This is of some personal interest to me - I was very active in the Indiana branch of NARAL back in the late 80's (including serving on it's Board of Directors) - although I have not been directly involved in NARAL for a long time.

"Massive Blowback To NARAL's Obama Endorsement"
www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/0...89.html

May 15, 2008 11:14 AM

The endorsement of Barack Obama by the nation's foremost abortion-rights advocacy group is causing major fissures and backlash within the women's rights community.

Hours after Obama received the support of NARAL's Political Action Committee, the organization's Washington branch felt compelled to announce its continued neutrality and disappointment with the endorsement.

"We strongly disagree with NARAL Pro-Choice America's decision to endorse at this time," a press release from the group read. "To endorse Obama at this point in the race is an unconscionable slap in the face to Senator Hillary Clinton."

They weren't alone. In a hastily announced meeting late Wednesday night, several of Clinton's most high-profile female supporters lashed out against NARAL's PAC calling it "a betrayal," and "extremely unnecessary,"

"We feel abandoned by this organization today," said Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz.

Elizabeth Malcolm, the head of Emily's List, called the move "disrespectful" to Sen. Clinton, "who held up the nomination of a FDA commissioner in order to force approval of Plan B and who spoke so eloquently during the Supreme Court nomination about the importance of protecting Roe vs. Wade - to not give her the courtesy to finish the final three weeks of the primary process. It certainly must be disconcerting for elected leaders who stand up for reproductive rights and expect the choice community will stand with them."

In an interview with The Huffington Post, Martha Burke, the former chair of the National Council of Women's Organizations, said she was "disappointed and think they are wrong. It feels like they are abandoning a known ally for a less committed candidate because they want to jump on a bandwagon. I think the pro-choice community should stick by a woman who has stuck by them."

And in a phone conversation, Marcia Pappas, the head of National Organization of Women, New York -- who famously accused Ted Kennedy for betraying women by endorsing Obama -- would not even commit to supporting the Illinois Democrat in the general election.

"It is disappointing that an organization that stands up for the rights of women would rush to this type of judgment, especially when we only have three weeks left. And I would wonder what criteria they used to make that judgment, based on the fact that [Obama] chose seven times to vote present," she said. "We certainly know that John McCain is not good on women's rights and we hope that Barack Obama is better on it, but it remains to be seen when we have a candidate who did not stand firm when he could have done so. "

Combined, the blowback from NARAL's endorsement is enough to suggest that Obama, should he become the nominee, may face future political hurdles when reaching out to the women's rights movement. But his record, compared to both Clinton and McCain, is strong on the group's issues. He has received three straight perfect ratings in NARAL's congressional record, has consistently supported a pro-choice platform, and his seven "present" votes (which Pappas cites) in the Illinois Senate were driven, he says, by legislative strategy rather than policy disagreements. As NARAL's president, Nancy Keenan, wrote on the Huffington Post:

"Sen. Obama has been a strong advocate for a woman's right to choose throughout his career in public service. Since joining the Senate in 2005, he has worked to unite Americans on both sides of this debate behind commonsense, common-ground ways to prevent unintended pregnancy. He supports legislation to provide our teens with comprehensive sex education, prevent pharmacies from denying women access to their legal birth-control prescriptions, and increase access for family-planning services."
posted by:
Cornel
  • NARAL Affiliates Question Obama Endorsement
    By Garance Franke-Ruta
    blog.washingtonpost.com/the-tr...ml#more

    NARAL Pro-Choice America affiliates in key swing and primary states are openly distancing themselves from the decision by NARAL Pro-Choice America to endorse Illinois Sen. Barack Obama over Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton to be the Democratic nominee for president.

    Since yesterday's announcement, NARAL groups in Pennsylvania, Missouri, Oregon, Washington, Texas and New York -- Clinton's home state -- have issued statements signaling their continued neutrality in the Democratic race and emphasizing that the national group did not speak for them on this matter. These groups represent nearly a quarter of NARAL's state chapters.

    "This decision was not made in consultation with the affiliate network and NARAL Pro-Choice Oregon will not be endorsing a candidate in this race," said executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Oregon Michele Stranger Hunter in a statement. "We are proud to have two strongly pro-choice candidates running for President. And we look forward to supporting whoever the nominee will be and are committed to defeating Senator John McCain (R-AZ) in November."

    Democrats in Oregon go to the polls on May 20 in one of the last primaries of the cycle.

    NARAL Pro-Choice Missouri felt so strongly about staying neutral its president recorded a robocall in the wake of the announcement, which the group then sent to 8,500 households emphasizing its neutrality. "In our membership demographic, a lot of longtime women's rights supporters are strong supporters of Hillary Clinton," Sumners told the St. Louis Post Dispatch.

    "If we had been consulted, we would have said, 'Let this play out,' " she said.

    NARAL Pro-Choice Washington emphasized its neutrality by praising both remaining Democratic candidates. "In the Senate and in their public lives, both Sen. Clinton and Sen. Obama have been leaders for a woman's right to choose," said Karen Cooper, executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Washington. "Sen. Clinton has worked with our own Sen. Patty Murray to help make birth control more accessible for the women who need it. She, like Sen. Obama, is a co-sponsor of the Federal Freedom of Choice Act, which would put the findings of Roe v. Wade into federal law. Time and again, both Sens. Clinton and Obama have stood up for the right to privacy and the right to choose."

    "American women would be well-served by either Clinton or Obama in the Oval Office," Cooper added.

    NARAL Pro-Choice New York issued a statement calling the national endorsement "premature" and emphasizing that "this decision was made internally by NARAL Pro-Choice America, based in Washington D.C., and without the consultation of the NARAL state affiliates across the country."

    "NARAL Pro-Choice New York will not be issuing an endorsement at this time," the group continued.

    NARAL Pro-Choice Pennsylvania echoed the New York group's statement, calling the endorsement "premature."

    And NARAL Pro-Choice Texas chose mainly to emphasize that the endorsement of Obama had nothing to do with them, and would have nothing to do with them, rather than publicly renouncing the national endorsement as some of the other groups had. "As NPCT has no federal PAC, our state affiliate can only participate in statewide campaigns, not national ones such as presidential or congressional races. NARAL Pro-Choice America PAC is the only entity authorized to make federal endorsements," the group said in a terse statement posted on its website. "There is no consultation role for NPCT or other state affiliates in this process."

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