The Daily - Roe v. Wade, Part 2: The Culture Wars

Episode Date: July 24, 2018

The Supreme Court ruled with little controversy in 1973 that women had a constitutional right to abortion. How did the decision give way to the deep and enduring political rifts we face today? Guest: ...Sabrina Tavernise, a New York Times correspondent who reported on the story of Roe v. Wade for “The Daily.” For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily. Today. In 1973, the Supreme Court said women had the constitutional right to an abortion, with little controversy. So how did abortion become one of the most controversial issues of our time? Sabrina Tavernisi tells part two of the story of Roe v. Wade. It's Tuesday, July 24th. removed from the... No, we aren't going to sit down. Why don't you give us some solid answers to our questions? You're going to take women,
Starting point is 00:01:06 you're going to drag women out of this hearing whose lives are at stake. That's a fine way to run something. We, tonight, became the greatest new force in politics for basic political and social change of
Starting point is 00:01:22 the 70s, and the greatest such force, perhaps, this nation has ever seen. We're saying that women have a fundamental right to control their own bodies and to control their own lives. So this issue really becomes a lightning rod. It's really out there on the national stage at this point. And it's an issue that's noticed by a political operative in Washington named Paul Weyrich. God gave us a purpose. God put us here for some reason.
Starting point is 00:02:02 Everything that we do here is aimed at the next world or it ought not to be done. He's a Republican. He's a conservative Catholic from Wisconsin. And he's really associated with a lot of the beginnings of the new right in the 1960s and 70s. He is really frustrated that the only think tanks in Washington are these very liberal ones like Brookings. that the only think tanks in Washington are these very liberal ones like Brookings. So he goes around really forming the kind of ideas and intellectual groundwork for what would become the conservative movement.
Starting point is 00:02:35 With money from the Coors family, that's the beer guys, he starts the Heritage Foundation. He does training for many conservatives we now know today. Newt Gingrich was somebody who had training from him. So he knows that there's this vast, untapped resource, really the only one left in the voting public, and that is evangelicals. And he spent a lot of time thinking how to involve them in politics these people are
Starting point is 00:03:08 protestants they're quite religious they have conservative values and they didn't really take part in politics very much they may have voted but they weren't an organized political bloc and he wants to change that we have been counseling with some of the pastors on how the mechanics of voter registration and whether or not they can do it in their church, what they can't, how they can do it. So the one means to reach them is through the churches. So he tries a lot of things. He takes on issues like pornography.
Starting point is 00:03:39 He tries to get them interested and fired up over different issues. And nothing really seems to work. them interested in fired up over different issues and nothing really seems to work. But in the late 1970s, something happens that changes things. It takes hold in the evangelical community and really, really electrifies it. The IRS starts to revoke tax-exempt status for church-run Christian schools all over the South. So these are schools that kind of sprung up after desegregation started.
Starting point is 00:04:17 They're run by churches, and they're sort of nicknamed segregation academies. They've been pushing and pushing, and now they want in. Well, they ain't gonna come in. We got our right. Damn. Not here, not now, not ever. They ain't gonna be in my grandson's class. Not here they ain't.
Starting point is 00:04:40 And who's gonna stop them? You all talk so fine. Never, never, never. But it's now, and they're here. There are places that families and congregants of evangelical churches in the South start to send their kids once desegregation starts. So these schools were a way for Christian families to essentially maintain segregation. Essentially, yes.
