New York women are already casualties of Gov. George Pataki's presidential aspirations:
Gov. George E. Pataki's aides said last night that he would veto a bill to make the so-called morning-after pill available without a prescription, prompting outrage among abortion-rights advocates.
Kevin C. Quinn, a spokesman for the governor, said in a statement that the governor's main objection was that the bill did not include provisions that would prevent minors from having access to the drug.
Mr. Quinn said the governor would be willing to reconsider the measure if the Legislature drafted and passed a new bill that addressed his concerns about the drug's availability to minors, as well as "other flaws."
Mr. Pataki's decision comes as he lays the groundwork for a presidential run in 2008 and underscores the forces he must negotiate as he steps onto the national stage.
Mr. Pataki's position as a longtime supporter of abortion rights has enabled him to survive in heavily Democratic New York for three terms. Had he signed the bill, he would have angered national conservatives, who are adamantly opposed to the emergency contraception and whose support he will need.
The governor revealed his position after he was asked about plans by Naral Pro-Choice New York, to start a nationwide television advertising blitz intended to pressure him into backing the bill.
The group's planned blitz stems from Mr. Pataki's initial refusal to say whether he would support the bill, which would make the morning-after pill, which prevents pregnancy after sex, available to women and girls without a prescription. When told of the advertising campaign last night, the Pataki administration reacted with surprise and later said the governor would veto the measure.
That spurred fierce criticism from abortion-rights advocates, who noted the difficulty in getting the Republicans, who control the Senate, to pass the measure the first time.
"It was a Herculean task to get it through the Senate and get the support of right-to-life senators who saw this as good common ground prevention," said Kelli Conlin, executive director of Naral Pro-Choice New York. Noting that Mr. Pataki had not raised any concerns about minors' having access to the drug before, she accused him of trying to placate conservatives in his possible presidential bid.
Further, Ms. Conlin noted that under Mr. Pataki, the state has covered the costs of abortions and abortion-inducing drugs for low-income minors. "This is about pandering to the right wing of the Republican Party rather than doing what's right for the women of New York," she said.
Mr. Quinn, the governor's spokesman, denied that politics had played into the decision.
And I am Marie of Rumania.
The morning-after pill is designed to PREVENT the need for abortions. It works by preventing a fertilized egg, if one exists, from implanting in the uterus and becoming a pregnancy.
The problem with so-called "right to life" objections to the morning-after pill is that they confer full humanity on a fertilized egg. Up to 30% of fertilized eggs never implant. The most widely-used contraceptives, including the IUD and all hormone-related methods such as the pill, patch, and Norplant, work in much the same way.
Opening the door to preventing access to emergency contraception on these grounds opens the door not just to a ban of these methods of pre-coitus birth control, but also to government policing of women to ensure that they do nothing to prevent a fertilized egg from implanting. I've made a lot of noise about the prospect of submitting used tampons to the government for microscopic examination and resulting potential prosecution if fertilized eggs are present. This has historically been hype used to illustrate a point. But cynical political gestures like Pataki's, as well as the efforts of the Christofascists, make such an outcome entirely plausible.
It's alarming that women are regarded as so expendable if they stand in the way of Pataki's presidential aspirations -- especially since the Christofascists would vote for Satan incarnate before they'd vote for a New York governor.
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