demonstrates at the 2006
March for Life. The
Republican Party platform officially advocates an anti-abortion position, which developed alongside the modern pro-life movement. Before
Roe v. Wade, the majority of Republicans were not anti-abortion, including most of the party's leadership, which typically cited abortion rights as included within an ideology of limited government and personal freedom. At the
1976 Republican National Convention, the party adopted an
anti-abortion amendment as part of their platform, for strategic reasons. The party's leadership hoped to appeal to Catholics, a demographic which had
traditionally voted Democratic, a party at the time containing fairly liberal economic views with mixed opinions on social ones, but who might be put off by growing
cultural liberalism and who made up the core of the anti-abortion movement. and seeks to eliminate abortion in the U.S. The
Democrats for Life of America are a group of anti-abortion Democrats on the
political left who advocate for an anti-abortion plank in the
Democratic Party's platform and for anti-abortion Democratic candidates. Former vice-presidential candidate
Sargent Shriver, the late
Robert Casey, a former two-term governor of
Pennsylvania, and former Rep.
Bart Stupak (D-Mich), a former leader of the bipartisan anti-abortion caucus in the
United States House of Representatives, have been among the most well-known anti-abortion Democrats. However, following his vote in favor of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Marjorie Dannenfelser of the SBA List reported that her organization was revoking an anti-abortion award it had been planning to give to Stupak, and
anti-abortion organizations accused Stupak of having betrayed the anti-abortion movement.
The New York Times reported in 2011 that the anti-abortion movement in the United States had been undergoing a disagreement over tactics. Since
Roe v. Wade was decided in 1973, the movement had usually focused on chipping away at
Roe through incremental restrictions such as laws requiring parental consent or women to see sonograms, restricting late-term abortions, etc., with the goal of limiting abortions and changing "hearts and minds" until there is a majority on the Supreme Court to overturn
Roe. However, some activists were calling for "an all-out legal assault on
Roe. v. Wade", seeking the enactment of laws defining legal personhood as beginning at fertilization or prohibiting abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detectable at six to eight weeks in the hope that court challenges to such laws would lead the Supreme Court to overturn
Roe v. Wade. Such activists believed that then-Justice
Anthony Kennedy, who nearly decided to overturn
Roe in
Planned Parenthood v. Casey, was open to rethinking
Roe. Others feared that such a legal challenge would result in the solidification of the 1973 decision in
Roe. Evangelical Christian groups tended to be in the former camp and Catholic groups in the latter.
Death penalty Among those who believe that abortion is murder, some believe it may be appropriate to punish it with
death. While attempts to criminalize abortion generally focus on the doctor, Texas state Rep.
Tony Tinderholt (R) introduced a bill in 2017 and 2019 that may enable the
death penalty in Texas for women who have abortions, and the Ohio legislature considered a similar bill in 2018. In March 2021, Texas state Rep.
Bryan Slaton introduced a bill that would abolish
abortion and make it a criminal act, whereby women and physicians who received and performed abortions, respectively, could receive the
death penalty. In 2023, South Carolinan Republican Representative
Rob Harris authored the South Carolina Prenatal Equal Protection Act of 2023, which would make women who had abortions eligible for the
death penalty. The bill attracted 21 Republican co-sponsors. ==Demographics==