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Debra Saunders Apr 8, 2005
Conventional
wisdom is clear
Washington's intervention in the Terri Schiavo
case hurt the GOP big-time. A Time Magazine poll found that three-quarters
of the public thought Congress was wrong to intervene after a
hospice, under court order, pulled the disabled woman's feeding
tube, while 70 percent disapproved of President Bush's role in
the saga.
Funny. A new Zogby International poll shows
that, when asked questions that go to the heart of the Schiavo
matter, the public is very much in sync with the failed attempt
by Congress and Bush to save the woman's life.
Zogby poll
Zogby, in a poll commissioned by the Christian
Defense Coalition, found that by a two-to-one margin -- 44 percent
versus 24 percent -- likely voters believe the law should assume
a patient wants to live and be kept alive with the help of a
feeding tube, if a patient -- like Schiavo -- left no written
statement on end-of-life care.
Should hearsay be admissible (as happened
with Schiavo), when courts decide if a feeding tube should be
removed?
Some 57 percent said no; 31
percent said yes.
If a disabled person is not terminally
ill, not in a coma, not on life support and without a written
end-of-life directive, should he or she be denied food and water?
Among those polled, 80 percent
said no.
The
poll is not clear-cut.
A majority of those questioned said elected
officials should not intervene when the courts deny rights to
the disabled and that elected officials shouldn't intervene to
protect a disabled person's right to live, despite conflicting
testimony. On the other hand, a razor-thin majority, 44 percent,
agreed that the feds should intervene if a state court denies
food and water to a disabled person; 43 percent disagreed.
The bottom line: The conventional wisdom is
off. It may well be that other polls showed voters disapproving
of what Washington did, because they didn't know Schiavo left
no written directive, that there was conflicting testimony on
her end-of-life wishes or that her husband had two children with
another woman.
Conventional wisdom is also wrong in defining
this case as a GOP issue. Not one Democratic senator voted against
the measure to send the case to federal courts. As the Rev. Pat
Mahoney of the Christian Defense Fund noted, Sens. Dianne Feinstein,
Barbara Boxer and Hillary Clinton each had a choice to vote against
the bill, "and they didn't."
Also, lefties Jesse Jackson, Nat Hentoff and
Ralph Nader opposed removing the feeding tube. Ditto disability
advocates. It's a bedrock issue: You don't deny food and water
to a disabled woman unless you know for sure that she wants you
to.
My
favorite post-Schiavo spin
My favorite post-Schiavo spin is that the
Democrats are the party that wants to keep the government out
of family life. Sure, that works -- if you forget that the Democrats
want to take teenagers' birth control and abortion decisions
away from parents, Democrats want taxpayers to pay for said birth
control and abortions, and Democrats made spousal abuse a federal
crime.
You remember the alleged GOP memo that talked
up how the Schiavo story was "a great political issue"
that would hurts the Dems and help the GOP with its "pro-life
base." ABC's Web site dubbed it the "GOP Talking Points
on Terri Schiavo."
It turns out, as The Washington Post's Howard
Kurtz reported, "no one seems to know who wrote it."
The Post's Mike Allen explained that the Post merely reported
that the memo was "distributed to Republican senators,"
but he believed the document to be "authentic" and
"used to attempt to influence Republican senators."
How convenient that a memo, its authorship unknown, that misspelled
Terri Schiavo's name and that said things only a moron would
be dumb enough to put on paper, made it into ABC's and The Washington
Post's hands.
The kicker:
A story that was supposed to be about the
GOP running roughshod over a woman's end-of-life wishes isn't
about her known wishes and isn't about the GOP, but about both
parties.
Polls showed that Americans opposed what Washington
did, but a more in-depth poll suggests most voters strongly support
the sentiments that drove Washington to intervene. The Democratic
Party wants government out of family matters -- unless they involve
children. And the memo that was supposed to show how craven the
GOP is instead shows how gullible the media can be.
Other than that, the conventional wisdom is
solid.
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