Giuliani shows abortion danger for Republicans

(Agencies)
Updated: 2007-11-28 15:18

ARLINGTON - Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani is doing surprisingly well among conservatives in his bid for the Republican Party's presidential nomination, but there is one group that will not countenance voting for him.


Republican presidential candidate former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani (R) greets voters at the Nashua Winter Holiday Stroll in Nashua, New Hampshire November 24, 2007. [Agencies]
 

For a dedicated core of mainly religious voters, abortion is the single issue that will decide their vote, and for them Giuliani fails the test.

Sally Morris is one such person. A devout Catholic armed with an ultrasound device, she works as a nurse at a clinic near Dallas that aims to persuade pregnant women not to abort their fetuses.

"I call this one 'Baby in prayer,"' she says as she points to an image of a 14-week fetus recently captured on her ultrasound, which shows its hands clasped as if in prayer.

Part of a program called "Option Ultrasound," sponsored by the conservative advocacy group Focus on the Family, the clinic works on the principle that women who view images of their fetus are less likely to have an abortion.

Eighty-nine percent of the women who visit decide to carry their child to term, executive director Becky Hyde said.

Morris, Hyde and others who work at the clinic consider themselves to be on the front lines of America's abortion wars, which threaten to divide the Republican Party.

Giuliani is the front runner in the race for the party's nomination for the presidential election in November 2008. His position supporting abortion rights sits well with socially moderate Republicans, but puts him deeply at odds with much of the party's conservative Christian base.

Some see Giuliani's success as a sign that abortion is losing some of its bite as a political issue. A poll by the Pew Research Center last month found that among white evangelical Protestants, abortion was a priority for 53 percent of those surveyed, below issues like terrorism and the economy, down from 60 percent in August of 2004.

But for a dedicated core, such as those involved in Option Ultrasound, abortion trumps all other issues.

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