Former one-term U.S. Sen. James Buckley died Friday, Aug. 18, at 100 years old.
Catholics in the United States owe him a tremendous debt of gratitude.
Buckley, a Catholic from New York, and Jesse Helms, a North Carolina Baptist, were the first two senators to introduce Human Life Amendments designed to overturn Roe v. Wade.
Helms’ amendment was the Senate version of the first Human Life Amendment, introduced roughly a week after Roe, by Catholic Rep. Lawrence Hogan, R-Md. The Hogan-Helms Amendment was modeled strongly on the language of the 14th Amendment, ensuring it applied conception. It also banned euthanasia.
Buckley’s amendment, in its first version, focused more directly on abortion, initially only allowing procedures necessary “to save the life of the mother.” Some Catholics, initially confident of the amendment route, were concerned the amendment might not square with the double-effect principle. Some legal scholars voiced concern that abortionists would bend “life” (as they did “health”) into extremely broad exceptions. Buckley subsequently introduced a second version, which permitted procedures necessary “to prevent the death of the mother.”
The New York senator worked to bring a constitutional amendment to the floor. Yielding to pressure, Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., eventually held subcommittee hearings, only to kill all amendments in September 1975, after Democrats increased their congressional numbers in the post-Watergate election.
One powerful witness of Buckley’s eloquence in defense of life can be found in his statement on the Senate floor when he announced his constitutional amendment. Together with accompanying documentation, it takes up 19 pages in the May 31, 1973, Congressional Record. Rereading it more than 50 years later, one sees that Buckley’s efforts were not throwaway rhetoric to placate constituents but the views of a thoughtful public servant who believed what he said.
“… [A] constitutional amendment was the only way to redress the damage wrought by the Court. …. [T]he Court’s decisions, unfortunately, leave those who respect human life in all its stages from inception to death with no other recourse.”
Criticizing Roe:
“… [T]he Court’s opinions in these cases requires that one attempt to follow a labyrinthine path of argument that simultaneously ignores or confuses a long line of legal precedent and flies in the face of well-established scientific fact.”
On the persistent misreading of the scope of Roe:
“… [T]he full import of the Court’s action is as yet incompletely understood by large segments of the public and many legislators and commentators. It seems to be rather widely held … that the Court authorized abortion on request in the first six months … leaving the states free to proscribe it thereafter. But such is far from the truth. … [A] woman may at any time … have an abortion provided only that she can find a physician willing to certify that her ‘health’ requires it; and as the word ‘health’ is defined, that in essence means abortion on demand.”
One could multiply quotes, but the fact is, at the beginning of an almost-half-century slog until a majority of the Supreme Court reversed Roe, Buckley presciently foresaw much of how that decision would acclimatize America to a culture of death.
But, apart from his legislative efforts on abortion, Buckley was instrumental in shifting the politics of abortion. That, in part, resulted from his election.
Buckley’s 1970 election to the Senate was a surprise. Gov. Nelson Rockefeller appointed Republican Charles Goodell to fill the Senate seat of Robert Kennedy after his 1968 assassination. Goodell’s voting record was solidly liberal. Democrats tapped Richard Ottinger. Buckley stepped into the race on the Conservative Party line, arguing that average New Yorkers, in an era of rising crime and social unrest, had no real choice between Goodell and Ottinger.
Rockefeller, in control of the New York Republican Party, pulled out all stops for Goodell. Earlier in 1970, Rockefeller turned New York into something of an abortion “sanctuary,” legalizing the procedure through the 24th week of pregnancy (six months), one of the most liberal regimes at the time. The governor deemed that “reform” as a signature achievement and vetoed the state Legislature’s 1972 repeal of that law.
In the late 1960s, conservatives were growing restive in a Republican Party they saw (especially after the 1964 Barry Goldwater defeat) as institutionally too liberal and out-of-sync with America’s “Silent Majority” (a Nixon theme). Ronald Reagan’s election as California governor in 1966 (and reelection in 1970) put a new face on the conservative movement, something eastern Republicans in states like New York intended to stop.
James Buckley’s upset election to the Senate began changing that equation. Although New York Republicanism held him at a distance (the state’s senior senator, Jacob Javits, voted against admitting him to the Senate Republican caucus), Buckley and Nixon launched a series of politicians running as “R/C — New York.” It stood for “Republican Conservative”; but, as political analyst Michael Barone pointed it, it also generally indicated the legislator’s religion: Roman Catholic.
That process eventually tipped the national Republican Party solidly into the pro-life camp, sidelining pro-abortion elements in the party like Rockefeller or Sens. Bob Packwood of Oregon, Charles Percy of Illinois, Edward Brooke of Massachusetts and Lowell Weicker of Connecticut….
From the National Catholic Register
James Buckley was an amazing interviewer. Go online and watch his interview with Mother Teresa now Saint Teresa of Calcutta. My he rest in peace.
Forgive me but I was thinking of William Buckley in my post not James Buckley. May God grant James Buckley peace for his tremendous pro-life work.
The interview with William F. Buckley Jr. and Mother Teresa was recorded on June 2, 1989. It’s available online.
Sen. James Buckley was the older brother of the famous, excellent conservative journalist, author, and public intellectual, William F. Buckley, Jr., who died in 2008. William F. Buckley, Jr. was the famous founder of the influential conservative magazine, “National Review,” and TV host, for many years, of “Firing Line.”
Thank you very much for your posting. I really appreciate your info.
Now, which Buckley went out and smoked cannabis out in international waters so he wouldn’t get in trouble with the law?
