PeterZ wrote:Dude! You have no idea what I believe on this issue. The SCOTUS decision was not unanimous, was it? 4 out of nine disagreed with the logic. How many Amercians will continue to agree with the dissenters? Here's a hint. Roe v Wade is still controversial.
My point still stands. Making fundamental changes to our society is best done involving as broad a base of our citizenry as possible.
Roe v. Wade is still controversial because it's an emotional issue that politicians can use to whip up fury in their voter base. Since that decision, there have been times when we've had a Republican majority in Congress, but they haven't -- and will not -- act to repeal it because they need issues like this to stoke the fervor and distract voters from the REAL issues like ruining the US economy by financing China's industrialization or meddling in the Middle East on behalf of the oil companies.
Back in the 1970's, the Republicans started drawing heavily on the activist religious right as a voter base. They saw it as a well organized demographic, motivated by anger at society's secularism. The Republicans strung them along with promises to turn the clock back to the "good old days" of mandatory Christian-centered school prayer, outdated "morals" and secondary status for women. Now that religious right tail is wagging the Republicans' dog. They are so out of touch with current society that they need that reactionary voter base just to stay in the game, but they can't afford to give that base what they promised. If the Republicans actually overturned Roe v. Wade, re-criminalized homosexuality and entangled the government with religion, the voting population would sling them out on their butts and the Republican party would die.
As far as involving a broad base goes, way back in August 2010 an Associated Press poll found that 52% of Americans supported recognition of same-sex marriages. In 2011, Gallup Polls found 53%. That trend has continued, recent polls are now up to 59-60%. So, if the issue was put to a popular vote, the result would have been the same.