After the first presidential debate in Denver and the vice presidential debate in Kentucky, several issues remain sorely in need of attention: women’s health, immigration, and same-sex marriage. On Tuesday, President Obama and Governor Romney will meet at Hofstra University to answer questions on both foreign and domestic policies from undecided voters in the Nassau County area. In town hall format, each candidate will have two minutes to respond and neither will be allowed a closing statement.
Near the end of the vice presidential debate, Martha Raddatz asked Joe Biden and Paul Ryan to speak personally about abortion, given the candidates’ religious perspectives. Biden answered that he accepts Catholic teachings and is personally pro-life but said, “ I refuse to impose that on others.”
Ryan also reflected on his belief that life begins at conception, saying, “The policy of a Romney administration is to oppose abortion with exceptions for rape, incest and life of the mother.”
These responses barely scratch the surface. Considering the next president’s Supreme Count appointees would have the power to overturn Roe v. Wade and anti-abortion legislation is popping up in various states. For example, the Virginia legislature passing a bill that would require ultrasounds as a preliminary procedure to abortion.









