The Daily - Why the Left Is Losing on Abortion
Episode Date: October 12, 2020Most Americans say that abortion should be legal with some restrictions, but President Trump’s nominee for the Supreme Court, Amy Coney Barrett, signed a statement in a 2006 newspaper advertisement ...opposing “abortion on demand.” Her accession would bolster a conservative majority among the justices.How did that happen? According to Ilyse Hogue, president of NARAL Pro-Choice America, abortion rights advocates have for too long taken Roe v. Wade for granted.Ms. Hogue describes how Republican attacks on abortion were not countered forcefully enough. “I think most people in elected positions had been taught for a long time to sort of ‘check the box’ on being what we would call pro-choice and then move on,” she said.Guest: Ilyse Hogue, president of NARAL Pro-Choice America.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily Background reading: The 2006 statement signed by Amy Coney Barrett appears to be the most direct evidence of her personal views, ones she has vowed to set aside on the bench.The issue of abortion contains political risks for both Democrats and Republicans, even as it energizes parts of their bases.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
As the confirmation hearings for Amy Coney Barrett begin this week,
much has been made of the decades-long battle that got the right to this moment,
with a conservative majority cemented on the court
and a nominee who openly opposes abortion.
Less attention has been paid to how the left lost that battle.
Today, a conversation with Elise Hoag,
president of NARAL Pro-Choice America.
It's Monday, October 12th.
Good morning, Michael. I'm Elise. How are you?
Hi, Elise. How are you? I'm supposed to be the one saying hello. Thank you.
So, Elise, the reason we want to talk to you is because we are at this very strange moment in the United States.
The majority of Americans support the right to abortion and support Roe v. Wade.
And yet the Senate is about to confirm an openly anti-abortion justice, the third conservative justice in the past four years.
And that right to abortion very much seems in jeopardy. And your group,
NARAL Pro-Choice America, exists to protect abortion rights. So it seems you're on the
cusp of a pretty historic defeat, despite having public opinion on your side. Does that all feel
kind of like an accurate characterization of where things are?
Yeah, Michael, I would say that's pretty accurate. And not to take the group
that I lead out of it, but I would say that the American people are on the cusp of a pretty
historic defeat if, in fact, this nominee is confirmed and this court does what the president
said it was designed to do, which is undermine the fundamental right to abortion.
Well, say more about that when you say the American people.
Well, when I say the American people are on the cusp of a very important defeat,
what we're experiencing is something that a minority of people have not been able to achieve legislatively, have not been able to gain political consensus around using one of the branches of government to impose that will
on people. And the impact will be fairly catastrophic, both in terms of what people will experience in their real lives,
but also in terms of the confidence of the American people that our value sets, our common beliefs are part of what guides our democracy.
You're saying that conservatives are using the Supreme Court
to do what they couldn't do legislatively.
But wouldn't the right say that that's what the left also did with Roe v. Wade?
It's just that the right has been doing it better than the left over the past few years.
You know, I don't know what they would say.
I would say that we have tracked a lot more money,
resources, and infrastructure going in
to the advancement of right-wing judicial activists.
Everything from, you know, the Federalist Society to Judicial Crisis Network
has poured resources into a strategy of moving like-minded people onto the courts in a way I
just don't think there is a parallel among mainstream or left progressives.
But doesn't that just mean that the right is doing it more effectively or
better? Because we find ourselves in this moment where we are, where the court looks like it does,
the lower courts look like they do, filled with conservative judges. And Amy Coney Barrett is
going to be, unless something radical changes in the next couple of days, confirmed. And Roe is in threat.
So I just want to understand how we got here.
And part of that story is the right being very effective in this long-term strategy.
But it's also, correct me if I'm wrong, about what the left has not done to counter that.
Because we have heard a lot about the success of the right and its strategy.
And we're really interested in what the left was doing during this time.
When you came into this role in 2013, President Obama was in his second term.
