
You can't have anti-choic
e politician
s in the Democratic
Party, receiving money and support from the Democratic
Party's members and the party's machinery, when the platform of the party clearly states that Democrats "unequivoc
ally support RoeVsWade and a woman's right to choose a safe and legal abortlon, regardless of ability to pay, and oppose any and all efforts to weaken or undermine that right".
Just about all profession
al Democratic politician
s want to make the Democratic
Party hospitable to anti-choic
e people (and all 'other siders' of the Democratic
Party's different special interest groups) , as noted in this article from 12/2004:
http://www.nationalcatholicreporter.org/washington/wnb121504.htm The only way to do that is for the party to not take a stance on abortion, to remove any reference to 'choice'. That's certainly true of HowardDean
.
During HowardDean
's tenure as chairman of the DNC, he indicated in several interviews that the intent was to move the Democratic
Party from referring to abortion at all in its platform. Here's one of those interviews , from 11/1/2005:
Video here or
Transcript here.
January 14, 2005 - Dems May Waver on Choice, Repro Rights
http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/2144/context/archive Howard Dean's a nice guy, but he's not a liberal and definitely not wed to sacrosanct Democratic
Party positions (pro-choic
e and public healthcare
).
Most voters judge politician
s by their personalit
ies and mistakenly assume politician
s' ideologica
l positions for their own when they've decided they personally like the politician
. Profession
al political operatives take advantage of that, engage in stagecraft
, and cast roles in government as if it were a movie. Who looks/soun
ds like a president/
senator/co
ngressman/ etc.? Who has the countenanc
e, the gravitas? Voters in different regions of the country respond to different looks, different personalit
ies.
Republican voters go for the Reagan/Bus
h/McCain/C
heney/Kyl/ Chambliss 'look'. FredThomps
on who, when not in the Senate or running for president, stars in episodic dramas on TV or does commercial
s selling products for companies that he helped when he was in the Senate.
Democratic voters go for the Kennedy/Cl
inton/Obam
a look (none of whom are or were liberal, but try telling that to their 'most ardent admirers')
. All of these politician
s were and are pro-corpor
ate, pro-Milita
ryIndustri
alComplex. The only difference
s have been on social issues, and on the Democratic side, they have proven to be, let's say, 'less committed' to their party's stated values, ideals, and goals, i.e. the People's issues. And that's what defines whether one is a Democrat or not.
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost