Catholic Professor Claims Obama Pro-Life, Deserves Re-Election
by Michael New, Ph.D. | Washington, DC | LifeNews.com | 9/10/12
www.lifenews.com/2012/09/10/catholic-professor-claims-obama-pro-life-deserves-re-election/
In recent election cycles, Democrats have made a series of ham-handed attempts to convince voters that they would actually do a better job lowering abortion rates than Republicans have.
In 2004, Sojourners ran an article by Glen Harold Stassen which used data from a sample of states to claim the abortion rate went up under President Bush. However, comprehensive data later released by the CDC revealed the abortion rate actually fell during President Bush’s first term in office.
In 2008, Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good (CACG) released a study which purportedly found that welfare spending was effective at lowering abortion rates. However, after a data-coding error was corrected, the results indicated that welfare spending had inconsistent effects across time.
This year is appears that Stephen Schneck will be taking on this role for the Democratic party. Schneck used to be the chair of the Department of Politics at Catholic University of America. He is currently director of CUA’s Institute for Policy Research and Catholic Studies and is associated with the group Catholics for Obama. At a panel hosted by Democrats for Life on Wednesday, Schneck attempted to make the case Stassen and CACG tried to make in 2004 and 2008 respectively. [Editor's Note: You can contact CUA here to complain.]
However, based on his Wednesday remarks, it does not appear he will be any more successful than his predecessors.
Schneck’s main argument is that since one-third of all births are paid for by Medicaid and the Romney-Ryan ticket wants to cut Medicaid — women who would have used Medicaid to pay their childbearing expenses will instead obtain abortions. There are obviously lots of problems with this logic. Schneck cites no research which shows that Medicaid spending is negatively correlated with abortion rates. There is also no evidence that women respond to higher childbearing costs by obtaining abortions in greater numbers. There is no guarantee that any Medicaid cuts would be focused on prenatal or perinatal care.
Medicaid is jointly run by the states and federal government and states could respond to federal cuts by increasing spending. Finally, past Republican efforts to cut spending have not always met with much success and there is no guarantee a President Romney would actually be able to cut Medicaid.
In the past, a number of Democrats have tried to make the case that social spending will reduce abortion rates. However, there is not one peer-reviewed study which shows that Medicaid spending or any other kind of welfare spending actually reduces the incidence of abortion.
There is, however, a substantial body of research which documents the effectiveness of pro-life laws. In 2009 the Guttmacher Institute did a literature review on public-funding restrictions for abortion. Of the 24 studies they considered, 20 found that abortion rates fell after public funding was reduced. They even acknowledged the best research indicates that restricting public funding lowers abortion rates. There is also an academic literature which documents the effectiveness of parental-involvement laws and properly designed informed-consent laws.
President Obama has pursued policies which will almost certainly increase the incidence of abortion. He rescinded the Mexico City policy which had prohibited foreign aid to organizations that perform abortions. He signed an appropriations bill which provided taxpayer funding for abortions in Washington, D.C.
His administration sued to prevent Indiana from defunding Planned Parenthood and stepped up with an HHS grant when New Hampshire cut taxpayer funds for Planned Parenthood. And, of course, Obamacare poses numerous problems for pro-lifers. If abortion is listed as a federal health benefit, that could easily nullify or weaken a number of state-level pro-life laws. Obamacare also provides federal funds to insurance plans which cover abortion. The HHS contraceptive mandate could require employers to cover abortifacients and is also a taxpayer bailout of Planned Parenthood.
The pro-life movement has been very shrewd in its marketing and Democrats can see the pro-life position making gains in the court of public opinion. They also know that their support for legal abortion is hurting them with several key demographic groups including working-class whites and Catholics. It is unfortunate that instead of actually offering substantial legal protections for the unborn, Democrats insist on trotting out these tired, unpersuasive arguments every election cycle.
LifeNews.com Note: Dr. Michael New is a political science professor at the University of Michigan–Dearborn and holds a Ph.D. from Stanford University. He is a fellow at Witherspoon Institute in Princeton, New Jersey.

[Another] ‘Pro-life Catholic’: Obama ‘is pro-life’
by Ben Johnson
Mon Sep 10, 2012
www.lifesitenews.com/news/pro-life-catholic-obama-is-pro-life
CHARLOTTE, September 7, 2012, (LifeSiteNews.com) – A former Democratic Congresswoman, who considers herself a pro-life Catholic, had no trouble justifying her support for a president who supports taxpayer-funded abortion for all nine months of pregnancy: “He is pro-life,” she said.
Fmr. Congresswoman Kathy Dahlkemper.
At a forum during the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday, former Pennsylvania Representative Kathy Dahlkemper said Barack Obama “actually signed the most pro-life piece of legislation that this country has ever seen,” referring to the president’s health care law, known popularly as ObamaCare.
When Republicans point to Obama’s outspoken support for abortion-on-demand, “you can turn on them and say, ‘He is pro-life,’” she said.
“I voted for the Affordable Care Act because in my opinion it is the most pro-life piece of legislation that we’ve ever passed in this country,” she said at a forum during the DNC. She also appeared at a panel discussion hosted by Democrats for Life of America.
That support cost her, as the former one-term member of Congress lost her House seat to Mike Kelly, a pro-life Republican, in the 2010 Tea Party landslide.
“I attacked by pro-life extremist groups for my vote for the Affordable Care Act,” she said.
Those “extremists” included Americans United for Life, the Susan B. Anthony List, CitizenLink, and the Pennsylvania Family Council, which bought ad time against her.
“Abortion funding was a key issue in the passage of the health care bill,” said SBA List President Marjorie Dannenfelser at the time. “Dahlkemper traded those protections for a worthless executive order from the most pro-abortion president in our nation’s history.”
She went on to call the bill “the biggest expansion of abortion since Roe v. Wade.”
For her part, Dahlkemper has no regrets.
“I left office with my head held high as I knew I had helped pass one of the most pro-life pieces of legislation in history, a law that I believe will significantly reduce the number of abortions in our country,” she said.
She added that she “strongly supported and voted for the repeal of ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.’”
The Democrats did not address the HHS mandate, which compels taxpayers to fund abortifacient medications such as Plan B and Ella.
Instead, Catholic University political science professor Steve Schenck forecast, “As the Affordable Care Act (ObamaCare) begins to roll out, all the evidence is that we will see similar reductions” in abortion nationwide. “That’s pro-life policy,” he said.
Another Catholic academic, Tom Berg of the University of St. Thomas, hailed “the European safety net,” a development Pope John Paul II condemned in his encyclical Centissimus Annus.
At the DFLA event, only former Michigan Congressman Bart Stupak addressed the HHS mandate, saying he was “perplexed” that the president had broken his promise and implemented the order, which Stupak considered “illegal.”