He had put two liberal and two female justices on the Supreme Court, Elena Kagan and Sonia
Sotomayor.
Donald Trump is not a political figure in anyone's mind.
And at the highest level, it seems like the most important thing for abortion rights advocates
is very secure. And that is the reliability of Roe v. Wade. So talk to me about that time period.
Sure. When I went to Naval in 2013, we were already dealing with what RBG talked about a
lot, a lack of equity and access. The right itself stood, but state legislatures had been putting
restriction after restriction after restriction in place, which disproportionately did, as it always does, impact low-income women, women of
color. And we were kind of in this massive cognitive disconnect, right? We had a majority
support, but not enough awareness of what was already happening in some of these red states,
what the real impact on women and families was, and a lack of sufficient motivation
for our elected officials to speak up about this, right?
To make it as central on our side
as they have made it on their side.
Because I was seeing that across the board,
nobody was talking about the issues
in a way that represented the threat of the erosion of abortion rights that we were already seeing manifest at the state level, the power grab that was happening from the right.
And in fact, the real extremity of the right's position that actually needed to be exposed.
that actually needed to be exposed. So you think about 2012 when Todd Akin, who was running against Claire McCaskill, said in an interview, women don't need abortions in the case of rape because
if it's a legitimate rape, the body has a way of shutting that whole thing down. A piece of medical
disinformation, absolutely untrue. But also, all of a sudden, people were like, well, wow, that feels like a
very extreme statement. And he lost, right? Todd Akin lost, and Claire McCaskill won.
But what we failed to do in that moment was demonstrate that Todd Akin was, in fact,
demonstrative of an entire philosophical framework that was driving the GOP and was hugely unpopular.
And I think silence in the political realm has both allowed the right to gain power,
but also created unimaginable threats. Again, yes, to abortion rights, which is important enough on
its own. But really, this is an entire ideological framework
that is way out of step with American mainstream. I just want to be clear. Are you saying that in
2013, the writing on the wall, to use your phrase, was really extreme speech around abortion,
like what you were seeing from figures like a Todd Akin, and that you were concerned because
there wasn't a comfort level on the left around confronting it and talking about it.
And so you felt it wasn't being sufficiently addressed.
Yeah, I think that there were absolutely parts of the reproductive rights and justice movement that were pushing for it to be talked about. But I think, you know,
most people in elected positions had been taught for a long time to sort of check the box on being
what we would call pro-choice and then move on because there was an inherent discomfort in
actually interrogating the issue much more than that. And I think that has fundamentally allowed the right to gain
disproportionate power and hurt us. You know, the fundamental platform of the Republican Party at
this point is extreme. And it absolutely deserves to be interrogated. What does it look like when
you criminalize abortion? What happens? Are you actually sending women to jail?
Most women who seek abortion care are already moms.
What happens to their family?
What are you doing to doctors?
How do you investigate miscarriages?
What does that look like and feel like to the American people
who have enjoyed this fundamental freedom for almost 50 years?
It is a really radical change in our culture and our society, and it has to be interrogated.
And I do not think we've done enough of that.
So back to 2013, you go to NARAL with this concern in your head that there's not sufficient appetite within the movement to confront this.
So what is your priority at that point?
within the movement to confront this. So what is your priority at that point? Because in this period, there are dozens of restrictions being put in place. North Carolina, Ohio, Michigan,
Texas, where you are from, all kinds of restrictions. Hospital admitting privileges,
building codes for abortion clinics. So what were you doing? Were you on the ground
abortion clinics. So what were you doing? Were you on the ground for any of these battles?
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, NARAL, along with our partners, and we work in a vast movement,
has a presence in all 50 states. But you mentioned Texas. And, you know, I think Texas is such an interesting place to start because in 2013, Wendy Davis took to the floor of the Texas state legislature in an old school filibuster.
Texas laws require you to do it really old school.
And, you know, I don't.
