You have it right, OVM. I agree with Tallcal until he started with #3. He does it tho... comparing apples to zucchini. No big deal.
I know what they're doing here. They're trying to pump up the one-issue conservatives into a frenzy. Same way Obama has played the class warfare card with McCain's 7 houses. I don't think he was trying to hide anything; just that he keeps his nose out of his wife's business (which might not be a good idea if you want to be president).
I'm middle of the road when it comes to abortion. Before, I was pro-choice. Once they told us our baby had Trisomy-18 (a genetic defect worse than Downs), it sent my head spinning. I would be tore up had that diagnosis been correct, and we aborted Logan. But I also know it would've been the right thing to do, being that he most likely would have been in constant pain. To have a cut and dry pro-life law is not something I would not want to see. On the other hand, what we have now is unsat, when we should be focusing on personal responsibility. Using abortion as birth control is wrong, any way you cut it. Babies are too precious to just throw away. Babies are not a "burden", as Obama has stated in the past, when referring to the possibilities of his daughters being pregnant at a young age.
My wife, during her first nursing job, watched 2nd trimester fetuses being born alive, into a bedpan, put into saline, then off it went, on its way to a bio-hazard bag. Granted, that was 20 yrs ago, so I don't think that's the way it works now.
My opinion, as far as answering the question at hand, is plain and simple... government should not legislate morality, but the ignorant need governing. In this case, wouldn't it be moral to make sure the fetus (baby) is dead before it comes out of the womb? Moral for us, not the baby. Because the baby was already condemned to its fate. If the doctor doesn't have the decency to do the job before the baby sucks air, then it should be the responsibility of the hospital to keep it alive until it expires. But, like I said, that should be a vote of conscience, not of parliament.