Starting point is 00:05:03 And that's why the IRS was going after them. Basically, the IRS tells them, look, if you're going to discriminate on the basis of race, you really can't have tax exempt status. So we're going to change things. And this is kind of like a real wake up call for evangelicals. And they've been a pretty insular community, not really taking part in politics. It's time now for the Old Time Gospel Hour with Jerry Falwell, pastor of the Thomas Road Baptist Church in Lynchburg, Virginia. We are not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God unto salvation. They've tried to wall themselves off from the outside culture, which they see as sort
Starting point is 00:05:42 of in various stages of decay. the outside culture, which they see as sort of in various stages of decay. And this federal government intervention really shakes them. If we expect for this country to survive, to continue as a healthy nation and a leader, the leader in the family of nations, we must now step up our efforts to return this country to moral sanity. We must do it with all the energies we have. You have Jerry Falwell, who's talking about it in speeches around the country. Jim Baker and Pat Robertson, two evangelical preachers, bring school activists onto their television shows. It's really making a big splash. I am convinced
Starting point is 00:06:25 that no matter how much heat we take, we are right. We are absolutely right. So Weirich sees this, and he feels like Falwell and evangelicals are the key to this. So he meets with Falwell in 1979 and basically tells him that
Starting point is 00:06:52 there's a moral majority out there on our side. And then, my friends, we will truly see a moral majority in America. May God bless you. And the account that many people have is that Falwell says, that's exactly what it is, that's what we're going to call this thing. And they actually
Starting point is 00:07:09 found something, a formal organization called the Moral Majority in 1979. It's going to be the organizing center of bringing evangelicals into the political system, of organizing them, of getting them out there and voting.
Starting point is 00:07:30 During the 1980s, preachers, we have a threefold primary responsibility. Number one, get people saved. Number two, get them baptized. Number three, get them registered to vote. So when the school issue really brings evangelicals out of their slumber, kind of electrifies them politically. Abortion is something he puts right at the top of the list when he meets with Falwell. Is it wrong to speak from the pulpit about moral and social issues? Now, the liberal preachers had never had a problem with that. He thinks it's the one thing that can really unite Catholics and Protestants. We feel today that we are participating in the murder of the unborn to vote for anyone who is not totally opposed to this biological holocaust. This is the issue that really can make
Starting point is 00:08:16 a real difference in the American political system in favor of conservatives. If you and I were allowed to write the blueprint for America for the remainder of the 20th century, what would be that manifesto? What would be that vision? Right at the top of the list, and I believe it's God's priority as well, we would have to return America to respect for the dignity of human life.
Starting point is 00:08:46 It must be the front burner item in everything that we're doing. I'm speaking of abortion. And if I could get a modification of Roe v. Wade that stopped all the convenience abortions, I'd be willing to do that. And the feminists don't like that. So two things are going on here. The feminist movement is taking up abortion as an issue of women's rights. And at the same time, the evangelical movement is taking up abortion as an issue of restoring morality that they think has been lost in the country. Right. These two movements are kind of hurtling toward
Starting point is 00:09:32 each other. And in the process, that is forging our modern political landscape. So you have Weirich, really the visionary here, making the argument that abortion is going to be the big uniting issue. And you have a presidential candidate, Ronald Reagan. This is a man whose time has come, a strong leader with a proven record. Who you remember from 1967 signed quite a liberal abortion bill for the state, understanding that this is a critical constituency for him. The time is now for strong leadership. Reagan for president.
Starting point is 00:10:13 How much consideration are you going to give to the advice of these new conservative organizations and the moral majority and people like the Reverend Jerry Falwell? I am going to be open to these people. He buys what Weirich is saying and what Falwell is doing. And he starts courting evangelicals aggressively. And one of the things he's telling them to persuade them
Starting point is 00:10:36 is that he's against abortion. He thinks it's wrong. Tells them he really regrets his 1967 decision, that abortion is a big, important issue for him. He's pro-life. There's one individual who's not being considered at all. That's the one who's being aborted. And I've noticed that everybody that is for abortion has already been born.
Starting point is 00:11:02 He's unequivocal about it in a way that previous Republicans had always hedged, had always kind of stepped away from characterizing it that bluntly. Ronald Reagan takes it head on. Is an unborn child a human being? I happen to believe it is. You're singing,
Starting point is 00:11:24 you're singing our song. And it works. I consider the trust that you have placed in me sacred, and I give you my sacred oath that I will do my utmost to justify your faith. Evangelicals vote for Ronald Reagan overwhelmingly. And the politics there, and the partisan politics there, are really the beginning of the modern American political system as we understand it today. This is the moment when party affiliation starts...
