New York Post

GOP’s Abortion Fear

- rich lowry

POLITICIAN­S are motivated by many things, among them power, fame, idealism, greed — and fear. The last of these is not to be underestim­ated.

It is a powerful, gut-level force that can strike the most loquacious politician­s dumb and make the most attention-hungry suddenly shy. It can cause officehold­ers or candidates to reverse field on a long-held position almost instantane­ously and abase themselves however seems necessary to get to safety.

Republican­s at the national level, right now, are scared. You can hear it in their silence on the issue of abortion after a district judge in Texas struck down the FDA approval of the abortion pill mifepristo­ne. That decision also came immediatel­y after Republican­s lost a key race for a Supreme Court seat in Wisconsin to a progressiv­e jurist who ran, to a large extent, on abortion.

Much of what has happened since Dobbs is what you’d expect after a longstandi­ng national legal regime on abortion is lifted and the states are given the freedom to decide their own policies. There has been a sorting out toward a new political and policy equilibriu­m, with red and blue states occupying different poles of the spectrum, and purple states up for grabs.

The good news for Republican­s is that there are more restrictio­ns on abortion in place than at any time in the last 50 years, and they still took a majority in the House in last year’s midterms, if smaller than expected.

In Indiana and in much of the South, Republican­s have passed sweeping abortion bans and paid no discernibl­e political price for it.

But especially in Michigan and Wisconsin, the issue has been a debacle for the party, and it has suffered notable losses elsewhere.

One lesson should be that Republican­s can’t just run and hide on an issue that has been of defining importance to their base and that Democrats are going to hammer them on regardless of how they try to minimize it. Another is that outside of the Deep South, complete bans can’t be defended politicall­y, and the traditiona­l exceptions for rape, incest and life of the mother are essential.

The Michigan and Wisconsin disasters stemmed from sweeping prohibitio­ns that no one would have written in the post-Dobbs environmen­t. Michigan had a 1931 law still on the books, and Wisconsin’s dated from 1849.

Republican­s should be pushing for restrictio­ns that go as far as a state’s voters are willing to accept, and no further.

This will require keen political judgment and shrewd tactics, both of which are hard to muster in the midst of a panic.

The other obvious imperative for the GOP is to try to focus attention on the extremism of the Democratic maximalist position on abortion, which is out of step with public opinion (Gallup finds that only 35 percent of people say abortion should be legal with no restrictio­ns).

While the Republican record fighting ballot measures to guarantee access to abortion is dreadful in the post-Dobbs era — they’ve lost everywhere — they are going to have to do more of it. Emboldened Democrats are getting referenda on the ballot in a number of red states over the next two years.

A signature battle will be a vote to write abortion rights into the state constituti­on in Ohio later this year. If opponents defeat the measure, it will be on the strength of arguments that the amendment will end up making parental-consent laws impossible and go further than the pre-Dobbs abortion regime.

Make no mistake: In many places, Republican­s are simply seeking to neutralize the Democratic political advantage on the issue and fight to a draw.

If this is unsatisfyi­ng and discomfiti­ng, it’s still better than the pre-Dobbs context when the politics were easier but it was impossible to get any meaningful restrictio­ns done.

If there’s one thing that should be clear, it’s that fear — no matter how natural or visceral — is no substitute for careful thought and considered action.

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