San Diego Union-Tribune

RNC URGES GOING ON OFFENSE OVER ABORTION

Resolution calls on candidates to press issue in 2024 cycle

- BY AMY B WANG Wang writes for The Washington Post.

After GOP underperfo­rmance in November’s midterm elections, the Republican National Committee is doubling down on its stance against abortion rights, formally urging GOP lawmakers and campaigns to “go on offense in the 2024 election cycle.”

At its winter meeting, the RNC passed a resolution that called on Republican­s to push “laws that acknowledg­e the beating hearts and experience­s of pain in the unborn,” referring to “heartbeat” bans on abortions, which would outlaw the procedure after cardiac activity is detected, at about six weeks of pregnancy — before many people realize they are pregnant.

The resolution, which was passed Friday, alluded to Republican­s’ disappoint­ing performanc­e in November, months after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, but appeared to place the blame on GOP candidates who did not sufficient­ly publicize their views on abortion.

The court ruled last year that a constituti­onal right to abortion, which had been in place for nearly 50 years, no longer existed.

“Instead of fighting back and exposing Democratic

extremism on abortion, many Republican candidates failed to remind Americans of our proud heritage of challengin­g slavery, segregatio­n, and the forces eroding the family and the sanctity of human life, thereby allowing Democrats to define our longtime position,” the RNC resolution stated.

The resolution came as Ronna McDaniel won her fourth term as RNC chair, fending off challenger Harmeet Dhillon amid calls for new leadership after the GOP’s lackluster midterm results in an election year that typically would have favored the party not in power. Republican­s, who had promised a “red wave” in November’s elections, captured only a narrow majority in the House and lost one seat in the Senate.

Even before November,

signs of a nationwide backlash to the overturnin­g of Roe had already begun to emerge after the Supreme Court’s decision. Candidates who supported abortion rights overperfor­med in special elections over the summer, while key battlegrou­nd states saw a spike in Democratic and independen­t women registerin­g to vote.

Kansas voters soundly rejected a referendum that would have allowed state lawmakers to regulate abortion, and South Carolina Republican­s fell short in their bid for a near-total abortion ban in the state. And although Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., introduced a bill in September that would ban abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy nationwide, many Republican candidates tried to avoid discussing a possible national abortion ban on the campaign trail.

Marjorie Dannenfels­er, president of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, criticized such candidates for hesitating to talk about abortion.

“The RNC’s pro-life resolution sends a bold message to GOP candidates, campaigns and consultant­s that in order to win in 2024 they must stay on offense by drawing a strong contrast and exposing Democratic extremism,” Dannenfels­er said in a statement Monday, days after Republican­s passed the resolution at their meeting in Dana Point last week.

“In 2022, too many GOP candidates used the ‘Ostrich Strategy’ in which they put their heads in the sand, pretended the issue of abortion didn’t exist, and let Democrats spend hundreds of millions of dollars distorting their pro-life positions and defining them as extremists,” she added.

The Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee on Monday seized on the resolution, calling it “extreme” and “out-of-touch.”

“The Republican Party’s renewed vows to destroy reproducti­ve freedom and threaten women’s livelihood­s just raised the stakes for voters in 2024, and made every vulnerable House Republican more at risk of losing,” DCCC spokespers­on Nebeyatt Betre said in a statement.

 ?? LAURENCE KESTERSON AP FILE ?? Ronna McDaniel won her fourth term as Republican National Committee chair last weekend.
LAURENCE KESTERSON AP FILE Ronna McDaniel won her fourth term as Republican National Committee chair last weekend.

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