Kerry Sets Pro-abortion Litmus Test for Judges
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Monday, Jan. 26, 2004
PORTSMOUTH, N.H. – Presidential hopeful John Kerry on
Monday called himself the only Democrat in the race who hasn't
"played games" on abortion.
Kerry, campaigning for votes in New Hampshire's leadoff primary
Tuesday, repeated his pledge to appoint to the Supreme Court only
those who would support abortion rights.
Each of the seven major candidates for the Democrats' nomination
supports the right to abortion. President Bush supports
abortion only in cases of rape or incest or when a woman's life is
endangered.
Kerry's closest competitor, Howard Dean, has said he would
choose judicial nominees who support constitutional privacy
protections, which includes abortion rights. Their rival Dennis
Kucinich also holds that view.
"I'm the only candidate running for president who hasn't played
games, fudged around," said Kerry, a U.S. senator from Massachusetts. "If you believe that choice is a constitutional right, and I do, and if you believe that Roe v. Wade is the embodiment of that right ... I will not appoint a justice to the Supreme Court of the United States who will undo that right."
At the same time, Kerry dismissed worries that he is vulnerable
to being labeled just another liberal by Bush and other Republicans
if he were the party's nominee.
"If the worst they can say about me is that I'm a liberal or
something, bring it on," he said. "I'll take that anywhere in the
country."
Joe Lieberman of Connecticut joined Kerry in voting against
Senate proposals to ban partial-birth abortions. The
other senator in the race, John Edwards of North Carolina, did not
vote on the partial-birth bills the two times they came up in the
last year.
Wesley Clark, a retired Army general, has said he supports abortion rights but also a 1992 court case that resulted in states being allowed to impose certain restrictions as long as they don't cause an "undue burden" on the woman.
Kerry rode in buses and helicopters Monday during a marathon of
campaigning, scheduling six rallies around the state and a visit
late Monday with staffers and volunteers in Manchester.
Except for vowing to meet with more voters than any other
candidate, Kerry was spending the day ignoring his rivals to focus
on his stand on issues. He said his message is resonating in all
parts of the country, including the South and other areas in which
Democrats have not won.
"The South is not a foreign country," he said. "If all they
want to do in this campaign is throw labels around, they've got a
problem."
Must 'Connect the Dots for People'
Kerry said voters in all regions of the country respond to the
same message of bolstering the economy and social justice. "What
we need to do is go across this country and connect the dots for
people," he said.
During a speech before about 500 people at Keene State College,
Kerry defended his vote to authorize Bush to use force in Iraq. A
member of the audience had told the senator the vote had
"horrified" him.
"For seven and half years we destroyed weapons of mass
destruction," Kerry said, and officials had assured him they would
be found. "I voted for a process promised by the president."
Kerry said women played a prominent role in his campaign. His
campaign manager is Mary Beth Cahill, and several of his top
advisers are women.
"Women are running the Kerry effort, ladies and gentlemen," he
told a crowd in Portsmouth. "If that doesn't say enough, I don't
know what does."
© 2003 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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