Table of Contents

PBP201H: Opportunities for Pro-Life Policies

Abortion is legal in Canada through all 9 months for any reason or no reason at all. Our vision is a vision zero for the abortion rate. What kinds of pro-life policies can we advocate for in order to reduce the abortion rate?

We're going to look at incremental federal and provincial policies, and also both the supply and demand side of the abortion equation, as attainable next steps to reduce the abortion rate on the way to upholding human rights for all human beings.

Supply Side Policies (Restricting Abortion) - 40min

Federal

WeNeedALaw has identified three key federal initiatives for enacting incremental policies in Canada:

  1. International Standards Abortion Law
  2. Banning Sex Selective Abortion
  3. Protecting Pre-Born Victims of Crime

International Standards Abortion Law - 10min

https://weneedalaw.ca/initiatives/international-standards-abortion-law/

For more, see Direction Matters and Draft Legislation.

Defend Girls - 10min

https://weneedalaw.ca/initiatives/defend-girls/

Watch the full documentary

See also:

Pre-Born Victims of Crime - 10min

https://weneedalaw.ca/initiatives/pre-born-victims-of-crime/

FIXME https://www.cbc.ca/news/opinion/abortion-law-1.5128422

Other Initiatives

Provincial

Criminal law in Canada is a federal matter (unlike the US where there is state criminal law as well), but healthcare is a provincial issue.

Just quickly mention these kinds of opportunities:

Case Study: United States

Michael J. New has been tracking the effects of the pro-life movement on the abortion rate in the United States for years, and has published studies on the effects of pro-life laws in reducing the abortion rate.

In December 2019, Michael J New wrote:

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has released abortion data for 2016, indicating that the U.S. abortion rate has continued to decline, a trend that began in 1980. Between 2015 and 2016, both the number of abortions and the abortion rate (the number of abortions per 1,000 U.S. women of childbearing age) decreased by about 2 percent. The decline was fairly consistent, as 33 of the 46 states that reported abortion data saw their numbers decline. This is good news for pro-lifers, and for anyone who wants to see the incidence of abortion decrease.

While much of the analysis of new abortion data typically focuses on short-term trends, the long-term decline in the U.S. abortion rate is even more impressive. According to the CDC, the abortion rate has fallen by more than 25 percent between 2007 and 2016 among the 47 states that reported abortion data consistently during that timespan (excluding California, Maryland, and New Hampshire, which did not report abortion numbers). The data also indicate that the abortion rate has fallen by approximately 50 percent since 1980. The abortion trends reported by the CDC are similar to those shown by estimates from the Guttmacher Institute, which in September released its estimates for U.S. abortion data for 2017.

Most of the media coverage of declining abortion numbers typically credits increased contraception use. But commentators often overlook a key factor in the long-term abortion-rate decline: the fact that a higher percentage of women with unintended pregnancies carry them to term. Data from Guttmacher show that between 1981 and 2011, the percentage of unintended pregnancies that resulted in an abortion fell from approximately 54 percent to 42 percent.

Since the early 1990s, pro-lifers have made gains in public opinion, enacted a higher number of pro-life laws, and established more pregnancy-help centers. The declining abortion numbers, and the fact that more unintended pregnancies are being carried to term, is nice evidence that these pro-life efforts have been effective. Hopefully, the new CDC data will encourage pro-lifers and inspire them to continue their lifesaving efforts.

See also:

Demand Side Policies (Social Support Policies) - 15min

While supply side policies seek to restrict the availability/supply of abortion, demand side policies seek to restrict the desire/demand for abortion.

We often think about this in terms of the other arms of the pro-life movement beside the political arm - the educational arm seeks to make abortion unthinkable so that people won't desire it by changing hearts and minds on abortion, and the pastoral arm seeks to make abortion irrelevant by providing support to people who feel like they may have no other choice but abortion.

The educational and pastoral efforts are essential, however, there is also a huge opportunity to reduce the abortion rate from public policy efforts that reduce the demand for abortion by providing support.

The Need

The Case

This makes economic policy relevant to the question of reducing the demand for abortion and lowering abortion rates1)

JVM and Camosy listen 26:47-31:42

JVM: I've done a lot of research over the last couple years in terms of how the abortion rate is reduced because, one of the things I've noted is that both Canada and the US have extremely high abortion rates compared to countries with better social safety nets (e.g. the Netherlands, Israel, Germany, Hungary) […] Conservatives should be championing these policies, because we should be the pro-family party…

* Charlie Camosy: think about the demand side of the abortion issue rather than the supply side

Also, 45:25-46:12, starting at “One pro-life said to me that you're just bribing women out of abortions, and I was like, uh, yeah, you wouldn't do that?”

e.g. read this blog post (FIXME summarize) Hungary

[Early 2019] Hungary’s prime minister has announced a raft of measures aimed at boosting the country’s declining birth rate and reducing immigration. Giving his annual State of the Nation address Sunday, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban announced a seven-point “Family Protection Action Plan” designed to promote marriage and families.

Measures announced included waivers on personal income tax for women raising at least four children for the rest of their lives and subsidies for large families to buy larger cars. The ‘action plan’ also extended a loan program to help families with at least two children to buy homes. Every woman under 40 will also be eligible for a preferential loan when she first gets married.

The government has also said it will spend more on Hungary’s heathcare system and will create 21,000 creche places. In addition, grandparents will be eligible to receive a childcare fee if they look after young children instead of the parents, Orban said.


JVM: Orban’s policies have already contributed to a decline in the abortion rate, with LifeSite reporting in 2018 that numbers had dropped by more than a third compared to what they were in 2010—40,449 to 28,500. Divorces also declined, with 23,973 in 2010 compared to 18,600 in 2017 as well as a surge in marriages (35,520 in 2010 compared to 50,600 in 2017.) Interestingly, Orban’s policies prove what Tucker Carlson has been saying to great controversy in the US for a couple of years now: Government’s economic policies play an enormous role in incentivizing or disincentivizing family, and as such social conservatives should consider the role of markets and the government in the breakdown of the family.