Las Vegas Review-Journal

VP’S fight for abortion rights should scare GOP

- Eugene Robinson Eugene Robinson is a columnist for The Washington Post.

No sitting president or vice president had ever visited an abortion clinic before Vice President Kamala Harris did so Thursday. That says pretty much everything you need to know about how former President Donald Trump’s ideologica­l stacking of the Supreme Court has shifted the politics of abortion. Democrats are leaning in, while Republican­s bicker and fret.

The Biden-harris reelection campaign sees reproducti­ve rights as one of its most powerful issues heading into the fall. Trump reportedly understand­s that he is vulnerable on abortion, and he is already trying to have it both ways — boasting to the Republican base about overturnin­g Roe v. Wade, while dissemblin­g before wider audiences. The task for President Joe Biden and Harris will be to make Trump and his party own the consequenc­es of taking away women’s freedom to control their own bodies.

Politicall­y, this should be a layup for Democrats. Since the Supreme Court’s 2022 ruling nullifying abortion rights, voters across the country — even in red states such as Kansas, Kentucky and Ohio — have approved ballot measures to restore those rights to the extent possible.

Meanwhile, however, Republican officials are rushing to fill the vacuum created by the demise of Roe with ever-more-draconian restrictio­ns on reproducti­ve rights — six-week bans on abortion as legislated (but not yet imposed) in Florida, for example, or even total bans as now in effect in South Dakota. The most extreme example, so far, is the Alabama Supreme Court’s recent ruling that threw into question the future of in vitro fertilizat­ion, which state legislator­s have scrambled to try to reverse.

Horror stories are legion about women whose lives have been threatened or whose health has been damaged by the denial of abortion care. Women who have been emotionall­y tortured by laws forcing them to carry unviable fetuses to term. Women forced to travel hundreds of miles to obtain abortions in states where the procedure is still legal.

Minnesota, where Harris campaigned Thursday, is one of those havens. According to the Society of Family Planning, a nonprofit that tracks reproducti­ve care, the estimated monthly number of abortions in the state rose by 33% in the year following the demise of Roe v. Wade — presumably from an influx of women fleeing states where “Handmaid’s Tale” restrictio­ns are now the law.

Public opinion is clearly with the Democrats on this issue. According to a new poll by KFF, 66% of American adults “support a law guaranteei­ng a federal right to abortion.” That whopping majority includes 86% of Democrats, 67% of independen­ts and even 43% of Republican­s.

Some GOP strategist­s, including former Trump aide Kellyanne Conway, have urged Republican­s to stop pushing extremist policies and instead propose a “compromise” 16-week national abortion ban. Trump has flirted with taking that stance, though he hasn’t fully settled on it.

But the KFF poll found that 58% of adults surveyed said they would oppose such a federal law. One wonders what it is about the concept of bodily autonomy that Republican­s don’t understand. It turns out that what Americans want — or want to reclaim — is the legal framework we had for nearly 50 years, before Trump’s three far-right appointees tipped the balance on the Supreme Court; women should have the fundamenta­l right to choose, and abridgment of that right can only go so far.

An issue that once galvanized the GOP has become a minefield for Trump and the party. One evening last month, according to NBC, Trump went table-hopping among dinner patrons at his Mar-a-lago Club, asking what they thought about the antiaborti­on views of several of the Republican­s he might pick as his running mate. Did they think Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina went too far by supporting a six-week ban? Would that be a drag on the ticket?

While Republican­s pull in all directions at once, Biden and Harris have been clear and consistent. During his State of the Union speech this month, Biden told the Supreme Court justices in attendance that “you’re about to realize just how much” political power women have in this country. He favors federal legislatio­n that would “restore Roe v. Wade as the law of the land.”

Harris, however, is taking the lead on protecting abortion rights. Her Minnesota trip was the sixth stop on what she calls her “Fight for Reproducti­ve Freedoms” campaign tour, which has included visits to swing states such as Wisconsin, Georgia, Michigan and Arizona. Republican­s have made no coherent effort to respond, which is understand­able, because they have no idea what their response should be.

The GOP’S big problem is that what Trump ought to say is the one thing he never, ever says: I’m sorry.

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