And she was she was basically standing in the legislature trying to physically filibuster for, I think, some record amount of time a state law that would have restricted abortion.
Absolutely.
And she had a personal story that was driving her.
But she lost that battle.
She did, right?
She actually won by the old set of rules.
She filibustered long enough for the clock to expire.
Then Governor Rick Perry said,
well, we'll go into another special session
to get this done.
That didn't work.
And then they had to change the rules again. They went into into another special session to get this done. That didn't work. And then they had to
change the rules again. They went into a third special session with changing the number of votes
that was required. And I think that was really a crucial example of their willingness to change
the rules to drive an agenda that they can't get done by the old democratic way of doing things. North Carolina,
you mentioned, right? One of the most controversial restrictions became sort of famous because they
passed it in the dead of night, attached to a motorcycle safety bill. These are things you do
when you really don't want the public to have the opportunity to understand what is going on and participate in the fundamental democratic process of being able to lobby your elected officials so that they are representing you.
That is what we have seen.
what we have been wholly unprepared and to some degree unwilling to fight is the changing of the rules at every step of the way. But at what point do you and the people you work with turn to
yourselves and say, they're changing the rules. We need to do the same. You know, I remember,
you know, we had just had a conversation with Marjorie Dannenfelser of the Susan B. Anthony List, and it's very clear from talking to her that the exact means, the partners, the process is not exactly top of mind.
It's the goal.
And I think it becomes clear in hearing you describe this and in watching recent history that the right was simply more dogged and in some ways more creative.
Yeah, I mean, I'm going to think on that for a second. I think that is absolutely true across
issues, isn't it? I mean, we're dealing with a crisis in democracy
of which this threat to abortion rights
is but a piece of the puzzle.
You know, when we say everything is on the line
with this election or even the Supreme Court nominee,
and I think people really do understand
that Roe is absolutely in the crosshairs,
but so is the Affordable Care Act,
which was actually passed with popular opinion
by the will of the people, as well as massive strides in civil rights, voting rights, LGBTQ
rights. Alito just alluded to the fact that, you know, Obergefell is on the line. It just didn't
quite get the right case to take it in the last couple of weeks. I think it is emblematic of a deeper disease that has
overtaken our democracy. And I think most American people still want to believe in democracy and not
change the rules so that we end up with minority rule. But the right has been very comfortable
with that for a very long time. And I think that has brought us to the dangerous point
we are at. I'm curious if you think the movement has demanded too much purity from Democratic
candidates. And I use that word because that's the word that was used by Senator Claire McCaskill,
the former Democratic senator from Missouri, who came under immense pressure from Democrats during her 2018 re-election
bid to be very vocal in defending abortion rights, to do the thing that you said in some ways
Democrats haven't done enough of in this era. And this was at a time when abortion rights were
becoming increasingly limited in McCaskill's state. And she lost that race to a Republican. And her point after that defeat was that the
Democratic Party and its allies are forcing Democrats to pass a purity test on issues like
abortion. And it's alienating some voters and putting candidates at political risk,
which means that rather than having a Democratic senator who is maybe not especially outspoken on abortion,
but is a vote for abortion rights in the Senate, Missouri has no Democratic senator, which is, in fact, the case right now.
Does that resonate with you, that critique?
You know, this is something with a great deal of respect that I think Senator Metcalfe and I disagree on. I think when in Missouri, just like in my home state of Texas, when we actually have the fundamental conversation
about who is standing for freedom,
trust in their constituents to make their own decisions
versus those who would seek to control those,
Josh Hawley being a great example of that, we win.
This is her Republican opponent.
Yeah, and when we fail to interrogate them on
the consequences of their extreme position, we fail to make real to the voters what the stakes
are. But that at the end of the day, red states, purple states, blue states, when you actually
frame the question of when it comes to who should make the decision
about outcomes of individual pregnancies, most people in every state believe that that is a
decision best left to the individual. And that when we take the time to have a real
empathetic, compassion-based conversation with voters, they are so with us.
