I don't believe he is in his larger notion that the Court can be seeded with justices willing to negate precedent. It's both a principled and self serving position, the reliance on precedent. Absent it, the Court becomes nothing more or less than a tool of the legislature. And it was a largely conservative appointed Court that gave us Roe.I disagree with both chrys and Barbarian in their approaches.
The problem with the argument by both is that without an active legislative effort or case before the Supreme Court, neither Democrat or Republican president will effect any change.
Where the divide starts is where the particular president stands on ideology. Is he actively searching for pro-choice or pro-abortion judges? (chrys is right on this.)
Chrys would have you believe the problem is that those conservative appointments were skewed by Democrats. I don't know that conservatives have the unified voice he assumes (see: McCain and many others with differing standards relating to abortion) but given the democratic party represents a political philosophy, to attempt to destroy that larger thing instead of attempting to reach agreement on the one issue seems to me a fool's errand.
Reagan affirmed. He had a landslide. What happened to the issue? I think the legislature alone will settle the matter and then only in reflection of the larger public sentiment. And I think a steady effort has demonstrably produced a sea change in that regard that will eventually win out.Is he affirming support for any current state-level legislation? Does he make promises to pro-aborts, whether individuals or organizations? Or does he affirm publicly his support for the sanctity of life, the need to create abortion alternatives? What is his voting record on these issues?
Re: Barbarian
That's how I read him and what I thought he meant, anna. :e4e: