Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Evangelica­l leaders wary of backlash

Leaders want to end abortions, not alienate women

- By Steve Peoples Associated Press New York

For evangelica­l Christian leaders like 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 that 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 told The Associated Press in an interview. “My guess is that there’d probably be less than 20 states that would make abortion illegal if given that right.”

Falwell added: “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 redefine 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.

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.

 ?? Steve Helber / Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump, right, is shown with Liberty University president Jerry Falwell Jr. in 2017.
Steve Helber / Associated Press President Donald Trump, right, is shown with Liberty University president Jerry Falwell Jr. in 2017.

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