Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Facts about Hovde’s abortion stance

- Hope Karnopp

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Eric Hovde has made his current stance on abortion public: He supports exceptions for rape, incest and the life of the mother, and also thinks voters should decide the issue.

Hovde made his position clear when asked by PolitiFact Wisconsin to respond to a radio ad that targeted his stances on abortion, based on comments he made while running for the same office in 2012.

Here are the main claims on Hovde’s abortion stance in the ad, which was launched by A Better Wisconsin Together, a progressiv­e research and communicat­ions group:

“Hovde said, ‘I am totally opposed to abortion’ and ‘I’m 100% pro-life.’ And he supported overturnin­g Roe v. Wade,” says the ad, which began airing on Feb. 21, 2024, a day after Hovde officially entered the race.

The ad also implies that Hovde opposes exceptions for rape and incest, because he’s been backed by Wisconsin Right to Life, an group that tracks its endorsed candidates’ stances on rape and incest.

“With views like that, Hovde could be a crucial vote in favor of a national abortion ban,” the ad says.

We ultimately do not rate the claims in the ad. Hovde’s position has changed since he first ran for U.S. Senate in 2012 and made those claims, and he is just now publicly stating his new position.

But let’s dig into the claims for the purposes of this PolitiFact as the race gets started.

Claims based on statements Hovde made while campaignin­g in 2012

When asked for backup, A Better Wisconsin Together communicat­ions director Lucy Ripp sent a memo that details the sources behind each claim in the ad.

Let’s tackle the claims one by one.

First, the ad claims Hovde said he is “totally opposed to abortion.” That comment comes from Hovde’s appearance on the Jerry Bader Show in 2012, when he was running in the Republican primary for Senate.

Hovde was asked to address concerns from voters that his charity donated to embryonic stem cell research.

“I am a strong believer in pro-life. I am totally opposed to abortion,” Hovde told the conservati­ve radio show.

He defended donating to research into multiple sclerosis, which he was diagnosed with in 1991, but disputed his money went to embryonic stem cell research.

So the ad is correct in the first aspect: Hovde — albeit in 2012 — said he was “totally opposed to abortion.”

A Better Wisconsin Together says the second claim, that Hovde said he is “100% pro-life,” came from the same radio interview.

Hovde didn’t say “100%” exactly, rather that he is a “strong believer.” While that caveat is important, the sentiment is similar enough.

Now for the third claim: Did Hovde say he supports overturnin­g Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court case that guaranteed abortion rights?

That claim is based on a WisconsinE­ye interview with Hovde. That was also in 2012, a full decade before Roe v. Wade was, in fact, overturned.

Hovde did not elaborate on his stance when asked if he thought Roe v. Wade should be overturned, beyond saying “yes” and repeating his answer when asked a second time.

So, all of those things, apart from one of the wordings, are things that Hovde did say. But a lot has changed since 2012.

Some Wisconsin Republican­s have softened their stance on abortion after Democrats mobilized voters on the issue in 2022.

Let’s check in with Hovde’s campaign to set the record straight on his stance.

He supports exceptions for rape, incest, life of the mother

Ben Voelkel, a spokesman for Hovde’s campaign, sent a statement from Hovde that shows his position has changed since 2012.

Hovde said: “I believe we need exceptions for cases of rape, incest and to protect the life of the mother.”

The ad does not explicitly state that Hovde himself opposes exceptions for rape and incest, but suggests he would because he has been supported by Wisconsin Right to Life in the past.

Wisconsin Right to Life did endorse Eric Hovde in 2012, as well as Tommy Thompson, who eventually won the Republican primary.

“Eric Hovde has indicated strong support for federal right-to-life issues should he be elected,” the antiaborti­on group said.

The group said in 2023 that it opposes exceptions for rape and incest, but does support emergency medical exceptions.

Supports posing issue to voters via referendum

Here’s the other part of Hovde’s stance. He says: “It is clear after the Dobbs decision that the people of Wisconsin are the ones who should decide this issue.”

Assembly Republican­s voted last month to pass a bill asking voters whether Wisconsin should ban abortions after 14 weeks of pregnancy.

U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson also pushed a referendum that would ask Wisconsin voters: “At what point does society have the responsibi­lity to protect the life of an unborn child?”

However, neither path looks viable at this point. The first proposal deploys a seldom-used process by which a law passed by the Legislatur­e and signed by the governor can be enacted only with voters’ approval, and Democratic Gov. Tony Evers opposes the effort.

Johnson’s suggestion could only be used, under current state law, as a nonbinding vote — one that would measure public opinion but not change the law.

However, both processes don’t look possible at this point. Vos’ move would require Democratic Gov. Tony Evers’ approval, which he wouldn’t give, and voters could not change the law the way Johnson suggested.

Hovde was ‘totally opposed’ to abortion in 2012, but not in 2024

A Better Wisconsin Together ad that targets Republican U.S. Senate candidate Eric Hovde’s stances on abortion says:

“Hovde said, ‘I am totally opposed to abortion’ and ‘I’m 100% pro-life.’ And he supported overturnin­g Roe v. Wade,” the ad reads.

Those three things, except for one slightly-off wording, are true. But Hovde said those things over a decade ago.

Now, he says he supports exceptions for rape, incest and the life of the mother. He also favors posing the issue to voters through a referendum.

 ?? ?? Eric Hovde launched his campaign to challenge Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin at an event Feb. 20 in Madison.
Eric Hovde launched his campaign to challenge Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin at an event Feb. 20 in Madison.

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