Starting point is 00:11:59 To mean something definitive in the abortion debate. Republicans against Democrats for. Exactly. After Reagan took office into the 1980s, abortion really became this very hot-button issue. It was the culture wars. The protests and the divisions become much worse. And there's a very strong movement on the anti-abortion side to try to show Americans what abortion is, to persuade them in a grassroots way. And in an effort to do that,
Starting point is 00:12:33 they made this movie called The Silent Scream. It came out in 1984, and it was trying to show people exactly what abortion looked like. exactly what abortion looked like. My name is Bernard N. Nathanson. I'm a physician practicing obstetrician and gynecologist. And I think I've had a passing experience in matters of abortion. Using ultrasound technology that was relatively new at the time. It's a moving picture. It has color. The whole story has changed since the 1970s.
Starting point is 00:13:09 Now, for the first time, we have the technology to see abortion from the victim's vantage point. It made a big impression, really hits a nerve. A lot of people wrote about it, really hits a nerve. A lot of people wrote about it, and Ronald Reagan talked about it personally. The question of abortion grips our nation. Abortion is either the taking of a human life or it isn't. And if it is, and medical technology is increasingly showing it is, it must be stopped.
Starting point is 00:13:41 It was distributed to every single member of Congress. And tonight, I ask you in the Congress to move this year on legislation to protect the unborn. The tactics become much tougher. Recent attacks on abortion clinics all over the country have prompted the House to open hearings on the problem. And the battle lines are really, really drawn. The mood in the House hearing room was heated today. An angry Congresswoman, Patricia Schroeder, lambasted abortion foe, Joseph Scheidler. I have had two children. I have lost two children. And it is not an easy thing for me to talk about. And you should be pro-life. I am pro-life, sir. But I could be in a very threatening situation if I were pregnant again. And I resent your sitting there saying to me that women just deal with this lightly.
Starting point is 00:14:24 I never said that. Well, you are implying that, sir. And I resent your sitting there saying to me that women just deal with this lightly. I never said that. Well, you are implying that, sir. And it's a really fraught time in the abortion movement. The most celebrated anti-abortion protests have been abortion clinic bombings. There's starting to be violence against clinics. Today, Scheidler, the executive director of the Pro-Life Action League, defended the bombings. No one has been killed or injured in the attacks on abortion facilities, but thousands of human lives are destroyed inside these buildings every day. There are murders of doctors. While standing in his kitchen in Amherst,
Starting point is 00:14:55 New York, Dr. Slapian was shot by a high-powered rifle fired through his window. Sadly, this was not the first such shooting. There were others. Over the summer, about 20 clinics in Florida, Louisiana, and Texas were attacked with acid. It's outrageous that somebody can be assassinated for something they have the constitutional right to do. It's a very risky time for people in abortion clinics, and Norma is there right at the heart of it. We must link arm in arm to protect and uphold the right to safe and legal abortion. Norma is working at an abortion clinic in Dallas. And she starts there about 10 years after Roe. And she works as a telephone operator.
Starting point is 00:15:39 She's taking calls from women from all over the state. She's also keeping her connections to the feminist world. She occasionally goes out and speaks at hearings in Washington. She spent some time in California with a very well-known feminist lawyer, Gloria Alred. She was a poster child, but she felt really uncomfortable in that world. I'm sorry, Norma. You said in passing a moment ago that you felt you had already been used too much. Used by whom? To what end? Even though that world wanted to elevate her. Well, I've been shunned by quite a few of the national leaders in the pro-choice movement.
Starting point is 00:16:19 To me, sometimes I really get this really strong hit that people think that I'm just like totally stupid. And I'm not. I mean, I've got brains and I have ideas. And I just don't really feel like they hear me. She makes constant references in her book to feeling looked down on by them. Feeling like they have these elite, vassar PhD educations. And she was a high school dropout. And, I mean, I'm not that Vassar quality, you know.
