Hamilton Journal News

In Iowa, DeSantis jabs at Trump on COVID, abortion, border wall

- By Jonathan J. Cooper

Donald Trump “flipflippe­d” on abortion, overreache­d in response to COVID-19 and failed to uphold his campaign pledge to get Mexico to pay for a wall on the southern U.S. border, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Tuesday in Iowa.

DeSantis, who is in a distant second place behind Trump in most national polls in the battle for the 2024 Republican presidenti­al nomination, stepped up his case against the former president during a CNN town hall in Des Moines five weeks before the state’s first-in-thenation caucuses.

He zeroed in on abortion in a state where evangelica­l voters form the backbone of the GOP, contrastin­g Trump’s recent skepticism about strict anti-abortion laws with his earlier comments about protecting the sanctity of life.

“You should be consistent in your beliefs, especially on something that’s very fundamenta­l, and he has not been consistent,” DeSantis said. “And there’s a lot of voters in Iowa who really care about this, who need to know how he’s changed his position.”

DeSantis last month picked up the endorsemen­t of Bob Vander Plaats, a prominent Iowa evangelica­l leader who has also questioned Trump’s commitment to the anti-abortion movement. Trump has responded by emphasizin­g his support from more than 150 pastors around the state.

Abortion has become a flashpoint in U.S. politics since a Supreme Court majority shaped by Trump’s three appointmen­ts eliminated the constituti­onal right to abortion, helping to power unexpected­ly strong Democratic performanc­es in the 2022 midterms. Trump has not backed a national abortion ban and has criticized the way many Republican politician­s talk about the issue. He has implied that a Florida law DeSantis signed, which outlaws abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy, is “too harsh.”

Asked about the case of Kate Cox, a Texas woman who sought an abortion when her health deteriorat­ed as she carried a fetus with a fatal condition, DeSantis was vague. He said “these are very difficult issues” and pointed to the Florida law’s exceptions allowing abortions when the mother’s life is in danger, though in Cox’s case, the Texas Supreme Court ruled that her pregnancy complicati­ons did not constitute the kind of medical emergency under which abortions are allowed.

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