd understanding of his listeners in one-on-one encounters or his instinct for making a momentous move at just the moment when voters were ready for it.

Baseball might have been the means by which he hoped to mark his mark as a young man, but judging from his time in Albany dealing with other politicians and the press, fencing might have been Cuomo’s more natural sport. The arts of thrust, parry, feints, posturing, ripostes—and, on the rare occasion, disengaging—were indispensable parts of his verbal arsenal.

In a New York minute, Cuomo could cross the line from jesuitical to downright preposterous. “You’re telling me that the Mafia is an organization,” he said, for instance, “and I’m telling you that’s a lot of baloney.”

Granted that the national recession, felt acutely in the state, limited revenues, and that Cuomo managed to balance all his budgets. But battles over state finances became incessant. It remains an open question how damaging this proved to his relationships with lawmakers in Albany. “If Cuomo had been governor at the time [of New York City’s fiscal crisis] instead of [predecessor Hugh] Carey, we’d still be talking now about how to get New York City out of bankruptcy,” a friend who had served in the Cuomo administration told me 10 years after his boss was out of office.

Weighing the plusses and minuses of three terms
In an age of diminished expectations, Cuomo’s achievements as governor could not be summed in a simple one-liner the way his predecessors had (e.g., “Thomas Dewey implemented construction of the state highway system”). To its credit, the state under his watch sought to step up to its responsibilities as the federal government under Reagan turned a blind eye to the social ills going unaddressed in the nation, including funding for AIDS  patients, expanding coverage for low-income children and pregnant women who didn’t previously qualify for Medicaid, and building permanent housing with support services for people living with mental illnesses in shelters and on the streets. (Moreover, unlike Nelson Rockefeller's actions with regard to Attica, Cuomo was able to negotiate the end to a hostage crisis at Sing-Sing prison without the loss of life.)

But perhaps the program with the widest impact was the penal archipelago necessitated by  Rockefeller’s anti-drug laws—which, while boosting Cuomo’s claim to be tough on crime (and, to be fair, getting some criminals off the street), disproportionately disadvantaged many of the state’s African-American and Hispanic youths. (Even some conservatives are now questioning the value of these long-term incarcerations.) Ironically, one of son Andrew’s proudest boasts as governor, in fact, was that he has closed some of these prisons.

In a trenchant piece published a few months before the governor’s 1994 last hurrah, New York Magazine’s Jacob Weisberg, while acknowledging the vapidity of George Pataki’s complaint that the state’s sputtering economy was all Cuomo’s fault, still lodged a telling criticism against the incumbent:

“Cuomo’s style of economic development involves government in a wheel-spinning vicious circle: The state spends time and money creating and implementing its taxes and regulations, then spends more of both finding ways around them for those who complain the loudest. Instead, he should just cut business taxes across the board. But the notion that the key to a sounder economy is doing less rather than more seems never to have occurred to him.”

In particular, upstate voters were peeved at what they regarded as his neglect of their needs. Much of that anger was misplaced (did any governor do enough to reverse the region’s decline in the post-WWII era?), but their complaints were not without merit.

New York State government became the largest employer upstate during Cuomo’s three terms. No wonder: Business taxes were roughly 75% higher than the national average by his last year in office. On his watch occurred the loss of the steel industry in Buffalo, the movement of more than 40,000 workers from General Electric in Schenectady, the closing of the Ford plant in Green Island, and the downsizing of manufacturing by Carrier Air Conditioning in Syracuse.

A searching discussion by Brian Mann and Martha Foley, on North Country Public Radio, outlined some of the other ways, positive as well as negative, in which Cuomo reshaped the upstate landscape:

*He created the Environmental Protection Fund, a permanent funding mechanism that would help New York State purchase land for open space conservation;

*He “walked away” from the findings of an Adirondack Parks commission he himself had set up, leaving on the table issues still unresolved two decades later;

*He negotiated a deal with the Mohawk Tribe for the building of a casino, with state approval, in Franklin County—an agreement made seriously complicated by a separate agreement he had helped broker, as Secretary of State under Hugh Carey, with a separate band of Mohawks for the right to use a chunk of state forest land in Clinton County north of Plattsburgh.

As New York governors are wont to do, Cuomo soon cast his eyes longingly down the Hudson and toward the Potomac. Washington offered him a warmer climate—and, in the Oval Office, a larger stage for his political ambitions.

