2004 Letter: Michelle O. Fundraises on Reversing Partial-Birth Abortion Ban
Michelle Obama wrote a letter in 2004 endorsing partial-birth abortions, a heinous procedure that involves removing an unborn baby during the latter stages of the second trimester or early stages of the third trimester and crushing the back of her head with scissors. Obama, in a fundraising letter on behalf of her husband's 2004 Illinois Senate campaign, said bans on infanticide were "clearly unconstitutional and must be overturned." "The fact remains, with no provision to protect the
The Supreme Court in 2007 upheld the ban on partial-birth abortions.
As LifeNews noted, "though the three-day-long partial-birth abortion procedure involves the partial birth of a baby during the middle trimester of pregnancy and the jamming of scissors into the back of her head to kill her," Obama described partial-birth abortion procedures as "legitimate" medicine.
In the fundraising letter, Obama complained about the "alarming news about the Justice Department's request for hospitals to turn over the private medical records of dozens of patients."
She called it a "cynical ploy" that "is designed to intimidate a group of physicians and force them to drop their lawsuit seeking to have the so-called partial birth abortion ban ruled unconstitutional" and wrote that supporters could "count on" Obama to vote against judges who would vote to overturn Roe v. Wade.
Barack Obama, who voted against the Born-Alive Infants Protection Act while he was a state senator in Illinois, has been an extremist on abortion. In fact, Democrats, in their 2012 platform, supported infanticide by not excluding partial-birth abortions, putting Obama and his party out of line with a majority of Americans who oppose the procedure.
As Townhall noted, partial-birth abortions typically take place during the second trimester but, because of modern medicine, babies as young as 21 weeks are now capable of surviving. health of the mother, this ban on a legitimate medical procedure is clearly unconstitutional and must be overturned," Obama wrote, according to a letter discovered by LifeNews. "Attorney General Ashcroft and President Bush believe so zealously in their cause that the privacy right of patients are under assault. They believe we have no federal right to privacy when it concerns our medical histories."