Deciding Vote
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
Over 50 years ago, New York State Assemblyman George Michaels cast a single vote that changed the course of American history but destroyed his political career in the process. For the first time, Deciding Vote shares the now-forgotten story of how Michaels defied his conservative and religious constituents by casting the critical tie-breaking vote on a bill which legalized abortion in the state of New York, laying the groundwork for Roe v Wade. The film is a moving tribute to this lost act of political courage.
Citation
Main credits
Workman, Jeremy (film director)
Workman, Jeremy (film producer)
Lyons, Robert J. (film director)
Lyons, Robert J. (film producer)
Jacobson, Melissa (film producer)
Other credits
Cinematography, Gabriella Garcia-Pardo [and 4 others]; editing, Kristin Bye; music, Olivier Manchon, Claire Manchon.
Distributor subjects
Reproductive Justice,Abortion,US History,Keywords
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Medical history is being made this week in New York State.
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Over the last two weeks,
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the New York Assembly
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spent more than 13 hours
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debating a bill
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which would make abortion legal
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for any woman for any reason
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up to the 24th week of pregnancy.
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Advocates and enemies of the bill
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brought tremendous pressures
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to bear on legislators on the emotional issue.
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We're not going to sit quietly any longer.
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You are murdering us.
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The drama was summed up late yesterday
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when one man's vote made the difference.
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Mr. Speaker,
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I had hoped that this would never come to pass.
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I fully appreciate that this
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is the termination of my political career.
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But what's the use of getting elected
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or re-elected
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if you don't stand for something?
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Ayes 76, Nos 73, vote’s passed.
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Blasting you with total abandon and profanity.
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Very upset.
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Your floor speech today was a traitorous one.
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Does a person like you sleep at night?
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If so, I don't know how.
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Many women say they should have recourse to abortions.
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But this is often impossible
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since most states won't allow it.
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And those that do have such stringent medical requirements,
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few women qualify.
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Most women who want abortions must go around the law,
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and a million do that in this country every year.
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Have you gone through an abortion?
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Yes, I have.
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Why?
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I was pregnant and I could not have a child.
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And I don't think anyone has a right
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to bring an unwanted child into the world.
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My father was always concerned
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about the underdog, always concerned about people
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who had less than we did.
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He was known as a country lawyer.
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Every so often, people who came to him for help
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had no money.
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So they'd pay him in eggs or they'd bring him a chicken.
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We always had a moral conscience and a social conscience.
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And so when he was asked by the Democratic Party
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in Auburn to run for assembly, this is 1960,
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he agreed to do it.
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Auburn was a highly Republican, highly Catholic, small town.
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A very slow, even-tempered place.
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Really wasn't very exciting.
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When my father won,
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he was the first Democratic assemblyman from this county
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since the Civil War.
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And, you know what?
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He was the last.
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He had strong beliefs that a person in his position
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as an assemblyman owed a lot to his constituency.
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He knew how to serve his constituents
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so that they got what they needed,
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which is why he was able to get re-elected
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every couple of years by increasingly larger margins.
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He got re-elected five times.
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You know, every day he was at two or three events,
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especially when he was campaigning,
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clam bakes and banquets.
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There’s Michaels with Kennedy.
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Sometime this week, the Assembly will take up
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the abortion measure already passed by the Senate.
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If the Assembly approves the measure,
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it will become the most liberal abortion
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law in the country.
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A law that says only that a woman
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receive permission for an abortion
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from a licensed physician.
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This was a big thing,
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keeping in mind that 1970 was before
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the Supreme Court decision in Roe versus Wade.
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At that point in time, New York was the second
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most populous state in the United States,
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second only to California.
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It's a large segment of the United States
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that was affected by that. It was a big deal.
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It was the first proposed law anywhere to legalize abortion.
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In other states
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do we eliminate the restriction for rape and incest
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and things like that, but never do we legalize abortion.
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There are many
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who say that this bill is abortion on demand.
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I submit that we have abortion
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on demand in the state of New York right now.
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Any woman that wants an abortion can get one.
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If she has $25, she has it done here
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under the most abominable circumstances.
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And if she doesn't have the $25,
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please don't forget that she can abort herself.
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And regretfully,
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regretfully, this is happening
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more often than you or I like to admit.