But what about an imaginary female voter, wants to vote for Claire McCaskill,
but feels there's not a place for this voter's belief that, yes, a woman should have the right to an abortion,
but only in very rare circumstances, and she may get the message,
if you get the kind of McCaskill campaign
you want, that that's not really a Democratic Party's view because the Democrats have followed
your guidance and they are being outspoken. And don't you just lose that voter and send them to
the Republican side? No, I would argue that that voter needs to have a more honest and open
conversation, one that gets down to core values,
one that reminds everybody of the fact that like we don't walk in our neighbor's shoes.
And when they are allowed to have that conversation and say, these are real stories of your neighbors
who have faced real complications in life, who should make that decision? What does freedom mean that we actually
win those folks? It's when we refuse to engage in the conversation, when we refuse to allow people
to sort of work through their complicated personal emotions. This is a plurality of people who I
self-identify as pro-life are still with us on the governing question of who decides.
But if we don't have the conversation, then they don't know where they fit.
It's interesting the way you just put that, because I think some people might hear what
you just said and think, boy, that's not meeting a voter where they are. That's telling a voter
how they ought to think about this. And that is potentially very dangerous politically. But you're saying if you engage the voter and have
the conversation, the outcome will be what you and this movement wants. That's a pretty complicated
political calculation. I think that's right. But I mean, isn't democracy about the messy stuff?
what I mean, isn't democracy about the messy stuff? Race, gender equity, what happens with sex,
what happens, you know, these are all really complicated conversations. And fundamentally,
when we have them, I think we win. So to Claire McCaskill, you say,
just because I want to be sure I understand this, I wish you'd had that conversation more fully because I think it would have benefited you.
I think that's right.
And not just the conversation about what we stand for
and what we represent,
but what this terrifying world does actually look like
that we are on the cusp of.
But where we are right now,
just the political reality of it,
is that Claire McCaskill loses,
folks like her, the Blue Dog Democrats, lost,
and Democrats have not held the Senate.
And if you can't elect Democrats
in those kinds of states,
then you can't control the Senate
and you can't control the Supreme Court.
And that brings us back, I think,
to Roe v. Wade and where we are right now.
And in talking to my colleagues ahead of talking to you,
perhaps the biggest critique of the abortion rights movement during this period
is what they describe as an over-reliance on the security of Roe v. Wade,
this notion that no matter how bad it were to get at
the state level or in Congress, that a woman's right to an abortion was going to be constitutionally
protected. So do you feel there has been a kind of over-reliance, a kind of taking for granted
that that thing would always be in the background? Yes. If I had a time machine and could go back in time
and was an adult in charge of the organization
that I am now,
I absolutely would have changed the way
that we did things through the 90s.
In the 90s, there was a real opportunity
to go on offense in a way that we didn't
because people felt overly
secure and the right at the same time, 20, 20 hindsight is a great thing, you know? And so
we can only control how we move forward and how we best secure reproductive freedom for
everybody in this country, not just in theory, but in practice.
We'll be right back. So, Lisa, you just said that, in retrospect, you wish the movement had done more to prepare for a reality
in which Roe was not secure,
in which you'd have done more aggressive work
at the state level and legislatively.
But you're saying you have to look forward now.
So let's look forward.
Let's talk about the months ahead.
We are airing this episode on the morning that Amy Coney Barrett's confirmation hearings
are scheduled to start in the Senate.
Our colleague Adam Liptak covers the Supreme Court,
anticipates that before we ever see Roe fully overturned,
we'll first see Republican states move to limit the right
to an abortion because they think the courts are going to back them. And that the gap between a
woman's right to have an abortion in Democratic states and Republican states is going to grow
wider and wider. And with that scenario in mind, are there states where you feel you must do the most work right now? No, I want to. Yeah. So we've long
looked at what are, as we would call sort of hubs or outposts for abortion access as states have
gotten more restrictive and more draconian, right? It was crucially important in Illinois that they
passed laws to protect and defend the right to abortion and also remove
existing restrictions in state law, not just for the people of Illinois, although that would be
enough, but because they are sort of an oasis in a region of states that have been more and more
restrictive. And so we know that there are patients coming across state lines.
