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A new twist for Pennsylvania's Senate race?

Abortion rights advocate Michelman considering independent candidacy

By Tom Curry
National affairs writer
msnbc.com
updated 2:40 p.m. ET March 6, 2006

Tom Curry
National affairs writer

E-mail

WASHINGTON — Abortion rights leader Kate Michelman is thinking of jumping into the Senate race in Pennsylvania as an independent.

Michelman is appalled by Democratic Party leaders’ selection of anti-abortion candidate Bob Casey Jr. as their choice to try to unseat two-term Republican Sen. Rick Santorum.

For Michelman and other supporters of the Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade abortion decision, the final straw came in late January when Casey endorsed President Bush’s Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito.

Analyst and pollster Terry Madonna at Franklin & Marshall College in Pennsylvania said, “If she runs as an independent, they’ve given Santorum a significant boost.” He added, “This is a very interesting dilemma liberal Democrats have right now.”

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Michelman said that if she joined the Senate race, she’d do so as an independent since she couldn’t meet Tuesday’s filing deadline to compete in the May 16 Democratic primary.

To run as an independent Michelman would need to get the signatures of 67,000 registered voters by Aug. 1.

A pro-Roe v. Wade alternative
Although Michelman said in an interview with MSNBC.com Monday she had not yet made up her mind about running, she reported that her colleagues in the abortion rights movement are urging her to get in the race so that she could offer a pro-Roe alternative to the two anti-Roe candidates, Santorum and Casey.

Michelman is conferring with Democratic pollster Harrison Hickman and other strategists and will make her decision in the next two weeks.

She has been traveling the country on a tour to promote her new book, With Liberty and Justice for All: A Life Spent Protecting the Right to Choose. At a book event in New York last Thursday night several prominent Democratic donors urged her to run against Casey and Santorum.

Casey is Pennsylvania’s state Treasurer and the son of former Gov. Robert Casey, who clashed with Michelman over the abortion issue 14 years ago at the Democratic convention in New York. Bill Clinton and party leaders barred the elder Casey from addressing the convention.

In the Democratic primary, Casey will battle two more socially liberal Democrats, Philadelphia lawyer Alan Sandals and history professor Chuck Pennacchio. Sandals and Pennacchio support the Roe decision.

Casey's cash advantage
At the beginning of the year, Casey’s campaign had $3.4 million in cash on hand, compared to about $50,000 for Sandals and $9,000 for Pennacchio.

Santorum had $7.7 million in cash.

While Michelman poses a potential threat to Casey, Santorum facing problems of his own, from both the social conservative and libertarian wings of his party:

Social conservatives are angry at Santorum for supporting Sen. Arlen Specter in his 2004 primary battle against conservative Republican Pat Toomey.

A Republican abortion rights group, the Republican Majority for Choice, is trying to find a candidate to oppose Santorum, running newspaper ads last week in Pennsylvania denouncing “candidates who claim to be Republicans but instead use the Party to further their own personal or religious agenda.”

As of early February, a survey of 611 Pennsylvanians by Franklin and Marshall College’s Center for Opinion Research showed Casey besting Santorum, 50 percent to 39 percent, with 11 percent of those polled saying they were undecided.

Michelman said Democrats across the nation are angry at Democratic senators’ feckless resistance to Bush’s judicial nominees, who they fear will abolish legal abortion.

She derided the Senate Democrats opposition to Alito as “a lackluster effort. I was disturbed that the pro-choice senators would stand aside” and not use the filibuster to block a vote on Alito.


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