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This was a bipartisan subject.
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There was a lot of Democrats
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and a lot of Republicans on one side,
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and there was a lot of Democrats,
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a lot of Republicans on the other side.
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I don't think you can analyze this bill on the basis
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of conservativism or liberalism,
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or any traditional philosophical approach.
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Of course, you do have the religious aspects to it,
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and that primarily, I believe, is where the opposition
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will come from.
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Catholics and Orthodox Jews have been warned
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by their religious leaders
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to avoid any involvement with abortion procedures.
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The Vatican has published a letter
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from Pope Paul’s
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Secretary of State,
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making it plain that the Roman Catholic Church
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still regards abortion as nothing more than homicide,
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even when the mother's life is threatened.
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You know, I was
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17 when this all came up,
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so I wasn't old enough to vote yet.
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I don't think I read the paper.
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I remember in religion class, they passed a petition
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around for us to sign opposing the law.
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And I remember that only
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one other girl and I didn't sign it.
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I was shocked.
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I was really shocked that all the boys signed it.
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And I was taken aback and said, you know,
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“What right do they have to say what women can or can't do
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with their lives?”
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People were talking about it.
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It was big news, there's no question.
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But my Dad was basically trying to stay out of it
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because he didn't want to upset anybody.
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His personal feeling about whether it should be legalized,
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we never talked about it. No girls in the family
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except for my sister-in-law.
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I didn't talk to him that much about it.
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You know, I was his daughter-in-law.
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However, he was well aware of the fact that his home base
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was the city of Auburn,
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which was dominated by a large bloc of population
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that was opposed to it, largely
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because of religious beliefs.
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We had a thriving law practice here in Auburn, very busy,
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and obviously one would have to consider
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that would probably be a negative effect on the practice
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because a certain number of people
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might leave as clients.
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So he made a promise to the county committee
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that he would vote against it.
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It is my hope that we will
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defeat this bill so unhumane and so unchristian.
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In the last ten years,
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367 young women in New York City were known
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to have died as a result of an abortion
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or an attempted one,
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either self-inflicted or performed
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by an unqualified person and under unsafe circumstances.
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All we're asking for is that these abortions
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be performed by a doctor under proper medical circumstances.
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The reason that the State of New York adopted
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the strict prohibition on abortion was for medical reasons
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because of the danger in an abortion
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in the early years of the 19th century.
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Now, this fact is no longer true.
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The medical reason for the law doesn't exist anymore.
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When does life begin?
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Can you answer that for me?
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Life begins at the moment of conception,
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but I am here as a legislator.
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I have an obligation to give a hearing
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and recognition to the fact
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that that is not the same view
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of all people under all circumstances.
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I've tried to get across
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and obviously not succeeded completely.
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Women do not have
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abortions unless they are compelled to do it
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by a sort of compulsion that no law you can draw
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would change.
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Could we have saved 367 young women from dying?
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That is the only question of conscience in my opinion,
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that anybody should be concerned with.
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I graduated college in ‘68.
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I was very involved in social action at the time.
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Anti-war, peace movement, civil rights.
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I was doing everything.
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My Dad said, “You know, I can't vote for the bill.”
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And I said, “I understand,
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just as long as your vote isn't the one to to defeat it.”
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I never dreamed
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that it would come to the point
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where his vote would be
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the one that was was so critical.
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This was typical of conversations
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between young adults
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and their parents in almost every house in the country,
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whether it was Vietnam,
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whether it was civil rights,
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whether it was equal pay for equal work.
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Our parents couldn't understand
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why we weren't happy with the way things were.
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So what was in our house was emblematic
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of what's going on all over the country,
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except my Dad was a state assemblyman.
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And unlike 99.9% of the rest of the country,
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he could actually do something about it.
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When I was a senior in college,
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I found out there had been several
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young women in my graduating class who had had abortions.
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This is back in the sixties.
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No one talked about it.
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It was taboo.
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I was lucky. I didn't have to face that problem.
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But I could see the look of fear in the girls’ eyes who did.
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Finally became something where I had to express my beliefs.
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I could see a change in him.
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It kind of opened his eyes.
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He had no idea it was as serious as it was.
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I probably said something like,
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“Well, you’re probably still going to vote the same way, aren't you?”
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Mr. Michaels.