And yet…one of the indelible images of the last quarter century of Presidential policies was of two chartered airplanes at the Albany airport in December 1991, waiting to fly him to New Hampshire so he could get his name on the state’s Democratic primary ballot for president. Instead, he announced that the severity of another budget battle in New York would preclude him from running. Even many of his admirers found it difficult to accept that explanation.

Lost policy opportunity on abortion
The greatest missed policy opportunity of the governor's time in public life might have come in the matter that endeared Cuomo the most to many in the media: abortion. His 1984 Notre Dame address, on "Religious Belief and Public Morality," was indeed nuanced and thoughtful.

But the years ahead showed that the governor was far more ready to challenge his own church’s strictures than its mirror image in pro-choice orthodoxy. His pronouncements on the subject went from acknowledging abortion as a tragic necessity to defending it as an unassailable right.

The tragedy was not just that America’s abortion debate became further calcified, with increasingly less middle ground between absolute positions, but that more deaths of the unborn eventually resulted.

It did not have to be this way. Across Western Europe, with countries far more liberal and secular than the United States, waiting periods and other restrictions vehemently opposed in America are common, along with generous maternity benefits, as outlined by Emily Matchar’s August 2013 article in The Atlantic Monthly

Cuomo could have argued forcefully for something similar in New York and America. Instead, his increasing rhetorical rigidity on this subject ensured unnecessary religious divisions and the alienation of many voters who, on economic issues, could have been expected to vote Democratic.

Cuomo’s background promised more than this. It wasn’t only because that, as recently as the 1977 Mayoral runoff primary, he had been far less supportive of abortion on demand than opponent Ed Koch, but because he came to prominence in state Democratic circles in the first place in Queens for forging compromises in the early 1970s over bitter city-neighborhood disputes involving another third-rail issue: race.  

Moreover, Cuomo’s justification for his abortion stance was inconsistent: while he said he could not in good conscience apply his religious beliefs in the public square in this instance, he felt no compunction about citing religious and moral principles in his full-throated opposition to the death penalty.

The office Cuomo should have pursued (not the Presidency)
The greatest missed opportunity of Cuomo’s career, as far as officeholding was concerned, may have been his rejection of an appointment to the Supreme Court by Bill Clinton. A seat on the Supreme Court would have provided a graceful escape from a post he found increasingly onerous as his power and prestige had dissipated. (Most observers ascribe his declining popularity toward the end of his time in office to a recession. But Cuomo should have understood, after his lackluster third-term victory over hapless GOP neophyte candidate Pierre Rinfret, that voters’ patience with him was wearing thin, the way it has over time with other formidable vote-getters, such as New York mayors Fiorello LaGuardia, Ed Koch and Michael Bloomberg.)

Joining the Supreme Court would have given Cuomo far more than what unsuccessful Republican nominee Robert Bork had hoped for: “an intellectual feast”—he would have had the chance to influence social legislation for a generation. For Clinton, the appointment would have removed another dominant sphere of influence within the party, added to the liberal bloc on the court, and posed a counterweight to the conservative, feisty Italian-American Antonin Scalia with the liberal, feisty Italian-American Mario Cuomo.

The nation also would have benefited from having a justice with practical executive experience. The court has had far more than its share of court appointees who were legal scholars or appellate judges, but far less in the mode of William Howard Taft, Charles Evan Hughes, Frank Murphy, or Earl Warren: governors (or, in Taft’s case, a President) who knew firsthand the impact of court rulings on administration at the state or federal levels.

Accepting an appointment to the high court would have been a win-win for both him and President Clinton, adding a positive element to their sometimes fraught relationship. The tape that Gennifer Flowers made public of her conversation with Clinton was less damaging for what it revealed about their intimacy than for his too-ready agreement with the spurious notion that Cuomo may have had underworld connections—a statement for which Clinton had to apologize privately, even as his campaign—wrongly—implied that the tape itself may have been doctored. The New York governor’s agreement to deliver the speech nominating Clinton would undoubtedly have been made with less alacrity had he known that adviser--and future Secretary of State--Warren Christopher had counseled against Clinton naming Cuomo his running mate (too “high maintenance,” Christopher warned).

Spurning the Supreme Court appointment also meant that the state Democratic Party would forego the necessary task of elevating midlevel talent to the highest offices, leaving the party, in effect, with an incumbent who would be practically a pinata for a resurgent national conservatism. "Since Cuomo is the aging poster boy of contemporary American liberalism and since New York is its center, a defeat of Cuomo would have national significance," urged conservative intellectual William Kristol.

