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Florida Governor Jeb Bush intervenes in right-to-die
case: A cruel pandering to the religious right
By Joseph Kay
31 October 2003
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Florida Governor Jeb Bush issued an order on October 21 directing
doctors to resume life support to vegetative patient Terri Schiavo.
The order came six days after Schiavo had been taken off feeding
tubes. Jeb Bushthe brother of President George W. Bushacted
in accordance with a statute passed that day by the state legislature
giving him the authority to overrule a court decision.
At his October 28 press conference, President Bush said he
supported the actions of his brother in the Schiavo case.
Terri Schiavo is once again being artificially fed. Her husband,
Michael Schiavo, who fought in court for the right to remove the
feeding tubes, will file a suit this week challenging the constitutionality
and legality of the new statute and Jeb Bushs order. Michael
Schiavo has been opposed by Terris biological family, which
has sought to block the removal of the feeding tubes.
The legislation passed in the Florida House and Senate and
the order issued by Bush are without legal foundation and in conflict
with fundamental democratic and constitutional principles. Bushs
order is a cruel maneuver, exploiting a personal and family tragedy
for crass political motives. It is calculated to solidify Bushs
support among Christian fundamentalist layers that have taken
up the Schiavo caseelements that form a principal base of
support for the Republican Partyand whip up the most backward
social forces.
Terri Schiavo suffered temporary heart failure in 1990, depriving
her brain of oxygen and leaving it severely damaged. For the past
13 years she has been in a persistent vegetative state. This is
a medical term for a condition characterized by wakefulness and
spontaneous breathing without conscious functions or thought.
Terri Schiavo is capable of only reflexive activity, and must
be sustained through a feeding tube.
She left no living will giving instructions on how far doctors
should go to maintain her life in the event of such a debilitating
accident. Because she is incapable of having thoughts on the matter,
let alone communicating these thoughts to doctors and her family,
guardianship has been transferred to her husband. This is in accordance
with the legally established hierarchy of guardianship. If she
had no husband, guardianship would fall to her adult children,
and if she had no children, to her parents.
The case is a tragic one by any measurefor Terri Schiavo
and for her family, including her husband. Disputes between family
members over whether to maintain life support for an individual
in a vegetative state or with a terminal illness are, unfortunately,
not uncommon. They are never easy to resolve, but there is a definite
legal procedure for doing so.
A Florida law passed in 1990 stipulates that a person in a
vegetative state can be removed from life support if it can be
demonstrated that it is their wish to do so. In 1995 the US Supreme
Court ruled that a person being fed through a tube could be permitted
to die if clear and convincing evidence indicated
that that was what the person wanted. Michael Schiavo has fought
in court for years to this end.
A Florida court ruled in favor of Mr. Schiavo in 2001, finding
that the evidence was clear that Terri would not want to continue
in her state. The Schindler familyTerris biological
kinrepeatedly appealed this decision until all appeals were
exhausted earlier this month.
The courts decision rested in part on the fact that Terri
Schiavos condition is irreversible. It is the consensus
of the medical community that any person who has been in a vegetative
state for a prolonged period has no chance of emerging from it,
since the parts of the brain that have been damaged are incapable
of being regenerated.
The family has made much of a video that appears to show Schiavo
reacting with others, as well as a widely published picture that
appears to show her smiling at her mother. However, these reactions
are purely involuntarycontrolled by areas of her brain that
still functionand do not indicate any conscious activity.
Like any animal, a human being will react to certain external
stimuli without the activity of the cerebral cortexwhich
in Terris case is completely destroyedand therefore
without thought or genuine awareness.
Speaking about vegetative patients, Dr. Walter Bradley, a neurologist
at the University of Miami School of Medicine, noted, You
squeeze their hand and say, Darling I love you, and
they look at you. You think, Its wonderful. My loved
one is coming back to me. But its reflex.
He continued: You can destroy a very extensive part of
the cerebral cortex, yet that human being will open their eyes
in the morning and will follow movements that are in front of
the face, will still have some reactions to pain...But when you
talk about spontaneous [that is, not merely reflexive] speech
and spontaneously looking at something, none of those things are
present.
A violation of the separation of church and
state
Given the medical facts of the case and the status of the husband
as guardian, the decision by the courts followed naturally. Normally
this would have been the end of the dispute.
What distinguishes the case of Terri Schiavo is the forceful
intervention of right-wing forces with whom the Schindler family
has become aligned. Relative to their small size, these forces
exert a vastly disproportionate influence on the politics of the
Republican Party, and the entire country.
The Schindler family has received the support of a number of
right-wing groups, and has worked closely with Randall Terry,
the founder and former leader of the anti-abortion group Operation
Rescue. Operation Rescue is a religious fundamentalist organization
aligned with various evangelical Christian and ultra-right
groups around the Republican Party. Pat Andersen, the
lawyer for the Schindler family, is currently being paid by the
Alliance Defense Fund, a legal organization founded by evangelical
Christians.
These groups, together with right-wing talk show hosts and
politicians, have galvanized a small layer in Florida, prompting
thousands of e-mails to Florida congressmen and daily prayer vigils
outside of the hospice where Terri Schiavo is being cared for.