So you see certain states as kind of satellites for nearby Republican-controlled states that may end up restricting abortion significantly.
I think that is the interim strategy.
that the goal of the movement that has seized so much control is not federalism,
not to send these decisions back to the states.
They've been very clear about that. It is to criminalize abortion across the country.
And we have to meet that threat with our own willingness to say it is long overdue
that we enshrine these rights and freedoms into federal
statute. Meaning an act of Congress? Yes. Yes. Do you think there ever would be political appetite
among Democrats in Congress to pass that kind of legislation? It would be controversial.
It would be polarizing. I mean, given all the competing views and priorities of what might be
a theoretical Democratic Congress, it's not a subject that Democrats campaign on at the moment.
It's not a subject that you hear Joe Biden or Kamala Harris talking about.
You know, I can hardly think of anything less controversial than wanting to codify Roe through federal statute.
And in fact, I think it is the Republicans' fondest wish that Democrats never advance
that legislation because it puts them in an impossible position of trying to please a base
that is way out of the mainstream or actually vote for their political future, which does require them
acknowledging this fundamental freedom. And so I am absolutely dedicated to working with federal
elected officials to call that bluff because that bluff has actually been our downfall.
Well, coming back to where we began, it seems like it would require a lot
of the kinds of public conversations it sounds, you've been thinking we need to have since 2013 to get such legislation passed.
Though I don't hear us having those conversations just yet.
Yeah, I think culture change is really hard.
You know, we're dealing with, again, a political climate that the radical right gambled on. Like,
we're just uncomfortable with these conversations. And I cannot be more clear.
Our silence on these issues and the values that drive us to engage in them
hand victories to them that they would not otherwise have.
Hmm. I mean, given that we aren't having
those conversations currently,
do you understand why someone who supports abortion rights
might be feeling a little terrified
and disheartened right now
as Amy Coney Barrett's confirmation barrels through
and it looks like Roe is in jeopardy?
And the plan being articulated is one that requires a lot of time and a lot of political will. And as you just said,
real cultural shifting. Yeah, I think people are right to be alarmed. I think we are on the
precipice of something that is bad and will get worse for a lot of people. But I would ask those people to
actually listen more carefully because we are having those conversations. Listen to Jen Jordan
on the Senate floor in Georgia during their debate of that extreme and extraordinary law.
Listen to her invoke the radical position her colleagues across the aisle
took in suggesting that miscarriages are something to be investigated. Listen to Cora Faith Walker
in the state house in Missouri, who has really underscored the hypocrisy of her colleagues who
will move to outlaw abortion services while not
addressing infant and maternal mortality in that state. These conversations are happening.
They are exposing hypocrisy. They are exposing the damaging consequences to allowing this agenda,
which is so out of step with public need and public opinion, to dominate in red states,
and take our cues from those on the front lines, elevate their voices and conversations,
and we will expedite the change that we need to see.
Do you fear that those two lawmakers may be yelling into the wind in those states?
I mean, those are red states. Those are states with Republican legislatures.
I mean, those are red states.
Those are states with Republican legislatures.
I mean, put another way, are you now operating as the underdogs here in the way that the right saw themselves until recently?
And how does the underdog operate if not with a similar playbook as the one used by the
right to get to this point?