Starting point is 00:16:50 I'm a street kid. I'm an ex-alcoholic. I'm an ex-drug dealer. I'm an ex-drug addict. You know, so, I mean, I wasn't their chosen one to be their special Jane Roe. She feels that they're embarrassed by her. They just never gave me the respect that I thought that I deserved. So even though these people are championing her cause, she doesn't feel at peace with them. No, she feels very looked down on by them. She feels used.
Starting point is 00:17:34 Let me explain to you this other way, Ted. And back in 1969, I wanted to have an abortion. I saved up my rent money. I went to an illegal abortion clinic here in Dallas, Texas. She described a scene meeting with Coffey and Weddington much further into her pregnancy in which they told her that it would probably be too late for her to actually get an abortion by the time the case was decided.
Starting point is 00:17:58 And she becomes enraged and says, look, I want to have an abortion. That's all I care about. And she realizes that all along they've sort of known that probably this case would not help her or Norma get an abortion. And she has this kind of rant in the book about these fancy women who all of themselves
Starting point is 00:18:17 and their rich friends could have had many, many abortions. And that was all I wanted. That was the reason why she signed all of these complicated papers and talked to these women at Columbo's Pizza in Dallas. But what actually ends up happening is that they go on and bring her case to the Supreme Court, in her mind, to their greater glory, and leave her behind. Then something kind of strange happens. There's a pastor who moves in next door, right next door to the abortion clinic where Norma works.
Starting point is 00:19:01 And he's running something called Operation Rescue. Are you the rescue people? You betcha. What's going on this morning? We're rescuing babies as we love to do. Yes? Yes, because abortion is murder. That's why we do this.
Starting point is 00:19:13 Because abortion is murder. The group's mantra is, if you think abortion is killing, then act like it. No choice. Come to me. No choice. Come to me. I'll do it. I don't care. I don't care about women's rights. It has quite radical, but largely peaceful tactics. Glory, glory, hallelujah. Protesters lying down on the street in front of clinics, handcuffing themselves to doors of clinics, going limp and having to be carried away by police, blockading clinics. lying down on the street in front of clinics, handcuffing themselves to doors of clinics,
Starting point is 00:19:49 going limp and having to be carried away by police, blockading clinics. Kind of a new chapter in the anti-abortion strategy. I mean, what are the chances that this evangelical pastor would move right next door to Norma's abortion clinic? Was that deliberate? So in most places that was deliberate, and it probably was in this case too. At first she was very angry and couldn't believe that they had the nerve to move right next door.
Starting point is 00:20:16 But within a short period of time, she started to become friendly with the head of the operation. His name was Philip Benham. She called him Flipper, and he called her Miss Norma. And they started to become pretty chummy. They even went on television together once, and newspapers started to write about how
Starting point is 00:20:42 there was this strange friendship developing between the poster child of Roe v. Wade and a minister for Operation Rescue. Everybody was really puzzled by it. I baptize you in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. And then in 1995, shocking everybody, she converts. This was the kind of conversion the pro-life movement has been praying for. She becomes a born-again Christian. And Flip baptizes her in the swimming pool in the backyard of one of his congregants.
Starting point is 00:21:21 There she is! This was the woman whose name is as familiar as any in the land, the embodiment of the pro-choice cause. And this creates a huge uproar. A Texas pro-life association
Starting point is 00:21:37 said memorably that the poster child just leapt off the poster. She joins the pro-life movement. Most of you won't recognize me or my real name. It's Norma McCorvey. I'm also known as Jane Roe, the plaintiff in the Supreme Court case, Roe v. Wade.
