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Republicans reassess strategy on social issues

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With the legislature just beginning its session, the outcome is anyone’s guess.

“I don’t think McCrory will be leading them in that direction,” says Virginia Gray, a professor of political science at the University of North Carolina. “But on the other hand, I don’t know that he’s going to veto this legislation — and it might not matter if he does.”

Virginia is a good state to watch, because it will hold a gubernatorial election this coming November. A true detente among Republicans on social issues has proved elusive, despite GOP leaders’ efforts. Conservative Republicans have been pressing ahead with abortion-related measures, confident voters will back them.

“I’m not going to quit trying just because people pressure me,” says Delegate Bob Marshall, a sponsor of many bills that address social issues — or, as he calls them, “the things Republicans don’t want to talk about.” The issues have failed to gain traction, he says, because of the leadership’s desire to quash them. “Republicans are ducking this.”

Meanwhile, Democrats have introduced measures of their own, including a handful of efforts aimed at repealing the controversial ultrasound requirement enacted last year. It was a final attempt to make the requirement optional that stirred advocates on both sides recently in Richmond, as the bill was set for a Senate hearing. Republican Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, the outspoken social conservative and all-but-certain nominee for governor, backed the bill, reportedly telling the Democratic sponsor, Sen. Ralph Northam, that he’d push Republicans to approve it.

It was a sign of Cuccinelli looking to moderate his reputation, analysts said, citing worries about his chances this November, when he’ll likely face Democrat Terry McAuliffe. But in a hastily convened committee hearing — a “kangaroo court,” as Northam put it — Republicans united to kill the bill. The 2013 legislative session appears likely to end this week without a repeat of last year’s fights over abortion.

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