Making terms, uncertainly, with defeat
The “aging poster boy” bit might have been unkind, but the rest of the sentence was true enough. Cuomo’s defeat in 1994 was not only demoralizing by itself, but also because it left the state in the hands of George Pataki. That upstate politician possessed no visible acumen but an all-too-clear connection to the ethically dubious Al D’Amato, whose most notable achievement in three terms in the U.S. Senate may have been avoiding prison for the application of his suburban-machine tactics to the Federal level.

(In watching the coverage of Cuomo’s final rites, I nearly gagged on the rank hypocrisy of D’Amato, who told credulous reporters about how the governor “exemplified integrity”: “Listen, he’s a man who probably lost an election because he said, ‘I’m opposed to the death penalty.’” I wondered how many of those covering the wake realized that D’Amato helped mastermind an election that never allowed voters to forget this fact?)

After his failed bid for a fourth term, Cuomo was a political Icarus who fell too quickly to earth. His relationship with son Andrew may have been every bit as complicated as the one between George H.W. Bush and Dubya. Though he gloried in Andrew’s ascent to governor, he felt that the latter’s initial failure to reach the state’s highest office in 2002 stemmed from a refusal to heed the old man’s advice. Mario’s late-in-life work for rich clients might have been just long-delayed compensation for years of public service and for being unjustly ignored by white-shoe law firms after a sterling college record, but one longed for him to labor unstintingly in the courts for those threatened by penury and the state, as New York City’s Paul O’Dwyer did.

Oddest of all, as the New York Daily News' David Hinckley recalls, Cuomo could not find an audience during a one-year stint as a Saturday talk show host on WABC radio. As conservative talk radio began to dominate the airwaves, his voice could not enthrall enthralled millions, as it had only the decade before.

What was—and what might have been
With his departure from public life, Cuomo joined Henry Clay, William Jennings Bryan, Adlai Stevenson, and Ted Kennedy among the most tantalizing of political might-have-beens: giant figures who often dwarfed their parties’ preferred Presidential candidates (and even successful aspirants to the White House).

The end of Cuomo’s political career paralleled his shortened athletic career: a promising, tough competitor sidelined against his will, with so much potential never reached. Disappointment inevitably clings to his mantle: he was "not to be the president his East Coast cheerleaders hoped, not to be a visionary for a new time of complexity and challenge," writes political analyst William Bradley, a former adviser to Hart, in a piece for The Huffington Post.

But, in a state with a history of corruption, his administration was largely scandal-free (helped out, in no small part, by ethics legislation enacted on his watch), and his own personal conduct was above reproach.

He was not all that he could or should have been, but he was intelligent, large-hearted, and superior to the great majority of the other figures in a bad, cowardly political time. He demonstrated a commitment to engage the electorate, beyond sound bites, in the essential moral debates of this age on the proper role of government. He did not leave people cynical about public affairs, but moved them to confront the necessity of change in a compassionate manner. He was, amazingly, not a convicted politician, but a politician of convictions.

(The photo accompanying this post, of Cuomo delivering a speech, was taken by David Berkowitz on Sept. 25, 2007.)

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Quote of the Day (The White House, on Sex-Selection Abortion)


“The Administration opposes gender discrimination in all forms, but the end result of this legislation would be to subject doctors to criminal prosecution if they fail to determine the motivations behind a very personal and private decision.  The government should not intrude in medical decisions or private family matters in this way.”—White House deputy press secretary Jamie Smith, statement to ABC News correspondent Jake Tapper, quoted in Jake Tapper, “Legislation About Gender Selection and Abortion — Today’s Q for O’s WH– 5/30/2012

But…but…but

The Obama administration nods toward opponents of abortion—yes, we “oppose gender discrimination in all forms”; yes, we believe in the value of life—until push comes to shove. Then, it is another matter.

Taken by itself, the administration’s stance on funding of birth control by religious institutions (with the burden of payment now shifted to insurance providers rather than religious institutions themselves) might appear, as the administration claims, a good-faith compromise. But there is, of course, a wider context. The administration objects to intrusion or “coercion” when it comes to a medical provider, as in the case of sex-selection abortion, but not when it comes to a religious group—which, in instances when they self-insure, will be forced to foot the bill for medical procedures they cannot morally support.

Of all the reasons for abortion, sex selection may provoke the most moral qualms, not just among the electorate at large but even among liberals sympathetic to abortion. This has only annoyed the pro-choice movement to no end. Fairly typical is the response of Allison Benedikt who, in an article for Slate, not only contends that “it’s entirely irrelevant why a woman wants an abortion,” but also that, for those uneasy about the issue, “Gulp for a second if you must, then get over it.”

