Pro-Choice Candidates Fight for Senate Seats
Dana Goldstein, RH Reality Check on May 6, 2008 - 6:40am
Published under: Contraception | STI/HIV/AIDS Prevention | Sexuality Education | Access to Abortion | Women’s Rights | Election 2008 | Congressional races |
Exhausted and stultified by the endless Democratic primary? Gagging a little bit every time you hear that John McCain is a "maverick?" With all the attention paid to the presidential slugfest, it's easy to forget that this November, over a third of the United States Senate will also be up for grabs. While supporters of reproductive rights fervently hope to see the White House back in pro-choice hands, the Senate would act as the crucial check on presidential power should that effort be thwarted. That's because with veto power over federal judicial appointments, only Senators have the ability to stymie a conservative president's attempts to place another anti-Roe justice on the Supreme Court. Today's Senate Democrats enjoy only a razor-thin 51-49 majority, meaning they can't prevent conservative filibusters or override a presidential veto. And according to NARAL Pro-Choice America classifications, there are currently just 35 strongly "pro-choice" senators and 17 "mixed choice" senators (including majority leader Harry Reid), but a full 48 "anti-choice" senators. That means when it comes to protecting reproductive health and rights, every open seat can make a difference, whether Republican or Democratic. Here are some of the key races to look out for:
Maine Collins has always enjoyed support from some pro-choice advocates, and has an 83 percent rating from NARAL. She was one of just three Republican senators to oppose the so-called "Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act" of 2003. Collins has also opposed parental notification laws and the ban on abortions on military bases, which Harry Reid supported. Yet she also voted for a dog-whistle anti-choice bill that would have increased penalties for committing a crime against a pregnant woman, under the rationale that the fetus is a second victim. Collins' opponent Allen, on the other hand, enjoys a 100 percent pro-choice voting record.
New Hampshire
Louisiana Landrieu's opponent is the anti-choice John N. Kennedy, who joined the GOP only last year, after losing a 2004 Senate run as a Democrat. He is currently the state's treasurer. Landrieu is leading Kennedy by comfortable margins in recent polls, but Louisiana has become more Republican in recent years, so the seat is considered up for grabs.
New Mexico Republicans Heather Wilson and Steve Pearce will face-off in a June 3 Senate primary. Wilson won reelection to the House in 2006 by just 875 votes, so her central-New Mexico district could be a Democratic pick-up. While she has supported stem cell research and funding for the United Nations Population Fund, she has consistently voted to roll-back girls' and women's access to abortion. Pearce is further to her right, with a 0 percent voting record on all reproductive health issues. Due to his anti-choice record, he has won the endorsement of the Susan B. Anthony List Candidate Fund, which usually endorses anti-abortion rights female Republicans. Wilson, though, is not radical enough for the group's tastes.
Virginia
Minnesota
Colorado
Alaska Stevens' opponent is Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich, the son of a former U.S. Congressman. They are running neck-in-neck. So there you have it, eight Senate races to watch in '08, some of them with fascinating implications for pro-choice politics.
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