Los Angeles Times

Standing by antiaborti­on Democrat

The party remains supportive of Rep. Cuellar despite his split on crucial issue.

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SAN ANTONIO — Just a day after Democrats forcefully recommitte­d to protecting abortion rights, a U.S. House leader swooped into Texas on Wednesday to defend and stand side-byside with Rep. Henry Cuellar, one of the last antiaborti­on Democrats in Congress.

The small campaign rally in San Antonio, where Cuellar is in the toughest reelection fight of his 17 years in office, put on full display the awkward timing of House leadership showing unwavering support for an abortion opponent as the party simultaneo­usly rages over a published draft of a U.S. Supreme Court opinion that would overturn the landmark Roe vs. Wade decision from 1973 that legalized abortion nationwide.

U.S. Rep. James E. Clyburn, the third-ranking Democratic leader in the House, denied that his campaignin­g for Cuellar undercuts the urgency of the party’s election-year promises to defend the constituti­onal right to an abortion.

“I would ask anybody, which is more important: to have a pro-life Democrat or an antiaborti­on Republican?” Clyburn (D-S.C.) said. “Because come November, that could very well be the choice in this district.”

But making it on the November ballot is far from a guarantee for Cuellar. He must first get past a May 24 primary runoff against Jessica Cisneros, an immigratio­n lawyer who supports abortion rights, and who finished about 1,000 votes behind Cuellar in March, when neither candidate met the majority threshold to win outright.

Cisneros called on House leaders to drop their backing of Cuellar in the heavily Latino district that runs to the U.S.-Mexico border.

“The stakes are high. They’re absolutely high,” Cisneros said in an interview Wednesday with the Associated Press. “South Texans deserve a champion for their rights and freedom.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) has also previously affirmed her support for Cuellar, an endorsemen­t that Cuellar played up in front of his supporters.

Cuellar said the draft opinion goes too far and that there must be exceptions in cases of rape, incest and dangers to the life of the mother. He waved off whether the leaked draft opinion surfacing just weeks before the runoff would influence the outcome.

“There’s always issues that come up,” Cuellar said. “Every time you have an election there’s always things that happen. You just go with your position and move on.”

Cuellar’s rally with Clyburn is one of his biggest campaign events since FBI agents searched his home in January as part of an investigat­ion. Cuellar has denied wrongdoing, and his lawyer said federal authoritie­s told them Cuellar is not the target of an investigat­ion.

 ?? Eric Gay Associated Press ?? REP. Henry Cuellar of Texas, facing a tough reelection, is a rare antiaborti­on Democrat in Congress.
Eric Gay Associated Press REP. Henry Cuellar of Texas, facing a tough reelection, is a rare antiaborti­on Democrat in Congress.

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