Starting point is 00:21:59 And she is a trophy for that movement. I mean, she was the poster child, and suddenly they have her. She's renounced abortion. She thinks it's wrong. However, upon knowing God, I realized that my case, which legalized abortion on demand, was the biggest mistake of my life. And she goes on a crusade to stop it. She gives speeches. She goes around the country, she takes part in protests. Well, I came here to show my support for life and to get arrested along with all the other saints. And I asked Mr. Obama to help me overturn Roe vs. Wade yesterday.
Starting point is 00:22:36 I don't know if you got the message though. She protests President Obama when he's going to give a commencement speech at Notre Dame. You know she's a Catholic. Even goes to the Senate to protest his Supreme Court choice, Sonia Sotomayor. She gets arrested and dragged out of the chamber for shouting when a senator was speaking. God bless you, Norma. We're praying for you, sister. Thank you, Norma, for standing up for the baby.
Starting point is 00:23:04 Does she explain why she makes this extraordinary conversion? So basically, over the years, as she recounts in her second book, she starts feeling a deep, big sadness that she attributes to supporting abortion. She talks about how she suddenly starts to hear the sound of children's feet pitter-pattering through the clinic after it's closed after hours. She hears the sound of a child's laugh as she tries to cut the flowers outside to put in the recovery room. And she starts feeling that someone out there in the universe is trying to tell her something. feeling that someone out there in the universe is trying to tell her something,
Starting point is 00:23:48 all of the sadness throughout her life, that's actually about abortion. She comes to regret that choice and her role in the movement. And she says it's God that helped her see that. And she starts talking to Flip. And she seems to get something from him that she's not getting from the women she knows in the pro-choice movement. He owned a bar and he had drinking problems. He was flawed in a way that she understood. She says at one point that they wanted her so that they could change something for everybody else and kind of ignored her as a person. Whereas Flip, who becomes her friend, wants her just for herself, not for the movement.
Starting point is 00:24:37 Someone in feminist circles after this happened, and feminist circles, by the way, didn't really have much of a reaction. They kind of just shrugged it off. But someone said, this is some way that she can use the system in the way that the system had used her. Does it occur to you that you may also be being used now by the Operation Rescue people for their purposes? No, sir. And I will not let them use me. When these people from Operation Rescue call me at home now, they don't say, hey, Norma, I want you to come down to the office, or hey, Norma, we're having a fundraiser. You know, you can get in and we're going to introduce you. We're going to acknowledge the fact that you're there. You know, but we don't want you to speak because you're a loose cannon, you know, and we don't want really loose cannons around,
Starting point is 00:25:29 but we really do need you there because you're Jane Roe, and we don't have any other choice. So go figure. You're saying that's the way you were used by the pro-choice movement? Yes, sir. Okay. Well, Norman McCorvey, I wish you that peace and tranquility that you clearly want. And I thank you very much for being with us this evening. Thank you very much. I appreciate you.
Starting point is 00:25:51 Thank you. Sabrina, do we know if she ever felt a real allegiance to either side of this fight that she came to symbolize? So, it doesn't really seem like she did. The people on the religious right, toward the end of her life, they were disenchanted with her and disappointed as well. Norma died of heart failure last year in February. She was 69. But neither side of the debate really claimed her. She'd been lifted up as a symbol,
Starting point is 00:26:40 and they'd just kind of forgotten about. In some ways, in the same way that the issue of abortion itself was, it was something that ended up becoming a much bigger political fight about power and what the nation would look like in the future. And in some ways that makes sense. Abortion is deeply personal for many people. abortion is deeply personal for many people it's a matter of life and death but it was also used in politics it gets used in the culture wars as this weapon that both sides are using to attack the other that's kind of Norma's story too
Starting point is 00:27:21 she's used in a way she was just kind of a token of this movement of both sides of Norma's story too. She's used, in a way, she was just kind of a token of this movement, of both sides. And a lot of that had to do with her class, how she came into the world,
Starting point is 00:27:35 her station in life, her background. In a way, she was a casualty of these culture wars. She ended up kind of flinging herself headlong
Starting point is 00:27:45 toward either side at different parts of her life, but never really fitting in. And in the end, not claimed by either. And somehow, her story, the story of Norma, kind of got lost. People don't really know her name. They only know Ro, the symbol, her pseudonym. Roe v. Wade, the My choice. My choice. My choice.
