*Obama ad slams McCain on abortion rights*
By: Ben Smith
September 3, 2008 08:38 AM EST

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Barack Obama has launched a broadside against John
McCain's opposition to abortion rights and moved one of the most divisive
issues in modern American politics to the airwaves on a large scale for the
first time in this presidential campaign.

Obama's new radio ad, airing widely in at least seven swing states, tells
voters McCain "will make abortion illegal." It's airing as McCain courts
female voters with the addition of the staunchly anti-abortion governor of
Alaska, Sarah Palin, to his ticket.

Democrats had, until now, sought to appeal to women primarily on economic
issues such as health care and workplace discrimination; abortion rights
were hardly mentioned at the Democratic National Convention in Denver last
week. But women's rights groups have been urging Obama to attack McCain on
the issue, pointing to polling showing that some women who support McCain
think he supports abortion rights. In fact, the Arizona senator has long
supported a ban on abortions, with exceptions for victims of rape and
incest, and for pregnancies that threaten the life of the mother. Palin has
an even firmer anti-abortion stance: She would require rape and incest
victims to carry their pregnancies to term.

"Let me tell you: If *Roe vs. Wade* is overturned, the lives and health of
women will be put at risk. That's why this election is so important," says
the nurse-practitioner who narrates Obama's ad. "John McCain's out of touch
with women today. McCain wants to take away our right to choose. That's what
women need to understand. That's how high the stakes are."

An announcer then claims that "as president, John McCain will make abortion
illegal," before playing an exchange on "Meet the Press" in which McCain
told moderator Tim Russert that he favors "a constitutional amendment to ban
all abortions."

"We can't let John McCain take away our right to choose. We can't let him
take us back," says the ad.
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Obama supports abortion rights, though he was criticized by Sen. Hillary
Rodham Clinton in the Democratic primary for avoiding votes on controversial
abortion issues.

Obama spokesman Bill Burton said the ad about McCain was sent to stations
last Thursday, before the choice of Palin was made public.

"This is a straightforward ad about the very well-documented fact that he
wants to overturn *Roe v. Wade* and supports a constitutional ban on
abortions," said Burton.

The campaign didn't release further details of the ad buy, but Politico
readers reported that it's airing in Florida, Virginia, Iowa, Ohio, Indiana,
Wisconsin and Colorado.

One Colorado reader said he'd heard it about a dozen times Tuesday — signs
of a large buy.

McCain aides didn't respond to a question about the ad, but Republican Party
communications director Danny Diaz responded by attacking Obama's opposition
to an Illinois bill that advocates said would protect babies who survived
abortions, and critics said was an attempt to limit all abortions.

"Barack Obama voted against a bill that would have protected infants born
alive having survived an abortion attempt," said Diaz. "He has offered
misleading statements on the issue and is now trying to confuse voters by
attacking Senator McCain."

Kate Michelman, an informal Obama adviser who is the former president of the
abortion-rights group NARAL Pro-Choice America, said she expected the
campaign to expand its appeal to women on issues of abortion rights.

"This is a door opened to a longer campaign and strategic effort to ensure
that women know the truth about John McCain and Gov. Palin," she said,
suggesting it would come "on the radio, in the mail, on the phones, and in
the organizing on the ground."

Though the campaign says the ad was released before Palin was chosen,
Michelman said her selection, and her strong anti-abortion stance, would
drive the issue closer to the center of the race.

"By his nomination of Gov. Palin, McCain has made his opposition to a
woman's right to decide a major campaign issue," she said.




-- 
"Usually when people are sad, they don't do anything. They just cry over
their condition. But when they get angry, they bring about a change."
- Malcolm X, Malcolm X Speaks, 1965

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