Gulp…then get over it. It is only one step removed from the statement by Time Magazine writer Nina Burleigh, at the height of the Clinton impeachment crisis:  “I’d be happy to give him [oral sex] to thank him for keeping abortion legal.”

Some years ago, when I was part of a  political-science book club, our moderator asked if we wanted to read a book dealing with abortion. “No,” one member said. “I don’t care to read or discuss that subject at all.” But four decades after Roe v. Wade, despite endless attempts by the media to marginalize any opponents for any form of the procedure as clinic-killers, fanatics, or simply members of a "war on women," there is no sign that the debate on abortion is abating. 

Unlike same-sex marriage, where there has been a pronounced shift in public opinion in less than half that time, the electorate remains deeply divided on the issue. The Obama administration’s decision not to consider even the slightest limit to abortion will not remove that issue from the public square; in fact, it might only increase the anger and tensions revolving around it.

Don’t imagine that Obama, the most cautious of politicians, hasn’t precisely weighed the pluses and minuses of restricting abortion in even the most morally objectionable of circumstances. On the one hand: the Catholic bishops, a hierarchy already politically tone-deaf and fantastically easy to depict as patriarchal, now also morally compromised even before its own flock because of the sexual-abuse scandal, and who thus have more limited power than ever to sway votes on abortion; on the other hand, the pro-choice movement, which, every bit as much as the Catholic Church, will not allow deviation on this stand, and will undoubtedly provide neither funds nor shock troops in what promises to be a difficult re-election campaign for the President.

Guess who Obama won’t risk offending? Can you think of any better reason why he helped scotch the Prenatal Non-Discrimination Act at the end of May?

Many Democratic voters of Catholic faith will vote for the President because they don’t believe Mitt Romney will reform Wall Street or do anything to curb the lunatic fringe of his party on anything related to immigration, global warming, or matters of war and policy. But a myriad of issues confront any voter, and Obama should not believe that Catholic voters will go to the polls free of qualms about the administration’s abortion position. 

If nothing else, the administration’s stance against banning sex selection means that there are no conceivable circumstances in which they will ban any form of abortion—not for partial births, not for sex selection. And if that holds true in the United States, why not also for elsewhere in the world that might receive American funding for population control?

This is a President so used to making moral distinctions, according to a recent New York Times report, that he personally selects targets for a "kill list" by drone attack.Yet when it comes to the unborn running the risk of termination, there are no moral distinctions for him: they all die.

Nor should the administration rest easy in believing that they are simply acting in a longstanding party tradition of broad expansion of rights for all. Their own history should make them much more humble in the belief that they are always on the side of the angels. While Andrew Jackson’s Democratic Party supported a broad expansion of the franchise in the 19th century, it also dispossessed Native-Americans of their lands and allied with southern slaveholders. In the 20th century, it supported the rights of labor but were decades late in supporting civil rights for African-Americans.

Viewed in that light, progressive counsels against single-issue voters ring a little hollow. President Obama might have felt uncomfortable about fielding the ban on sex-selection abortion proposed by Republicans, but unlike in state legislatures, history doesn’t offer Presidents the option of deciding which issues he can vote “present” on without taking sides.

Will the President pay at the polls for his stance on banning sex-selection abortion? Perhaps yes, perhaps no. But the unborn surely will. 

(White House photo of Barack Obama in his first press conference as President)

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Quote of the Day (Cardinal Bernardin, on a ‘Consistent Ethic of Life’)

“The primary intention of the consistent ethic of life…is to raise consciousness about the sanctity and reverence of all human life from conception to natural death. The more one embraces this concept, the more sensitive one becomes to the value of human life itself at all stages…. This consistent ethic points out the inconsistency of defending life in one area while dismissing it in another. Each specific issue requires its own moral analysis and each may call for varied, specific responses. Moreover different issues may engage the energies of different people or of the same people at different times. But there is a linkage among all the life issues which cannot be ignored….


“There are those who support abortion on demand who do not grasp or will not discuss the intrinsic value of human life and the precedence it should take in decision making. The issue—the only issue—they insist, is the question of who decides, the individual or the government.

“Who decides is not the issue. We all decide, but we make our free decisions within limits. In exercising our freedom, we must not make ourselves the center of the world. Other individuals born and unborn are as much a part of the human family as we are.”—Joseph Cardinal Bernardin (1928-1996), “Deciding for Life” (Message for "Respect Life Sunday"), October 1, 1989