The Christian right has linked the Schiavo case to a broader
campaign in the state and nationally to end abortion rights, push
for prayer in the public schools and promote other planks in its
anti-democratic agenda. Christian fundamentalists and their Republican
allies have long campaigned against the right to die
on the basis that only God can make decisions on life and death,
a belief that does not prevent them from supporting the death
penalty. Underlying all of their arguments are religious conceptions
such as belief in the immortality of the soul. Jeb Bush has pandered
to such forces throughout his tenure as governor, and the Schiavo
case has provided him with another opportunity.
Bush has attempted to present his decision to intervene as
an outgrowth of his own personal values, not a response to pressure
from the Christian right. Because he is a Roman Catholic and values
life, he maintains, he was driven to intervene.
Even if one were to take him at his word, this explanation would
remain an overt affront to core constitutional principles, since
it is an endorsement of the imposition of religious beliefs by
the state on the public at large, an establishment of religion
expressly forbidden by the First Amendment to the US Constitution.
A dangerous precedent
In order to advance the agenda of the Christian right it was
necessarygiven the solid legal foundation of the courts
decision in support of Michael Schiavofor Bush and the Florida
legislature to violate, in addition to the separation of church
and state, a number of other constitutional principles.
The bill passed by the legislature was narrowly tailored to
apply only to the one case. Without mentioning Schiavos
name specifically, it allows the governor to issue a stay
of a court decision to remove feeding tubes under conditions that
are particular to the Schiavo case. It is valid for only 15 days,
beginning retroactively on October 15. Such a case-specific bill
is considered to be a violation of due process, since laws are
supposed to be general. It is not in the power of the legislature
to decide cases of fact or determine the fate of particular persons.
Otherwise, the foundation of the legal system collapses, since
any law can be contravened on a case-by-case basis by legislative
or executive fiat.
The violation of the privacy rights of the individuals involvedMichael
and Terri Schiavo in particularwas highlighted by the fact
that the bill was stampeded through the legislature in one day.
Most of the congressmen knew little of the case or the court rulings.
It is well established in American constitutional jurisprudence
that there is a right to privacy that limits the intrusive powers
of government into personal matters. The Schiavo case presents
a crude and heartless contravention of this right, with the government
stepping in to dictate a matter of the most sensitive and personal
nature.
In intervening, the legislature and the governor violated established
separation of powers provisions of the Constitution. The
courts should be deciding such cases, not a legislature jumping
in, said Bill Allen, professor of bioethics and law at the
University of Florida.
The bill basically says that the governor is not bound by the
decisions of the courts. Law professor Steven Gay of Florida State
University noted, The statue tells the governor that he
does not have to enforce judicial decisions. Thats sort
of George Wallace territory, referring to the Alabama governor
who defied court orders mandating the desegregation of schools.
In considering the significance of the intervention, one need
only ask what would happen if the court decided that the Schiavo
law was unconstitutional. Could the legislature then intervene
and issue a stay on that court ruling?
In promoting the perspective of the right-wing forces behind
the Schiavo case, the media has played a critical role. Right-wing
pundits have called for halting the execution of Terri
Schiavo, while the mass media has continually aired photographs
and video clips that give a false impression of her conscious
activity. This has done much to legitimize the position of the
right-wing forces aligned with the Schindler family.
Dr. Ron Cranford, a Minneapolis neurologist who testified as
an independent expert in earlier hearings on the case, noted that
the video and photographs are part of a massive propaganda
campaign, which has been very successful because it deludes the
public into thinking [Terry Schiavo] is really there. Throughout
the entire conflict the media has been a persistent source of
misinformation regarding the medical issues involved. For example,
Schiavo is often presented as being unable to communicate her
thoughts, when in fact she is unable to have thoughts in
the first place, given the destruction of her cerebral cortex.
The media has provided the venue for a propaganda campaign
by a small group of religious fundamentalists. This is a product,
on the one hand, of the medias generally right-wing character,
and, on the other hand, of its persistent tendency to treat important
legal and ethical issues in the most sensationalist manner and
to appeal to the most backward conceptions.
Jeb Bush is in his second and last term of governor, and though
there are rumors that he may run for president sometime in the
future, the motivations behind his pandering to the religious
right go beyond his personal political ambitions. They are bound
up with the national strategy of the Bush White House and the
Republican Party, as underscored by President Bushs endorsement
of his brothers intervention.
According to these calculations, the Florida Governors
action will help win Florida for his brother in the 2004 election
by mobilizing the partys right-wing base. More broadly,
the move is an indication of the type of politics upon which the
Republican Party plans to base its national campaign in the 2004
elections.
The exploitation of the Schiavo tragedy coincides with the
passage in Congress of a bill banning certain types of late-term
abortion. It is on such so-called social issues favored
by the extreme rightopposition to the right to abortion,
anti-gay agitation, the demand for prayer in the schoolscombined
with the promotion of fear and hysteria associated with the war
on terrorism, that George W. Bush plans to largely base
his campaign for a second term as president.
See Also:
The Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of
2003: Republicans drum up support from religious right
[24 October 2003]
US Republican right defends religious
zealot general
[22 October 2003]
Bitter recriminations in Bush camp
Pat Robertson calls for nuking the State Department
[15 October 2003]
The Christian right
and the Republican Party: the dirty secret of American politics
[6 March 2000]
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