Anti-abortion leaders undeterred as Trump for the first time says he'd
veto a federal abortion ban
Send a link to a friend
[October 03, 2024]
By CHRISTINE FERNANDO
CHICAGO (AP) — Anti-abortion leaders said Wednesday that they're
undeterred after Donald Trump said he would veto a federal abortion ban,
the first time he has explicitly said so after previously refusing to
answer questions on the subject.
During Tuesday night's vice presidential debate, the Republican
presidential nominee posted on his social media platform Truth Social
that “everyone knows I would not support a federal abortion ban, under
any circumstances, and would, in fact, veto it.”
He then said that abortion rights should be left up to the states — his
most common response to questions about the issue since Roe v. Wade was
overturned by a conservative majority that included three of Trump's own
appointees to the Supreme Court. In the two years since the ruling,
abortion rights have emerged as a major vulnerability for the GOP, which
has struggled to find a consistent message on the path forward, while
driving turnout for Democrats.
With the election less than five weeks away, Trump has been trying to
thread a divide between his own base of anti-abortion supporters and the
majority of Americans who support abortion rights. The former president
is trying to make up ground with women — a group that views Democratic
nominee Kamala Harris more favorably nationally — in the handful of
battleground states that will likely determine the winner.
“Trump’s statement last night is just one more example of Republicans
trying desperately to rebrand themselves on the issue of abortion,” said
Ryan Stitzlein, vice president of political and government relations at
the national abortion rights organization Reproductive Freedom for All.
“But at the end of the day, the only thing that has actually changed is
their rhetoric on the issue. It’s their reaction to seeing the political
consequences for this deeply unpopular policy position.”
Major anti-abortion groups, while voicing disagreement with Trump, said
they weren’t discouraged by his latest comments on a national abortion
ban.
Kristan Hawkins, president of the national anti-abortion Students for
Life of America, said, “There are differing approaches in the pro-life
movement on how best to achieve our goal.”
“Donald Trump has his own strategy to get the federal government out of
the business of abortion,” she said. “We might disagree with him about
the long-term goals of our movement, but in the short term, we can work
with that direction.”
Hawkins added that there are other avenues Trump could use to restrict
abortion nationally, including through defunding Planned Parenthood and
appointing anti-abortion officials to lead major federal departments.
Carol Tobias, president of the National Right to Life Committee, said
she wasn’t surprised by Trump’s remarks.
“But quite frankly, unless something really unusual happens in this
election, neither side is going to have the votes in Congress to pass a
national law,” she said. “So that wasn’t really at the top of our list
anyway.”
Angela Vasquez-Giroux, vice president of communications for Planned
Parenthood Votes, meanwhile, said she doesn't believe Trump's vow to
veto a national abortion ban, calling him “a legendary flip-flopper who
says whatever he thinks helps him most in that moment.” She said that
even without a national abortion ban, Trump would be able to restrict
abortion across the country by appointing anti-abortion judges and
federal officials or reviving the Comstock Act, a 19th-century
“anti-vice” law that abortion rights advocates say could imperil access
to medication abortion.
[to top of second column]
|
Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump
gestures at a campaign event at Discovery World, Friday, Oct. 1,
2024, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Trump had not previously said whether he would veto a national ban.
In fact, he repeatedly declined to say if he would veto such a ban
during September’s presidential debate with Harris, although it is
extremely unlikely that either political party would be able to win
enough votes in Congress to pass national abortion legislation.
In August, Trump’s running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, said the former
president would veto a national ban. But Trump demurred on the
subject during the September debate, saying, “I didn’t discuss it
with JD.”
The question has since lingered amid Trump’s shifting stances on the
crucial issue.
Trump senior adviser Jason Miller on Tuesday rejected the idea that
Trump had changed his position on the matter.
“President Trump made clear, which he’s said all along, it should be
back in the states,” he told reporters after the debate. “Nothing
changed. He’s always said it should be back in the states.”
Vance falsely claimed during Tuesday's debate that he never
supported a national ban himself, though he said in 2022 that he
“certainly would like abortion to be illegal nationally" and
supported Sen. Lindsey Graham's proposal to impose a national ban on
abortion at 15 weeks of pregnancy. In 2023, he voiced support for a
“minimum national standard” for abortion, including at 15 weeks of
pregnancy.
Republicans have been accused of attempting to recast federal
abortion restrictions as “minimum national standards” in order to
distort their own stances on the issue amid the political
unpopularity of the GOP's position on abortion.
“It doesn’t matter what they call it," Vasquez-Giroux said. “What
matters is how it’s going to impact everyone that we know and love
and care about. If you call it a limit or a ban, it’s the same
thing, and everyday people will suffer.”
Around 6 in 10 Americans think their state should generally allow a
person to obtain a legal abortion if they don’t want to be pregnant
for any reason, according to a July poll from The Associated Press-NORC
Center for Public Affairs Research. Voters in seven states,
including conservative-leaning Kentucky, Montana and Ohio, have
either protected abortion rights or defeated attempts to restrict
them in statewide votes over the past two years.
Harris' campaign, meanwhile, has maintained that Trump would sign a
national abortion ban if reelected and blamed him for the abortion
restrictions in swaths of the country since the overturning of Roe
v. Wade, which once granted a constitutional right to abortion.
Trump has repeatedly taken credit for appointing the three Supreme
Court justices who helped overturn Roe v. Wade and boasted about
returning the abortion question to the states. But voters don't have
a direct say through citizen initiatives in about half of states,
and in states that will have abortion on the ballot this year,
anti-abortion groups and their Republican allies are using a wide
array of strategies to counter proposed ballot initiatives.
___
Associated Press writer Jill Colvin in New York contributed to this
report.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |