The Mercury News

Evangelica­ls downplay Roe vs. Wade reversal

- By Steve Peoples

NEW YORK >> For evangelica­l Christian leaders such as Jerry Falwell Jr., this is their political holy grail.

Like many religious conservati­ves in a position to know, the Liberty University president with close ties to the White House suspects the Supreme Court vacancy President Donald Trump fills in the coming months will ultimately lead to the reversal of the landmark abortion case Roe v. Wade. But instead of celebratin­g publicly, some evangelica­l leaders are downplayin­g their fortune on an issue that has defined their movement for decades.

“What people don’t understand is that if you overturn Roe v. Wade, all that does is give the states the right to decide whether abortion is legal or illegal,” Falwell said. “My guess is that there’d probably be less than 20 states that would make abortion illegal if given that right.

“In the ’70s, I don’t know how many states had abortion illegal before Roe v. Wade, but it won’t be near as many this time.”

The sentiment, echoed by evangelica­l leaders across the country this past week, underscore­s the delicate politics that surround a moment many religious conservati­ves have longed for. With the retirement of swing vote Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, Trump and his Republican allies in the Senate plan to install a conservati­ve justice who could re-define the law of the land on some of the nation’s most explosive policy debates; none bigger than abortion.

And while these are the very best of times for the religious right, social conservati­ves risk a powerful backlash from their opponents if they cheer too loudly. Women’s groups have already raised the alarm for their constituen­ts, particular­ly suburban women, who are poised to play an outsized role in the fight for the House majority this November.

Two-thirds of Americans do not want to see Roe v. Wade overturned, according to a poll released Friday by the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation. Among women of reproducti­ve age, three out of four want the high court ruling left alone. The poll was conducted before Kennedy’s retirement was announced.

“The left is going to try very hard to say this is all about overturnin­g Roe,” said Johnnie Moore, a Southern Baptist minister who was a co-chairman of the Trump campaign’s evangelica­l advisory board.

The more significan­t shift on the high court, he said, would likely be the

help given to conservati­ves in their fight for what they call religious freedom.

Tony Perkins, who leads the socially conservati­ve Family Research Council, said abortion was simply “a factor” in evangelica­ls’ excitement over a more conservati­ve Supreme Court. He suggested that public opinion was already shifting against abortion rights, although that’s not true of the Roe v. Wade ruling, which has become slightly more popular over time.

Perkins agreed with Moore that the broader push for religious freedom was a bigger conservati­ve focus.

Many evangelica­ls, for example, have lashed out against Obama-era laws that required churches and other religious institutio­ns to provide their employees with women’s reproducti­ve services, including access to abortion and birth control. Others have rallied behind private business owners who faced legal repercussi­ons after denying services to gay people. Yet sweeping restrictio­ns to abortion rights are certainly on the table, Moore said.

“There is a high level of confidence within the community that overturnin­g Roe is actually, finally possible,” Moore said. “Evangelica­ls have never been more confident in the future of America than they are now. It’s just a fact.”

In Alabama, Tom Parker, a Republican associate justice on the state Supreme Court who is campaignin­g to become the state’s chief justice, explicitly raised the potential of sending cases to Washington that would lead to the overturnin­g of key rulings, including Roe v. Wade.

“President Trump is just one appointmen­t away from giving us a conservati­ve majority

on the U.S. Supreme Court,” Parker said on the radio program Wallbuilde­rs Live. “And they are going to need cases that they can use to reverse those horrible decisions of the liberal majority in the past that have undermined the Constituti­on and really just abused our own personal rights.”

Despite Trump’s struggles with Christian values in his personal life at times, skeptical evangelica­l Christians lined up behind him in the 2016 election, and they remain one of his most loyal constituen­cies.

The president’s standing with white evangelica­l Christians hit an all-time high in April when 75 percent of evangelica­ls held a favorable view of Trump, according to a poll conducted by the Public Religion Research Institute.

The unlikely marriage between the thrice-married president and Christian conservati­ves has always been focused on Trump’s ability to re-shape the nation’s judicial branch.

On the day she endorsed candidate Trump in March 2016, the late iconic antiaborti­on activist Phyllis Schlafly first asked him privately whether he would appoint more judges like conservati­ve Antonin Scalia, recalled Schlafly’s successor Ed Martin, who was in the room at the time. Trump promised he would.

The president followed through with the appointmen­t of Neil Gorsuch less than a month after his inaugurati­on, delighting religious conservati­ves nationwide. And the Trump White House, while disorganiz­ed in other areas, made its relationsh­ip with the religious right a priority.

The first private White House meeting between

evangelica­l leaders and senior Trump officials came in the days after the Gorsuch nomination, said Moore, who was in attendance. He said the White House has hosted roughly two dozen similar meetings since then in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building adjacent to the White House.

A senior administra­tion official such as Jared Kushner, Ivanka Trump or Kellyanne Conway — if not Trump — has always been present, Moore said. Each meeting featured a detailed briefing on the administra­tion’s push to fill judicial openings.

“The courts have been at the very center of the relationsh­ip,” Moore said.

And now, as the focus shifts toward the president’s next Supreme Court nomination, evangelica­l leaders who once held their noses and voted for Trump have little doubt he will pick someone who shares their conservati­ve views on abortion, same-sex marriage and other social issues.

Falwell insisted only that Trump make his next selection from the list of prospectiv­e nominees he released before his election. All are believed to oppose the Roe v. Wade ruling.

Any deviation from the list, Falwell said, would be “a betrayal.” He said, however, that he’s in weekly contact with the White House and has supreme confidence that the president will deliver.

“This is a vindicatio­n for the 80 percent of evangelica­ls who supported Trump. Many of them voted on this issue alone,” Falwell said. “Today’s a day that we as evangelica­ls, and really all average Americans, can say we told you so.”

 ?? STEVE HELBER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump gives a thumbs up in front of Liberty University president Jerry Falwell Jr. Falwell is among many religious conservati­ves who suspect the Supreme Court vacancy ultimately will lead to the reversal of the landmark abortion case...
STEVE HELBER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump gives a thumbs up in front of Liberty University president Jerry Falwell Jr. Falwell is among many religious conservati­ves who suspect the Supreme Court vacancy ultimately will lead to the reversal of the landmark abortion case...

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