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McDonnell, a Roman Catholic political protege of religious broadcaster Pat Robertson who has been mentioned as a possible vice-presidential candidate on a ticket with Mitt Romney, backed down on Wednesday, saying: "Mandating an invasive procedure in order to give informed consent is not a proper role for the state." He said he supports legislation that would require pre-abortion sonograms, but not the invasive variety. It was just the latest reversal over the past few weeks on the issue of women's health. After a three-day furor, the Susan G. Komen breast cancer charity dropped plans to withdraw funding from Planned Parenthood. And President Barack Obama was forced to back off requiring religiously affiliated universities, hospitals and other organizations to provide free birth control their employees. How much damage is done to McDonnell and the GOP depends on how broadly the issue permeates pop culture and who's watching, said Merle Black, a political science professor at Emory University in Atlanta. "A lot of people watching those shows wouldn't necessarily support McDonnell anyway. The question is whether it's reaching and turning off independents and especially women," Black said. But Jarding warned: "When the female anatomy becomes a policy term in your state and the governor is the guy identified with that, that's not where you want to be."
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