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Mr. Miller.
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Mr. Murtaugh.
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Mr. Mitchell.
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Mr. Speaker, I didn't hear the vote.
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May I have it again?
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The bill needed 76 votes to pass and it got 75.
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He had voted opposed.
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He had voted opposed to the bill.
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Staffers and aides were in the chamber
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to see what happened
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and when they saw the number of votes switching against it,
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they said “It will never pass.”
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And they started walking out.
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Very often, the most organized groups
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that do the most lobbying, that make the most noise
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are groups that actually don't represent a majority.
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So very often
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you have to take quiet conversation with yourself.
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I know where people stand,
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but I have to do what I think is right.
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You're the only hope we have.
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You're the only vote we've got.
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Assemblyman George Michaels, an Upstate
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Democrat who had voted against the bill,
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asked for the floor.
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Mr. Speaker.
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Mr. Michaels.
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I ask your indulgence.
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I had hoped that this would never come to pass.
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Just before I left
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for Albany this week,
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my son Jim,
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who, as you recall, Mr. Speaker,
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gave the invocation
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to this Assembly
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on February 4th,
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and he said, “Dad, for God's sake,
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don't let your vote be the vote
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that defeats this bill.”
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Many people in my district
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may not only condemn me
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for what I'm about to do,
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but Mr. Speaker,
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I say to you in all candor
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and I say this very feelingly
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to all of you.
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What's the use of getting elected
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or re-elected
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if you don't stand for something?
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So, Mr. Speaker,
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I fully appreciate that this is the termination
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of my political career,
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but I cannot in good conscience stand here
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and thwart the obvious majority
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of this House,
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the members of whom I dearly love
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and for whom I have a great deal of affection.
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I’ll probably never come back here again
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to share these things with you.
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I therefore request you, Mr. Speaker
00:13:21.342 --> 00:13:24.053
to change my negative vote to an affirmative vote.
00:13:28.349 --> 00:13:31.852
Ayes 76, Nos 73, vote’s passed.
00:13:32.937 --> 00:13:34.855
Suddenly, all hell broke loose.
00:13:34.855 --> 00:13:35.981
In New York State today,
00:13:35.981 --> 00:13:36.899
the Senate passed
00:13:36.899 --> 00:13:38.442
a long disputed abortion bill.
00:13:38.442 --> 00:13:40.778
One of the nation's most sweeping abortion control bills.
00:13:40.778 --> 00:13:44.031
Making it entirely a decision to be made by a woman
00:13:44.031 --> 00:13:44.949
and her doctor.
00:13:44.949 --> 00:13:47.159
The bill now goes to Governor Nelson Rockefeller,
00:13:47.159 --> 00:13:48.786
who has said he will sign it.
00:13:48.786 --> 00:13:51.539
I was living in Cincinnati at the time and I'm
00:13:51.539 --> 00:13:52.665
in the middle of a meeting
00:13:52.665 --> 00:13:56.085
that evening and get this phone call from a station
00:13:56.085 --> 00:13:58.712
in Long Island telling me what happened.
00:13:59.171 --> 00:14:00.381
I said, “What?”
00:14:00.381 --> 00:14:02.466
The kids were watching Sesame Street
00:14:02.466 --> 00:14:03.592
when I got a phone call
00:14:03.592 --> 00:14:07.680
saying, “Switch stations, Grampa’s on TV.”
00:14:07.680 --> 00:14:11.267
The fact that CBS and NBC both had cameras
00:14:11.267 --> 00:14:13.143
in the legislative chambers
00:14:13.143 --> 00:14:15.062
showed how groundbreaking it was.
00:14:15.521 --> 00:14:16.605
I called my Mother,
00:14:16.605 --> 00:14:18.732
she said, “Oh my God, so much is happening,
00:14:18.858 --> 00:14:20.609
we can't talk.”
00:14:20.985 --> 00:14:22.987
Because the phone was just continually ringing.
00:14:22.987 --> 00:14:25.656
Your family was correct in their description of you,
00:14:25.656 --> 00:14:27.283
however, they were too kind.
00:14:27.283 --> 00:14:29.326
They left out the adjective dirty.
00:14:29.326 --> 00:14:31.954
Shocked and confused by your recent vote.
