Rudy Giuliani Says GOP Voters Shouldn't Abandon Him Over Abortion
  
Regarding the following:
  
So, Rudy Giuliani says GOP voters shouldn't abandon him over his supporting the 
killing of unborn children.
  
Oh, no, I can't think of a better reason to tell Giuliani to get lost.
  
News Flash to Giuliani -- It is you who have abandoned the heart and soul of the  
tenets of the Republican party -- namely the protection of human life from conception 
to natural death.  All other issues, COMBINED, are still not as important as saving 
the lives of 1.3 million children who are killed every year, in what used to be the 
safest place on Earth, their mother's womb.
  
Either Giuliani is a poor political strategist not to know that he is bucking the 
odds in being pro-abortion and trying to win the Republican nomination, or he is 
doing the work of the devil, who would like nothing better than to have a pro-abortion
Republican and a pro-abortion Democrat running for the presidency -- he can't lose.
  
Odd,  how one time pro-life Democrats would switch in a heartbeat to be pro-abortion 
once they run for the presidency under the Democratic banner.  Why do they find it 
so much easier to sell their souls to the devil, than for Giuliani to give his soul 
to God?
  
I just can't figure that one out.  If Giuliani was pro-life, I do think he would win 
the presidency over Hillary Clinton.  Simply put -- Giuliani would sooner lose the 
presidency than to honor the Will of God.
  
Frank Joseph MD
  
DrFrank@abortiontruths.net
  
  
Rudy Giuliani Says GOP Voters Shouldn't Abandon Him Over Abortion
  
Virginia Beach, VA (LifeNews.com) -- Pro-abortion Republican presidential candidate 
Rudy Giuliani continued his efforts to reach out to primary voters who may be inclined
to support other candidates because of his position.
  
He told an audience at Regent University that the issue of terrorism is the most 
important single issue in the campaign. Giuliani gave a 30 minute speech Tuesday at 
the conservative Christian university and never mentioned abortion directly or how 
he is out of step with most Republican voters, who are pro-life.
  
But he did appear to acknowledge the divide between his views and those of GOP voters 
he needs to capture the party's nomination. "Don't expect you're going to agree with 
me on everything because that would be unrealistic. I don't agree with myself on 
everything," he said, using a self-deprecating tactic he's employed before.
  
"But if you agree with me about enough things, and you think I have the ability to 
lead then maybe I'm the person you can support," he added. He urged pro-life voters 
to look beyond their differences with him over abortion and appeared to say that the 
destruction of more than 1.2 million unborn children annually was not the top issue 
facing Americans.
  
"It's not about one issue, it's about many issues," he said, according to a transcript
 of his speech. "If there is one issue that dominates ... is the fact that Islamic 
terrorists are planning to kill us. They have succeeded in doing it and they want to 
do it again." Read the complete story.
  
  
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