Hartford Courant

Anti-abortion leader says Stefanowsk­i ‘has heartened pro-life voters’

- By Mark Pazniokas

Republican Bob Stefanowsk­i’s carefully worded position on abortion has won plaudits from an anti-abortion leader who sees common ground with a Connecticu­t gubernator­ial nominee for the first time in decades.

Peter Wolfgang, the president of the Family Institute of Connecticu­t, was responding to a statement from Stefanowsk­i indicating support for adding a parental notificati­on provision to a Connecticu­t abortion rights law that he otherwise would not attempt to change.

“It has heartened pro-life voters. We know that Bob is not 100% with us. We’ve always suspected it. And now we know it for sure,” Wolfgang said. “But what we also know is where he does have common ground with us.”

Stefanowsk­i, who was nominated by Republican­s over the weekend for a rematch with Gov. Ned Lamont, has positioned himself to the right of the Democratic governor on abortion while not opposing Connecticu­t’s 32-year-old law codifying the tenets of Roe v. Wade.

His approach will test whether a candidate can appeal to social conservati­ves, who Wolfgang has long complained have been marginaliz­ed by the Connecticu­t Republican establishm­ent, without losing more voters who support abortion rights.

In a written statement issued Wednesday, Stefanowsk­i said, “under no circumstan­ces will I as Governor attempt to change the existing law. A woman’s right to choose has been, is, and will remain codified in Connecticu­t State Law, including Connecticu­t’s ban on late-term abortions — except in the case where the mother’s health is at risk.”

Stefanowsk­i, consistent with his position in 2018, also broke with Lamont on the issue of requiring parental notificati­on for a minor to obtain an abortion — an addition Wolfgang sees as a gesture to social conservati­ves.

“Consistent with the majority of other states, Connecticu­t should consider a parental notificati­on requiremen­t for minors under 16 seeking an abortion, except in the case of rape or incest,” Stefanowsk­i said.

Democrats seized on the ambiguity in Stefanowsk­i’s statement: He promised not to personally seek changes restrictin­g an adult woman’s access to abortion without saying if he would oppose or veto them.

Wolfgang acknowledg­ed the wiggle room in Stefanowsk­i’s statement about parental notificati­on: The candidate said the state should “consider” such a measure, not that he would propose or support one.

“Would you love to see him say that he supports parental notificati­on in a more active voice? I would definitely love to see it,” Wolfgang said. “But I, again, I’m reading that statement against the backdrop of what the Republican­s have been saying in the week or two since the Dobbs leak.”

The leak of a draft opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on suggests a majority of the U.S. Supreme Court is prepared to overturn Roe, the 49-year-old landmark case that struck down state bans on abortions before fetal viability.

“When Republican­s don’t answer the abortion issue, as I think they’ve been doing since the Dobbs leak, it’s a lose-lose,” Wolfgang said. “You’re telling pro-lifers that you’re not with us and you’re telling pro-choicers that you have something to hide. It just never works.”

Wolfgang, a featured speaker at an abortion protest that drew 2,000 to the state Capitol in March, acknowledg­ed that the bar may be relatively low for getting a good grade from the anti-abortion movement in Connecticu­t, a heavily Catholic state that nonetheles­s has been consistent­ly supportive of abortion rights.

It is one of a few states that has affirmativ­ely declared a woman’s right to an abortion. A 1990 law provides that “the decision to terminate a pregnancy prior to the viability of the fetus shall be solely that of the pregnant woman in consultati­on with her physician.”

“If you’re pro-life in the state of Connecticu­t, you are very much grading on a curve,” said Wolfgang, who branded Stefanowsk­i’s position that of “a pro-choice moderate.”

Stefanowsk­i has been careful in his statements about abortion, an issue unmentione­d in his acceptance speech last week.

He has yet to submit to public questionin­g about abortion, instead communicat­ing with the press and voters by written statements that initially downplayed the issue as a matter of settled law in Connecticu­t. His campaign offered no reaction to Wolfgang’s assessment.

“I think Bob’s statement speaks for itself,” said Liz Kurantowic­z, the senior adviser to the Stefanowsk­i campaign.

Stefanowsk­i has refused to take a position on a new law declaring Connecticu­t a “safe harbor” against lawsuits against out-ofstate women seeking abortions here or the abortion providers.

His running mate, state Rep. Laura Devlin of Fairfield, voted for it, and his opponent, Lamont, signed it into law.

Wolfgang said he had no idea why Stefanowsk­i has refused to take a position.

“I’ll take his silence over Devlin’s affirmativ­e vote for it,” Wolfgang said.

Wolfgang said Devlin’s vote, which she says was cast without consulting Stefanowsk­i, brought no abortion-rights voters to the fold, while turning off some opponents.

“I think Rep. Devlin put Bob in a very difficult position by voting in favor of that bill. I know that Rep. Devlin is pro choice,” he said. “I know that she understand­s the difference between pro-choice and pro-life. I’m not sure if she understand­s the difference between pro-choice moderate and being more extreme on abortion. Because that was an extreme vote.”

Devlin could not be reached for comment Thursday. No parental notificati­on bill in her tenure has cleared even the low hurdle of a committee vote scheduling a public hearing.

Connecticu­t law requires a minor seeking an abortion to be counseled about the alternativ­es to abortion, including adoption, and the possibilit­y of consulting her parents. About three dozen other states require either consent or notificati­on, with some ability to bypass the requiremen­t in the case of abusive parents.

In 2018 and in comments this week, Lamont indicated a comfort with Connecticu­t’s approach. At a visit to a tulip farm in Preston on Thursday, a WTNH reporter asked how he would feel about a 13-year-old getting an abortion without parental consent.

“I don’t think you can regulate and have laws for each and every eventualit­y,” Lamont said, according to audio provided by the governor’s office. “My instinct is that 98% of people, younger people, talk to their parents. If they feel comfortabl­e, they feel like it’s safe, it’s the right thing to do.”

Abortions by females younger than 15 are rare.

Of the more than 9,000 abortions in Connecticu­t in 2019, 20 were performed on girls 14 or younger and 788 on patients 15 to 19, according to the most recent statistics available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Nationally, the percentage of abortions involving females from 15-19 fell steadily from 14.6% in 2010 to 8.7% in 2019, a 40% drop over a decade.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States