Pro-life leaders explore how to change hearts and minds post-Roe

Kate Scanlon

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A woman holds her daughter during the opening Mass of the National Prayer Vigil for Life Jan. 19, 2023, at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington. On the eve of the annual national March for Life, leading experts convened by the University of Notre Dame's de Nicola Center discuss a post-Roe world in which mothers, babies (born and unborn), and families are protected and cared for as they deserve.
A woman holds her daughter during the opening Mass of the National Prayer Vigil for Life Jan. 19, 2023, at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington. On the eve of the annual national March for Life, leading experts convened by the University of Notre Dame’s de Nicola Center discuss a post-Roe world in which mothers, babies (born and unborn), and families are protected and cared for as they deserve. OSV News photo/Bob Roller

The pro-life movement should work to change hearts and minds on the issue of abortion by demonstrating “radical solidarity” with women and unborn children, some of the movement’s leaders said at a Jan. 19 panel in the nation’s capital.

Experts on the panel, sponsored by the University of Notre Dame’s de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture and held on the eve of the national March for Life, said that for the movement to be successful, it must demonstrate the inherent dignity of every person, including the poor and vulnerable.

“We’ll have an exchange and extend the hand of love and friendship to those who disagree very deeply with us on this question, to our pro-choice friends and neighbors,” O. Carter Snead, director of the de Nicola Center and a professor of both law and political science at Notre Dame, told those gathered at the National Press Club in Washington. “What this movement is about is unconditional love; it’s about ‘everybody counts.’ It’s about radical hospitality, radical solidarity. You don’t change hearts and minds with arguments — you change hearts and minds by loving people.”

The event was part of the de Nicola Center’s “Women and Children First Initiative,” exploring the legal, public policy, and cultural elements surrounding building a life-affirming culture across issues such as health care, poverty, racial justice and human rights.

Demonstrating radical solidarity with women facing both planned and unplanned pregnancies is crucial to building a culture of life, panelists said. But they all pointed beyond public policy to everyday interactions with loved ones or medical professionals as key moments of influence.

Former congressman Dan Lipinski, a Catholic Democrat from Illinois who lost his U.S. House seat after a primary challenge from a pro-abortion rival in 2020, said that while the movement sought an end to Roe v. Wade, its reversal has made aspects of the cause “a lot harder now” on a political level.

“The other side was ready,” he said. “I don’t think we were ready.”

After ballot successes for Democrats on abortion, Lipinski said, the party will be energized to seek comparable victories at the state level.

“‘Safe, legal, and rare’ — well, rare’s gone,” Lipkinski said of the Democratic Party’s shift on abortion, referencing a line coined by former President Bill Clinton in his 1992 presidential campaign to describe the party’s position on the issue.

While urging pro-life Republicans to adopt more social safety net measures, Lipinski praised the Providing for Life Act, a bill introduced by Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., which includes a compilation of efforts including an expanded child tax credit.

The panel was held the day before the 50th March for Life in Washington.

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