Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump’s abortion stance faces Georgia backlash from both sides of the issue

- BY GREG BLUESTEIN

“I’d encourage President Trump to remember the formula that got him elected the first time — choosing a pro-life VP and providing clarity about his judicial opinions. Instead he seems to be relying solely on the extremism of his opponent to be the motivator for the faith community. It may work, but it’s a shaky strategy.” — COLE MUZIO, HEAD OF FRONTLINE POLICY COUNCIL

Former President Donald Trump tried to navigate tricky political territory when he said abortion rights should be left to the states while avoiding taking a stance on a national ban.

That led to fierce criticism from Georgia conservati­ves who want national restrictio­ns two years after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and abortion rights supporters who say the presumptiv­e Republican nominee can’t be trusted.

The intense reaction surroundin­g Trump’s abortion stance cemented the notion that abortion rights will be a major factor in Georgia and other politicall­y competitiv­e states in November, just as the issue helped shape the 2022 midterms.

It exemplifie­d how Republican­s continue to struggle with the question of backing federal bans after Democrats won a string of electoral victories that preserve access to abortion, even in several conservati­ve-leaning states.

Trump said in a video statement Monday that each state should decide its abortion stance through legislatio­n and that “whatever they decide must be the law of the land.” He added, though, that he favored exceptions for rape, incest and the health of the mother.

He was immediatel­y blasted by President Joe Biden who said Trump fostered “chaos” around abortion after appointing three conservati­ve Supreme Court justices who helped overturn the 1973 decision that allowed abortions up until a fetus could be viable outside the mother’s body.

In Georgia, Democrats see abortion as a politicall­y potent issue to ignite the party’s base and energize swing voters who helped decide the past three election cycles.

Many senior Republican­s, meanwhile, have largely steered clear of highlighti­ng Georgia’s strict 2019 antiaborti­on law that took effect after the Supreme Court’s 2022 ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on that there is no constituti­onal right to abortion.

The Georgia law, the center of pending legal challenges, bans abortions once a medical profession­al can detect fetal cardiac activity. That’s typically about six weeks into a pregnancy and before many women know they are pregnant.

State Rep. Michelle Au, D-Johns Creek, said Trump’s “ever-changing rhetoric” on abortion might as well be a concession that “stringent abortion care bans are a losing issue for Republican candidates up and down the ticket.”

Au, a physician, echoed Biden in saying Trump’s position also endorsed policies in Georgia and other states where they adopted tougher abortion limits.

“You can’t brag about being the person responsibl­e for the overturn of Roe v. Wade while also sidesteppi­ng the responsibi­lity, the blame and the electoral consequenc­es of what comes next,” Au said.

Trump’s policy also triggered a backlash from religious conservati­ves who have long fought for national limits on abortion. Among them was former Vice President Mike Pence, who called it a “slap in the face” to abortion opponents.

Cole Muzio, the head of the conservati­ve Frontline Policy Council, took much the same approach. He said Trump’s policy is an “unequivoca­l disappoint­ment” for abortion opponents.

And he promised the issue isn’t going away, even with a divided Congress unlikely to take action in the next few years.

“I’d encourage President Trump to remember the formula that got him elected the first time — choosing a prolife VP and providing clarity about his judicial opinions,” Muzio said.

“Instead he seems to be relying solely on the extremism of his opponent to be the motivator for the faith community,” Muzio said. “It may work, but it’s a shaky strategy.”

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