http://www.mclaughlin.com/library/transcript.htm?id=677MR. MCLAUGHLIN: Did she try to initiate any anti-abortion legislation or regulation?
MR. BUCHANAN: You can't -- that's all up, John -- that's going to be Roe v. Wade.
MR. MCLAUGHLIN: Now, did she try to do it in any part of her career, in her administrative capacity up there? MR. BUCHANAN: Where she wins on --
MR. MCLAUGHLIN: No? No? No?
MR. BUCHANAN: She had a baby that has Down Syndrome and she elected to keep that baby. And that is testimony that this is a right-to-life woman, and she won't deny it. She's feminist for life in Alaska.
MS. CROWLEY: She is Ann-Margret in "Kitten with a Whip." (Laughter.) She is fabulous, okay? And it raises the question, where has she been? The Republican Party has been craving somebody new and fresh and dynamic.
Kitten With a Whip (1964)
Review Summary
An aspiring senator finds himself in deep trouble when he tangles with a sultry teenage girl gone bad in this campy drama. Ann-Margret stars as Jody, a tough customer who escapes from reform school by stabbing a matron and attempting to burn down the building and then takes refuge in a house owned by ambitious politician David Patton (John Forsythe). Despite the hellcat's ample charms, the would-be officeholder wants nothing to do with her and tries to drive her away. She responds by practically taking him hostage, with the help of a gang of delinquent friends. An unexpected act of violence causes more trouble, leading Jody to hijack David and force him to a drive a getaway car to Mexico. The stilted dialogue, over-the-top situations, and rampant sexual innuendo will prove particularly attractive to camp aficionados, who should be delighted by the presence of such recognizable figures as Ann-Margret and Forsythe in the central roles. ~ Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide
http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/97895/Kitten-With-a-Whip/overview