00:14:32.746 --> 00:14:35.165
What a disgusting display of emotion
00:14:35.165 --> 00:14:37.751
you put on for the benefit of television cameras.
00:14:37.751 --> 00:14:39.628
That was a slick trick you used.
00:14:39.628 --> 00:14:42.172
A man who lets his children
00:14:42.172 --> 00:14:43.924
make his decisions for him
00:14:43.924 --> 00:14:45.551
cannot be much of a man.
00:14:45.551 --> 00:14:47.845
All right, that was the K’s.
00:14:47.845 --> 00:14:50.431
I hope you choke on your chicken soup and matzah.
00:14:50.431 --> 00:14:52.725
Oh yeah, there was real trouble.
00:14:52.725 --> 00:14:55.603
A lot of people were bent on not nominating him
00:14:55.603 --> 00:14:58.147
for another term, and they succeeded.
00:14:58.689 --> 00:15:00.149
The ramifications?
00:15:00.149 --> 00:15:01.191
He lost.
00:15:01.859 --> 00:15:03.235
He lost his election.
00:15:03.235 --> 00:15:05.321
He lost the primary, he lost his election.
00:15:05.654 --> 00:15:06.655
This one just says,
00:15:06.655 --> 00:15:08.657
“Man, I am glad to see that
00:15:08.657 --> 00:15:10.784
you will be out of the assembly next year.
00:15:10.784 --> 00:15:12.953
You never had any business being there.
00:15:12.953 --> 00:15:15.372
You were voted in by the people of your county
00:15:15.372 --> 00:15:16.999
and not just your family.”
00:15:16.999 --> 00:15:18.500
Oh, we talked about it a lot.
00:15:18.500 --> 00:15:21.211
It had great ramifications on the family.
00:15:22.212 --> 00:15:23.047
My Mother,
00:15:23.047 --> 00:15:24.465
who had been born and raised
00:15:24.465 --> 00:15:27.134
in Auburn, felt that the community had turned on her.
00:15:28.218 --> 00:15:30.512
Those are the letters we got,
00:15:30.512 --> 00:15:31.805
two or three weeks.
00:15:33.098 --> 00:15:34.642
Then they stopped writing.
00:15:36.268 --> 00:15:38.395
But the positive stuff,
00:15:39.396 --> 00:15:40.481
that never ended.
00:15:40.481 --> 00:15:41.398
I remember being
00:15:41.398 --> 00:15:43.484
in this back bedroom at my Grandparents’ house
00:15:44.318 --> 00:15:47.154
when these women of all ages came,
00:15:47.154 --> 00:15:47.988
flew from all over the country,
00:15:47.988 --> 00:15:49.698
to this little town in upstate New York,
00:15:49.698 --> 00:15:51.825
to come to his bedside and thank him.
00:15:51.825 --> 00:15:53.744
I mean, it was incredible.
00:15:54.036 --> 00:15:56.163
The most liberal abortion law in the country
00:15:56.163 --> 00:15:57.623
went into effect yesterday.
00:15:57.623 --> 00:15:59.291
The Family Planning Information Service,
00:15:59.291 --> 00:16:00.501
would you hold on please?
00:16:00.709 --> 00:16:02.169
How far has this pregnancy advanced?
00:16:02.169 --> 00:16:04.672
I’ll call you right back and can you fly right in
00:16:04.672 --> 00:16:06.215
if I get that kind of referral for you?
00:16:06.215 --> 00:16:07.549
It’s simply a matter of how well
00:16:07.549 --> 00:16:09.718
New York City, principally the city,
00:16:09.718 --> 00:16:10.928
of course, to some extent,
00:16:10.928 --> 00:16:13.806
the rest of the state, handle this law here.
00:16:14.056 --> 00:16:16.475
If they handle it well, I think we'll have repeal
00:16:16.725 --> 00:16:19.144
throughout the country within two years at the most.
00:16:19.436 --> 00:16:20.813
I’m that optimistic.
00:16:21.105 --> 00:16:24.400
That bill became model legislation for other states
00:16:24.400 --> 00:16:25.609
and became picked up
00:16:25.609 --> 00:16:27.653
by the highest levels of the court system
00:16:27.653 --> 00:16:29.363
in this country in Roe versus Wade.