Here is an article on the subject. I don’t agree with William F. Buckley on this. I believe in totally eradicating drugs from our country– and saving our youth. I don’t believe in smoking anything– tobacco or marijuana. Extremely damaging to health.
https://www.nytimes.com/1972/11/29/archives/buckley-shifts-marijuana-stand-conservative-editor-says-use-should.html
Wondering: In a New York Times article titled Buckley Shifts Marijuana Stand by Glen Fowler dated November 29, 1972, William F. Buckley was asked whether he had ever smoked marijuana himself. Mr. Buckley laughed and said “Yes. It was on my boat, outside the three-mile-limit- I’m a law-and-order advocate you know. To tell the truth, marijuana didn’t do a thing for me.”
as william f would say: i rather went out to an area where national laws were no encumbrance.
Here is a link to a video of Buckley interviewing Ven. Abp. Fulton J. Sheen on “Firing Line:”
https://www.ccwatershed.org/2016/01/09/archbishop-fulton-j-sheen-william-f-biuckley/
This was only an excerpt from an interview with Ven. Abp. Fulton J. Sheen. Buckley actually had several interviews with Sheen, on “Firing Line.” You can find them, or excerpts from them, on the Internet.
I am sick of celebrity worship. Wm. F. Buckley, Jr. was a neocon who smeared The John Birch Society, saying the JBS was racist. Book you’re not supposed to read…”William F. Buckley, Jr., Pied Piper For the Establishment.” The JBS tried to warn us about the UN’s wicked plans for a One World Government. Thanks to Buckley’s lies, most Americans didn’t get the memo and now it’s too late.
Buckley, a self-described right-wing conservative/libertarian, was a public intellectual, making his secular intellectual contributions to society. That is what public intellectuals do. However, it is sad to see the stark contrast, in Buckley’s interviews with Ven. Abp. Fulton J. Sheen– between a secular, worldly interpretation of the world and events– and a religious interpretations, from a religious leader, like Sheen. I avoid radical, extremist right-wing/libertarian and conspiracy-theory groups like the John Birch Society, and many others—- although some of these groups have been right about some important issues. The JBS wrongfully attacked President Eisenhower, and accused him of possibly being a Communist sympathizer. As a result, Buckley and many others were offended, and dropped their interest in the JBS. Also, I recall, long ago, trying to politely deal with the obvious racism of enthusiastic JBS followers, who tried to convert people– very offensive! Get off my doorstep, please! And take your literature with you!
The John Birch Society had a big, official campaign, to fiercely oppose the Civil Rights Movement. They did not have a stated policy of racism, but many group members were racist. The JBS resented being called “racist,” although the organization formally opposed the Civil Rights Movement. On the other hand– I did not like the anti-American, leftist, subversive college groups, who sang subversive political folk songs in the early 1960s on college campuses, either. Groups such as the Chad Mitchell Trio, who sang satirical, leftist political songs, like the “John Birch Society Song”– and many others– were basically anti-American. These radical leftist liberals were as bad as the extreme radical right conservative/libertarians. These anti-American, socialist leftist “hippie” liberals contributed to the horrific destruction of our great Nation, in the 1960s.
Well, I found the “John Birch Society Song” on YouTube. Here it is. It is hilariously funny! Now, we need a bunch of satirical songs, mocking the liberal leftist, immoral, anarchic, lawless, anti-American hippies and college professors, political leaders, and politically-correct idiots who follow them. Here is a link to the Chad Mitchell Trio performing the “John Birch Society Song” on a college campus, in 1962:
It was called Okie from Muskogee.
i take it that means john denver, replacement lead singer for the CMT and composer of country roads was anti-american as well? what-ever…
No, “Okie from Muskogee” is a very funny country and western song, entirely different, sung by a different group. I found it on Youtube– good satirical song to mock the filthy, ignorant, immoral 1960s San Francisco liberals and hippies. Now I want to find a funny, satirical song to mock the Democrats of today, like Biden and Pelosi– and get radio stations to play it 24/7. Here is “Okie From Muskogee.” Get ready to flee Calif. for Oklahoma– or Texas.
https://g.co/kgs/7pmCxo
I don’t think you’d like Kid Rock. Too many F-words, maybe.
Never heard of Kid Rock. I never listen to rock “music,” I have always felt that it became totally Satanic in the late 1960s, and should be banned— period. There should have been tough laws, forbidding those kinds of performers. But to hear a nice, clean-cut young performer sing a pretty “pop” song on the radio, in the late 1950s or early 1960s– was really nice– although the song was put in the category of “rock n’ roll” music. For example, Pat Boone (also a devout Christian) singing “Love Letters in the Sand,” or “April Love,” etc. Lawrence Welk had a strong “good family values only” code of behavior, for all his performers. He invited his band and performers to bring their families with them, when traveling, to do their shows. Once he caught a man having an affair with a young woman,
and fired them both, immediately. Period. Lawrence Welk was a strong Catholic, and always attended Daily Mass.
I am not an Oklahoman nor a Texan. But I appreciate honesty, sincerity, integrity, and good values, in all cultures.
Not everybody in Texas and OK is honest and sincere with good values.
I simply said that I appreciate honesty, sincerity, integrity, and good values, anywhere. Many people are leaving California because it is notoriously evil, dope and crime-infested, with poor values, poor schools, a corrupt State (blue state) government, and a very low quality of life. Many ex-Californians have been re-locating to Texas. As the funny song “I’m Proud to be an Okie From Muskogee” relates– many people in Midwestern rural regions proudly uphold good family values, living right, and patriotism, while places like California are disintegrating into total corruption and ruin, because of immoral “hipsters” and liberals. These rural, Midwestern areas are much nicer, and much safer, than California. A better quality of life, by far. Great place to raise a family.