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But as the race nears its end, you can expect both sides to try to
hack away wedgesor at least sliversof voters with appeals to
religion and morality. It is already happening. Desperately contested
Ohio is one of 11 states that will decide on Nov. 2 whether to amend
their constitution to ban gay marriage. Phil Burress of the Ohio
Campaign to Protect Marriage, which favors that state's proposed
amendment, is preparing to mail 2.5 million bulletin inserts to some
17,000 Ohio churches. His group has already submitted nearly 55,000
voter-registration cards. "The church will show up on Nov. 2," he
says, and although his effort to ban gay marriage long precedes the
Bush re-election effort, Burress knows that his new registrants will
disproportionately support the President.
On Saturday, Bush himself devoted part of his radio address to wedge
issues, smacking Kerry for voting against bills proscribing
partial-birth abortion and against the Defense of Marriage Act, which
banned federal recognition of same-sex marriages but otherwise left
the matter to the states. Kerry says he voted against the abortion
bills because they didn't contain sufficient protections for a
mother's health. He now agrees with the marriage act's provisions,
but he has said he voted against it because he didn't want to support
"gay bashing."
Unlike Dukakis in 1988, who seemed uncertain about how to respond
when he was called a liberal, Kerry and running mate John Edwards
have shown unexpected nerve on social issues. When Kerry and Bush
were asked during the debate whether homosexuality is a choice, the
President said he didn't know. Kerry was clear. "It's not a choice,"
he said. Kerry then made a case against discrimination against gays
in the workplace, but the blogging class paid most attention to his
mention of the Cheneys' lesbian daughter.
Pro-Kerry troops are trying to mobilize their own social-issues
voters. Many lesbians and gaysincluding gay friends of the
Presidentfelt deeply betrayed when Bush announced support for the
anti-gay-marriage amendment. Recently Bill Jacobs, the gay-outreach
coordinator for the Kerry campaign in Nevada, took volunteers into a
section of Las Vegas known for its gay bars. They were able to
register 200 people in just a few nights. "Don't do it for Kerry; do
it for the community," Jacobs kept saying.
One of the ironies of the 2004 campaign is that although wedge issues
won't determine the outcome of a race dominated by national security
and the economy, the victor can have a more direct impact on certain
social issues than on intractable problems like unemployment. Bush
and Kerry have similar plans for Iraq. Presidents can do little to
directly improve the economy, and their powers to disband terrorist
networks are limited. But if Kerry wins, he could change the
landscape of values politics in the short term andassuming the next
President will nominate at least one Supreme Court Justicewell into
the future. Liberalism will begin to rise from its post-9/11 crouch.
If Bush is re-elected, social conservatives will start to consolidate
their big advances. The battle will be fought on at least four
fronts:
The Supreme Court Only one Supreme Court JusticeClarence Thomasis
under 65. Chief Justice William Rehnquist, who has had health
problems, is 80. If Bush is re-elected, the conservative Rehnquist
may feel better about leaving. Sandra Day O'Connor, 74, might also
go. John Paul Stevens, 84, the most left-leaning Justice, may finally
find a nice porch if Kerry wins. When asked during the second debate
to name potential court nominees, neither candidate would. But Bush
has said he admires Thomas and Antonin Scalia, who form the hard nub
at the right edge of American jurisprudence. Kerry has made clear
that his nominees will favor abortion rightswhich brings us to ...
Abortion Currently the court has six Justices who support Roe v.
Wade, but that number includes O'Connor and Stevens. Advocates of
abortion rights say Bush's re-election could mean Roe's reversal and
a return to a patchwork of state laws, some of which would probably
ban the procedure. If Kerry is elected, his appointments would
solidify Roe's standing.
Stem cells This is a rare wedge issue for the Democrats. In August
2001 the President barred federal funding of research that would
require the destruction of embryos to obtain their stem cells.
Scientists believe stem cells can be used to grow healthy human
tissue to replace tissue damaged by a variety of diseases, including
Parkinson's and Type 1 diabetes. Bush allowed work on already
existing stem-cell lines, but scientists say those lines aren't
adequate to unlock the technology's potential. If Bush is re-elected
on Nov. 2, many U.S. stem-cell researchers will probably move
overseasor to California, where voters could pass Proposition 71 on
the same day. Prop 71 would provide $3 billion in state funds to
stem-cell research.
Many Catholics and social conservatives oppose the research because
it means destroying embryos. But partly because of stem-cell advocacy
by celebrities like Christopher Reeve, Michael J. Fox and Ron Reagan,
fully half of voters now favor developing new cell lines. In the new
TIME poll, 49% of voters say Kerrywho would quickly end Bush's
funding banis closer to their position on the issue; 34% say the
President is closer to their view. "Stem cells are an issue that
affects persuadable voters," says senior Kerry adviser Tad Devine.
Democrats are so giddy about that possibility that they can
exaggerate the technology's potential. After Reeve died last week,
Edwards sounded like a faith healer when he claimed, "If we do ...
the work that we will do when John Kerry is President, people like
Christopher Reeve will get up out of that wheelchair and walk again."
Scientists are actually years from the first human clinical trials
using embryonic stem cells.
Gay marriage Kerry and Edwards like to brag that they have the same
position on the issue as Bushthey oppose it. But unlike Bush, they
think states should be free to define marriage. Hence a Kerry victory
would probably doom the proposed Federal Marriage Amendment. The
amendment was already a long shot. It failed a vote in the
Republican-led House of Representatives last month, and the TIME poll
found that 54% of voters oppose the amendment, up from 46% just last
summer.
Kerry may still remain vulnerable to a wedge attack that can convince
swing voters that he doesn't share their values. But the TIME poll
shows that voters now find themselves closer to Kerry on stem-cell
research, abortion, gay rights and gun control. That means the Bush
campaign may not have done enough to convince voters that Kerry is an
out-of-touch lefty on those issues. Of course, if the Republicans can
do so in the next two weeks, 2004 could still look like 1988 after
all.
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