00:16:29.363 --> 00:16:30.739
New York State, among others,
00:16:30.739 --> 00:16:32.866
already have liberalized abortions.
00:16:33.075 --> 00:16:35.411
Now, the rest of the country must follow suit.
00:16:35.411 --> 00:16:37.246
Definitely because of Assemblyman Michaels,
00:16:37.246 --> 00:16:40.124
because if the bill just sort of roared to approval
00:16:40.124 --> 00:16:42.126
it might not have attracted so much attention.
00:16:42.126 --> 00:16:43.293
The Supreme Court agreed today
00:16:43.293 --> 00:16:44.128
to hear arguments
00:16:44.128 --> 00:16:46.505
on one of the most sensitive issues of the time,
00:16:46.505 --> 00:16:47.923
the legality of abortion.
00:16:47.923 --> 00:16:49.216
In a landmark ruling,
00:16:49.216 --> 00:16:52.261
the Supreme Court today legalized abortions.
00:16:52.469 --> 00:16:53.262
The majority
00:16:53.262 --> 00:16:55.180
in cases from Texas and Georgia said
00:16:55.180 --> 00:16:57.224
that the decision to end the pregnancy
00:16:57.224 --> 00:17:00.060
during the first three months belongs to the woman
00:17:00.060 --> 00:17:02.146
and her doctor, not the government.
00:17:02.479 --> 00:17:04.440
Thus, the anti-abortion laws
00:17:04.440 --> 00:17:07.651
of 46 states were rendered unconstitutional.
00:17:07.860 --> 00:17:10.154
This was probably the most important
00:17:11.321 --> 00:17:12.698
point in my life.
00:17:12.698 --> 00:17:14.825
This was not his personal passion.
00:17:14.992 --> 00:17:19.288
So the fact that he really listened to his middle son
00:17:19.288 --> 00:17:20.539
and his daughter-in-law,
00:17:20.539 --> 00:17:22.041
who I can only imagine
00:17:22.041 --> 00:17:24.418
were talking to him in pretty desperate tones,
00:17:24.793 --> 00:17:26.295
you know, he took it in.
00:17:26.295 --> 00:17:29.465
He took it in and he did something about it.
00:17:29.757 --> 00:17:32.718
He knew what he was doing and he did it at risk of
00:17:32.718 --> 00:17:34.928
of the fact that he would lose his political position
00:17:34.928 --> 00:17:36.055
with his vote.
00:17:36.055 --> 00:17:38.307
Not many people do that anymore.
00:17:39.099 --> 00:17:41.101
You know, we've talked about some of the perspectives
00:17:41.101 --> 00:17:41.894
on leadership.
00:17:41.894 --> 00:17:45.230
We've started a really great piece of work about,
00:17:45.731 --> 00:17:47.483
you know, feminist leadership.
00:17:47.483 --> 00:17:49.485
But now I wanted to move us to start
00:17:49.485 --> 00:17:52.404
thinking about what I think is most critical,
00:17:52.404 --> 00:17:53.405
and that is
00:17:53.405 --> 00:17:56.784
the element of leadership that requires real moral courage.
00:17:57.159 --> 00:18:00.287
I want today to talk about George Michaels.
00:18:00.579 --> 00:18:03.332
My concern is that too many of the people who exercise
00:18:03.332 --> 00:18:04.249
moral courage
00:18:04.249 --> 00:18:06.543
don't have a legacy because we don't talk about them.
00:18:06.543 --> 00:18:08.504
If you're looking for a model
00:18:08.504 --> 00:18:09.505
for doing that, for
00:18:09.505 --> 00:18:10.506
sticking your neck out,
00:18:10.506 --> 00:18:12.925
for taking a position of moral courage,
00:18:12.925 --> 00:18:15.969
Assemblyman George Michaels is right at the top of my list.
00:18:25.979 --> 00:18:28.816
It's not on his tombstone, but he always said,
00:18:29.483 --> 00:18:33.445
“The most important thing you can ever say about anyone
00:18:35.447 --> 00:18:37.449
is he made a difference.”
00:18:41.078 --> 00:18:42.913
And my Dad made a difference.
00:18:43.956 --> 00:18:46.333
What's the use of getting elected
00:18:47.084 --> 00:18:48.669
or re-elected
00:18:49.753 --> 00:18:52.047
if you don't stand for something?