I don't think that we—look, ultimately, the playbook on the other side is an undemocratic,
if not anti-democratic one. And I don't think that's our playbook because I think that what
we have is an understanding that when we actually see this for what it is, which is a craven grab to maintain power for a minority,
that we start to get the exponential benefits of merging all of these movements for voting rights,
for civil rights, for racial justice, for voting rights, for civil rights, for racial justice,
for gender justice, for abortion rights, into a singular voice that exhibits change politically
and through policy. And I actually think, and I think this is important, that they're ramming
through this nomination for the Supreme Court has done the service of bringing clarity to the fact that all of our rights are on the line together.
And therefore, it is bringing coherence to the cacophony in a way that will be transformational in terms of the way elections go into our legislative power and ultimately in
the way we use the courts and litigation. But I still hear you saying that, forgive the language,
the left and the movement is herding all of its cats and bringing everything together and trying
to marshal a strategy. And at this moment, that may be very disheartening for some people on the left to hear
that right now the abortion rights movement is figuring out how to knit together all the
experiences and the people when defeat is literally on the horizon. You know, I think that the goal
of the right has been to dishearten us. It's been to teach us that organizing doesn't matter. And so disengagement
is a reasonable strategy. And I don't see that happening. And I think if we were to admit defeat
and adopt their tools, that would be the end of our democracy. And that is not what we stand for.
Of course, there are democratic means of achieving top-down change and highly regimented organizations and movements, but that has not been the reputation of the kind of activist advocacy left. gay marriage in New York, it turned into a very chaotic situation until Governor Andrew Cuomo
stepped in once and said, we're doing it my way. We're doing it top down. We're going to get it
done in a few months. And he did it. But implicit in that was that the left struggles with this
kind of discipline. But I would argue that if you are executing a top-down agenda that doesn't actually center those most affected,
that doesn't actually represent the majority of people who will benefit or suffer from laws put
into place, it's going to be a short-term victory. And as you say, the GOP may win this confirmation.
They may, in fact, get their greatest wish and undermine Roe.
But that's not the end of the story.
You know, we are seeing so much more energy on the left come from communities, come from
state level legislatures.
That is a strategy that's been pursued by the right for so long.
And we have a sort of all powerfulpowerful weapon on our side, which is
that we are the majority. And at the end of the day, I believe as long as our democracy holds,
that the majority will prevail.
You know, ultimately, if our biggest sin is a deep belief in the power of democracy to come out with good outcomes that benefit the majority of American people and all of our complications and all of our beautiful diversity, I'll take that sin.
We have to get better at actualizing it or else we will lose everything we hold dear.
Well, Lisa, I really want to thank you. I appreciate you engaging in this conversation
with us and being so generous with your time. So thank you.
Thank you.
The Times reports that Judge Amy Coney Barrett signed a letter published in a newspaper in 2006
when she was a law professor opposing abortion, an unusual public declaration for a Supreme Court nominee.
Those who signed the letter declared that they, quote,
letter declared that they, quote, oppose abortion on demand and defend the right to life from fertilization to natural death. The letter is expected to be seized upon by Senate Democrats
during Coney Barrett's confirmation hearing as evidence that she has taken a public position
on the subject and therefore cannot rule on the subject of abortion in an
unbiased manner. Those confirmation hearings are scheduled to begin this morning at 9 a.m. Eastern.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
The second presidential debate scheduled scheduled for Thursday, has been canceled after President Trump flatly refused to participate in a virtual format.
Instead, both Trump and Joe Biden are expected to hold dueling forums on rival TV networks. Meanwhile, the president's doctor says that his infection is no longer contagious,
but did not say whether or not the president is now testing negative for the coronavirus.
And in a sign of Democratic fundraising muscle, Jamie Harrison, who is challenging Senator Lindsey
Graham of South Carolina, raised $57 million in the last quarter,
the highest quarterly fundraising total for any Senate candidate in U.S. history.
The fundraising reflects the broader financial might of Democratic Senate candidates in 2020
and the specific anger among Democrats at Graham. a vocal Trump defender and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee,
which is rushing to confirm Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court.
Recent polling shows that Harrison, who once badly trailed Graham,
is now running neck and neck with him.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.