Starting point is 00:28:26 My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice.
Starting point is 00:28:27 My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice.
Starting point is 00:28:29 My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice.
Starting point is 00:28:31 My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice.
Starting point is 00:28:32 My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice.
Starting point is 00:28:33 My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice.
Starting point is 00:28:33 My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice.
Starting point is 00:28:34 My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice.
Starting point is 00:28:34 My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice.
Starting point is 00:28:39 My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice.
Starting point is 00:28:40 My choice. My choice. My choice. My choice. My Sabrina, did Norma end up having the baby in the end? She did. It was a girl. And she was whisked away for adoption before Norma could ever see her. She writes this. All my life I have tried to do my best.
Starting point is 00:29:03 all my life I have tried to do my best. The problem, as I try to understand it, is that I do not fit many people's idea of historical role model. For one thing, I am not a gentle woman or a sophisticated one. Unlike many of the women I admire, I have not been able to spend a lifetime thinking of big issues or political strategies or many times even what I am going to do the next day or hour or minute. I would like to be that kind of woman, but I am not. Instead, I am a rough woman born into pain and anger and raised mostly by myself, married to a man who beat me when I was pregnant. I have sought out and pulled close to bad people, and I have lashed out and pushed away
Starting point is 00:29:46 the people who love me. I have a bad temper, and oftentimes, at the worst times, I lose it. I am my own worst enemy. I've had three children, but two of them, for better or for worse, are unknown to me. Of my many sorrows, This is without a doubt the worst. We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today. President Trump and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani are exchanging threats of war as the U.S. prepares to reimpose economic sanctions on Iran that were suspended under the nuclear deal Trump canceled. In a speech over the weekend, Under the nuclear deal, Trump canceled.
Starting point is 00:30:51 In a speech over the weekend, Rouhani warned that, quote, America should note that peace with Iran is the mother of all peace, and war with Iran is the mother of all wars. In response, Trump tweeted, quote, never ever threaten the United States again, or you will suffer consequences the likes of which few throughout history have ever suffered before. By Monday, Iran's government was downplaying the exchange, dismissing Trump's message as, quote, the bullying words and the rhetoric he uses, especially in his early morning tweets. And... John, Sarah. Thank you, Sarah.
Starting point is 00:31:32 Senator Rand Paul today made a strong attempt to vitiate the credibility of former CIA director John Brennan, saying that he's, and I quote, monetizing his security clearance and that it should be removed from him. He even called on the president to do this. Will the president consider Senator Paul's suggestion and call for the removal of former director Brennan's security clearance?
Starting point is 00:32:01 On Monday, Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said that the White House may remove the security clearances of former high-ranking national security officials in retaliation for their criticism of President Trump. Not only is the president looking to take away Brennan's security clearance, he's also looking into the clearances of Comey, Clapper, He's also looking into the clearances of Comey, Clapper, Hayden, Rice, and McCabe. Sanders said Trump was considering revoking the clearances of at least six former officials, including FBI Director James Comey, CIA Director James Clapper, and NSA Director Michael Hayden,
Starting point is 00:32:44 all of whom have faulted Trump in prominent media interviews for not confronting Russia over its interference in the 2016 election. Former directors of intelligence agencies typically keep security clearances so that they can consult with their successors and share their expertise. The president is exploring the mechanisms to remove security clearance because they've politicized and in some cases monetized their public service and security clearances. Making baseless accusations of improper contact with Russia or being influenced by Russia against the president is extremely inappropriate. And the fact that people with security clearances are making these baseless charges provides inappropriate legitimacy to accusations with zero evidence.
Starting point is 00:33:40 That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.

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