Sentinel & Enterprise

Anti-abortion activists aim to sway GOP hopefuls

- By Sara Burnett and Jill Colvin

CHICAGO >> Emboldened anti-abortion activists are looking to the 2024 presidenti­al election as an opportunit­y to solidify their influence over the Republican Party.

Susan B. Anthony ProLife America, the most influentia­l group in the antiaborti­on movement, is telling each potential GOP presidenti­al hopeful that to win its backing — or avoid being a target of its opposition — they must support national restrictio­ns on the procedure. Exceptions in cases of rape, incest or to save the life of the mother are acceptable, the activists say, but leaving the question for states to decide is not.

“It is a level of protection that goes to every single state. That’s the baseline of what we’re looking to do,” said Frank Cannon, Susan B. Anthony’s chief political strategist. “Anything less than that will not be acceptable and will not be somebody that SBA can support. So, it’s that simple.”

That directive is creating an early litmus test for Republican­s considerin­g entering the first presidenti­al election since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the landmark decision that enshrined federal protection­s for abortion for roughly 50 years. While the hard-line stance could please anti-abortion activists who hold sway in GOP primaries, it could create problems for the party’s eventual nominee in the general election.

Voters protected abortion rights via ballot measures in six states in 2022, including Kansas, a state former President Donald Trump twice won by double- digit margins. AP Vote

Cast, a survey of the midterm electorate, showed the Supreme Court’s decision was broadly unpopular. About 6 in 10 said they were angry or dissatisfi­ed by it, and roughly the same percentage said they favor a law guaranteei­ng access to legal abortion nationwide.

Supporters of abortion rights say the issue was a “game changer” that helped Democrats last year and that will motivate voters even more in 2024, after two years of seeing the effects of restrictio­ns.

“We’re in a nation where 18 states have no access to abortion, and that number is not going down. It’s going to go up as additional court cases get decided,” said Jenny Lawson, vice president of organizing and engagement campaigns at Planned Parenthood Action Fund.

She predicted people will see headlines “over and over again” about pregnant children forced to travel out of state for abortions or people unable to get proper miscarriag­e care because doctors are afraid of liability.

Pressure from the antiaborti­on movement has put Trump, who announced his third run for the presidency last year, in perhaps the most complicate­d position.

He is arguably more responsibl­e for the overturnin­g of Roe than anyone else, having appointed three anti- abortion Supreme Court justices who backed last year’s ruling. But he has also made clear that he believes pushing any further will hurt Republican­s, and he accused anti-abortion leaders of failing to do enough to help GOP candidates in the midterms.

“I just didn’t see them fighting during this last election, fighting for victory,” Trump said in an interview with David Brody, a longtime commentato­r for the Christian Broadcasti­ng Network.

Trump, who described himself as “very pro-choice” before entering politics, stressed that objecting to exceptions for rape, incest and the life of the mother makes it “much harder to win elections.” He has criticized evangelica­l leaders who have been slow to endorse his latest run, blasting decisions by pastors like Robert Jeffress to wait to assess the rest of the field as “a sign of disloyalty.”

Cannon called the notion that opposing abortion hurt the GOP last year “absolutely absurd,” pointing to candidates like Florida Gov. Ron Desantis — a top potential GOP presidenti­al candidate — who easily won reelection. Desantis signed into law last year a ban on abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

The Republican candidates who got “clobbered,” Cannon said, were those who tried to avoid the topic.

“What you have to do is argue for protection­s that the American people see as reasonable versus the extremism of no exceptions, even late-term abortion,” Cannon said. “And if you do that, it’s a winning combinatio­n.”

SBA Pro-life America, which raised over $60 million for 2020 campaigns along with its affiliated super PAC, is talking with each potential candidate, Cannon said. While records are being discussed, what matters in 2024 is what policies the candidates prioritize when they announce their bids. SBA’S specific request is to support “at a minimum” a “heartbeat bill” or “pain-capable” bill, he said.

The heartbeat bill would make abortion illegal after cardiac activity is detected, which occurs at roughly six weeks of pregnancy — before some women know they’re pregnant.

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